Tuesday, 13 May 2014

22. Jedburgh

C & C Site
May 10th - 12th

A beautiful drive through rich farmland with the rolling Cheviot Hills in the distance. Great variety of colours in the trees. Carefully manicured grass verges and hedges trimmed neatly into a taper towards the top (presumably an anti- snow measure). Almost like driving through a park. Into Scotland at Coldstream, passing over the Tweed on a lovely old stone six-arched bridge. On to Kelso and into Jedburgh from the north-east, passing through Bonjedward (yes, you heard me) on the way. Whatever happened to Jedward anyway? The site is in the lee of a wooded hill and faces west, with the Jed Water running through it.

This area is the heartland of Scottish border rugby, with Jedburgh, Hawick, Selkirk, Melrose, Kelso and Galashiels all within virtual touching distance of each other. The brand of rugby played here, with light, fast, mobile forwards, gave the national Scottish side its attractive playing style in the 'Sixties and 'Seventies. Ireland at the time had a similar style and it was a joy to watch games between them; total mayhem, all action, end-to-end, attack, attack, attack. Watching England was, I'm afraid, like watching paint dry. And Wales, of course, were simply in a class of their own. France were quite good, too.

A heron on the Jed, waiting
So it's farewell then to the great Professor Colin Pillinger, the mastermind of Beagle 2, Britain's gallant failure to conquer Mars. He designed it on a beer mat and built the prototype out of cardboard. Surely only Britain, or possibly even only England, could have produced such an eccentric; the world may have lost a character, but we haven't lost our essential national character. Not quite yet. The thing to remember, though, is that Beagle 2 is still out there, wandering silently through the universe and beyond. It will be like in Arthur C Clarke's ”Rendezvouz with Rama”; way in the future someone will discover Beagle 2 and wonder what it is and ponder the nature of the creature who created it. I like to think that one day in that far distant future the Prof. will be re-united with his brain-child.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10815922/Professor-Colin-Pillinger-obituary.html


Now, here's a thing. I watched 'City of Angels' last night. It's a Hollywood re-make of Wim Wenders' sublime 'Wings of Desire'. Hollywood re-makes are usually awful, I detest Nicolas Cage, I cringe at Meg Ryans's little cutie act, yet I love this film. I suppose it's the central story. Stranger still, my Dad told me he liked it. Now, he wasn't into films at all, (which is probably why I went to the pictures so often as a child with my Mum) and I'd never heard him say he liked a film. Very strange. On a lighter note, when I typed 'Wings of Desire' just now I typed 'Wigs of Desire' by mistake. Ho, ho.     

Oh, bliss! On Sunday morning I put my cycling shorts on and cycled into and around Jedburgh without winceing or whimpering once! What a result! I found a promising-looking butcher's whose frontage boasted of its wonderful pies. Popped into the Co-Op to get some milk and found some interesting food in the cold cabinet; black pudding in batter, steak slices, which look like steak mince formed into a loaf and sliced like bread and lorne, which is a square sausage. The chief Cartwright in 'Bonanza' was played by Lorne Greene. Strange to name a child after a square sausage. Found the town's original public library which, a plaque outside said, was endowed by Andrew Carnegie. Just think, Jedburgh might have had a giant concert hall, too.

There was an interesting information board by the river near the lovely ruined abbey. Apparently, James Hutton, who is regarded as the father of geology, based his ground-breaking (sorry!) Theory of the Earth on rock formations he found in in Jedburgh.


Presumably the abbey was another of Henry VIII's victims. He was a complete bar steward, wasn't he? Why couldn't he just steal the monasteries' treasure, drive the monks out and leave the buildings alone? With the roof on an abbey would have made a great stately home or community swimming pool or working mens' club or Wetherspoon's pub. He was a complete and utter monarch, I think.

Now, here's a Stephen Fry moment for you. The name of the butcher with the magnificent pies is 'Learmonth', and this seems to be a local name, as I saw two more examples in Berwick. The great Russian writer Mikhail Lermontov was descended from a Scot whose name was Learmonth. Lermontov = Learmonth, see? The little lad on the advert on the door is saying 'Say aye to a pie'.  

There was an interesting stone in the graveyard of the abbey. James Laidlaw, RAMC, killed in action in 1914. On the grave was a small fresh wreath with an inscription from Jedforest Rugby Football Club. Was he the club doctor over a hundred years ago? How fine of the club to remember him for so long. (There are lots of Laidlaws here and two played at scrum-half rugby for Scotland in my time; Roy in the 'Eighties and his nephew Greig, who is still playing).

