Part 27 – A Week Of Two Halves

A Close Shave

Haiga – Nice Day Out i

Hard to get up when the alarm sounded at 7.30 a.m. Monday morning, a mixture of excitement and apprehension cut through the fatigue.  I engaged auto-pilot to prepare for our first break away from home since March.  As the trip to Blackpool celebrated Phil’s birthday, this one to Southport marked mine.  A trouble-free train journey was broken by a half-hour wait at Wigan, spent reading poems.  Inscribed on the buffet windows, bright lights shone through peeling letters, making them hard to decipher.  In Southport, we exited the station to gratefully remove our face-masks and walked through the busy streets to the apartment I’d booked.

in what turned out to be an eclectic area, the street buzzed with life.  Boy racers lovingly worked on their car next door; a photo of Putin stared form a window across the road; minibuses collected workers (for field or factory?) in the early hours; vans delivered supplies to an Indian restaurant on the corner; two men navigated a cherry-picker to reach a roof, the blurb on the cab proclaiming ‘tree prooning’ (sic) among their services.

After a bit of a faff getting the room key out of the box with the twiddly buttons, we accessed the flat, unpacked, freshened up, ate a quick lunch, and headed back out to Lord Street.  Perusing pubs and eateries, we were shocked how busy it was.  So much for everyone being back at work and school!  We confirmed a nice brasserie would be open for a birthday dinner and visited the quirkiest baccy shop in the land.  With a window-display of clocks, watches and gaudy ornaments, the casual observer would never guess it actually sold fags.  Across the road, a man on one of the many benches shouted at anyone within earshot that he was the mayor.  “Well, he might be.”  Quipped Phil.  By the time we’d stocked up in Sainsbury’s, walked back and sorted the shopping, we were too tired to leave the flat again.  Phil cooked dinner, we drank prosecco, caught up on news (regional travel corridors were now a thing) and cheekily logged into Netfilix to watch a film.  I just about managed to stay up until midnight for him to wish me happy birthday.

Down on the Beach

Predictably scant sleep meant another weary start to Tuesday.  A leisurely birthday morning (shared with the popstar Pink), involved gift-giving and my favourite brekkie before a short excursion.  At the station, we waited in a queue snaking round the aisles of the booking office-cum-shop. Unable to see round the corner, we waited impatiently.  As we navigated a magazine stand, we discovered only 2 people ahead of us, thus at a loss as to what had taken so long.

The regular stopping train took us to Hall Road.  It was a short walk to Blundellsands, marking the start of Anthony Gormley’s ‘Another Place’ installation.  Lots of space on the beach in spite of numerous people and dogs, we walked towards the sea.  The soft sand squidged between my toes as we proceeded towards Crosby.  A stick with rungs and a light on top stood in the middle of an inlet, as sand floated away in chunks.  Fascinating as the phenomena was, we realised the tide was coming in, and unhurriedly started to retreat.  Phil suddenly strode across a big stretch of water.  Too wide for me, I  walked back to a spot that looked more passable.  And then my leg sank.  Scared, I called out loudly to him.  “I’m sinking!”  “It’s only a couple of inches. Carry on!” “But my jeans are already covered to the knee!”  “Trust me.  I grew up round this stuff.”  I gulped and went for it, inevitably sinking several times.  Reaching safer ground, I was absolutely splattered!  He had a similar experience but insisted it was because he was trying to get to me – likely story!  Further along the shoreline we found a safer stretch to wash some of the mud off, then sat on concrete steps at the edge of the beach, to expunge more muck and dry out, thankfully aided by the warm afternoon sun.   Concerned he’d only brought 1 pair of shoes for the whole break which were now soaked and muddy, he said they’d be fine “but Jasper Conran would not be happy.”  Spotting the roof of Crosby sports centre (the starting point of our first visit to see the sculptures three years ago), I suggested we seek facilities. .  Large signs on the beach access road pointed to rows of porta-loos in the carpark. A more comfortable walk back to the station, partly on sand, partly on prom, with a picnic break, enabled us to take in archetypal British seaside scenes.  OAPs on deck-chairs, binoculars trained on the horizon (no doubt checking for illegal foreigners), summed it up nicely.  In Southport again, Phil bought take-away coffees from a cheap bakery and nipped in Sainsburys for shoe-cleaning stuff. I waited in a small garden with an ornate fountain, fending off approaches from a man on the next bench.  “I’m waiting for my boyfriend.” That got rid of himSeated opposite the shop entrance, I observed a steady stream of taxis disgorging unmasked punters and drivers, until Phil finally re-appeared.  “No-one knows what shoe polish is anymore.”

A Close Encounter

Tray of Compensation

We finished the mediocre coffee with cake at the flat, showered, changed,and stuck jeans in the washing machine.  Unable to fathom how it could possibly be a washer/drier as I’d been told, we hung them on radiators. Rested and cleansed, we headed back out for the evening.  Hoping to catch sunset at the lakeside, we realised it was in the wrong place! We settled on wandering about in soft twilight, circuited Kings Gardens, round to the pier and onto the modern steel bridge leading back to Lord Street.  Phil had booked the favoured bistro.  Eating in an actual restaurant felt very special and I was comforted by ample space between diners and fountains of hand gel. But the experience was marred by an altercation at the end of our meal. A family group seated opposite, stood to take photos, and came within inches of our table. I politely asked a woman to move away which she did, only for another member of the party to make a show of brushing past Phil, making contact with his back.  They then accused Phil of hitting them! Angry that my birthday evening had been ruined, I spoke to the waiting staff. Apologetically, they moved us to the back of the restaurant, allowing us to recover.  They returned to present me with a pudding tray.  Filled with every dessert on the menu and ‘happy birthday’ written in chocolate, it definitely made up for the unpleasantness! Too stuffed to eat or drink any more, we settled on a brew before going to bed.

