Hanna Family Blogsite
04 February 2016
A Morning Walk along Middleton Beach to Emu Point
Another Facebook photo album, of a two hour, three kilometre walk along Middleton Beach from Ellen Cove to Emu Point earlier today. As with previous Facebook photo albums of mine, it's public, and you don't need a Facebook account of your own to view it.
01 February 2016
A Visit to Stony Hill, October 2015
Mere months after we actually traipsed around the Hill, I've finally put up a Facebook photo album of the afternoon. As usual, it's a public album, so a Facebook account isn't needed to see it -- use this link to marvel at the instructive captions, mordant wit, and other textual exertions in which one has to indulge when one is stuck indoors on a blustery day in Albany.
15 May 2015
The Wugster does the Tapestrising
For the record, this tapestry kit -- a replica of one of "The Lady and The Unicorn" tapestries in the Musee Cluny in Paris -- was acquired little over twenty years ago, and although it was worked on for a little while back then it has languished untouched for many of those years. Retirement, however, seems to have prompted its being brought out of storage ("storage" in this case meaning "tucked down the side of Judith's TV viewing chair") to be worked on for an hour or so at least one day a week, and sometimes more than just one day. But at least it's being worked on! It may even be finished before another twenty years have elapsed!
12 December 2014
FYI and ACTION: Enforced Change of Email Address for Joseph Nicholas
I signed up with Global Internet (as it then was) in 1998 or 1999, to access the internet via dial-up through a modem -- all that was then available. Global Internet eventually became part of Madasafish, which in turn became part of Plusnet, but through those changes -- and through our switch from dial-up to broadband internet access in 2009 -- I kept the same email address, josephn at globalnet dot co dot uk.
Two days ago, however, I received an automated email from Plusnet stating that all those who'd signed up under the old dial-up option would be having their accounts terminated with effect from Friday 9 January 2015, unless they transferred to Plusnet's broadband service. A phone conversation with them in response to this email has confirmed that use of another broadband service will not be acceptable. As you might imagine, a change of broadband provider is not something I wish to pursue (apart from anything else, our existing broadband service is packaged with our telephone service, a change of which would be far too much hassle).
I am therefore having to change my email address, and am giving you this advance warning so that you can amend your address books and commence using my new address before my current address becomes defunct next month. Please use my new address -- excellenceingardening at gmail dot com -- for all communications henceforward.
(Interestingly, Blogger doesn't seem to have any facility to allow blog authors and administrators to change the email address they use to log in, although they can change the addresses to which blog posts are forwarded. This is means that in one tiny corner of the internet, the old josephn address will continue to be used. Heigh-ho!)
Two days ago, however, I received an automated email from Plusnet stating that all those who'd signed up under the old dial-up option would be having their accounts terminated with effect from Friday 9 January 2015, unless they transferred to Plusnet's broadband service. A phone conversation with them in response to this email has confirmed that use of another broadband service will not be acceptable. As you might imagine, a change of broadband provider is not something I wish to pursue (apart from anything else, our existing broadband service is packaged with our telephone service, a change of which would be far too much hassle).
I am therefore having to change my email address, and am giving you this advance warning so that you can amend your address books and commence using my new address before my current address becomes defunct next month. Please use my new address -- excellenceingardening at gmail dot com -- for all communications henceforward.
(Interestingly, Blogger doesn't seem to have any facility to allow blog authors and administrators to change the email address they use to log in, although they can change the addresses to which blog posts are forwarded. This is means that in one tiny corner of the internet, the old josephn address will continue to be used. Heigh-ho!)
04 November 2014
Another Facebook Photo Album
I must be on some sort of roll....here's a another album of photographs from a day out this summer, of a walk in the Chess Valley, in the Chilterns AONB (Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty), in June 2014. As before, this is a public album; go here to view the photographs.
03 November 2014
Photographs of a Day Trip to Eynsford, 18 July 2014
Having had it on my list of Things To Do for, like, months, I've finally put up a Facebook album of photographs from our visit to Eynsford a few months ago, to see the remains of Lullingstone Roman villa, the 17th-18th century Lullingstone Castle (actually a former manor house) and the ruins of Eysnford Castle, a Norman fort. The album is public, and can be viewed whether or not you have a Facebook account; use this link.