Rock strata by the Jed


 

Saturday, 10 May 2014

21. Various places in Northumberland
       May 3rd - 9th

Since I last wrote I have stayed a few more days on the north Northumberland coast. In hindsight, I think it was a mistake, as I have become bored, stale and grumpy and haven't felt like blogging. It's just too rural and the weather has been poor. I lived in the very rural West of Ireland for ten years, and I think that provided me with enough peace and quiet (and bad weather) to last me for a while. While I enjoy the countryside, I'm not really a country person; I don't enjoy walking for its own sake, for example, and I usually cycle to get somewhere, not for the sake of it. I think my ideal situation is on a quiet rural site near an interesting town.
 
Incredibly, last night I had the dreaded 'A' Level nightmare again, perhaps to mark the 50th anniversary of my taking my exams. It's only once or twice a year, but it still shatters me. I'm sitting in front of an 'A' level paper and can't do any of it and I know it's because I haven't done any studying. That's all there is to it, nothing comes before and nothing follows, but it's really horrible.

On the way up to Berwick (again) I passed through Bamburgh, where there is a wonderful castle. In the rare moments of sunshine it glows orangey pink. It's like Berwick – best seen from a distance. From a distance it sits glowering out to sea, saying “I'm watching here and nothing will happen that I can't handle”. It's truly impressive. Up close, however, (and you get very close to it as you pass through the village), it's just a mountainous pile.


I don't have a lot more to say, I'm afraid, because I don't enjoy the seaside any more. I spent many happy hours there when I was a child and later with my own children but now I feel sad on a beach and can't wait to get away.
 
So, I'll talk instead about films. “Oh no,” I hear you say, “he's going to go off on a rant again.” Well, before I say anything, please remember that I defended “Blade Runner” when it was first released to general scorn and that of the critics and said it was a great film before it was finally accepted and attained cult status. See, so there. After much searching I found a cheap copy of the DVD of “AI – Artificial Intelligence” in HMV and watched it this week. I had seen it twice before and thought it enjoyable and essentially good, but now I'm sure it's great. This was confirmed when I found a “Kermode Uncut” page (http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/markkermode/posts/AI-Apology) where the film critic Mark Kermode, who is a bit conceited but whose opinions I respect, apologised to Spielberg about having criticised the film on its release. He described it as Spielberg's 'enduring masterpiece'. Please watch it as soon as possible; you won't be disappointed. And it co-stars a walking, talking teddy bear. Could it get any better?
 
I won't mention “Gattaca” to-day.

I'm back again at Berwick to-day, having had hardly a good word to say for the place last time. Now, though, the sun is out, a watery, breezy sun, but a sun nevertheless. I'm sitting outside reading and looking down at the mouth of the Tweed and I can feel my mojo returning. I have seen a great number of beagles, which I love, in Northumberland. We used to call them 'laughing dogs' because they seem to have a smile on their face. I've also seen several Bedlington terriers, which are like big poodles with a streamlined head and are named after the small former mining town of Bedlington in south Northumberland. Bedlington is also the home of a football team called Bedlington Terriers, who were the subject of a nice little film on Film 4 a couple of years ago called “Mr Rich and the Terriers” about the club being adopted by an American millionaire industrialist. It all seemed very hopeful, but when I looked to-day the “Club History” section of the website doesn't mention Mr Rich and the club is advertising for a manager and a sponsor, having finished 20th out of 23 in the Northern League. Sadly, fairy tales rarely come true in non-league football these days. You can see a Bedlington terrier on the club badge.


 
The site here is wonderfully infested with blackbirds and I've been watching a pair foraging for worms and grubs in the grass just outside the door of the van. I've mention them before, but these birds fascinate me. They seem to be have real character and great humour and, of course, their singing is magical. This reminded me, and cheered me up a lot after the horrible 'A' Level nightmare, that I had to do a critique of R S Thomas's poem 'A Blackbird Singing' unseen for my 'S' Level English paper in 1964. Here it is:-

It seems wrong that out of this bird,
Black, bold, a suggestion of dark
Places about it, there yet should come
Such rich music, as though the notes'
Ore were changed to a rare metal
At one touch of that bright bill.
You have heard it often, alone at your desk
In a green April, your mind drawn
Away from its work by sweet disturbance
Of the mild evening outside your room.

A slow singer, but loading each phrase
With history's overtones, love, joy
And grief learned by his dark tribe
In other orchards and passed on
Instinctively as they are now,
But fresh always with new tears.
 