The WHO said due to being too relaxed over summer, virus spikes were inevitable in the UK.  Boris announced the new ‘Rule of 6’.  From Monday 14th September, it would be illegal for close encounters of more than half a dozen people, indoors or out.  Scotland and Wales followed suit but excluded under 12’s.  Shocking testing delays were blamed on labs and, according to Matt Cock, on too many ‘non-eligible’ people requesting tests.  He was telling us get them the other week!

Fruits De Mar

Stick in the Mud

In spite of developing a sore throat in the early hours, I had a slightly better sleep and rose on Wednesday determined not to be ill.  We walked to the far end of the lake, over small dunes and across to descend steps onto a marshy beach. Beinga careful of mud and puddles this time, I wryly observed that at least signs on sticks marked the danger zones clearly, unlike the previous day.  We succeeded in hunting down samphire. Picking proved tricky without uprooting the plants. A woman with a pair of scissors inspired me to use the penknife attached to my rucksack which made cutting the greener tops easier. Assuming she knew what she was doing, it transpired during a chat that she didn’t. I’d hoped to get some handy tips but instead imparted knowledge on how to keep and cook the wild veg. Continuing to the pier, we walked on crunchy shells, wondered at a mysterious spur in the distance but couldn’t be bothered investigating.  Climbing steps onto the boardwalk, a buffeting wind forced us to retreated inland. Hungry, we headed down back streets to the source of the best fish n chips, according to google, pausing to marvel at the Brexit number plate on a laundry van (someone actually paid real money for that!) and what Phil called the ‘worst Debenhams ever’.  It was in fact the back door, although the shop itself was defunct along with all the other department stores. We took our bulging take-away trays to eat in the flat. They possibly were one of the best ever!

Stuffed again, we dozed on the sofa, freshened up and went back out to walk the length of Lord Street. Between the numerous dead shops, definitely significantly more post-Covid, most charity shops survived. Disappointingly, hardly any units were open in Wayfarers Arcade. We flouted the daft one-way system to capture fabulous shadows cast by wrought iron beneath the glass roof. At the far end of the street, we examined a plaque on the clock tower. Now marking the entrance to the Travelodge and Morrison’s, it proclaimed the site of the erstwhile station for trains to Chester ‘across the dunes. Puzzling over how the hell that worked, we deduced later that it explained the mysterious spur and vowed to make it a mission at a later date.  Back in the central gardens, we sat on a bench, supped take-way coffee from Remedy, and laughed at the antics of drunkards and pigeons trying to look hard. We picked up a few supplies to supplement a picnic-style dinner before returning to the flat.

Lucky Screenshot

The samphire required copious rinsing and picking over to remove grit and hard stalks – so much easier when someone else did the hard work!  Still, it went well with salmon and Polish bread from the shop round the corner. Despite being so tired I could hardly keep my head up, we forced ourselves to drink a remaining bottle of prosecco. (Well, we couldn’t take it home!)  Preparing for bed, I forgot the phone in my pocket and did the classic thing of dropping it down the bog! Still working after a wipe when I plugged it in to charge, the screen went black.  As it beeped alarmingly Phil entered the bedroom.  He took the phone case off, and said “It’s sopping wet. How many times have you washed it?” Not wanting to admit what I’d done, I was evasive.  He seemed to get it working but not for long. Eventually, I had to own up.  He placed the phone on top of the boiler and it appeared to recover overnight.  Later in the week, unused features activated unbidden.  The screen reverted to black and muzak emanated from the mic.  Trying to get the icons back, I took a series of random photos.  Luckily, one displayed a screenshot saying ‘accessibility shortcut is on’  enabling us to fix the issue.  Another crisis averted! 

On top of Pizza Express closing 73 restaurants, Jobs were going at Pizza Hut and Lloyds Bank.  Boris tabled theInternal Markets Bill, allowing goods from NI unfettered access to the UK and making EU state aid rules clear.  Ministers claimed the bill was a ‘safety net’ in case of a no-deal Brexit.  An amendment to the finance bill planned to give government powers to designate which goods from GB to NI could enter the single market and thus be liable to EU tariffs.  Effectively overriding the Withdrawal Agreement, Brendon Lewis admitted it broke international law.  Several past leaders railed against the government including Brown and May who said it damaged trust in the UK.  Needless to say the EU were not happy: if the UK wanted a free trade deal, there must be “no back-tracking” and threatened legal action.  At one of his daft briefings, Boris gave more detail on the ‘rule of 6’ and rabbited about ‘moonshot’ tests.  Another ridiculous target of 10 million a day with results in minutes.  Yet they still failed to get the basics right!.  He announced ‘Covid-secure’ marshals in towns and cities.  Not mandatory and town halls footing the bill, only councils awash with Tory cash would be able to pay them.

Back To Reality

Layers of Opinion

Thursday morning, my sore throat returned and still exhausted, I knew I was in for another bout of sinusitisWe had no option but to get up and ready for the off by 11.00.  As we made to leave the flat, piled laundry bags suggested the cleaner was already in the building. With an hour and a half before our booked train home, we wheeled our cases round town and went in the market hall. I remembered it was carp but not that crap, Not even a pie to be had! In need of coffee, sitting at a table outside Remedy seemed safer than a garden bench with the luggage.  The tiny cup was a rip-off compared to take-aways. ‘Safe distance’ stickers marked paving throughout the centre. On the way to the station, one in particular caught my eye as layers of graffiti summed up  differing opinions of the pandemic.

The ‘bus train’ stood at the platform. we grappled with the lack of baggage spac and did our best to sit comfortably during the unfamiliar route via the Covid hotspot of Bolton, alighting at Salford Crescent. During the wait for our connection, we negotiated the steep steps to the station exit for a snack. Surveying dismal surroundings, Phil laughed: “I see no crescent.” With little but student flats in sight, we wondered what they’d done with the natives! A better train whizzed us across the Pennines. the local park was now busy with after-school kids. Barely able to drag my case by the time we got to the house, we dumped the lot, sorted some washing and went to lie down.  Alas, the first siesta of the week was thwarted by the relentless noise of men doing stuff outside.  Unable to ease my fatigue, severe back pain or sinuses, I almost cried with frustration.  Preparing dinner, I could hardly stand. Was it the fatigue or the fact we hadn’t had a proper meal all day?  A few hours decent night-time sleep was disturbed by hot flushes and worsening sinusitis symptoms.