Retirement -- A Progress Report
In the weeks before I retired from the civil service, at the end of March this year, work colleagues would ask me whether I had any plans for my retirement. Of course! I would reply, and would outline the four "big projects" that I expected to fill the next few years -- a reading backlog (three-quarters of it fiction) which would keep me occupied for about five years if I did nothing else; the digitisation of the residue of my once-huge vinyl record collection (the residue being stuff that hasn't appeared on CD and is never likely to -- 12-inch singles from the early 1990s by Ride, for example); albumising the photographs from varous foreign holidays, some of them (Southeast Australia, Andalucia, central Spain) dating back to 1998 and 1999; and the digitisation of my late father's enormous collection of slide photographs from the late 1950s and early 1960s (some of which, from his trips to Australia associated with the subsequently-abandoned Skybolt project, could be of minor historic interest). There wouldn't be time to sit around doing nothing; why, I was retiring at 60 precisely so that I could get on with these things!
Needless to say (you're probably ahead of me here), I haven't started any of these projects. The fiction is untouched; the vinyl records are still taking up space on the floor of my room; nobody seems to make photograph albums any more (Boots and WH Smith both offered loose leaf formats to which pages could be added as required, but they are now incredibly difficult to find); and I have yet to actually open and view the boxes and boxes of slides. What have I been doing, that these projects have slipped so?
One answer is that these are all things one does indoors, when the weather is too cold and wet to be doing things outside. In the past, "outside" has usually meant the garden and the allotment, which could only be dealt with at weekends, but giving up work has freed us to deal with them at any time, which means that we've been able to keep up with all the jobs that have needed doing (weeding, harvesting, cutting the grass, renewing bed edging, whatever) instead of running furiously behind them and never catching up. (So hooray for that.) "Outside" has now also meant, as I wrote in a couple of posts earlier this year on my LiveJournal blog, the exploitation of the weekdays that retirement has given to us to attend lunchtime lectures, make midweek visits to places outside London, and generally fill the days with activities that we might otherwise never have fitted in at all -- looking back through my diary for 2014, and reviewing the rolling list of places we've been (as we tick them off....as new ones are added), I find that we have had an average of two events a week since the end of the March, not counting the various things that we did individually because the other wasn't interested. (Weekly dance classes for Judith, day trips to the National Railway Museum in York and Bovington Tank Museum for me.)
Looking ahead to the rest of this week, I see that we have tickets for the exhibition Constable: The Making of a Master at the V&A on Wednesday, followed by a trip across the road to this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition at the Natural History Museum; on Thursday I have a lunchtime lecture on Germany: Floating Frontiers at the British Museum followed by a visit to the Museum of London for its Sherlock Holmes: The Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die exhibition; and on Friday we have tickets for Late Turner: Painting Set Free at Tate Britain, with an evening lecture at the British Museum on New Discoveries from Ancient Egypt. The following two weeks each have another two BM lectures, then a range of local events....the week commencing 15 December is currently blank, but something will doubtless be added to it at some point.
Busy busy busy -- so busy that we both wonder how we ever had time to go to work. But that's retirement for you -- the best career move one can ever make!
Needless to say (you're probably ahead of me here), I haven't started any of these projects. The fiction is untouched; the vinyl records are still taking up space on the floor of my room; nobody seems to make photograph albums any more (Boots and WH Smith both offered loose leaf formats to which pages could be added as required, but they are now incredibly difficult to find); and I have yet to actually open and view the boxes and boxes of slides. What have I been doing, that these projects have slipped so?
One answer is that these are all things one does indoors, when the weather is too cold and wet to be doing things outside. In the past, "outside" has usually meant the garden and the allotment, which could only be dealt with at weekends, but giving up work has freed us to deal with them at any time, which means that we've been able to keep up with all the jobs that have needed doing (weeding, harvesting, cutting the grass, renewing bed edging, whatever) instead of running furiously behind them and never catching up. (So hooray for that.) "Outside" has now also meant, as I wrote in a couple of posts earlier this year on my LiveJournal blog, the exploitation of the weekdays that retirement has given to us to attend lunchtime lectures, make midweek visits to places outside London, and generally fill the days with activities that we might otherwise never have fitted in at all -- looking back through my diary for 2014, and reviewing the rolling list of places we've been (as we tick them off....as new ones are added), I find that we have had an average of two events a week since the end of the March, not counting the various things that we did individually because the other wasn't interested. (Weekly dance classes for Judith, day trips to the National Railway Museum in York and Bovington Tank Museum for me.)
