The Anonymous Widower

Free as a Lark

My horse runs at 3:30 at Nottingham today.  She is 33-1 and is only having a first run. 

She’ll probably be very green, so no bets unless you’re stupid.

May 7, 2010 Posted by | Sport | | Leave a comment

Heysel

Whenever we think of Heysel Stadium in Brussels we think of the terrible tragedy at the football match between Liverpool and Juventus in which 39 Juventus supporters died.

After lunch I took the Metro mainly to see the Atomium and found that it was at the same place as the stadium.

But now the old stadium has gone and a new one, now renamed the King Baudouin Stadium, has taken its place. 

The King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels

I remember I was in Cheltenham that night visiting a client and watched the disaster unfold on the television in my hotel room.  I have had a lot of tragedy lately in my life and I don’t want to go through anymore.  

Hopefully, I won’t see anything like that again.

May 6, 2010 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Incident at Leeds

I learned to fly soon after we moved to Ipswich in about 1974.  It had always been something that I’d want to do.  But C never flew with me for some years.

She probably flew with me some time in about 1986 for the first time and that was rather a hary flight to Prestwick, where because of bad weather we ended up in Glasgow.  It wasn’t bumpy, but there was just a lot of low cloud and we were above it, so you had the problem of getting into the airport.  But we did safely.

But she was always a nervous passenger.

Until that is we flew to Prestwick to see a horse we owned called Debach Dust run at the nearby Ayr racecourse.

The horse ridden by Kim Tinkler had shown her usual ability and had done nothing, so we weren’t all that pleased in many ways after flying all the way from Ipswich.  But it was a hell of a lot better than driving all that way and in that the trip up took about three hours as opposed to about seven or eight in a car.  In fact one trip on a Friday to that part of Scotland had taken twelve hours, so we knew the advantages of flying, even if C was very reluctant.

September 17th, 1988 was a beautifully clear day for flying, but I remember as Tango-Tango, my Piper Arrow cruised at a good altitude over the Southern Uplands of Scotland, the wind was making it rather bumpy.  C was sitting quietly beside me, trying to make as little fuss as possible.

To say all hell broke loose would be wrong, as it was just that after about an hour into the flight, that the oil pressure in the single engine was starting to fade and drop to zero.  In other words, we were losing oil and had to get down as quickly as possible. 

But before you think that this was a serious situation, I had several things in my favour.

The visibility was good and I could see northern England laid out before me, so if I had to land without power, there would have been plenty of wide open fields in which to do what every pilot dreads; a forced landing.

But more importantly, I was at 5,000 feet or so and I was only about 50 nautical miles from the major airport at Leeds.  It also was probably the nearest airport too, so the choice of where to go was made up for me.  Many air accidents have happened because pilots attempt to get to their home base.  I wasn’t going to take that risk, but I did prepare C for a bumpy emergency landing on the moors.

Throttling back and losing height slowly seemed to be the best thing to do and as I still had some oil pressure, I hoped that this action would get me to Leeds without losing all power. 

Now in all the bad films, you always call Mayday, when you are in trouble.  But in my case, I assessed that with an average amount of luck, I’d be OK.  Especially, as I had set up Leeds airport on my navigation equipment, so that I knew exactly where I was heading.  I also knew the airport quite well and also the problems that you sometimes get when approaching from the east due to downdrafts.

So I made what is a Pan-Pan call and Leeds cleared me to come in on Runway 09.  This would mean that I had the shortest distance to travel to land, but that I would have to land with a crosswind from the right.

Very little else happened and I turned on to finals at about eight hundred feet, so that if the engine decided to go completely AWOL, I would still make the runway.  I also knew that I had 1100 metres of runway, which was quite enough for the little Piper.

C kept absolutely quiet in all this time!  What she was thinking she never really told me!

But it all happened without incident and I landed Tango-Tango successfully with no problem and was able to taxi the plane off the runway to the light aviation terminal.

