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  • Scones, Biscuits and Tea

    Dec 6th, 2017

    wp-1510520081363..jpgWhen it comes to a no-nonsense accompaniment to tea, halfway between a cake and a biscuit, it’s a scone you’re after. There are scones, and there are scones, but no-one makes scones like an Anglican, because an Anglican scone is a timeless scone, steadfast, trustworthy and British. In case you are unfamiliar, Anglicans are baby boomers for whom the Sixties were too noisy, and they live in a kind, optimistic world of raffle tickets, tea cosies and Rich Tea biscuits. Young Anglicans usually have the traditional old testament names of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, George and Ringo. They drink squash and colour things in until they stop being seven and, overnight, become seventy three, using phrases such as ‘…pardon my French’ to excuse Anglican swearwords like ‘blast’ and ‘damn’, and ‘…it’s gone a bit dark over Bill’s mother’s’ to warn of oncoming rain. Anglicans have a particular way of buying scones, biscuits and tea from each other in places such as Itteringham parish hall, where I met my old dear yesterday. It involves saying things like ‘…and four makes twelve’, ‘…I’ve got the seventeen’, and ‘…eighty three, ninety three, ninety eight and two’s a pound’ when counting change, and is curiously civilised. All in all, Anglicanism is like a Masonic code, if the purpose of Freemasonry was to make sure that everyone had a nice sit down of an afternoon. They are a lovely bunch.

    2017-12-03 18.44.18These are exciting times for my old dear. For a start, there is a royal wedding to get her teeth into. We are both delighted with the Markle girl, who seems a good sort and has a name that rhymes with Sparkle, like a real princess. I imagine we’ll watch the ceremony on her sofa with a union jack across our knees, as is customary on such occasions. She has also been asked to lead the choir at her local church, which represents something of a coup because when she first arrived in East Anglia, two years after me, her proposals for streamlining the Wednesday morning Prayer ‘n’ Praise marked her out as ‘something of a flying cannon’. It is a progressive church, ‘with all the equipment for Catholics’, and she is fond of it. She lives in one of the small and remote villages on the north Norfolk coast, closer to the King’s Lynn end than the small and remote village where I live, which is so small and remote that they were still burning Catholics on public holidays until 2004, equipment or not. She is, if anything, even more suspicious of the countryside than I am, attributing the death of her cat, who I hated, to the ‘change of air’. Renal failure at nineteen was no more than veterinary superstition – Norfolk is so guilty it might as well cackle about the place in a mask and cape. Slough, her former home, is so maligned that I once carried off a joke about it during a funeral eulogy in the town’s crematorium, but my old dear actively misses it. The death of the cat was traumatic – certainly more traumatic than that of her husband, which she announced to me over the phone with an astonished ‘You’ll never guess what – your father’s dropped dead’, although as it was his eulogy I carried off the Slough joke in, I can hardly claim to be a paragon of sensitivity, myself.

    Anyway. After several scones, each on a doily on a saucer, we were scone drunk, so Joe picked us up, stopping for a final quick round of scones before taking us to Runton. Upon IMG_20171202_155340.jpgarrival, he parked next to the Screaming Car, from which Becka emerged looking blissful, having been pounding her fists on the steering wheel for, by the look of things, about fourteen minutes. In far off days, I would treat my old dear to shandy at the Duke of Wellington public house, Toynbee Street, London E1, and Vinny the Landlord would ban swearing among the villainy therein for the duration of her visit. At Runton, Graham echoed this tradition by keeping his children in their caravan until she went home. This says something about my old dear’s overall bearing, a mix of charming old lady and forgotten Kray sister, rather than her as someone fazed by unruliness – indeed, she once demonstrated a disdain for authority by punching someone to the floor, even though he was a fireman, in a fireman’s uniform. Nonetheless, ‘Anton’ respectfully stopped listening to Piss Whores In Training when she came to inspect the Old Servant’s Quarters, where he has all but finished the rewiring. This marks the culmination of an impressive eight months of work, especially considering he was only a qualified electrician for the last three weeks of it, and means that in addition to Flat Earthers and so forth, we might one day be able to have people who believe in normal things staying there. Imagine that.

