Friday, 29 August 2025

Enthusiasm

 

Enthusiasm

We can all get carried away from time to time. A university lecturer I knew a long time ago wanted to follow the trend for extremely curly hair, but didn’t want to have a perm. Somehow, he discovered that washing his hair in laundry powder – I believe it was ‘Persil’ – would create the same effect. I think he overdid it, because eventually his hair started falling out. He had to forego fashion to save his hair. It ruined his love life, too.

Another man of my husband’s acquaintance was taking part in the London Marathon many years ago. He was raising money for charity, as so many competitors do, and, in a moment of patriotic enthusiasm, had a union flag painted onto his hair.

All went well, the race was run, and then he attempted to wash out the colours. Unfortunately, he was unsuccessful. As the CEO of a serious organisation, he was expected to present a sober front at work. Nothing he tried worked, and in desperation he contacted his doctor. The doctor was unable to help, either, so perhaps the poor man had to call in sick for a while.

Thursday, 28 August 2025

Defaced Blue Ensign

 

Defaced Blue Ensign

‘Ensign’ has a couple of meanings. In the British army it used to be the lowest ranked commissioned officer, now known as a second lieutenant. In the US navy an ensign is the lowest commissioned officer.

The ensign referred to here is a flag.

In the 17th century, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the English fleet was organised in three squadrons for more efficient deployment. In order of precedence, they were plain unadorned flags ranked red, blue, and white.

In the mid-nineteenth century, the Royal Navy standardised its flags. The White Ensign was assigned to RN warships, the Red Ensign was reserved for merchant ships, and the Blue Ensign was allocated to ships commanded by Royal Naval Reserve officers. This change meant that the Blue Ensign became a symbol of official service.

The Blue Ensign is deep blue with the Union Flag in the top left corner. It can be flown by British government ships, merchant ships under the command of RN Reserve officers, and some privileged yacht clubs, like the Royal Yacht Squadron.

When an ensign is defaced, it is not vandalised or despoiled. It simply has been modified with an emblem added to it to signify which organisation is using it. Below are some examples of defaced Blue Ensigns.


Defaced Blue Ensign of Wales

Defaced Blue Ensign of Metropolitan Police

Defaced Blue Ensign of Bermuda



Wednesday, 27 August 2025

 

    The oddest thing
                                     Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons


If you are easily offended by less than standard English, please do not read on. Actually, it's language that's extremely standard for some!

After months of not being able to post any live video clips, I uploaded one recently. It didn’t work for me, but I left it in situ anyway. The oddest thing was that it seemed to play for others.

I looked back at it for the umpteenth time and to my surprise was able to watch it, if not in glorious technicolour, at least with some semblance of life!

Be prepared now to be bored by a succession of videos!

It transpires that it’s not that straightforward. There’s a degree of fiddling about (technical term) to be done in order to make it viable. Changing the bit rate, you understand (I don’t)

Then the in-house guru did even more research, muttering the while about ‘poorly written programs, but it’s free isn’t it?’ or, as some soldiers have been known to express it, ‘The f***ing f***er's f***ed, sir’ preferably with a broad Glaswegian accent (apologies to any Scots out there!) That expression unambiguously and completely sums up the problem.

Now we have a solution. ‘YouTube Studio’ is the answer to a maiden’s matron’s prayer, apparently.

So, to celebrate, here is a short video that Barry made while walking Arthur a few days ago. We see many dog walkers in the area – there are probably a dozen dog-walking businesses, some more ‘controlled’ than others.

In case you cannot quite make it out, that is a multi-coloured standard poodle bouncing along, ahead of more conventionally-coloured dogs. He seems a happy boy and cannot tell that he is not quite as other dogs!

        *I have changed the setting from private to public, so the video should be viewable now. 

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

A life on the ocean wave . . .

 

A life on the ocean wave . . .

 . . . well, Solent, anyway.

                                    Kat, Callum, Hailey and Melia 

Callum ‘phoned. He was taking Kat and the children to the boat, just to familiarise them with it, though Hailey is too young to do more than just sit and look. Kat was intending to take the children home after a couple of hours, so Callum asked if Barry would be interested in going for a sail.

    Melia gets to grips with ship to shore technology in the navigatorium.