Genuinely ill Friday, I was resigned to a stint in bed. After a bath, I fetched the laptop and made a start on a heap of tasks including work on the journal and photos from Southport.  Discovering the co-op website showed all current offers and enabled ordering to ‘collect in store’, the search algorithm proved illogical.  By the time I’d finished the order, my slot had timed out.  What a waste of time!  I wrote out a list for Phil to go shopping the old-fashioned way.   Attempts to rest were again thwarted by the interminable noise of men with power tools.  Phil came to sit with me at coffee time.  His phone sounded an alert and he made for the front door just as my new ipad case dropped through the letter-box.  Only ordered the previous night, a text told him it was a coming a second before it arrive.  They miracles of modern technology!  I ate dinner downstairs and stayed up to  watch films but retired early.

As the UK R rate reached 1 plus, local restrictions came into force for Birmingham, and Portugal and Hungary were added to the quarantine list.  The new TIT App was to be launched 24th Sept.  soon to be mandatory to take patron’s contact details, pubs were urged to display posters with QR codes for quick scanning.  Amidst the Brexit wrangle, Liz Truss actually got her trade deal with Japan ‘in principle’, including PDO status for cheese.  Her obsession had obviously paid off!

Saturday, I felt slightly better, but returned to bed after breakfast.  The sheets really needed changing and dust expunged.  I opened the window to get some fresh air, then shut it again sharpish against the onslaught of a blustery wind.  I collapsed on the bed to recover before responding to an update from Elder Sis concerning mum’s affairs.

He displayed child-like excitement over Leeds United being in the premiership.  Playing Liverpool in the first game of the season, it was a game of champions.  They put on a creditable performance, losing by a narrow margin, in an empty stadium.  Some lesser league matches had small audiences of actual fans but no pies – “What was the point of going then?” I asked.

On a very warm and sunny Sunday, I  was still fatigued and unable to spend long out of bed.  I edited photos from the trip and drafted a haiga.   In addition to android sparking up features unbidden, leading to renewed Blue lines had appeared on the left side of my phone screen with issues on the key-press area housing the hash key.  Phil concurred it was due to the dowsing and suggested I put it “in the hottest place you can find.”  Moving it about in patches of sunlight the next couple of days improved the situation but I was resigned to the lines being permanent.  It could be worse.

In the last hurrah before the ‘rule of 6’ came into force,  several fines for gatherings were issued.  Former PMs Blair and Cameron joined in the condemnation of Boris’ Internal Market Bill while a tory MP resigned and the Attorney General threatened to do so in the event of law-breaking. The fracas rumbled on into the following week.

Reference:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

Part 26 – Dishonest Intentions

You Can’t Make An Omelette…

Haiga – Secret History i

Bank Holiday Monday, a good brekkie was spoilt by bad feelings.  Everything cooked too quickly, I became anxious, then broke a tumbler and had to fish glass shards out of the sink.  It got more fractious when Phil joined in and swore when we got in each other’s way.  I really lost it as he stood motionless in the middle of the room.  Fuming through the meal, I stormed upstairs with coffee to calm down.  Posting the weekly Haiku and journal were quicker now I’d got used to the new WordPress block editor.  However, it took another hour to carry piles of recycling to the bins and be ready to go out, leaving me knackered.  I hoped the afternoon walk would dispel the morning’s frustrations.

The odd glimpse of sun penetrated the grey clouds as we walked up to the nearest woods.  Risking a dodgy path on the west side, we found evidence of ancient druid purposes.  We continued to the honesty box, spotting fresh eggs for sale.  Just about to exit, a woman came along wittering about a non-existent sign on the door.  Distracted, I forgot to pay.  Phil found humour in saying it was deliberate.  “It should be called the dishonesty box!”  Debt paid, we thought of going on the top road with sweeping views across the valley, to find it marked private – that didn’t seem right.  Nearing the next village, I wanted to avoid the centre but Phil insisted on going to the worst Sainsburys in the world.  As horrid as expected, the aisles were far too narrow, we were trapped by a heedless woman selecting one of every type of biscuit, the food selection was awful, and I lost a precious zip-lock bag for my face-mask!  I stomped off, taking the straightest line to the Sustrans path, only stopping to pick blackberries.  How disappointing!  Our last forage being at the start of the month, I’d expected a bumper crop by now, but they’d got too wet with all the rain.  Homeward bound, Phil’s shoulder gave way.  I offered to carry his shoulder bag to ease the pain but he refused.   Both very tired and still in foul moods, he said he’d do coffee then made straight for the bathroom.  Annoyed again, I took the food to the kitchen and rinsed the berries.  He arrived, offering to take over, but he’d saved me very little energy expenditure.  Now both exhausted and suffering back pain, we collapsed on the sofa.  Thus I finished the day as fed up as I’d started it.  and to top it all, on the last day of Dishy Rishi’s meal deal, we realised we hadn’t managed a single one!

Fancy Pigeon

Tuesday also brought a number of travails.  As I put washing outside, the line snapped and the pole broke again!  I then tried to book an Ocado delivery to find there were still no slots (I blamed M&S; the new partnership started that day) and train tickets for a Birthday  trip.  National Rail re-directed me to the Northern site which bombed out 3 times.  Frustrated, we went to the station to buy them in person. 