Looking ahead to the rest of this week, I see that we have tickets for the exhibition Constable: The Making of a Master at the V&A on Wednesday, followed by a trip across the road to this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition at the Natural History Museum; on Thursday I have a lunchtime lecture on Germany: Floating Frontiers at the British Museum followed by a visit to the Museum of London for its Sherlock Holmes: The Man Who Never Lived and Will Never Die exhibition; and on Friday we have tickets for Late Turner: Painting Set Free at Tate Britain, with an evening lecture at the British Museum on New Discoveries from Ancient Egypt. The following two weeks each have another two BM lectures, then a range of local events....the week commencing 15 December is currently blank, but something will doubtless be added to it at some point.
Busy busy busy -- so busy that we both wonder how we ever had time to go to work. But that's retirement for you -- the best career move one can ever make!
15 July 2014
A Visit to Eltham Palace
The joys of retirement....we awake on Bastille Day 2014 (yesterday), note that the weather is forecast to be dry, warm and sunny, and decide that it's the right day to make a return visit to Eltham Palace in southeast London -- somewhere we last saw in 1998 or thereabouts, shortly after it first opened following its restoration by English Heritage. As usual, I took lots of photographs; and, following previous practice, I have created a Facebook photo album of our visit which is available to anyone to view.
27 June 2014
A Day Out at Chatham Historic Dockyard
Another album of photographs on Facebook for your delectation, with instructive captions, of a return visit to a heritage site we'd previously visited shortly after its opening some 20 years ago, and never since. As with previous albums, it's publicly available, so you don't need to be logged into Facebook or even have a Facebook account to see it; go here and revel in our thrillingness.
11 June 2014
A Circular Walk to the Watts Gallery
Yesterday was dry, warm and sunny, so we went for a walk in the countryside west of Guildford, to visit the Watts Gallery at Compton, returning via Loseley House. I have created an album of photographs of the walk and visit on Facebook, which should be available even to those who don't have a Facebook account -- see here.
30 May 2014
Butterflies and Mammoths
This afternoon, we went to the Natural History Museum to see the new (but temporary) exhibition on mammoths, featuring "Lyuba", a frozen mammoth calf which died when it fell into a muddy hole a month after its birth around 42,000 years ago; it was excavated from the Siberian permafrost a few years ago and (until any other turn up) is currently the best-preserved of any mammoth mummies. (Photography inside the exhibition is prohibited, but there's a range of images of the calf here. The Wikipedia entry for the calf contains details of its discovery, including some which the videos accompanying the exhibition completely omit.) We also went to the Sensational Butterflies" exhibition (another temporary exhibition) in the Museum's forecourt: a heated tent which has been set up every summer since 2008 to house tropical butterflies flittering about and (if you're lucky) landing on you. I wasn't lucky; but Judith was -- see the accompanying photographic evidence of a butterfly on her hair. (We were not able to identify the species of butterfly in question.)

This being half-term, the Museum was overrun with children (shriek, gibber, run away), being led around by platoons of harassed parents; the most enormous queues were for the dinosaurs, which are perennially popular. There were also large queues for the mammoths exhibition, for which an entry fee is levied (entry to all the other parts of the Museum is free); but we, being Museum Members, were able to flourish our membership card and jump straight past the head of the queue without having to pay anything at all. The paying visitors were left seething with jealousy, doubtless.
This being half-term, the Museum was overrun with children (shriek, gibber, run away), being led around by platoons of harassed parents; the most enormous queues were for the dinosaurs, which are perennially popular. There were also large queues for the mammoths exhibition, for which an entry fee is levied (entry to all the other parts of the Museum is free); but we, being Museum Members, were able to flourish our membership card and jump straight past the head of the queue without having to pay anything at all. The paying visitors were left seething with jealousy, doubtless.