Barry hasn’t been down to the boat for an exceptionally long time, with things like sepsis and pneumonia and associated problems disturbing the natural order of things. He agreed he would like a day’s sailing. It’s always enjoyable for him as he doesn’t have to do anything, just keep an eye on things and issue occasional instructions while Callum does the rest very capably.


                            Callum takes his ease before setting sail

Susannah, at home with us for the weekend, said she would drive, as she would like to see her nephew and meet her great-nieces.

Hamble Point Marina is just over an hour away from us, and they set off shortly after 9.00. Callum lives much closer, so his journey is significantly shorter.

Marnie and Dean joined the party later with their two children, who are old enough to take on some of the tasks. It was a lovely day, with light airs, blue sky, and a pleasant amount of sun.

                                            Fergus and Isla
They had a wonderful day, avoiding the Isle of Wight ferries and the cruise liners. The Solent is a remarkably busy stretch of water, but big enough that close encounters of the sailing kind are easily avoided. 

Barry brings the boat alongside after a most enjoyable day

(I don't know whether the video will play! Just checked - it won't.)

Plans are afoot for the future. Gareth and Elliot fancy a day out, too.

 
Defaced blue ensign, ASA
It can only be flown when Barry is aboard 

Monday, 25 August 2025

 

Short back and sides . . .

Wellingtonia Avenue, Crowthorne
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

  Arthur had an appointment with the dog groomer on Saturday. Susannah unexpectedly had the opportunity to go sailing with Barry, so I said I’d take him to his ‘hairdresser.’

At first, I couldn’t think where the grooming salon was and then realised it’s where the old ‘Iron Duke’ pub used to stand. It was pulled down several years ago and in its place is a small parade of shops, including the dog groomers ‘Dog Scents,’ a pet food shop and a small development of houses in Iron Duke Close.

Sir Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington 
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

‘Iron Duke’ was a nickname for the Duke of Wellington. There are a lot of nods to Wellington in Crowthorne as his estate is just a few miles away at Stratfield Saye. Wellington College, our local independent (fee-paying) school was founded in his memory in 1859.

Duke’s Ride references his love of hunting in Windsor Forest. The Waterloo Hotel sat between Dukes Ride and Waterloo Road and was closed ten years ago and later demolished.

Wellesley Court is a gated development of apartments and Wellesley Drive is a small estate of predominantly detached houses. Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley was the 1st Duke of Wellington.

Wellingtonia (Californian redwood, (Sequoiadendron giganteum)

There is also Wellingtonia Avenue, a road lined with giant redwood trees (Sequoiadendron giganteum) They are known in Britain as Wellingtonia, to honour the said duke. The Americans wanted to call them ‘Washingtonia’ after George Washington. They were beaten to the draw by the botanist William Lobb. Lobb returned posthaste to Britain in 1853 with seeds and seedlings collected from the huge conifers. The trees soon became status symbols in grand estates, though they will never achieve the height and girth of their Californian relatives.

I duly dropped Arthur off. He’s not very keen on going to the salon, but I left him in the capable hands of the groomers and picked him up an hour and a half later. He nearly turned himself inside out when he saw me, such was his excitement and relief. He looked neat and tidy, as though he’d lost several pounds in weight, and smelt wonderful.

Arriving home, he was greeted rapturously by Roxy and particularly enthusiastically by Gilbert. A few hours later, Barry and Susannah returned, and the whole tail-wagging exercise was enacted again.

This morning, very early, Susannah, Arthur and the cats decamped for London, and the house is ours alone again. I hope we shall see them all again soon.

Sunday, 24 August 2025

Bad dream

 

Bad dream

Bilbo Baggins said, ‘Not all those who wander are lost,’ but I was.

 I was driving an unfamiliar car, following directions that led me into alleyways, cul de sacs, restaurants, private receptions. I was despairing of ever finding my way home when my eldest daughter appeared. When I asked her if she knew the way, she said, ‘Of course, I do. Follow me.’

She set off at a spanking pace and I attempted to follow but was delayed by something and by the time I had extricated myself she had long disappeared. I drove past a hog roast in a front garden several times and ended up in an hotel room, without the car. I vacated the room, and resumed my fruitless journey, unable to locate any road signs that might give me an indication of where I might be. At one point, I reversed into another car, for no apparent reason, damaging both vehicles, didn’t stop to inform anyone and continued driving.

It was a relief to wake up, but I felt so tired after the anxiety of my dreamt journey. Periodically, I have dreams of being lost, though usually in a familiar location, where I will eventually discover a route I know, so this was quite unusual. 

                            Tonight I shall sleep soundly, I hope!                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Saturday, 23 August 2025

Letters

 

 

Letters

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

This is an old post, rehashed.

When Mary heard the clatter of the letterbox flap, old memories were reawakened. She recalled how her heart would leap in anticipation and then be overwhelmed with disappointment. Many days, the mail brought only bills and she would sigh and shake her head over the buff envelopes, and hope that the next day would deliver a letter from David. Some days a bundle of letters dropped onto the mat and she would smile as she put them in date order, deferring the pleasure of reading them until she could sit in her favourite chair and carefully open them.

Every time she slit the envelope, she imagined she could catch David’s scent. She read the letters quickly, passing her fingers lightly across the words. Then she would read them again, more slowly, savouring the dearly-loved handwriting. Every pen stroke was precious and proof of David’s love for her.

My Darling,

                It has been so long since I held you in my arms and kissed your lovely face. I miss you more and more with each passing day and cannot wait to be with you once again.

              A few of us had shore leave last night and went out on the town. It’s not much of a town and there wasn’t much to see, but it was good to be on terra firma again. Getting’s one’s sea legs is one thing, bur regaining one’s land legs is quite another. I smile when I remember how you laughed at my rolling gait the last time I was home on leave.

           I wish I could tell you more of my daily life, but you know that’s not possible. One day . . .! Maybe that day will come soon – I’m sure we all hope so. Until then, be patient my darling, and know that I love you with all my heart. I long for the day when we can be together again forever, you, me and our children. Am I presuming too much? You do want children, don’t you? I know you do – didn’t we decide on five? They will be the most beautiful ever seen, I know. I will never do anything to hurt you, my dearest one, my angle. Keep safe, sweet one.  

                                        Yours always and forever,

David x

Mary giggled a little at David’s spelling of ‘angel’ but loved him all the more for not being absolutely perfect. She brought the letter to her face and sniffed it. David’s hands had been the last to touch it – well, she knew that wasn’t strictly true; all mail had to be censored, but she thought the people who did that must recognise love letters and skim them quickly, almost without touching them.

She must write back immediately. During his last leave, David had told her how important letters were to all the men and how they brought some normality and a sense of home with them.  She had promised then that she would write every single day. Sometimes it was hard to think what to write. Her life was very ordinary, her days spent reading or sewing, sometimes gardening or learning a new piece of piano music. On the most trying days, she enclosed a pressed flower and told David something about it – where she’d picked it and what the weather had been like on that day.

She sat at her writing desk, looking out over the garden, one finger gently touching her lips, remembering David’s ardent kisses. She picked up her pen and unscrewed the cap.

My dearest David,

                             It gave me such joy to receive your letter this morning. It makes the sun shine brighter, the birds sing more sweetly, the sky bluer. Such nonsense, I know, my darling, but truly your letters lift my spirit in a way nothing else can, apart from your presence, of course.

                       Naturally I understand the secrecy that must necessarily surround all of you. I would not have it otherwise and no-one I know thinks any differently.

                      I’m sorry the town wasn’t up to much, though part of me feels quite glad. I should not like to think of you being tempted by glamorous ladies in smart clubs. No, don’t worry, my love – I know your heart belongs to me. Have you not told me so often enough? And are you not a respectable married man? Yes, I do want children – the more the merrier, I think, but five will do to start with.

                Keep safe, my darling. I love you and I always will.

                                   Your Mary xxx

Mary bent to pick up the mail, groaning a little. Her back felt worse this morning, after a restless night. She sifted through the pile, muttering at the proliferation of unwanted flyers and impersonal business letters. She tossed them onto the hall table – they would keep until later. For now she would take her tea onto the patio and sit in the morning sunshine and listen to the birds.

It had been just such a morning when David’s last letters were delivered, but she had delayed opening them immediately. It had been a shock, receiving them from beyond the grave, as it were, for the telegram informing her of David’s death had arrived only the day before.

Mary gazed at her wrinkled hands and felt afresh the emptiness in her heart, less agonising now, more of a dull ache. There had been no children, no little part of her beloved husband to cherish. At least she still had his letters and that was as much as she had known of him during those long months he had spent at sea. She also had the letters she had written to him. They had been returned unopened and that was how they had remained. She needed no reminders of the optimism and love she had felt.