As we set off, I realised I’d forgotten the railcard so had to go back.  We walked through the still busy park, as the local schools hadn’t yet re-opened, to the booking office.  Last year, it was possible to travel to Southport on one train but alas, no more.  When he gave me the tickets, details of the connections, involving changing at a different station each way, were not evident.  I asked them to print the itinerary.  Phil laughed at the step-by-step instructions: ‘get on the train…’  The town centre was also still full.  We browsed a few shops.  I had to stop Phil buying more eggs in the convenience store. The friendly staff joked: “you might want an omelette.”  “Don’t encourage him.  He’d buy every reduced item in the shop if I let him.”  On the wavy steps, the man from the Med café chucked bread at the avian scavengers.  An oddball fancy pigeon ineffectually fought for crumbs amidst the scruffy town-dweller.

In conjunction with food suppliers, Marcus Rashford launched the Child Food Poverty Taskforce, calling for free school meals for all on UC, holiday food and activity provision, and a modest rise to healthy start vouchers.

Noise Annoys

Across The Valley

Mid-week brought a change with greyer and wetter conditions.  Finalising my submission for Valley Life magazine, I  had no chance of arranging for the 2021 calendar to be printed until later in the month.  I made my own icon to use as an insert, quite pleased at how it turned out.  Working on the journal, I took the plunge pasting it into the template before it was quite finished then had to revert to an older back-up version as chunks were missing.  Note to self: keep a copy in the ‘draft’ file in future. Intending to start packing for our short break, I tackled a stack of ironing.  By the time that was done, I’d had enough.  I also discovered the whites I wanted to take were grubby even though they’d been unworn all summer!  In the evening, the drum circle returned.  The beats no longer reverberated across the valley as relentlessly loud  after the hiatus.  Out of practice or socially distanced?

Tim Divvy, the new director general of the BBC declared patriotic songs would be sang at the proms finale after all.  Another example of placing ‘yes men’ in prominent roles.  At PMQs, Keir marked his birthday by saying Bumbling Boris was “governing in hindsight.”  In a lockdown hokey-cokey, Matt Cock made a U-turn on Trafford and Bolton putting them back under local measures.  Travellers from Greece were added to the Scottish quarantine list, while Wales asked people coming from Zante to self-isolate.  No such requirements were announced for England.  Rishi unwittingly gave a preview of the autumn budget as his notes were caught on camera.  Showing part of a speech to the new intake of Conservative MPs worried they’d lose their seats at the next election, he reassured them there wouldn’t be “a horror show of tax rises with no end in sight.”  As a record 409 migrants crossed the channel, Boris repeated promises to change the law after Brexit, making it easier to send refugees back.  The opposition said he ‘totally lacked compassion.’

Compensating for the lack of decibels created by drum-beats, Thursday morning traffic was interminable. ‘Schools are back then!’ I observed.  I tried to ignore it and go back to sleep but remembered Phil needed to collect a package from the sorting office and woke him up.  Deciphering the times scribbled on the card, we found it was currently only open early morning.  After a bowl of cereal, Phil bounded off, leaving undrunk tea.   I heard the front door shut, then open again a few minutes later, belying his claim that it took hours for the post office staff to find his package, which was indeed the Covid-19 testing kit.

Spend, Spend, Spend

Worst Bargain Ever

I had arranged lunch with my walking friend.  Phil prevaricated before deciding to come.  The tea room terrace was empty and we took a table to wait for someone to spot us and bring menus.  We all had a version of brekkie (I forgot their veggie sausages were actually vegetable!)  After the meal, we walked up to  the market for a few items and over to the town hall.  Phil went home to  work.  My friend headed up to the large charity shop. I needed facilities and caught up with her to find a posh spa set (from which I gave her the buffer) and a small basket with a lid from the ‘donations welcome’ section.  It reminded me of Monday’s ’dishonesty box’ jibe which of course she found hilarious.  In the second shop, she got a pile of walking guidebooks and I bought a blue shirt for a quid, dodging men taking endless binbags of clothes out.  In truth, they should have asked us to wait outside.   Spotting something for Phil, I bought an early Christmas gift – it’s never too soon to start!  On the way home, Oxfam provided reduced posh coffee.  Although I’d spent less than a tenner, it felt like a veritable spending spree on frivolous items, after months of not purchasing anything but food and wine.

My friend took a long-cut to her house while I returned the quick way.  I went upstairs to rinse the whites I’d left in bleach, and lay down on the bed but was unable to rest.  A text from the ballet teacher informed me that a new term started next Monday. With uncertainty over adequate physical  distancing measures and being away for the first class, I decided to give it a miss.  At night, I was unable to settle.  With the help of the meditation soundtrack, I managed a few hours but woke far too early. It would be a week before I got a decent stretch of sleep.

On Super Thursday, 600 new books were ludicrously published.  You’d need a lot of spending money for that lot.  More bad news for the latte set transpired, as Coca Cola-owned Costa predicted a loss of a tenth of their staff.  With people being sent hundreds of miles for a test, TIT was evidently still crap.  Tory MP Chloe Smith’s husband Sandy Mac who’d attended the ‘Unite for Freedom’ demo in London last weekend, tweeted that Covid-19 was most likely a mental illness and there was no killer virus.  What a moron!

Phil seemed to struggle Friday morning, but forged ahead with a busy day.  Arranging to meet up at the tills, I headed for the co-op, sighting the worst bargain ever in the veg section – miniscule fennel bulbs reduced to a mere £1.37!  I’d seen a pair of shoes in Oxfam but wasn’t sure if they’d fit him.  He checked them out and caught up with me at the kiosk, saying  it was shut.  It was probably donation day; unlike the smaller shop, they didn’t admit customers when the place would be awash with bin bags.  I chatted to the friendly cashier while Phil took the trolley to queue at the conveyer, where he was scolded for standing too close to the person in front. “You are very naughty” I said, as he performed an evil pixie jig.  Back home, we added the immediate washing of masks to the ablutions routine.  That way, we knew there would always be clean ones ready to use.  After lunch, he set off for Leeds – for the first time since before lockdown!  He picked a helluva day too. Leeds residents were warned they might be next for a local lockdown if they didn’t behave, while Leeds (and Sheffield) universities reported a rise in foreign student applications, mainly Chinese youngsters eschewing the USA.

