February 27, 2008 at 11:10 pm
· Filed under Random Thoughts, Life As We Know It, Behaviour · Posted by Sephe
Part of the joy of pets is the fact that they play. In fact cats and dogs play but I don’t think hamsters do, unless you count their treadmill. I’ve never seen a rabbit do much more than munch or sleep but to be fair I have never kept one. As for fish, maybe they play chase.
I had a friend that kept white rats. Apparently they do play but the thought of being close enough to find out gives me the willies. Ferrets also play apparently as well as running up trouser legs.
There are some free range pigs not far from here and while the adults sleep the piglets roll around and chase each other through the mud as well as fighting over food.
I’m not keen on caged birds but was left two elderly budgies when their owner died. I tried to give them some freedom by letting them out of the cage for a fly around (indoors) but they were agoraphobic. Budgies do play though. They like bells, mirrors, ladders and swings and will wind each other up like children.
Wild animals romp around and play and it’s not just confined to the young. Most adult animals continue to play, but some humans find it harder. I’m not quite sure where I’m going with this but maybe it doesn’t need a resolution anymore than play does.
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February 26, 2008 at 10:50 pm
· Filed under Life As We Know It · Posted by Sephe
Devoted to our dogs we buy them squeaky toys even though they drive us nuts with the noise. This post has loads of cute dogly activity.
I did think of using a squeaky toy as a training tool for The Heek because he loves them so much. I’ve tried the metallic clicker and a dog whistle but when he’s spotted another dog they do little to divert him. However the sound of a squeaky toy sends him into a frenzy of delight so that, combined with a treat may be the answer.
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February 24, 2008 at 2:41 am
· Filed under Food, Life As We Know It, Behaviour · Posted by Sephe
24 hour drinking and the British booze culture. Alcohol is fattening!
We are becoming more like the USA and using cars for the shortest journey. As roads become more congested, more and more are being built rather than alternatives sought.
Schools have been asked to improve nutrition for children and parents are urged to change their habits but manufacturers are still allowed to churn out high fat, highly processed foods and target their advertising at families and children.
PC’s, TV’s, DVD’s, hand held games and a culture where television is so important that the results of talent or competitive shows are considered important enough to broadcast on the news.
Our long working hours. Everyones to shattered to exercise.
Sunday trading. We have access to shops and food 7 days a week and have forgotten how to do without, eat less and make do with what we have in the store cupboard.
Gyms. Exercise is seen as a task or leisure pursuit in itself rather than a natural part of daily activities…walking to school or work, gardening, a family game of rounders, dance class, a long country walk.
The availability cheap, mass produced food stuffs so that we no longer respect food as something which we should be grateful to have, but as something which is always there in abundance.
The snack culture which means that children are not as hungry as they should be when a meal is served. They can be picky about eating vegetables because they know that they can have a bag of crisps if they get peckish rather than waiting until the next meal.
Our inability to cook. The popularity of the umpteen cookery programmes does not indicate that people cook but rather that they sit and watch celebrity chefs cook.
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February 21, 2008 at 10:19 pm
· Filed under Life As We Know It · Posted by Sephe
Our society is purely surveillance with CCTV everywhere, employers and advertisers tracking our website surfing habits, ,stores using reward cards to get information about our spending habits. Our mobile phone and credit card use is being watched and recorded by somebody and even our rubbish will be surveyed. Most of this ensuring we ae targetted by advertisers or charged.
On top of the hefty tax we pay out of our wages we pay council tax, car tax, VAT on umpteen products and inheritance tax when we snuff it and leave our property to our loved ones. Rather than using any other methods to reduce speed, discourage parking illegally we are fined and now the answer to binge drinking- rather than reviewing the 24 hour licensing hours, raising the legal drinking limit to 21 and educating people about alcohol, guess what - prices might be raised to cure the problem!
Traffic police sit in surreptitious places waiting to catch those who are speeding or not displaying a car parking ticket while 999 calls can take hours to get a response. And if they don’t get you there are now camera surveillance teams monitoring areas where you may stop illegally for a few minutes - while at the controls of your car - which will ensure a £60 fine is in the post. Unfortunately they don’t discriminate if you had to stop due to circumstances such as somebody running out in front of your car or running into you so you stop to exchange insurance details.
The congestion charge in London is another way to raise revenue.
Soon a cough or a sneeze will cost you!
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February 20, 2008 at 11:03 am
· Filed under Random Thoughts, Life As We Know It · Posted by Sephe
It is 10am, the sun is shining and I’ve just taken the Heek for a walk wearing a tee-shirt because it is so mild, despite the cold and frosty night.
I walked through the church yard and over a little wooden plank bridge to a meadow and round, back to the far side of the castle. Along the way we were serenaded by birds singing their hearts out in the bushes and trees. A sparrow was collecting bits of dry grass and a blackbird carried twigs in his beak.
I saw snowdrops in whispering clusters under the yew trees, while random bunches of daffodils sprout everywhere, adding their cheerful yellow trumpets to the increasingly colourful graveyard.
It is half-term and children are out on bikes, playing in the grounds of the castle, their chirrupping voices similar to bird song and they too are wearing tee-shirts.
I wonder if summer will arrive in April?
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February 19, 2008 at 10:06 pm
· Filed under Back Story (History), Life As We Know It, Rituals and Traditions · Posted by Sephe