    ‘Anton’ and my old dear have always got on well, with her referring to him as ‘a bit like a black Tom Jones’ even though I’m not entirely certain you can say things like that anymore. I called Joe and ‘Becka’ up to the Old Servant’s Quarters to bask in ‘Anton’s’ achievement, and the afternoon was spent reminiscing about the markets, my old dear having worked on my grandfather’s Petticoat Lane curtain material emporium as a teenager with a bouffant bob. The bonhomie diminished only when my dog crept in and ate four mini sausage rolls and some crisps from ‘Anton’s lunch. I pointed out that he’ll think he’s at a wedding reception and that we should probably open some cava and put You Can’t Hurry Love on, whereupon ‘Anton’ told me to fuck off, immediately apologising to my old dear, who said that she rather fancied some cava now I’d mentioned it. ‘Anton’ drove to Saxthorpe, bought cava, fish and chips for everyone, and a lovely afternoon turned into a lovely evening with a bit of a sing song at the end. And that, you see, is how the Runton Estate won my old dear’s approval, which is not an easy thing to win.

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    Photards:

    Main – Joe in an anorak by a white board with a balloon and a master plan.

    Inset top – the Duke of Wellington public house, Toynbee Street, London E1. Stanton (left) and Chrissy boy. I forget the context, but Stanton seems to  be about to produce pictorial evidence of what happened to the last person who didn’t agree with them.

    Inset middle – my dog, with an injury to his front driver’s side leg caused, again, by a deer from the petting zoo.

    Inset lower – two of our beautiful donkeys having a lovely time outside a Norfolk cathedral. Very strokey faces.

  • Taxis, Erotica and Freegans

    Nov 29th, 2017

    IMG_20171018_152727.jpg

    It is a clear, cloudless early December afternoon on the Runton Hall Estate, in the untamed interior of rural East Anglia. This is a flat region, and from the second floor bathroom of the Old Servant’s Quarters, where I am adding some trademark finishing flourishes to the grouting around the sink, I can see Moscow. Happy noises glide through empty air from outside. Joe is persuading two of our donkeys onto a trailer – it is a busy time of year for animals associated with the Nativity – while Becka and their numerous children are selling tea and coffee to the film crew from two urns on a trestle table. Business appears to be good. I can eavesdrop on all this agreeable industry because despite being a de facto plumber these days, I refuse to listen to commercial radio while I work. Instead, I have Pulitzer prize nominated The Glorious Cause*, a military and social account of the American War of Independence, on Audible. Or rather, I do until ‘Anton’ arrives to work in the next room, when I download Piss Whores In Training** instead. It’s the kind of thing he will enjoy, and I am working in a bathroom, so it seems an appropriate compromise. Then again, it’s five and half quid and goes on for an hour, and when compared to The Glorious Cause – twenty seven hours long and obtained with a free monthly credit – seems poor value indeed. We listen to Piss Whores In Training for a few minutes before it occurs to us that Nicky Delgado’s stoic narration will also glide through the empty air amid the agreeable hubbub of the Runton Hall Estate. We turn it off, thus making the world a slightly better place, and work in silence.

    IMG_20171115_205408.jpgWell, not entirely in silence. As the splintering yawn of ‘Anton’ crow-barring floorboards mingles with the ambient burble from outside, I declare the quickest way from Euston Square to Cally Road to be up Euston Road, past King’s Cross, left onto York Way, through the lights, and over Regent’s Canal. In return, ‘Anton’ points out that to avoid the Holborn Viaduct on the way to Hatton Garden you need to pick up Ave Maria Lane from High Holborn, straight off Cheapside. Since jointly working on the Old Servant’s Quarters we have found ourselves doing this sort of thing often, in what I believe to be an abstract expression of homesickness, as even the names of streets in that unhappy city chime in our grubby Cockney chimney sweep ear flaps. Also, we know more London street names than most, because we are former Knowledge Boys***, an apprenticeship we hampered somewhat by leaving town three years into the projected six year timescale for full Knowledge absorbtion. Incidentally, when you see someone on a moped in London with a clipboard on the handlebars, that’s a Knowledge Boy putting some work in. Myself, I was a cycling Knowledge Boy, zipping hither and yon amid the traffic with directions flapping from my handlebars on cardboard luggage labels. It’s an enjoyable way to earn your spurs. I’d love to go back and finish it; sadly, rural East Anglia is a long way from Charing Cross – when you see the distance to London on road signs, the numbers are in light years – and I fear it may be some time yet.