06 May 2014
The First Weekend of May --
-- was the May Day Bank Holiday, a public holiday in all four parts of the UK and (for historical reasons stemming from the Anglo-Norman invasions in the 12th century) the Republic of Ireland as well. We were quite busy: on Saturday we went for a walk along the Lea Navigation from Markfield Park north to Stonebridge Lock and back across Tottenham Marshes and the Hale Village development at Tottenham Hale; and on Monday we attended the Tottenham Ploughman Mayfest event in Markfield Park. Copious photographs were taken of each jaunt, and have been assembled into Facebook albums with instructive captions. Both albums are public, and can therefore be viewed by anyone irrespective of whether or not they have a Facebook account: the walk along the Lea Navigation is here, and the Tottenham Ploughman Mayfest event is here. "Enjoy!" as I believe is now the preferred term....
01 May 2014
Vote for Judith Hanna!
Well, you can if you live in Haringey's Tottenham Green ward, where The Wugster is one of the Green Party's three candidates in the local elections later this month. (Standing primarily to help make up the slate and not expecting to actually get elected -- we've both got enough to do as it is, thank you very much....)
29 April 2014
Apple Blossom Time
It's a cool and overcast morning here in Tottenham, North London, with the promise of rain later (just when we plan to go to the allotment, of course), but the apple blossom in our garden is booping merrily along....
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(Judith just visible in the conservatory behind the tree, doubtless engaged in some important post-breakfast numberwangs.)
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(Judith just visible in the conservatory behind the tree, doubtless engaged in some important post-breakfast numberwangs.)
25 April 2014
A Visit to Kew Gardens
Today is grey and damp, with the weekend promising more of the same and the temperatures trending downwards (chiz chiz as N Molesworth the goriller of form 3B would sa). But yesterday, when it was mostly fine and occasionally sunny, The Wugster and I went to Kew Gardens, for which she has purchased an annual pass allowing her and one guest an unlimited number of visits; four such visits, and the pass has paid for itself (especially as ticket prices may have to rise to make up some of the continuing cuts in government funding). (Which of course government spokescreatures claim are not actually cuts at all.)
The Wugster was interested primarily in the displays of azaleas and rhododendrons, which are currently in or coming into bloom; I was interested primarily in photographing things, and doing a spot of birdwatching in between: Emirates Airlines Airbus A380, Malaysian Airlines short 747, numerous British Airways 737 and 767 variants, and so on....because Kew Gardens is directly under the approach path to Heathrow Airport, and it seems that crossing the garden boundary is the signal to the pilots to lower the aircrafts' landing gear: you can see the wheel wells open and the undercarriage extend, and hear the pitch of the engines rise as the pilots have to increase thrust to compensate for the extra drag. Hours of fun, for those who might be interested in such things.
Anyway, here are some photographs of the azaleas, together with a photograph of The Wugster taking a photograph of some rhododendrons. Then we strolled to the end of Syon Vista, walked along the lake photographing coots and coot chicks, and went up the treetop walkway before exiting via the gift shop where one or two new plants for the garden were acquired.
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The Wugster was interested primarily in the displays of azaleas and rhododendrons, which are currently in or coming into bloom; I was interested primarily in photographing things, and doing a spot of birdwatching in between: Emirates Airlines Airbus A380, Malaysian Airlines short 747, numerous British Airways 737 and 767 variants, and so on....because Kew Gardens is directly under the approach path to Heathrow Airport, and it seems that crossing the garden boundary is the signal to the pilots to lower the aircrafts' landing gear: you can see the wheel wells open and the undercarriage extend, and hear the pitch of the engines rise as the pilots have to increase thrust to compensate for the extra drag. Hours of fun, for those who might be interested in such things.
Anyway, here are some photographs of the azaleas, together with a photograph of The Wugster taking a photograph of some rhododendrons. Then we strolled to the end of Syon Vista, walked along the lake photographing coots and coot chicks, and went up the treetop walkway before exiting via the gift shop where one or two new plants for the garden were acquired.
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