      Our English master, 'Ger' Davies, was a great fan of R S Thomas, who was an Anglican vicar and a hardline Welsh
      nationalist. A fantastical Celt, Davies despaired of us plodding Saxons and once said, unforgettably:-

You are cabbages, cabbages, rotting in the thick Sussex clay
 
The man was a poet himself, don't you think?

Cycled in to Berwick, but walked once I got into town. I did actually see two live cyclists to-day (I've seen plenty of dead ones flattened on the road or festooning hedges) but it's not cycling country this. Worse, the traffic system in Berwick is a complete mystery to me. I suspect there is a one-way system, but the council seem to be economising by not displaying any road signs. The system, then, may be “anyone vehicle can drive in any direction on any road and on any side of the road”. The evidence of my eyes certainly suggests this. I very nearly got cleaned-out twice by cars coming towards me in a narrow street that I had thought one-way and had to dive up on to the pavement.

 

Now, you're not to worry now or feel fearful, nauseous or faint, but I bought a pair of cycling shorts. I read on a cycling forum that they would change my life. Certainly something was already changing my life, because recently I've been suffering badly in the nether regions and have begun to walk like John Wayne. I say you're not to worry because I shall always wear them under ordinary shorts or trousers, so passers-by will be spared the horror. I found them very uncomfortable when I sat down in them and had decided to take them back, but then noticed the assistant in Halford's had left the security tag (the big, thick plastic disc) in. Phew!

Lots of bluebells around now, but I haven't seen a proper bluebell wood yet. If you see a really dense show it looks just like smoke on water. There used to be one I saw every weekday next to the main London/Brighton railway line between Three Bridges and Gatwick Airport when I used to commute from Sussex. For just a couple of weeks each year it was worth the journey. Funnily enough, just as I finish typing this they are talking about bluebells on 'Gardener's World'!


















 

 

 

 

Saturday, 3 May 2014

20. Berwick-upon-Tweed

CC Site
May 1 – 2
Uneventful drive up the A1, mostly single carriageway, about 30 miles. The site is on a hill on the south bank of the Tweed overlooking the sea and Spittal and looking across to Berwick. Certainly the most spectacular view I've had so far. The day started with high winds and torrential rain and it's only now, at midday, eased a little.
View from the site
I don't think I've ever been so cold in May. I remember once, in 1975 I think, a Yorkshire match at Headingly was halted because of snow. Boycott was batting so nobody minded.
I had an hour's nap then cycled to Halford's to get a new tyre and tube and a set of brake blocks. While they were changing the tyre I walked into the town over the old stone bridge. Some depressed places I have seen look as if they are suffering a loss after the last boom in the Noughties. Berwick looks as if it missed the last boom and the previous five.
 
Dereliction in the town
There are many empty shops and they look to have been empty for some time. Very few of the first-floor accommodation above even the open shops seems to be occupied. Everything was grey and damp, grey stone or concrete walls stained with damp from broken gutters, the roofs and walls encrusted with moss. Tomorrow I will concentrate on the town walls and the harbour and the beaches. The town is just too depressing. It reminds me sadly of Ballina, near where I used to live in Ireland. Such a pity, as the setting is beautiful and quite spectacular. One wonders how much the dereliction is caused by recession and how much by the jumbo Tesco's and Morrison's on the outskirts and the only slightly smaller Asda in town. 
From the pier looking landwards
 
 
Beautiful day to-day, brilliant sunshine all day (and it's now 19:00) although a cold wind. Cycled down to Spittal and along the promenade then along Dock Road to Tweedmouth. Over the old bridge into Berwick and to the end of the pier at the harbour mouth. Lovely houses along the waterfront; not vast mansions but two- up two-down terraced stone cottages in great condition. Presumably former fishermens' homes. Berwick looked a different place in the sunshine, but it is definitely better viewed at a distance. The three bridges and the city walls are very impressive and the Tweed estuary an ever-changing wildlife show. It's interesting that another Spittal is also the next-door neighbour of Galway in the west of Ireland, and Berwick definitely feels to me more like an Irish town.
 
From the pier, looking out to sea
A little game I played while here was to try to guess if the next person I spoke to would sound Scottish or
geordie.  

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Dunstan Hill, Alnwick

19. Dunstan Hill, near Alnwick
C & C Club site
28th - 30th April

Up along the Northumbrian coast, about thirty-five miles. The first hurdle was Blyth, a small port from where coal was shipped. There is a lot of new development, but still plenty of bad housing, shoddy development and general horribleness. Many of the people I saw were truly scary, with their mean scowling faces, shell- suits, tattoos, weapon dogs and shaven heads. And that was just the women. Blyth is the home of a deservedly celebrated non-league football team, Blyth Spartans. Founded in 1899, they have been the bane of many professional league teams in the FA Cup; Crewe, Stockport, Chesterfield, Reading, Stoke, Bury, Shrewsbury and Bournemouth have all been humbled and in 1977-78 they reached the Fifth Round, losing to Wrexham in a replay.  

