Wednesday, 5 November 2025

D is for Dad

 I've mentioned before that I never knew my Dad, he was killed in a motorbike accident in 1954, a few months before I was born. I always knew that and there were photographs in the house but he was rarely talked about after Mum married his older brother when I was 3 years old. 


Apart from photographs I only have a few bits belonging to him. He did his National Service after the war in the RAF and I believe was posted to the Isle of Man. He certainly went somewhere by boat as I have a berthing card.


The brass trivet was made when he was an engineering  machinist at ICI. And somewhere around is his locker key for ICI (large paint manufacturer then based in Stowmarket, Mum worked in the testing lab there after leaving school which I suppose is how they met). I also have a set of parallel rulers of his that would have been used by a navigator in a plane.

I often wonder how different life might have been had he lived. 

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Tuesday, 4 November 2025

C is for Crime Fiction

 I mainly read crime fiction - you may have noticed! But Why?

I think it's because  they have a proper ending and don't make me cry. I prefer police procedural and nothing too cosy or psychological. Quite choosy really. I abandon anything that I don't like quite quickly and love to find a good  author that I've not read before who has already written several books. 
One good thing that has happened is the reprinting of books from the 40's, 50s and 60's by publishers like British Library Crime Classics. So many authors wrote good stories that were lost and never reprinted at the time.

Below is my 'Emergency Supply' of crime fiction on my shelves. These are in case I run out of library books or I need something that I know can be read without great mental effort!




I long ago decided not to tackle anything  'heavy',  classic, highbrow etc - I can't be bothered to improve my knowledge even though some people class crime as light and easy reading- it suits me.

Hope the mobile library will bring me another good collection of mainly crime fiction next week.

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Monday, 3 November 2025

B is for Blackthorn

It's been almost a year since I mentioned the Ogham Tree Alphabet on the blog .

This is what I wrote way back in 2020, when I found Karen Cater's book about it and started taking photos and writing about all the trees mentioned in the book.


The Ogham Alphabet is the only native British writing system devised over 2,000 years ago and carved using notches onto wood or stone.

I had heard of this way of writing from the Sister Fidelma Books by Peter Tremayne -the first few of these I read years ago before they became very repetitive.

It turns out that in the Ogham Alphabet each letter is also a tree and a number and part of the calendar or actually the other way round..........each tree is a letter and number and a month or day of the year.


Over the last 5 years I've written about most of the trees mentioned in the book but not the Blackthorn. I took the photo above way back in the late summer or early autumn, when I noticed how many sloes there were on a tree in a car park. It's been sitting in drafts waiting for after the Autumn equinox because the Blackthorn is the tree that rules the dark half of the year, giving the strength to survive the winter month.

 The tree represents the letter S and the number 14.


Blackthorn wood is dense and strong and the thorns can cause infection. The wood is used for the Irish Shillelagh a walking stick or cudgel. And it was said that if a witch pointed a stick of Blackthorn at a pregnant woman she would miscarry.
 Vast numbers of sloe stones have been found in ancient archaeological sites although now we find them far too sour to eat.
It is thought that the Crown of Thorns that Jesus was crucified with was made from blackthorn and a blackthorn winter is a spell of cold weather just as the blackthorn blossoms during the days of the Ice Saints.



This lovely illustration by Karen Cater shows the whole year of trees for the alphabet.




All the other posts about the Ogham Tree Alphabet are here if you want to look at them.

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