There aren’t many of these around but whenever I spot them I can’t understand why BT decided to replace them with horrible grey and beige efforts.


The red ones are mostly in quaint village locations and always look cheerful and homely. In the days when we didn’t have mobiles you can imagine how welcome a sight they were. Travellers whose car had broken down, walking through dark lanes, a little elderly lady without a phone, having her weekly chat with her sister, a child with friends, giggling as they ask if they can stay to tea.
Fortunately the post office have retained red post boxes. Long may they continue.

The only thing I can’t understand is why they chose to make dog poo bins the same colour

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February 18, 2008 at 11:06 pm
· Filed under Uncategorized · Posted by Sephe
Here lies Ann Mann, Who lived an old maid But died an old Mann. Dec. 8, 1767
Tom Smith is dead, and here he lies, Nobody laughs and nobody cries; Where his soul’s gone, or how it fares, Nobody knows, and nobody cares. Newbury, England [1742]
Here lies the body of Margaret Bent. She kicked up her heels and away she went.
Winterborn Steepleton Cemetery, Dorsetshire, England
She was a suicide blonde -
Dyed by her own hand.
On a dentist: Stranger tread this ground with gravity.
Dentist Brown is filling his last cavity.
Edinburgh, Scotland.
Beneath this stone lies a merry lass
Who aimed for the brake and hit the gas.
This stone was raised by Sara’s Lord. Not Sara’s virtues to record For they are known to all the town. This stone was raised to keep her down.
Kilmurry Churchyard, Ireland
Grim death took me without any warning
I was well at night and dead at nine in the morning”,
Kent
Here lies Oakford Grain
Saw a light at the end of the tunnel
It was a train
“Here lies Johnny Yeast. Pardon me for not rising.”
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February 17, 2008 at 11:06 pm
· Filed under Life As We Know It · Posted by Sephe
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February 17, 2008 at 7:47 pm
· Filed under Back Story (History), People, Life As We Know It, Behaviour · Posted by Sephe
These are becoming increasingly popular especially in winter when it is dark so early. It is an easy way to cash in on British history and to add atmosphere and intrigue to old buildings. There is nothing like a ghost to draw the crowds.
The walks usually start in the graveyard of an old church or stately home and the guide (speaking in a suitably deep hushed voice) begins the story of the sad old ghost, where they lived and their tragic and untimely death.
As the story unfolds the group follow him as he walks (or glides) along pointing out old and current haunts and where the ghosts is likely to appear. The group stops, waiting and listening in strategic spots as dusk turns to dark and his voice gets deeper and the atmosphere creepier.
By now there is a pleasant frisson of fear amongst the group which becomes more jumpy so that if one accidentally touches another a gasp or even a scream rings out into the night.
He stops talking, but gestures again for them to stop so they huddle in the dark expectantly and wait. Then someone suddenly realises that the guide has faded away.
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February 16, 2008 at 7:41 pm
· Filed under Food, Life As We Know It, Behaviour, Uncategorized · Posted by Sephe
Every village and town boasts little old teashops with waitresses in black uniforms and white aprons who carry little notepads and pencils and serve the tea from trays. Yet is possible to forget the tradition of afternoon tea for months or years.
However, once in a while, after a walk, or on holiday you can suddenly find yourself sipping hot tea and eating cucumber sandwiches, and while you do so you always vow that it is so nice that you will do it regularly.
A bone china tea service sits on a pure white tablecloth. The tea is piping hot and strong and there are cucumber sandwiches, scones with strawberry jam and cream and a selection of cakes and biscuits. The experience is artistic, gentle, relaxing and sociable.
Maybe the answer to our binge drinking culture is to close pubs early and encourage tea shops to stay open 24 hours.
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