Tuesday, June 26, 2007

New Driver
I had purchased a new driver last October during the autumn sales. It was a package deal and included a free rescue club. I enjoyed the Slazenger KI Driver very much but two weeks ago it made a strange sound as I hit one of my prodigious drives and I was disheartened to see that the head had cracked. Unable to locate the receipt, I was sure that I was stuck with a broken driven and would have to return to my old one that failed to give me the 300+ yards to which I am now accustomed. I returned to the store where I had purchased the Driver and was delighted to find out that they took it back and asked no questions. They even allowed me to pick a different driver as a replacement.
I couldn't resist purchasing this Bonnie head cover. Hope it brings me luck.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Get a room!
What do you think they're smoking?
I'll bet there is even some Quakers in this crowd
Sunrise
Summer Solstice -Stonehenge
Stonehenge is just a short drive southeast of Bath. Today being the longest day of the year in the Northern Hemisphere, brings a large gathering of Druids, pagans, and new-agers to this rather impressive sun calendar.
Photographs from today's Guardian.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Where is George Washington when you need him?
Garden Refurbishment: Part II
The gardener who is in charge of the ongoing refurbishment had taken a few days off to seek approval to remove the rather pathetic Cherry Tree that is at the end of our driveway. Approval was necessary because we live in a conservation area. Well, approval wasn't granted. It seems our Cherry Tree is the only remaining tree from an orchard that used exist before the homes were built in the late 1800s. Needless to say this poor tree has been on its last legs for some time. The cherries are inedible and dead limbs and rotten wood are in great abundance. The far-sighted conservation committee did allow our gardener to remove all of the dead branches. Surely they don't think this will make it spring back to life! The photograph shows some of the dead wood that was removed and the rather forlorn tree that remains. Maurene and I have determined that it now looks like a giant, though rather barren bonsai tree.
Quaker Wall Hanging
If all of the preparations are finalised the Bath Quaker Meeting will begin worshipping at Central United Reformed Church in the autumn. I was asked by the Clerk of the Meeting to come to their current Meeting House to view a wall hanging that they wish to bring with them. They wanted to insure that it would meet with our congregations approval.
I found it quite interesting as it was a representation of Jesus' visit to the home of Mary and Martha. If you aren't familiar with the story, Mary sits and listens to the teachings of Jesus whilst Martha hurries about in the kitchen preparing a meal.
The similarities to Jesus and the Buddha sitting under the Bodhi tree are striking.

Friday, June 15, 2007

They call me mellow yellow- Our Broom tree and some unidentified bush
A second patio at the back of the garden which replaces a dead tree and bramble patch

Restoring the greenhouse
Garden Refurbishment
A gardener finally arrived and did some significant refurbishment on our garden. I thought I'd include a few photographs of his efforts and some of the lovely foliage that is blooming in mid-June. We have different varieties of plants blooming throughout the spring and summer. I have included a musical link if you'd like to sing along as you look at the photographs.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Happy birthday, Abby!
Don't look so sad! You're not that old.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Watch this!
Tony Benn, long-time Labour MP and socialist is my political hero. But although he has a warm spot in his heart for Karl Marx (he actually called him the last of the Old Testament biblical prophets) he is also a great devotee of Thomas Paine (a Founding Father who was born in Sandwich England). I cordially invite you to spend a half-hour or so watching his documentary on Democracy. It is in five parts for easy viewing. You can find it at:
http://www.bennites.com/BIGIDEASDEMOCRACY.html If that link gives you a problem you can use the links section of my blog. Click on My favourite British politician

Monday, June 04, 2007

Dennis Milligan -a fine American

This is how these tools think. . .
In his first interview as the chairman of the Arkansas Republican Party, Dennis Milligan told a reporter that America needs to be attacked by terrorists so that people will appreciate the work that President Bush has done to protect the country.
"At the end of the day, I believe fully the president is doing the right thing, and I think all we need is some attacks on American soil like we had on [Sept. 11, 2001]," Milligan said to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, "and the naysayers will come around very quickly to appreciate not only the commitment for President Bush, but the sacrifice that has been made by men and women to protect this country."
Milligan, who was elected as the new chair of the Arkansas Republican Party just two weeks ago, also told the newspaper that he is "150 percent" behind Bush in the war in Iraq.
In his acceptance speech on May 19th, Milligan told his fellow Republicans that it was "time for a rediscovery of our values and our common sense."
Editor's note: If you accept this logic then we should hope that Putin nukes the United States and then we'd realise that the President is right about Star Wars!



Move over Rover,
Let Jimi take over!*
Photograph of my new nephew with the distinctive shirt given to him by his cousins, Sarah and Abby.

* Lyrics taught to me by my cousin, Mark, who also taught me The Larry Lamport song.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

The 'Mother of all Roses'
Hopefully, the gardener will come this week to do a major refurbishment on our garden. He has already started with some repairs to the greenhouse, taking a way a major brush pile that had accumulated, and removal of a bush that had gone past its 'sell by' date. He has also started a second patio where I hope to place a Zen garden.
Anyway, Maurene discovered this huge rose on one of our bushes.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Ryan Keith Garner (quite original name there, Keith and Tiffany)
I'm a great Uncle (as if you didn't know)
I just discovered that I am a great Uncle (actually four times now). Ryan Keith Garner was born at around 1.30 pm today, 1 June 2007. I am so happy for Keith and Tiffany and can't wait to see my newest nephew in September. I'm a bit misty eyed sitting here at the computer. This is one of those times I wish I was back in the USA. Maurene is away in London so I have no one to celebrate with! So, its off to the local to hoist a pint in honour of Ryan Keith Garner.
It was forty years ago today. . .
On 1 June 1967 what many consider the Beatles seminal work, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, was released. My primary memory of the album was established that autumn, when my Sophomore English Teacher, Miss Myers, played the music for a week during class and we discussed the possible meaning of the lyrics. Little did I know that the experiences in Miss Myer's English Class would prepare me for the hermeneutical pursuits that would follow at United Theological Seminary. The BBC World Service is devoting much airtime today to the album with interviews and opinion pieces. And from today's Guardian editorial page:
In praise of... Sgt Pepper LeaderFriday June 1, 2007The Guardian
It was not 20 but 40 years ago today that Sgt Pepper taught the band to play, and the album that defined the 1960s was released. From touching ballads (She's Leaving Home) to dreamy psychedelia (A Day in the Life) to music-hall wit (When I'm 64), the record confirmed the breadth of Lennon and McCartney's songwriting. Track for track, the LP may not be the Beatles' best; not least because 1967 hits such as Strawberry Fields and All You Need is Love were omitted. It stood out, however, for the sweep of its ambition. Adopting the alter ego of a marching band, the fab four donned colourful uniforms, and they top and tail proceedings with a song performed in role, giving the collection a sense of theatre, if not a coherent concept. The transformation of cheeky mop-tops into artists was also marked by the lyrics being printed on the sleeve, so that they might be read as poetry. George Martin's production exploited classical instruments and eight-track technology alike, making for a sound the world had never heard before. And there is still no icon in pop history to match Peter Blake's inspired cover, which shows the band with stars, writers and their younger selves. Even where it falters, the album innovates. Within You Without You may be a dirge, but it exposed the west to the sitar and provided the prototype for many a hippy sermon. Like no other record, Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ushered in a new age- one with long hair, dope and time for a number of things that weren't important yesterday.