She sighed and stood up. ’Life must go on,’ she chided herself, but some days she wondered why.

Friday, 22 August 2025

 

The Dorset Family

No photographs of the Dorset Family! No opportunities, so here's a photograph of Arthur this morning, saying, 'It's about time we went out for a walk!'

On Tuesday evening I had a call from my eldest daughter, asking if it would be all right for her to visit the following day. She had been intending to descend on us without warning, but her elder daughter said, ‘Mum, haven’t you read Janice’s blog? She said that it's lovely to see people, but a little advance notice would be helpful.’

I was surprised at that. I didn’t know that Marnie read my blog. Anyway, Gillian took the advice to heart. On Wednesday, Gillian, her daughters, one son-in-law and all six of her grandchildren arrived. Their dogs remained in Dorset.

Five-month-old Hailey was passed to me and sat happily on my knee watching her cousins. The other three girls, Marnie’s daughter, Isla, who is twelve, Kiri’s daughter, Ariella, four, and Callum’s daughter Melia, two and a half, did what girls usually do. They settled down on the floor with paper and coloured pencils, then gravitated to construction toys with gears and cogs. It’s clear that they spend a lot of time together, giving, taking, and working cooperatively.

Fergus, who is nearly eleven, concentrated on playing with the dogs, particularly Gilbert. He is very much at ease with animals.

 Luca was busy pressing buttons and investigating the contents of cupboards and drawers. He will be three in October and is ‘into everything’ as the saying goes. He needs a dedicated full-time adult to monitor his actions, and prevent them if necessary possible. He found the cat litter tray especially interesting. The texture of the granules was pleasing as it poured through his fingers. Naturally, the more he was dissuaded from investigating it, the greater was the fascination. Fortunately, the tray only contained unused litter! The cats were prowling around, quite unaffected by the sudden influx of people, particularly small ones.

Gilbert and Arthur were intrigued by the baby and gently licked her toes, which she seemed to enjoy. Roxy, of course, is an old hand paw with little humans, and knew which ones to attend, principally Luca, who was waving his food around in a tantalising manner.

Barry took Marnie and Dean into the garden, to pick apples and plums, of which there are an abundance. All the children, apart from Hailey, had a turn around the garden – such a Regency phrase!

Our garden is no longer a children’s space, in the sense that they cannot play football, cricket, or tennis in it, or ride their bikes, but it is full of interest. We have tried to divide it into ‘rooms’ with a winding path and arches which support a variety of climbing plants. Actually, it’s more the case that the plants support the arches now.

Marnie was in seventh heaven. Her ambition is to have a self-sufficient garden. She already grows a few vegetables, but has plans for much more when she and Dean can acquire a house with a bigger garden.

She came back into the house laden with fruit, a branch (!) of bay leaves to dry, thyme, oregano, a number of different mint plants, which she can root on, and a great quantity of cobnuts. She and Paul, her father, have been engaged in creating chutneys and pies. The crab apples are not ripe, so she will have to make a return journey to pick those for crab apple jelly. I haven’t made that for some years now as somehow everything in sight gets covered in stickiness.

They had to leave early as Fergus had a football match near Blandford. He’s a tall boy and plays goalkeeper, like his sister, Isla, and just as his mother used to.

All too soon, the house was relatively empty again and peace descended. The dogs and cats slept well, Gilbert retiring to (our) bed shortly after his supper at 6:30.

Tonight, there will be more upheaval for Arthur when Susannah returns. He will be so excited. He’s a lovely little dog, very faithful and affectionate and we shall miss him when he returns to London with Susannah and her cats.

Thursday, 21 August 2025

Alaska

 

Alaska

Alaskan sunset

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Why did Russia sell Alaska?

Russia discovered Alaska in the first half of the eighteenth century, claiming the coast for the Russian Empire in 1741. The first settlement was made on Kodiak Island in 1784, but it didn’t become a formal colony for another fifteen years.

Few Russians settled in Alaska, finding it inhospitable. Primarily, they traded in sea otter skins, which were popular with the Chinese, because of their fine, soft quality. Sea otters had been hunted almost to extinction by the first half of the nineteenth century.