It wasn’t an easy journey from Leeds to Ipswich though.  There wasn’t a car hire firm open and in the end it was a taxi to the train station, a train to Peterborough and then a lift from there with our eldest son.

But C never again worried about going in a light aircraft with me. 

So much so that within a year we flew all around Australia in a similar Piper Arrow.

But that is another story!

May 3, 2010 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , | 5 Comments

The Wembley Pitch

We get rather blase at Ipswich, as our pitch is often voted one of the best in the country.

I would have thought that the pitch at Newcastle would not be of a good standard, as the pitch is surrounded by high stands and Newcastle weather is not as good as that in London or Ipswich.

The Pitch at St. James' Park

This picture was taken around four o’oclock and you can see that it is mainly in shadow.  Surely, this isn’t good for grass!

Now I didn’t even walk on the pitch, but from my lofty place in the sky, it looked to be in good condition and the players didn’t seem to slip at all.

So if they can get it right in the more difficult circumstances at Newcastle, why can’t they get it right at Wembley?

April 26, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , , | Leave a comment

St. James’ Park, Newcastle

St. James’ Park is the home of Newcastle United and the reason I went north was to see Ipswich play for the last time this season.  I shall actually be away for the last home match.

Note the view from high in the stand over the city.  The Sage Gateshead, the Baltic Mill and some of the bridges can be clearly seen.

To me the most interesting thing about the game was Connor Wickham’s performance and his well-taken goal.  For the last few matches he’s been playing up-front on his own and he has scored quite a few goals.

I do hope that he both keeps this up and stays at Ipswich.

April 26, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

The New, the Venerable Rowing Club and the Curious

I took this picture of Poplar Rowing Club with Canary Wharf in the background.

Poplar Rowing Club

The rowing club is the third oldest in Britain and dates from 1845.

But what is the round building on the right?

It’s one of the entries to the Greenwich Foot Tunnel.

That incidentally is about sixty years younger than the rowing club.

April 19, 2010 Posted by | Sport, World | , , | Leave a comment

A First Game of Real Tennis

Well not the first, but the first game since I had the stroke.  In fact it was exactly five weeks since my last game.

I lost that one, just like I lost the one today.  But today wasn’t disastrous as I lost the set 6-2 and was leading the second 5-1 at one point.  When time ran out I was 5-4 ahead.  Was I tiring?  I won’t use that excuse.

Now what will be interesting is to see how my handicap progresses in future months.  I haven’t checked but I think it is about 54.

Could games with a rigorous handicap system like real tennis be used to gauge how people are progressing with various brain and mental problems?

April 18, 2010 Posted by | Health, Sport | , | Leave a comment

Ipswich 1 – Doncaster 1

This was a typical end-of-season match with no-one really bothered about the result.  We did see a sweet goal from Connor Wickham and a rather dubious penalty, but not much else.

Except for the sun at half-time.

Half-Time at Portman Road in the Sun

Is there any other major ground where you can laze on grass before a match and at half-time? So the grass is plastic, but who cares?

Can anybody explain to me who sponsors Doncaster?  The logo on the shirts looked like the sort of squiggle of which a two-year-old would be very pleased.

April 18, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

Virgins in More than Name

Just watching the start of the Formula One race in China. 

Virgin Racing have left their car on the jacks at the start!

Isn’t that a bit fundamental?

April 18, 2010 Posted by | Sport | | Leave a comment

A Real Heroic Story

Britain are not noted to be great at ice hockey, but they at least qualified for the World Championships in Slovakia.

However, they then found that they couldn’t get there because of the Icelandic volcano.  But here in the UK, we’re don’t let a little dust get in our plans, so they took a coach all the way. This is from the BBC.

Great Britain won their opening game in Group B of Division One at ice hockey’s World Championships, beating Croatia.

GB made a 26-hour bus journey to hosts Slovenia after the Icelandic volcanic eruption cancelled their flight, arriving two hours before face-off.

Well done to the team and they showed that we must just get on with it. 

Rumour has it, that the team have decided to sleep in the bus!

April 18, 2010 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment