A year of semi-natural Scotland

The old day job brings a brief escape from the surreal juxtaposing chaos of Facebook and Twitter. Off we go into the great outdoors for some down to earth chat with gardeners in the real world.

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Add comment April 10th, 2013

Spring WILL come

SteamingAhead

 

Ray is steaming ahead. Literally. In this cold air breath comes in cloudy puffs as wind whips flurries of snow off the verges and plucks a mourneful chord on the telegraph wires. G Minor I reckon but I really wouldn’t know. Whatever, it’s cold, bleak and very unseasonal.

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Add comment March 30th, 2013

Cameron’s poll tax?

 

speaker seen between Unite flags at bedroom tax demo

 

On a bleak, finger-chilling day, some heart-warming moments.  At the demonstration against the bedroom tax outside the Scottish Parliament,  a young Edinburgh student stirs the blood with invective against Holyrood Palace: will they be paying tax on unoccupied bedrooms? Like f*** they will. And, a trade unionist raises hopes: “This will be Cameron’s poll tax”. Loud cheers. (more…)

Add comment March 16th, 2013

Give us statues we can look in the eye

I might have known better. Getting into the taxi in Queen Street Station one rainy day I couldn’t help commenting on George Square. Looking a little tidier today, I say, but what’s happening to the statues?

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Add comment February 21st, 2013

First catch your swan

swan_face

‘You know those ducks in that lagoon by Central Park South?  That little lake? By any chance do you happen to know where they go, the ducks, when it gets all frozen over?’

I blew the dust off my old copy of The Catcher in the Rye to find that quote. Rather eerily it fell open at exactly the right page. But never mind those ducks in Central Park, Holden Caulfield.  What I want to know is where do the swans go when they leave Pond Cottage?  Long before it is in any danger of freezing over.  (more…)

Add comment January 5th, 2013

The art and craft of making a good town centre

The Post Office closed and reopened as a DVD shop. Then the DVD shop closed and reopened as a shop selling…well, to be honest I’m not sure what it is selling, the window display does not tempt me to cross the street let alone go through the door, but it looks like they are selling ‘gifts’.  Or to put it another way, more stuff. (more…)

Add comment December 28th, 2012

In these shoes?

One of the perks of my voluntary work with Leith Open Space is an occasional chance to peek behind the scenes at the Scottish Parliament.  Recently it gave me an unexpected view of the Deputy First Minister. (more…)

Add comment December 7th, 2012

RIP the quick brown fox

Ah, the typewriter. I’m sitting, hands on laptop keyboard, staring at the screen but my mind’s eye looks back to an old Royal machine in a long-ago newsroom where I sit, fingers poised above firm round buttons, piles of screwed up copy paper on the floor, staring into the middle distance, waiting for words. (more…)

3 comments November 21st, 2012

All the world’s a market place

“I hope you don’t mind”, says Kerry, “I’ve put you down for leading a workshop on Open Space Community.”  I’ve just arrived at the conference and within minutes I find myself sitting with a microphone in my hand in a circle of people of all ages from all over the world inviting them to join ‘my’ workshop. What on earth am I doing here?

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Add comment November 9th, 2012

Beware the Tigers of Florence

Florence: Friday 3.00pm (ish).  Beneath the pomegranate tree, a pleasant softening of focus after lunch of melon, bought in the market at the far end of our street, prosciuto from the scary supermercato way over the railway bridge, and a glass of red wine. (more…)

Add comment October 29th, 2012

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