Whaling and fishing were secondary pursuits, with a trade in ivory from walrus tusks. Timber and ice were plentiful and were sometimes supplied to Russia and, on occasion, to California.

In 1867, impoverished by its three-year war (1853-1856) and eventual defeat in the Crimea, Russia desperately needed money to return the country to some stability.

The US Secretary of State, William Seward, agreed to buy Alaska from the Russian Empire for $7.2 million. It was thought at the time to be an expensive, foolish purchase, and was denigrated as ‘Seward’s Folly’ and ‘Seward’s Icebox.’ The procurement added more than 586,000 square miles to the US, but no-one thought the remote territory a worthwhile economic purchase. There is historical disagreement over that opinion.

However, almost thirty years later, in 1896, gold was discovered. That precipitated the Klondike Gold Rush, which, followed by the discovery of oil, ensured that the acquisition of Alaska came to be celebrated.                                                             

Would Russia attempt to ‘reclaim’ Alaska one day?

Wednesday, 20 August 2025

Berries and crops

 

Berries and crops

                                        Taken through glass. 

Juvenile woodpigeon, in foreground, and adult on pyracantha.

In July we noticed rowan berries ripening in the woods, and that seemed exceedingly early. Rowan berries normally start colouring up in late August.

I caught the tail end of a report on the radio, suggesting that autumn and particularly winter would be challenging times for wildlife this year. The long, hot, dry summer has led to trees losing their leaves prematurely, and unripe acorns and fir cones are also dropping. Nature’s larder may not be able to provide so readily for the little creatures that rely on it.

In the garden, the berries on the brambles have also ripened early. Most noticeable have been the pyracantha bushes. The red berries are already being greedily and speedily consumed by wood pigeons. The orange and yellow berries are always later to ripen, but it seems that they, too, will be earlier than usual this year.

Farmers are warning that some vegetables will be more expensive. A strange weather system has given heatwaves and, in some areas, record rainfall, which has resulted in sodden fields and poor yields. For example, broccoli production is down by 50%.

I suspect that many root vegetables will be in shorter supply than usual. Carrots have increased in price by more than 34% in two years, mainly due to flooded fields.

The answer is clear. If you have the energy and the determination, ‘growing your own’ is the route to follow.


Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Dappled

 

Dappled Sunday


                                        Dappled Connemara pony
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

It was beautiful in the woods this morning, with the sun slanting through the trees, casting dappled light on the peaty ground.

The first lines of a verse came into my mind:

  I had a little pony,
His name was Dapple Grey.

I couldn’t remember the rest of it, so looked it up when I reached home. Somehow, I wish I hadn’t!

This is the traditional English nursery rhyme:

  I had a little pony,
His name was Dapple Grey;
I lent him to a lady
To ride a mile away.

She whipped him, she slashed him,
She rode him through the mire;
I would not lend my pony now,
For all the lady’s hire.

It probably dates back to the 1800s. Iona and Peter Opie, in ‘The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes’ suggest that it originated about 1825.

I discovered another version, which was popular in USA:

I had a little horse, his name was Dapple Grey,
His legs were made of cornstalks, his body made of hay.
I saddled him and bridled him and rode him off to town,
Up came a puff of wind, and blew him up and down.
The saddle flew off, and I let go -
Now didn’t my horse make a pretty little show?

Saturday, 16 August 2025

 

No post

 

No post today.

Nothing to say.

Too much going on in the background.

Cast down by events.

Nothing life-threatening.

Back soon.

Friday, 15 August 2025

Summer visitors

 

Summer visitors

Arthur goes to bed with at least one toy.

Arthur has come to stay for a couple of weeks while his owner visits the South of France for a few days. It is a working holiday for her. She was recently made redundant but managed to get another short-term contract, so is working remotely. She has gone with a pregnant friend whose parents have a holiday home there.

Arthur was always going to stay with us, but the cats had to come, too. The cat-sitting arrangements fell through while Susannah waited for confirmation of her new job. Solomon, Lenny, and Zula are safely ensconced in what we laughingly call the South Wing, East Wing, West Wing?? another part of the house anyway, where she and Frankie lived for almost six years. It’s just the three old bedrooms of our children, nothing spectacular.

Herschel and Jellicoe are fascinated and sit near the dividing door when I go in to ‘see to the cats.’ Arthur dances around outside, not desperate to visit his housemates. They are not nearly as tolerant as our felines, who give him a good ignoring while attempting to steal his food.

                                        Stopping for a portrait

Arthur is a very obedient little dog – a working Cocker spaniel, with boundless energy and the sweetest nature. Out of the house for a walk, he dashes hither and yon, but never goes far from whoever is walking him, currently Barry. He is polite to other dogs and people but is not really interested in them. Susannah has trained him exceptionally well. He is a great companion for her and an alert guard dog, though he would greet any intruder with immense joy.

I now have two dogs at my feet. Dogs seem to need more contact and reassurance than bitches. Roxy comes to us now and again for attention, but she’s much more independent than the boys. I suppose that’s the nature of the beast. The girls instinctively nurture their young.

 
Ready for morning cuddles

Thursday, 14 August 2025

Summer holiday

 

Summer holiday

                                    Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

It’s lovely to live in an attractive part of the world, though it can be a disadvantage if hordes descend upon it for their summer holiday. Generally, it’s the coastal regions that spring to mind, but there are other bucolic areas that attract holidaymakers.

I have no wish to mention the name of one particular American visitor to the unspoilt loveliness of the Cotswolds. He has as much right as anyone to a vacation, though I understand he has had several already since being appointed to his role as 2iC USA. He and his family and a large cohort of security ‘people’ have descended upon Dean, a picturesque hamlet in Oxfordshire. It and its environs are home to many slebs, including Jeremy Clarkson, David Beckham, Ellen DeGeneres, and former Prime Minister David Cameron. The locals are accustomed to seeing ‘famous’ faces and are unfazed by them.

However, 2iC’s advent has caused enormous disruption in the area, with public access being closed and local residents having to prove their identity as they attempt to go about their daily lives. Though it may only be for a few days, it has drawn attention to 2iC in a quite remarkable way, inflating his profile, as he travels from A to B in his 29-vehicle motorcade.

To put it into some sort of perspective, 1iC, the Orange One, has a circus of forty or fifty vehicles. Putin has around twelve vehicles and Xi Jinping about ten (in China) The French President has three to five vehicles, while the German Chancellor has around six. The Japanese Emperor has three to five vehicles, and the Dutch Prime Minister has one of two, or perhaps a bicycle.

As the UK Prime Minister fulfils his                                                                                 duties, his motorcade consists of four to six vehicles, though that number may increase for high-risk situations or state visits.

Meanwhile a typical Royal motorcade would involve between three and six vehicles, with more for state occasions and visits.

The question that comes all too readily to mind is whether 2iC is practising for a more significant role in the future?

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Wednesday, 13 August 2025

Steam fairs

 

Steam fairs

Today, the Glorious Twelfth, has felt like a Saturday all day long. It’s also hot.

We all have different interests and hobbies. Sometimes they overlap, perhaps the most obvious one being photography.

My eldest daughter and son-in-law spend many summer weekends at steam fairs across the country. It is a way for Gillian to ensure that Paul is released from the constant calls for him to sort out someone’s plumbing. He’s a reliable, hard-working plumber and has a reputation for charging fair rates. In fact, he doesn’t charge what he's worth, which is another reason his work is in demand. He has an abiding interest in military vehicles, not surprising, I suppose, since his father was in the army and Paul lived in army quarters for much of his young life.

He enjoys repairing vehicles and preparing them for exhibition. A few years ago, he acquired a 1956 Daf YA Dutch Army Weapons Carrier. He tinkered with it, found authentic spare parts, and eventually drove it to rallies. Then he painted a twin-axle caravan to match – olive drab! – and hauled that along, too.

Following that, he bought a Bombardier military motorcycle and a Hillman 12 RAF staff car. His daughters Marnie and Kiri take it in turns to drive the car. I’m not sure how the motorbike gets to the steam fairs – in the Daf, I suppose, along with the dogs.


Sometimes, Gillian and Paul go to rallies on their own. At other times, one or two of their children accompany them with their families, towing a more conventional-looking caravan – that is, not olive drab.


Luca, 2, and Ariella, 4, in camouflage outfits!

It’s a grand way to escape from the humdrum of daily life. The rallies are held in fairly remote locations in large fields, so there’s plenty of room for dogs and small children to play safely. Many connections are made, and much knowledge and experience are gained. Paul returns with ever more plans and Gillian smiles and leaves him to it.