Left in peace, I spent the afternoon preparing for our short break.  I tried to ascertain which restaurants would be open, but my calls went unanswered.  Packing was inexplicably time-consuming.  Unable to fathom why it took so long, I dropped another scarf on the floor creating more washing!  At dinner-time, Phil returned looking absolutely shattered after his trip to the big city.  “That’s the most people I’ve seen for months!”  “Was it really busy?” “Not compared to what it was like pre-Covid, but still weird.”  “When I see pictures on telly, it looks less busy than here.” “Per square inch, yes.” Thus confirming my suspicions that the public were still avoiding major conurbations and clogging up our small towns instead.

The weekend was taken up finalising blogs, and final preparations for our break away from home.  Saturday, I nipped outdoors to forage on the street for mint and blackberries.  After a fine morning, a shower arrived on cue.  The young couple with the baby were also preparing to leave the house.  “Typical!” We agreed.  But it was worth the sortie, proving more fruitful than Monday’s foray.  Sunday involved an anxious wait for details on how to access the apartment we’d booked.  I eventually spoke to a woman who explained that in the current climate, they released details on the morning of arrival.  As I assured her we would definitely not cancel, she sent them straight away putting my mind at rest. Phew!

With the highest number of infections now detected in young people, there was more bleating about the risk of spreading as students moved around the country.  Matt Cock said all schools were safe (in spite of the rise) and people should go back to offices or the economy would collapse. Insisting ‘all’ workplaces were Covid-secure, he was contradicted by Rabid Raab who said “the economy needs to have people back at work… unless the employer can’t put in place the Covid-secure workplace that we need”.  Stabbings in Birmingham and London left 2 dead.  XR  topped off five days of pointless demos with press blockades.  Did anyone know what their intentions actually were?

Reference:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

Part 25 – The Nudge Unit

A Flurry of Wets

Storm Francis Hits Landfall

On a sunny Monday, I forced myself up to do exercise, in spite of tummy ache. Posting blogs took ages as WordPress changed the format to something called ‘block editor’.  Unable to see how to align photos, I thought of changing back to ‘classic editor’, but that cost money.  I almost cried with frustration!  Eventually, Phil helped figure it out.  Allegedly the change was to make inserted pictures look better but I couldn’t see any difference.  The morning gone, I really wanted some rays but had to wait a while for the gripes to subside.  By the time we were ready to go out it was 3.30.  As usual, Phil needed the shop.  As we made our way to town, insisted on picking berries from a meagre crop of blackberries near the old builder’s yard. In the always-busy centre, we visited a couple of shops and lingered awhile near the river.  Back home, a pile of kids were clambering over our garden bench.  I told them off, then hovered to make sure they behaved, while a woman emerged from next door (probably the mother).  As she started taking photos of the kids posing in front of the wall, I said pointedly: “when you’ve quite finished with my garden, I was going to clean up.”  This was half-true; I had thought earlier of sweeping dead weeds into a binbag before the rubbish was collected early next morning but hadn’t felt up to it.  I  forgo a siesta in an effort to shift the interlopers.  it didn’t!  I swept up regardless and eventually they did move off, with the residents of next door, only to loiter further down the street.  Phil came out and made to help but I advised against it I was almost done and he had clean hands.  Stuffing a bargain quiche in the freezer, I discovered squishy Magnums.  We ate the messy but tasty treats outside to avoid spillages.

Watching catch-up on My5 in the evening, the internet bombed repeatedly.  And each time the programme resumed, we had to watch adverts, including for the thing we were trying to watch!  As the internet flaked out again right near the end of the last episode, we gave up.

Tuesday, I rose slightly later after a decent sleep, performed a few chores and was just about to sit with a cuppa, when the British Gas engineer rang to say he’d be half an hour.   A responsible, physically-distanced visit concluded with him informing us the central heating was functioning well.  Of course he had to give us the spiel about it being an old boiler and offering a quote for a new one.  “We Can’t afford it”.  We said in unison.  “Who’s got money for that type of thing right now?” I added. 

I worked on the journal in the afternoon but became unable to focus.  I briefly rested my eyes then switched to smaller tasks, including trying to book an Ocado delivery to find no decent slots, and texted some friends.  Needing a complete break from technology, I went upstairs, did yoga, and lay down to read and relax.  A variety of external noise made repose impossible.  With the arrival of Storm Francis, traffic splashed through surface water on the main road, goods trains careered by, and works vans revved.  Local news reported that heavy rain had caused flood sirens to sound but amongst the other racket, I didn’t hear them.   In fact, we seemed to get off quite lightly again compared to other areas of the country.  Not that that would be the case with the Co-op bank branch closures.  The lay-offs were bound to badly affect this region.

Boris called the BBC ‘wet’ for announcing they would not be singing the words to patriotic songs at the prom finale.  That was rich from the biggest wet going!  The WHO now advised all people over 12 to wear face-coverings.  Compulsory in school corridors north of the border, Tory MP Marcus WetFish called it ‘scientifically illiterate guff’ while our government refused to change the guidance.  Later, ministers announced a partial U-turn saying that in ‘areas of national intervention’, masks should be worn in transition areas.  Heads rolled in the form of Sally Collier, head of Ofqual (clearly a scapegoat for the recent debacle) followed the next day by DFE Permanent Secretary Jon Slater, with Boris passing the buck on a ‘mutant algorithm’ for the exam results fiasco.

A good day for Astra-Zeneca, they started trials of the catchily-named drug AZD7442.  Consisting of 2 monoclonal antibodies, extracted from people who’d had Covid-19, it was a preventative for those exposed and a curative for those infected with coronavirus, possibly effective for 6 months. Meanwhile, Trump planned emergency authorisation for the vaccine developed by AZ and Oxford University. 

A Brexit Interlude

Brexit Turnip

Newsnight reported on Brexit including a leaked dossier from the Cabinet Office.  Disaster planning included food drops on the Channel Islands, massively increased PPE and testing capacity (sic) and troops on the streets, to mitigate shortages and rioting.  This prompted much mirth at the prospect of turnips for Christmas dinner and a post on ‘Brexit Island’ for the first time in a while.

A Slightly Sad Day for Pie Fans

Overgrown Grocer’s Yard

Tummy issues re-surfaced on Wednesday.  Not helped by watching Jeremy Vine as I became incensed at Carol Gammon not getting challenged on her terrible mask ‘science’ with no one citing the recent research on their effectiveness. My tweet went unacknowledged.  Cleaning the living room rendered me exhausted and irritable.  After a coffee break, I worked on the journal until lunchtime.   Phil said he needed to go to the shop and asked if I wanted to come.  Still feeling uncomfortable, I agreed. On the way, we saw the elusive courgette grower for the first time, pruning his raised beds which take up whole chunks of pavement.  Errands done, we wandered round town and noticed the old grocer’s yard was very overgrown with the cobbles almost indiscernible beneath opportunistic grass and weeds.  Round the corner, we bumped into an old friend for the first time this year.  With similar mental health issues, we chatted about liking lockdown and fighting the system (having both recently won battles).

Last Sunday evening in Kenosha, Wisconsin, Jacob Blake had been shot seven times in the back by police as he entered his car where his children sat.  His family said he was paralysed from waist down.  Protests continued in several US cities and 2 people were shot dead by a white vigilante.  Melania Trump called for calm and not judging people on colour (sentiments not echoed by her husband).

Thursday started better.  A submission for the next issue of Valley Life magazine was due.  I worked on a draft and was quite pleased with ‘Autumn Symphony’ if I say so myself!  On the market, I waited ages at the fish van as the queue hardly moved.  I would never get how some people could afford to buy up practically everything  on the stall, with the price of fish these days!  It made my bit of trout look meagre.

The government announced payments of £13 per day for people on benefits asked to self-isolate in the ‘high risk areas’ of Blackburn, Pendle and Oldham, with possible roll-out if the pilot worked.  Council leaders called the nudge a ‘slap in the face’.  Czechia, Switzerland and Jamaica were added to the travel quarantine list, starting at the now habitual time of 4.00 a.m. Saturday.  A pamphlet was issued saying 5g was safe. I doubted the hippies would take any notice.  It was a sad day for pie-eaters as a Covid-19 outbreak hit Greggs distribution in Leeds. And a sad day for latte-drinkers.  Pret A Manger shed branches and staff, confirming our prediction that all the economic nudging to keep coffee shops afloat was a waste of money. 

A Very Sad Day for Marvel Fans

RIP Black Panther

Friday was positively yukky.  Suitably attired for the stormy conditions, I embarked on the weekly co-op shop.  A woman reached into the chiller cabinet, picked up packs of humus, peered at them for ages then put them back.  Waiting on the other side of the aisle, impatience got the better of me.  As she moved slightly to the side, I took a large stride and reached in to quickly grab what I wanted saying “before you touch very single one!”  Inevitably done in when I got back, I took time to recover before starting work on a 2021 calendar based on my haigas.

Local restrictions were due to be eased from weds 2nd September, for most of Bradford, Calderdale and Kirklees, but not Halifax, Batley, Dewsbury, Bradford City or Keighley.  With the picture also patchy in the GMC area, it looked blatantly racist.  Big news in Metro but not even mentioned on telly news, fast-tracking of licensing was proposed to enable the use of vaccines before the end of the year.  To coincide with the new school term, and with 9/10 people wanting to stay working at home, government planned adverts aimed at getting people back to workplaces. Announced by Grant Shatts, hypocritically from his house, ‘Inside the Nudge Unit’ took pride of place on the bookshelf behind him.  Obviously where he got all his tips.  Printed media reported that they’d threatened redundancy if people stayed away from the office.  The last time I looked, the government had no jurisdiction over individual workplace policies, thus had no right to say that.  Labour MP Lucy Powell called the comments ‘unconscionable’ and Sturgeon said workers should not be intimidated into going into offices.  Indy Sage accused the government of abdicating responsibility, saying what was really needed was a functioning TIT and a ‘workplace charter’ to ensure safety: “Threats and slogans won’t get us out of this pandemic.”

Sadly, Chadwick Boseman aka Black Panther, died aged 43.  He’d suffered with bowel cancer for 4 years but continued working – a great loss to the comic film industry. 

A Rude Awakening

Haiga – Impressions i

Saturday morning, I tried to sleep late but had to get up for the loo.  Bad enough having to go so early, there was then a very loud impatient rapping on the front door.  Phil belatedly started down the stairs, asking “did someone knock?”  “It’s probably kids.  Ignore it.  They’ll be  gone by now anyway.”  Phil went back to bed.  I went down to fetch tea and saw a Post Office card for him with illegible sorting office collection times.  He’d been invited to take part in a trial.  Also from Imperial College, but different to mine, it was to see if he actually had Covid-19.  Having filled in the on-line questionnaire he awaited the testing kit which was probably the contents of the package.

As dismal weather persisted, I worked on the journal and 2021 calendar.  Then I made a banana and date loaf (eating some warm out of the oven with lunch), and  Phil cut my hair.  I was just cleaning up afterwards when he shouted down to the kitchen very loudly, making me jump!  Thinking something bad had happened, he mildly asked what we still needed from the shops.   Gone ages, he eventually returned to say town was packed with drunks outside all the pubs.  The traditional bank holiday weekend shenanigans, despite the awful weather.

Bright at first, Sunday soon reverted to type.  I had a terrible night.  Coupled with dismal conditions, I was disinclined to go out, and Phil equally so.  I continued 2021 calendar designs and nicked the new cover haiku for use in my weekly blog.  The rest of the time, I watched telly, bemoaning the severe lack of Bank Holiday specials – not like the old days!

Days before the new term yet more guidance for schools was issued with different tiers: tier 1 – all in school.  Tier 2 – rota system for secondary pupils, (if  a rise in cases).  Tier 3 – secondary pupils work at home.  Tier 4 – full lockdown (last resort).  Meanwhile, universities warned that students returning risked a ‘second wave’.  They should have thought of that earlier.  ‘Unite for Freedom’, an anti-lockdown protest inhabited Trafalgar Square and coppers broke up illegal gatherings.  There was a huge rave in wales and in WY police issued 8 £10k fines, mostly in Leeds.  A flight from Zante contained infected people.  Appalled fellow passengers claimed TUI didn’t enforce mask-wearing and failed to inform people for 5 days.  In response, the company said a full investigation would take place.

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

Part 24 – Omnishambles

Turkeys Voting For Christmas

A Turkey Voting For Christmas

I continued to be mainly bed-ridden for the first half of the week, observing a mainly grey scene occasionally broken up by thunder and rain.  Phil looked better but left exhausted from pain over the weekend.  Monday, I posted blogs and rested in the afternoon, unusually sleeping for 20 minutes.  Feeling marginally better, I was cheered further by another huge government U-turn, on the A level results fiasco – bullied by a bunch of teenagers having a march!  Phil said it boded well for negotiating trade deals with hard-faced Republicans after a no-deal Brexit!  Gavin Salesman didn’t get sacked although rumours circulated that he had tendered his resignation, to be refused by Boris.  I guessed the Bumbler was waiting for more fiascos with the GCSE results and schools re-opening in September: then Gavin would be for the chop ( as already hinted at).  Later in the week, it emerged Ofqual had made the decision on the A level grades, but Gavin claimed it was his idea.  They just couldn’t stop lying!  Pathological!  

The Railcard people asked for screenshots of full-priced tickets I’d purchased. I sent them on Tuesday, hoping for a refund.  While not promised, why else would they ask? 

I’d been annoyed at the lack of help at mealtimes, for which Phil apologised, saying he was busy.  I kept schtum but if he would  keep working all the time…  while I stayed abed in the afternoon, he embarked on errands, which made him wobbly.  I was really fed up and miserable at us both being ill.  A woman from the other end of the street called round.  While she talked to Phil on the doorstep, I eavesdropped out of view at the top of stairs and caught the odd word; ‘old mill development’ ‘ builders’ ‘ asbestos removal’.  He agreed to be on the e-mail list.  At about 10.00 p.m., she circulated a letter from the Street Action Group (SAG) to the developers, requesting comments by 5 p.m. the next day.  Much too late for me, I planned to look in the morning, but forgot.  I sat up watching Prime, then struggled to stand and berated myself for being out of bed so long.  Regardless of fatigue, I tossed and turned with mind-churn.  Thoughts randomly included the neighbour stuff (why were we only being included in the group now?  Were we an afterthought?)  The meditation soundtrack lulled me in and out of sleep but I didn’t settle properly until 4.00 a.m.

The news that PHE was to be abolished had seeped into the press overnight Sunday/Monday.  In a move to deflect blame from the government, Matt Cock said their pandemic activities would merge with TIT in a new National Institute for Health Protection, effective from next month.  And who got to head up this shiny new body?  Yep.  The incompetent posh Tory wife, Dildo Harding!  The Cock denied cronyism, saying she was the best person for the job.  Even the right-wing press proclaimed ‘omnishambles’.  Where next for Gammons?  If they wouldn’t stand for it, would backbench Tories rebel?  Wasn’t that turkeys voting for Christmas? I predicted a resurgence of Brexit parties if the government collapsed and forced another election.

Moonshot

Haiga – Feeding Time i

Wednesday, I really struggled after only a few hours’ sleep, but forced myself to get changed as my PJ’s stank.  I straightened the bed and opened the window for some fresh air but had to close it sharpish as the dismal weather merged into tropical storm Ellen.   I spent the rest of the day working on the laptop including a ‘response’ to StandUpX.  New research showed face coverings reduced exposure to droplets by x10k, providing more ammunition and a useful illustration.  Not that it stopped the hippies and gammons continuing to protest and spread misinformation about mask-wearing. (See image below).

The Cock hit the headlines again, bleating about mass population testing.  The ‘moonshot’ tag made no sense.  What the hell did that mean?  Blair resurfaced to say the government were ‘running out of time’ to avoid a ‘second wave’.  In Greater Manchester, the organiser of a Gorton house party last Saturday claimed only 20 people were invited but she had a massive gazebo in the garden.  A ‘closure order’ banned anyone visiting for 3 months; effectively a ‘house lockdown’.  Oldham faced possible pub closures while the mayor said it was pointless as people would just go to other areas within GMC and Yorks (was that why our town was always packed?)

Warm sun made a brief return on Thursday.  Somewhat recovered and less fatigued after a better night, I performed a few stretching exercises in spite of the persistent achiness and tummy issues.  Phil queried the rules about wearing masks in cinemas but not if eating: “so you could just continuously scoff popcorn.  Then you wouldn’t need to wear one”.   I spent the morning sat on the bed dealing with admin on the laptop.  The Researcher had sent a mini-update on the project to which I replied but heard nothing further.  I jotted down a very short list of presents for my birthday in a few weeks’ time.  The thing about not buying stuff is you realise you don’t need any of it!

Wild Carrot

Lunchtime, I felt up to getting out in the sun and suggested going to a café with outdoor seating.  The town centre inevitably heaved.  We wandered up to the outdoor market.  A dismal affair.  Useful stallholders were absent, the gaps filled with pointless crap – on the one day it was meant to be real stuff!

We found a table outside the Turkish place and basked in sunshine.  Eating al fresco at the med-style café as people strolled up and down in summer garb and buskers played, gave a holiday feel. 