After Blyth came Ashington, a former pit village, where Bobby and Jack Charlton came from. Gradually the view became more rural, until I reached Lynemouth, with its huge Alcan aluminium smelter and a hulking power station festooned with a network of power cables emanating in all directions.

Lynemouth was the last of the industrialisation, though, and soon we were back in green fields, trees and sheep. The sea was just over the hill 200 yards to my right. The road misses Amble but goes through the middle of Warkworth, a lovely stone-built village with a most imposing twelfth century castle on a fifty-foot motte covered with daffodils (now past their best even this far north). After rounding the castle the road passes over the River Coquet on a modern steel bridge built in 1965 to save the beautiful old two-arch stone bridge next to it.

Craster Harbour
Eventually found the site after having made an ill-considered and doomed diversion to Craster. Next to a wood, flat, lots of room, all very shipshape. Bus to Alnwick stops outside the front gate, albeit only every two hours, and lots of quiet roads for cycling. Will try Alnwick first because I need a book or two and then plan to spend the rest of the time cycling along the coast. Spent the first afternoon booking six sites two weeks ahead and finishing the Blog for Whitley Bay.

Extraordinarily rude man with wife arrived on the next pitch. I was just starting my dinner, but could see him wrestling with the door of the gas locker on his van. I have several times managed to fix a similar problem with mine and thought I might be able to help. When I offered he just muttered about not having any tools and stomped off to disappear into his van, leaving me like a lemon with my mouth opening and closing like a fish. Lemon sole, I suppose. Sorry! So I came away and carried on with my dinner. I suppose by offering to help I cast aspersions on his manhood or some such nonsense.

Thick sea-fret this morning, but enough visibility to see that Mr. Rude-Git has gone. Off to Alnwick on the bus, forty minutes. Via Craster, an amazing tiny harbour looking, with the tide out, like a giant empty rock- pool. Everyone who got on the bus knew everyone on it. I was sitting right at the front, but the chitchat was deafening. At Lesbury an old gent with a yard broom was waiting by the stop. He came on and swept the entrance platform of the bus and had a chat with the driver. Their chat was incomprehensible to me.

Northumberland is one of the strongholds of the glottal stop (of which more anon), of course, but a more interesting verbal tic is the peculiar guttural Northumbrian 'r'. It is said that this developed as a tribute to Harry Hotspur, as people mimicked what was, in fact, his speech impediment.

Not a lot to say about Alnwick if you leave out the castle, as I did. Narrow streets, stone buildings, nice market place (market on Thursday), lots of small shops including the obligatory hardware shop selling everything including the kitchen sink. (I have found that nearly every small town has one of these. Halleluia!) Mooched around the charity shops, had a cup of coffee, bought a paper and bought an OS map of this area in readiness for my cycling tomorrow. I sat for half an hour in a tiny patch of sun on a bench in the market place watching people and cars and it was great. I don't normally do that but I'm going to make a habit of it.

Well, what about the odious Max Clifford, then? It turns out that he wasn't a very nice man. Surprise, surprise! Wonder how long he will get. That reminds me, the other day in Newcastle I saw a poor devil who was a dead ringer for Jimmy Saville. The only thing that would make me indulge in plastic surgery would be if I looked like Jimmy Saville.

Dunstanburgh Castle
Now, back to the dreaded glottal stop (“be'er” for “better”, “opportuni'y” for “opportunity”, you get the idea). Is it a case of yoofspeak or “prolier than thou” or of trying to sound American? Don't know. Whichever it is, it's awful and it's growing and it means that we now have a twenty-five letter alphabet. I have designed a protest poster for you to display in your front window or in your car and include a .tif copy of it here. Just right-click on it, choose 'Save picture as' and save it. Or not.



Last day; for three days this sea-fret has hung overhead, keeping the temperature down and visibility to about 100 yards. This made the bike ride more boring than usual as there was little to see. Took a few snaps at Craster then went on to the beach at Embleton Bay. Dunstanburgh Castle, almost on the beach and looking out to sea, was a ghostly blur. Never mind; got some exercise and travelled about 19 miles. My bike computer went a bit crackerdog and told me I was doing 38mph on the flat at one point. Yea, right! Rather a lumpy ride which makes me think I need a new rear wheel as well as a tyre. No cycle shops around here. Oh well, pastures new tomorrow.

