The Anonymous Widower

Will Ipswich Keep David McGoldrick?

I’ve watched all of Ipswich Town’s competitive matches so far this season.

The performances have not been as good as everybody wants, but they have been entertaining and certainly a lot better than we have seen in recent seasons.

The star with five goals so far has been David McGoldrick. With many of the teams in the Premier League struggling to score goals, I would suspect that someone will come calling. I suspect it could be a difficult job to tell them to go away, so will Mick McCarthy use his Irish charm or Yorkshire plain-speaking.

In fact the one thing that we can make a real judgement on now, is McCarthy’s choice of players, as only time will tell how good the team turns out to be. In David McGoldrick, Christophe Berra, Cole Skuse, Paul Anderson, Anthony Wordsworth, Frank Nouble and Dean Gerken, I think he has made a good set of signings.  I won’t add Ryan Tunnicliffe, who is only on loan. But surely, Manchester United wouldn’t have loaned Ipswich such a good player, if he wasn’t going to benefit from his time with the club.

It’s definitely a case of so far so good! We’ll know more about how good this side is at the end of the week after the games at Derby and Sheffield Wednesday.

 

September 29, 2013 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

Hundreds Of Sunflowers

On the forecourt at St. Pancras station, it was all happening this morning.

It’s an art installation, that will be opening on Tuesday.

I shall return!

September 29, 2013 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

All The Fun Of The Fair

The fair in Kings Cross Square was going well, when I visited this morning.

Do we need more open spaces like this, to put on events? Of course!

September 29, 2013 Posted by | World | , , | 4 Comments

Bridget Jones Becomes A Wrinkled Widow

Several newspapers, like the Glasgow Herald here, are reporting that in the latest Bridget Jones Diary, the heroine has become a widow. The Herald’s headline is something that I know a lot of widows will disagree with.

Meet Bridget Jones at 51: a wrinkled widow who becomes a Twitter cougar

I’ve met quite a few widows and widowers older than than 51,who can’t be described as the least bit wrinkled. In fact, I have to go a good bit past 51 to know any that are the least bit wrinkled.

I may be 66, but I don’t think I’m also too wrinkled. If anybody would like to check, I’ll buy the coffee.

I think the Herald, just played the alliteration card to get a catchy headline.

September 29, 2013 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

Two Quotes From The Times

These two quotes were in The Times yesterday.

Billy Jean King – “pressure is a privilege”

Joely Richardson – “if you want to achieve anything in life, you need guts.”

I like them!

Joely Richardson also followed up her quote with a statement that not enough people have them.

I’ll agree with that too!

September 29, 2013 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Ready Meals

I have just realised I’ve not eaten a shop-bought pre-prepared ready meal for about five to six weeks now. I have had a couple of cartons of soup for lunch, as I’m trying to keep my liquid levels up.

Usually, I cook something from scratch.

On the other hand, I was looking around my local Sainsburys in Dalston, yesterday and there seemed to be some frozen ready meals from a company called Kirstys.

The range is shown here.

If I’m late and need a meal urgently, I might try one.

September 29, 2013 Posted by | Food | | 1 Comment

Amy Winehouse’s Cat

I met somebody yesterday, who has a cat that was once owned by the late Amy Winehouse.

Apparently, it has a few problems, like wanting to sit on top of everything, like doors and the microwave on top of the freezer.

The cat just seems to love to get high.

September 29, 2013 Posted by | World | , | Leave a comment

Greater Anglia Get It Together

I travel to Ipswich regularly to see Ipswich Town play.

My last two tickets cost me £34.95 and that was made up by buying a Senior ticket from the Zone 6 boundary (Harold Wood) to Ipswich and then upgrading it to First.

Yesterday’s ticket was much simpler in that it was a Senior First Class ticket all the way and back for £32.60.

I’ve just looked it up the 19th of October, when Ipswich play Burnley and I can now buy one on-line for £32.60.

it also looks like that for a Tuesday night match, I can get an Off-Peak First Return to Ipswich for the same price, provided I leave before 16:30.  I don’t remember that being possible before.  i could of course be wrong. The only returns to Ipswich I can find in my credit card statements are £34.95.

It looks like the price has got down for me and I’ll now be able to avoid the queues at Liverpool Street station on a Saturday morning, by buying my ticket on-line. I’ll also have time for a proper lunch before I travel.

That’s progress.

I’ve never found any fault with the staff on the trains to Ipswich, but today they seemed to have gone up a gear in cheeriness. The steward was also offering more than the usual single complimentary drink with your First Class ticket.

I have no complaints and let’s hope it all gets even better.

For instance, it is known that Herculean efforts are sometimes needed to keep the Class 90 locomotives on top form. As passengers generally like the smooth riding Mark 3 coaches, could a small injection of the new Class 88 locomotives, allow some Norwich services to be extended to Great Yarmouth, as they used to be in the past. Would they also enable proper trains to be run to Bury St. Edmunds and Lowestoft?

September 29, 2013 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Roll On 2016

I saw this article in Global Rail News, about Eurostar starting services between London and Amsterdam in 2016.

About time too!

September 28, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Pilots Will Fall Asleep

There has been a lot of publicity about pilots failing asleep in the media in the last few days, including this report from the BBC.

In my twenty or so years of flying, in which I amassed about 1,200 hours in command, I only dropped off once.

i was flying my Cessna 340a to the South of France, with C and a couple of others in the back. I must have dropped off, because I remember awaking as we hit a bit of turbulence.

My plane had a very good avionics system and was flying happily on the auto-pilot.

Nothing untoward happened and after that I always made sure that someone was sitting alongside me to hand me the occasional drink. But not too many, as the plane didn’t have a toilet.

i do wonder if I fell asleep because my Cessna was too comfortable for the pilot. The seat was very comfortable and could be adjusted in virtually every direction. I was also wearing headphones, which cut all the noise out, so I was very much isolated from what was happening around me, using just my eyes to scan the skies and read the instruments.

The sky can be very hypnotic as it speeds pas you and I do wonder if the whole experience was far too relaxing and on that trip it induced me to sleep.

But we’ve all dropped asleep haven’t we! But usually it’s in front of something somnolent on the television or on the back seat of a car.

Incidentally, my basset hound, Lucy, used to love the aircraft and would just spread herself on the floor of the plane and go to sleep, as we flew around.

So should we make the pilot’s seat and job in an aircraft, a little less comfortable?

Many years ago, before terrorism raised its ugly head, I managed to get into the cockpit of several airliners. On a British Caledonian DC-10, I actually made up the fourth in a hand of cards.  The engineer on that flight actually introduced me to the guy, who sold me my first aircraft; a Piper Arrow. I also was invited onto the flight deck of a British Airways Concorde, as we flew across the Atlantic.

But perhaps the most unusual was when C and I flew to Australia, where we hired a Piper Arrow and flew round Australia. We were in First and everybody in that class who wanted to, was invited in turn, to visit the flight deck of a new British Airways 747-400. This was the first Jumbo, with a glass cockpit of computer screens rather than mechanical instruments. We were given the grand tour for about half an hour and the Captain was very pleased to show us, how his avionics worked. Then he asked C what she thought of it all, she answered honestly, by saying it was just like bigger versions of what was in my Cessna. He was not amused! My avionics then were probably about two years old and in those days, they were much similar in style to those on airliners, than they probably are now!

Long haul flying is probably pretty boring for the crew, as it is certainly is for the passengers. So did the trips to the flight deck, that many of us used to enjoy, help to relieve that boredom and keep the pilots on top form?

September 28, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | | Leave a comment