We visited a couple of charity shops. Phil found an old camera and I bought books (I got through novels at break-neck speed this year).  After some aimless wandering, we sat on a bench near the old bridge.  A crop of wild carrots studded with red poppies and yellow flowers attracted my attention, but the stench of dog poo and a fly infestation made me retreat from taking close-ups.  Across the river, kids in baseball caps threw food at ducks.  A small filming crew of a woman and two men came and stood by the railings. “Are we disturbing you?” they asked “No, we were going anyway.” One of the men said: “you don’t have to on our account.  You won’t be in it and if you are, we’ll glam you up with the make-up kit.”  “Are you saying we need glamming up?”  I asked.  “I meant him.” (indicating Phil).  “I meant him too!”   Phil asked what they were filming and the woman told us it was a short film about businesses’ flood resilience.  A good location for that.  Back home, I lay down again but unbale to rest, I went out to potter in the garden and bring flowers in.  An earwig wove round the petals of a hydrangea bloom so I had to take it out again.

U Turn If U Want To…

U Turn

Scientists at UCL claimed contact-tracing apps were unlikely to reduce the spread of coronavirus.  Even if 80% of us used them, other measures were needed such as closure of indoor spaces.   Meanwhile, kids were revealed as silent ‘super-spreaders’.  They carried more virus when apparently healthy than seriously ill adults.  Portugal was removed from the quarantine list but Croatia, Austria and Trinidad & Tobago were added.  The government ignored Simon Calder’s plea to give more notice: effective from 04.00 Sunday, no flights were due to leave Croatia until after that time.  Having been caught out himself, Shatts said things changed quickly and only travel if you are content to be quarantined when you come back.

It was reported that a boy of 16  from Sudan died crossing the channel in a dinghy, with a shovel for an oar. It later transpired he was a man of 26, but still a tragic casualty.  Nasty Patel was accused of heartlessness. Pierre-Henri Dumont, National Assembly representative for the Calais region exclaimed: “How much will it take for the British to regain an ounce of humanity?”  Detention Action, said: “We have repeatedly warned (Patel) it was only a matter of time before her toxic policy to deny safe and legal routes to the UK would cost lives. This death lies firmly at her door.”

Back on the exams front, record high GCSE grades were awarded following yet another U-turn and another reprieve for Gavin Salesman.  Pearson’s delayed BTEC results, allegedly to be in line with higher A level marks.

Friday morning, Phil received a flurry of messages from SAG.  All the neighbours were going outside at 9.30 to berate the developers for placing the asbestos suction machine too far into the road.  What on earth did they expect them to do?  Years ago, we attended a meeting to challenge the old mill development.  The woman now leading the SAG’s main gripe was that people in the proposed flats opposite would see her knickers.  A local expert on the matter informed her this would not be enough to overturn the planning permission, but a lack of infrastructure and parking might.  A few of us agreed to take photos of the street at different times of the day to demonstrate how little space there was.  As far as I know, I was the only one that did.  Anyway, we lost that battle.  I was glad I’d been left out of it this time!   I tackled the worst of the grime in the kitchen and went to the co-op.  We needed quite a big shop so Phil came to help carry stuff back.  Dry when we set off, a ton of rain suddenly threw itself down.  A man just about to exit swore: “where the fuck did that come from?”  “The sky,” Phil giggled.  We waited inside until the deluge abated somewhat and made our soggy way home.  Things got fraught, sorting the purchases, washing bottles, and stuffing things in the fridge.  Exhausted, I collapsed on the sofa.  After lunch, I researched places to stay in Southport for my birthday.  The favoured Clifton Spa was shut until further notice, which was a pain. I’d expected the large hotel to be safely open and anticipated a dip in the pool should the weather be too inclement for walking.  Further searching uncovered a small self-catering apartment which I reserved.

As the R rate increased to as much as 1.1, restrictions were lifted in Wigan, Rossendale, and Darwen, but increased in Oldham, Blackburn and Pendle (no socialising or non-essential travel, but pubs stayed open).  I hoped we didn’t face a similar scenario, disrupting birthday trip plans (at least we could cancel our accommodation for free up to 4th Sept.).  The M&S sandwich factory in Northants shut and The Cock rabbited about fines for non-compliance with quarantine. The tenant eviction ban was extended by 4 weeks; nowhere near enough to avoid an increase in homelessness in time for Christmas.  Government debt reached £2 trillion, more than GDP, while Apple hit a net worth of £1.5 trillion.  Almost enough to buy us out!

A Series of Slightly Unfortunate Events

Response To StandUpX

On a changeable Saturday characterised by miniscule sunny spells amidst squally showers, I stayed home, wrote a haiku and fixed things – dead watches, jewellery and a phone stylus.  Phil joined in the maintenance to replace overhead bulbs in the kitchen so we had light at last, and bodged the bedroom door which kept sticking (taking longer than anticipated of course).  He also popped to the shop amid an alarming shower.  As the rain became heavier, it was positively scary-sounding late into the night.

Sunday, I awoke fuzzy from mediocre sleep and watched aghast as a stupid woman on Sunday Morning Live said not everyone wanted a coronavirus vaccine as they might get tracked.  This reference to the idiotic Bill Gates conspiracy nonsense went unchallenged!

Witless claimed the risks from kids missing school was greater than the adverse effects from coronavirus.  Police reported more than 100 illegal gatherings over the weekend, including a rave in Deighton, Huddersfield.  Boris planned to increase fines of up to £1,000 in time for the bank holiday weekend.  I doubted that would stop them!

Unsure what to do on another wet day, I cleaned the bathroom leading to a series of slightly unfortunate events.  As I shook rugs out the window, bits of hair and grit went everywhere creating another chore, then I managed to drag a scarf under my foot from the bedroom to the bathroom meaning I had to handwash it, then the tap fell to bits!  Exacerbated, I noted the sun momentarily made an appearance and I considered going outdoors, when clouds immediately returned.  I switched to sewing and settled in front of the telly, to be irritated further by an intermittent signal!  Thoroughly fed up, I then developed a nasty stitch in my side just before dinner.  It eased of slightly after eating but I could barely keep my eyes open and went to bed early.  Regardless of the tiredness, sleep eluded me for some time.

Reference:

i. My  haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com