They find me interesting
 






Monday, 28 April 2014

18. Whitley Bay
CC Site
Apl 25 – 27

Up the A1(M), through the Tyne Tunnel, skirting North Shields and Tynemouth then through the middle of Whitley Bay, which looks promising. I am at the top of a cliff overlooking the North Sea and a lighthouse a few yards off the beach. I counted passing ships and got to seven in an hour before a sea-fret closed in and it started to rain. The ones I saw were big slab-sided container ships and all seemed to be going north. I hope the Scots aren't stealing the family silver before they go their own way. The site is actually at Seaton Sluice, which doesn't sound very salubrious. I can remember paddling in the sea here in February, 1975. I was a bit hardier in those days. Really looking forward to this one.

St. Mary's Lighthouse, from the site
While having lunch I watched The Searchers on Film Four. What a great film. I saw it with my Mum, from whom I must have got my love of the cinema, at the Ritz in Horsham in 1956. It has come to be considered a masterpiece, and one of the greatest and most influential films ever made. The British Film Institute's Sight and Sound magazine ranked it as the seventh best movie of all time based on a 2012 international survey of film critics. And Vera Miles was heart-breakingly beautiful. She was once Miss Texas Grapefruit.

There was a great quote on “Pointless” last night. A young woman, when asked what subjects she would like to come up, said she wasn't too good on history but it didn't matter as it was only stuff that had already happened. 

The Spanish City
Saturday morning, bright and sunny but bitterly cold. Took the bus into Newcastle, about an hour's journey through the urban sprawl of north Tyneside. On the way saw a sign to Walker (an area of Tyneside); the Animals sang “Take me Back to Walker” in 1964, but I don't think they meant it because Eric Burdon certainly never went back after he discovered L.A. and drugs. 

Also saw a sign to Gosforth, one of the posher bits of Newcastle. They had a very good rugby union team in the 1970's and 1980's. One of their iconic players was Colin White, who played at prop and was capped four times for England. Although small and light compared to the monsters of to-day – he was probably the size of the average scrum-half now – he was incredibly tough. This was the amateur era, of course, and he was a tree surgeon. One day he cut two of his fingers off with a chainsaw. He set out to drive to Casualty, realised he had forgotten to bring the fingers and went back and collected them. After recovering he continued playing at the highest level. I was sad to see that he had died in 2011. 

Passed the Spanish City in Whitley Bay, the permanent funfair immortalised by Dire Straits in “Tunnel of Love”. It closed in 2005 but there are plans to refurbish and re-open it. Also passed the enormous Formica factory in North Shields (why is it called “Formica”, is it made from ants?). Dire Straits didn't sing about it and neither did the Animals.
 
Grey's Monument
There was an amazing number of open spaces, playing fields and sports centres on the way. Newcastle United have a very good scout now (amazingly Alan Carr's father) but I can't help thinking he should spend more time locally. There was a time when virtually every club in the Football League had at least two geordies in their team while Newcastle have always missed loads of local talent. How come Alan Shearer was on Southampton's books as a youth team player? The Burnley team which won the old First Division (i.e. The League Championship) in 1959-60 was composed of eight geordies. 

Coming into the city from the north past the Civic Centre and into Haymarket it is rather elegant, with many flowering trees and some fine houses. Walked down Northumberland Street to Grey's Monument and down Grey Street to High Bridge (a street, not a bridge). CAMRA used to own a pub here, the Duke of Wellington. I popped in to get a souvenir proggy mat (the local name for the cloth mats they put on the bar to soak up spills) and to admire the array of handpumps. Now a pretty ordinary pub, empty apart from me and a strange, very over-dressed old barmaid. Went past the Beehive, a classic old green-tiled boozer on the corner of High Bridge and Bigg Market. Looking through the steamy windows I saw it was packed, heaving at 11:55 in the morning. Incredible.
 
Central Arcade
Through the Central Arcade, three floors of music!  Excellent!

Up Grainger Street and into Grainger Market, the most amazing Victorian cast-iron closed market. It was just wonderful and I wandered around with a silly grin on my face. It had just such a brilliant atmosphere and I could see that everyone else was loving it too. It first opened in 1835 and contains over 100 businesses, including seven butchers, six cafes, five greengrocers, four fishmongers, three bookshops, two petshops and a brilliant model shop with, by the looks of it, every Star Wars figure ever issued. Everyone should go and see Grainger Market. It's worth going to Newcastle just to see it. Believe me, it's superb.

Tearing myself away I spotted a bit of excitement around Grey's Monument, which is Newcastle's equivalent of Speaker's Corner. Three young chaps were extolling the wonders of Islam, three weedy-looking lads from the Revolutionary Workers' Party were explaining that the UK's immigation policy is racist and about thirty English Defence League “gentlemen”, surrounded by about fifty police, were roaring at all of them. Loads of people were standing around watching. One copper gave me a very hard look, which I can only think was because my beard has got a bit out of hand and I look a bit fundamentalist. I smiled and gave him a wink and he didn't arrest me. You can do things like that when you're old. I wondered what Earl Grey, architect of the Great Reform Act of 1832, made of it all as he looked down from his column 130 feet above. Would he think it was all worthwhile? He looks as if he is dying for a cup of tea. 
The wonderful Grainger Market
Good job Saturday was so great because Sunday was a washout. Cold rain and a bitter wind all day. Went back to bed and read. Feel rather guilty about not giving Whitley Bay a fair chance to enchant me. I think I have been rather feeble, skulking in the warm. I will go away and beat myself up now.




 

 

 

 



Friday, 25 April 2014

17. Durham
CC Site
April 21st - 24th
     About forty miles here from Stokesley, where I had been staying with my nephew and his family. The route took me up the A19, right through the middle of Teesside with its quaint industrial architecture. I was very early to book-in, so went further up the
     A1(M) to Washington, where I used to work in the 'Seventies and 'Eighties. Our three factories, which were brand new in 1974, are all derelict, as is most of the industrial estate around them. The only businesses flourishing were Makro, the wholesaler to the small shop-keeper and Kuehne and Nagel, the shippers. Thanks to Thatcher that's our economy now, discounting stuff other people have made and sending it somewhere else. This area was the land of Parsons, Vickers and Austin and Pickersgill, heavy engineering and shipbuilding to go with the coal-mining. The road sign announcing Washington said “Welcome to the original Washington”. Nice one.
I    I also popped in to Chester-le-Street and had a look at Durham's county cricket ground, the Riverside Stadium, which now promises to be a regular test cricket site. It's wonderful, very impressive and nicely done, unobtrusive and in a lovely setting of parkland and lots of trees right by the River Wear (pronounced “Weir”, by the way). It looked as if there was a match on to-day, so I might go and watch tomorrow if it's a bit warmer.
    Talking of coal-mining, I changed the bedding in the van to-day. It's a terrible job, as you have to climb the ladder into the space over the cab and struggle on your knees with sheets, pillows and the duvet with about two feet of headroom. Two feet of headroom is fine for sleeping, but is very tight for crawling around. It's a good job I change the linen only once a year. Just kidding!
      Oh God, I've just found out that the Durham cricket ground is called “The Emirates Stadium”. Does that mean a fatwah will descend on my head? Oh no, so much to do, so little time. 

The Sanctuary Knocker
 

Durham Cathedral
   
        Heavy rain this morning, the first for quite some time. A change of plan was indicated. No Durham/Somerset cricket for me to-day. Instead I walked to the Belmont Park and Ride and caught the bus into the city. To get to the bus stop I had to cross two slip-roads of the A1(M), which wasn't nice. At times like this you realise how few, how very few, motorists indicate their intentions at roundabouts. In my new trim shape, however, I was lightning off the blocks.
 
 
     On arriving in the city I asked the driver where I could catch the bus back. “I'll show you”, he said, and got out of the bus to show me where the stop was. This is the sort of thing which almost makes life worth living. The day was cold with intermittent torrential rain and I had forgotten my camera, so I limited myself to food shopping and checking out the bus station. I did, however, see the awesome sight, surely the finest in urban Britain, of the castle and the cathedral looming over the river Wear from Framwellgate Bridge. I shall remember my camera tomorrow. Fool!
     I found “The Shakespeare”, a great old single-frontage pub dating from 1109 and consisting of two tiny bars. They used to serve draught (i.e. real) Newcastle Exhibition, rarer than hens' teeth. It was nicknamed “Execution” (not “Journey into Space”, that was Newcastle Brown Ale) and was absolutely lethal. Ah, the happy highways where I went and cannot come again, my salad days when I was green in judgement (and very often around the gills, too). It's being refurbished and guess when the refurbishment started; yes, you got it, the day before I arrived. I was only going to take   a photo, anyway, honestly your honour. 
     Pleasant sunny day (Wednesday); walked into the city along the river, about three miles. Absolutely beautiful, through
woods with a carpet of wood anemone and wild garlic and a woodpecker banging away over my head like John Humphreys at a politician. Had a good look round the cathedral, but my enthusiasm has waned. It used to be my favourite, but now, having seen so many other examples, I find it rather butch and brutalist. It really suits Durham, though, which was the seat of the Prince Bishops. These were the Bishops of Durham who were given special powers by the Crown which allowed them to do pretty much what they wanted, which in those days normally meant imprisoning, torturing, murdering and expropriating anybody and anything they chose. These saintly clerics were pretty tough fellows in those days; the Archbishop of York led the English army against the Scots at Northallerton in the Battle of the Standard in 1138, having said that it was God's work to withstand the Scots (no comment). I can imagine Rowan Williams riding at the head of an army with beard and hair flowing and looking like Gandalf on Shadowfax, but this new Welby bloke looks a bit of a wuss. When you enter County Durham the sign says “County Durham – Land of the Prince Bishops”. This can be translated as “Abandon hope all ye who enter here” or “Keep your hand on your wallet” and is the equivalent of “Welcome to the Land of the Russian Mafia Oligarchs”.


The castle and cathedral and Framwellgate Bridge

Extended heavy rainstorm in the night, the noise on the roof preventing me from sleeping for three hours. Desperate straits; I have no book to read as my trawl of charity shops in Durham drew a blank yesterday. I must say I've never seen a university city with such a paucity of bookshops. I was desperate enough to consider buying a new book and went into Waterstone's. It's pathetically small and almost the whole of the ground floor is taken up by “university merchandise”, fleeces, sweatshirts, mugs, scarves, etc. everywhere. I'm a simple soul and expect a bookshop to have books. I left muttering oaths. I even considered looking in W H Smith, but managed to stop myself. It might have triggered a heart attack or a violent rage. My hopes rest on the charity shops of Sunderland.
      Great bus ride to Sunderland from Durham. At West Rainton, a pretty former pit village, a sign saying “No Opencast Mine Here”. Is that ironic? Not sure, but it's something or other. From East Rainton, a not so pretty former pit village, a splendid view of the Penshaw Monument above Washington. This 70 foot high folly is a replica of the Temple of Hephaestus (the Greek Vulcan) in Athens and can be seen for miles around. It is considered to be Wearside's most beloved landmark, even appearing on the badge of Sunderland Football Club. Through Rainton Business Park, where one huge block might have been the HQ of NPower and another had a sign saying “Sunderland Software City”. Coming into Sunderland, on the left a pub called “The Board”. I thought it a strange name and wondered what the pub sign was; a plank? I found out on the way back and it was a chess board with a game set-up. Nice. On the right, St. Chad's church; there are lots of St. Chads in the North but I can't remember having seen any down South. Then a large house with a sign announcing “The Home of Life Transformational Dentistry”. What a fantastic boast! Then, last but not least, a long single storey building with a verandah the length of the front, two old lads reading their papers on it and a sign saying “Aged Miners' Home”. Brilliant!
     The previous time I had gone to Sunderland was via Hylton Castle and alongside the Wear and by the shipyards. I think I'm right in saying Sunderland had the largest shed for building a ship entirely under cover. In 1978, 7,500 people worked in the yards, but within ten years the last yard had closed. Because the river isn't wide enough, they used to launch new ships beam-on rather than stern-on, which is quite unusual.
     I was thinking about this when unfortunately I arrived. I'm sorry to be so harsh, but Sunderland is a disastrous mess. It's the ugliest place I've ever seen since I went to Consett in 1975. As usual, I went to the Tourist Information office to get a street map. It was in the council offices and was a table with a few leaflets on it. The man at reception told me the office had been closed. There wasn't a street map. I asked “Do they not want anyone to come here, then?” He laughed in a really sad way. It was awful and I went away with a heavy heart. The sad thing about the whole mess was that there were some very impressive buildings in the wide and rather dignified main street, five storeys, stone and with lots of nice Victorian frilly bits. They were good enough to be in Regent Street or the King's Road. Unfortunately the shops on their ground floors were boarded-up. I took a photo of an atrocious Poundland. Well, at least the football team is not the worse thing about Sunderland.
The only good thing about the Tourist Information Table was a book for sale about Sunderland Football Club with, on its cover, the club's great Republic of Ireland centre-half Charlie Hurley. With his film-star looks, tackle that would stop a rhinoceros in full charge, commanding aerial presence and silky footballing skills, unique for a centre-half in the 1950's and 1960's, Hurley was the hero of Wearside. He was also the hero of my English teacher in the third form, Jerry Hanratty, who was from Jarrow just up the road. I took a full-page colour photo of Hurley from “Football Monthly” into school. Jerry was delirious and stuck it up on the wall of the classroom. What a creep I was, but I got a really good report that year. Jerry used to call me “Basil”. 
 
 
Now, about UKIP and their campaign poster. There are 26 million unemployed in the EU, 2 million of them in the UK. Any of the 24 million can come to the UK to seek work. We have no idea how many will come; indeed we have no idea how many have come already. The benefits? More freely available cheap labour. The costs? Additional strain upon the infrastructure, upon the health, housing, education and transport systems. So cui bono? Owners, employers and capitalists and the government will use the benefits of cheap labour to depress wages. Since themselves they have the means to buy health insurance, their own houses, to send their children to private schools, since they do not use public transport and can afford to employ cheap domestic servants, there will be no down side for them. For the rest of us, the costs will be longer waiting lists in hospitals and for a GP appointment, higher house prices and rents, longer waiting lists for social housing, bigger school classes, more crowded roads and slower journeys and further delays on the railways.
     No-one is suggesting that 24 million unemployed will come to the UK from Europe. No-one is saying that immigration should be halted. UKIP propose a system which Australia and the US operated for years and I can't recall their having been accused of racism. Identify shortfalls in the labour force and welcome people, from whatever country, who can fill these gaps, giving preference to those who have good English and clean personal records.
     This is not racism, but simple economic and social planning. On Radio Four this morning was a discussion. A New Labour spokesman said UKIP's campaign poster was racist. The UKIP man accused New Labour of “closing-off the discussion” by playing the racism card. So many discussions of this nature over the years have been closed-off by the playing of the racism card. We must be able to discuss these issues frankly and honestly and we cannot allow the discussions to be stifled by political correctness.
    Phew! I needed that.
On the way to my next stop I'll be passing “The Angle of the North”, the Anthony Gormley statue at Gateshead of one of the Anglo-Saxons who invaded Britain in the Dark Ages. As you can see, they were quite large and could fly, which made them formidable opponents for the Romano-Britons
                                                         and, later, the Danes.

Monday, 21 April 2014

16. Leyburn
CC Site
13th-15th April

     Nice site in an old quarry, complete with lime kilns. This is going to be a short issue, because (a) I'm knackered and (b) it's a bit quiet here for me. Leyburn is very small; it's very much a hub for visitors to Wensleydale, especially walkers. You can tell locals from visitors because the latter all have leather skin, wear quasi-military clothes and carry ski-poles. It does, however, have a preserved railway, one, in fact, that I knew nothing about until a train went by yesterday afternoon about fifty yards from me, but HAULED BY A DIESEL LOCOMOTIVE. Oh, calamity.

I walked into town on Monday, about a mile and a half and very boring, although the view to the south across the dale was soothing. The station was closed, which was disappointing. The railway operates only at weekends at this time of year. I spent about thirty minutes in town then came back. The only excitement was buying a Cadbury's Cream Egg in the Co-Op. On the way back I stopped and studied a field full of sheep and their lambs and rescued a bumble bee I found on the pavement. I was so emotionally drained by the entertainment that I had an afternoon nap for two hours.

I must try to find something to write about tomorrow. Sorry!

    Went for a bike ride through Leyburn and on towards Askrigg further up the dale. I was nearly cleaned-out by a flying fire engine hurrying to an emergency and then by an old lady at some traffic lights. I gave up and came back having done only eight miles. (The real reason was that it was so hilly).

I sat in the warm sun reading until 4:00 and watched a crazy blackbird. These really are the loopiest birds and my favourite. It started with a thrush feeding on the grass verge opposite the van. Along came a hen blackbird and tried to drive it away. The thrush moved a couple of feet and carried on serenely feeding, quartering a small area systematically. The blackbird flew off to the base of a tree where it started to hurl lumps of moss around in an apparent huff. It was completely frantic, but seemed to find nothing to eat at all. Now and then it would charge the thrush again, the thrush just, as before, moving a couple of yards and carrying on regardless. I watched for fifteen minutes while the thrush fed steadily and the blackbird made a mess and went without. Eventually the cock blackbird came along and they flew off together. I imagined the cock said to her “Why are you being such a daft bat?” Come on, now, let's go home”.           
   
     This is quite a short page, so it leaves me room for a rant. Now, what about, for example, “Myself and John” or “Myself and the Manager”? It just won't do. “John and I” or “The Manager and I” is what is needed. I think the trouble is that the correct form sounds posh or affected, possibly because the Queen was always supposed to have said “My husband and I”. It's another case of “Prolier than Thou” then. Please don't do it. Besides, it's rude to put yourself first.