    IMG_20170810_150744.jpgApart from that, the only obstacle to my becoming a licensed taxi driver is the fact that I cannot legally drive. This is due to a common ocular complaint, keratoconus, which renders my vision atrocious. It’s a condition, rather than a disability, so we don’t get our own Olympics like those look-at-me landmine people. Then again we’d wander in front of the hundred metres by mistake and cause a pile up, so perhaps it’s for the best. In any case, you can’t keep a good man down, so I fight adversity by driving illegally instead. Concerned road users may rest assured that I have never driven on the public highway, limiting myself instead to private roads such as those surrounding the Runton Estate, teeming with dead wildlife mown down by Joe, Becka and delivery vehicles of every description. It was briefly suggested that instead of letting glampers hunt their own food with Graham’s dogs as discussed elsewhere, we let them have the roadkill as a form of freeganism. I discussed this briefly with our survivalist/glamper tent wholesale agent Beggar’s Canyon, who has occasionally accompanied Becka during food raids on supermarket bins in Norwich – Beggar’s Canyon because she is a freegan, and Becka because she has so many children to feed. I rather like freeganism. It strikes me as a positive way to deal with a disgusting issue. Sadly, freegans are even more tiresome than vegans, and although I like the idea of turning Runton Hall into a freegan glamping experience, the only way it could be enjoyable is if no freegans turned up. Tricky.

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    *Robert Middlekauf, Oxford University Press, 2007

    **Kathryn Pissinger, Author’s Republic, 2017

    ***The Knowledge is the required qualification for a licensed black cabbie. It entails learning all of the twenty five thousand streets within six miles of Charing Cross, how and where they intersect, and every possible route between any two points therein, including the pubs, churches and other landmarks en route, what is headlining at major theatres, what footie is on, and so forth, so that you can take anyone anywhere without hesitation or recourse to satnav. You certainly need to apply yourself, but people successfully manage it every year.

    Photards:

    Main: Hippy washing line at Runton. They get issued with proper clothes in the building at the end.

    Inset top: Impressive almost-finished carved owl in the Runton woodland. Owls are a big thing for the conspiracy people, being symbols of the Illuminati and so forth, so I’m amazed the Flat Earthers haven’t gone nuts.

    Inset middle: Joe in the Compleat Angler, Norwich. It’s a difficult pub to love, and the staff are so slow that they seem to be making a stop motion film, but it’s friendly enough and good for the footie. The riverside terrace downstairs, which no one ever uses, is lovely in the summer.

    Inset lower: Joe’s wheelbarrow. He is the only person from White City to have ever seen one.

  • This Hollywood Life

    Nov 26th, 2017

    IMG_20171116_184309.jpgThere are two forms of measurement in Britain: imperial and metric, depending upon what you’re trying to measure. For example, imperial measurements, such as ounces and inches, are used for fun things like drugs and cocks. Metric milligrams are for calculating legally incriminating blood-alcohol levels and such like. Horses, being undeniably hilarious, fall squarely into the imperial system, and are measured from ground to shoulder in imperial units known as hands. For example, a Shetland pony, such as the little bastard that lives in the petting zoo at Runton, is ten hands high. Like everything in the petting zoo, he does nothing other than destroy fencing and lark about, and is richly deserving of measurement in stroppy old centimetres like a hub cab or lamp post. We have discussed petting zoos before, and I once again urge you never, ever, to have one. It’s worse than having children. You can put children up for adoption if you decide it’s not really for you, but once you have a petting zoo, you’re stuck with it.

    Happily, the horse I met last weekend, Conkers, was a fine ambassador for his species. I estimate him to have been about seven hundred hands high, and he arrived with a film crew shooting test scenes at Runton*. In the useless and autistic society we somehow thought it would be a nice idea to construct for ourselves, we are regularly urged to follow, believe in, or generally chase our dreams, presumably in preference to dealing with any kind of reality. A lie is a sort of dream, and I had lied enthusiastically about being an Olympic standard horseman to secure a small speaking part as a Union cavalry officer in the forthcoming cinematic epic. I have on two occasions managed to hang onIMG_20170618_163100.jpg to a horse, silently weeping, as it moved along at 1 mph. I can therefore confidently claim to have seen a horse, but genuine horsemanship is difficult to bluff, especially when confronted with all the stirrups and saddles and swishing and sheer horsiness of what an actual horse is. They are massive, they keep fidgeting, and our ancestors must have been pretty desperate to get somewhere slightly further away a little bit more quickly than usual to domesticate them in the first place. I asked if they could blue screen the shot and cgi Conkers in later, but it was already evident that I cannot do a decent American accent in any case, with my line – ‘Sir, you are to maintain your fire and hold fast your ground. General Meade will send reinforcements presently’ – sounding as if Worzel Gummidge was saying it, thus detracting from the gravitas of the scene. I looked at ‘Anton’, watching proceedings from an upstairs window of the Old Servant’s Quarters, but to no avail. He is black, and not allowed to ride horses. The debacle bought a snort of amusement from Joe, which I thought was a bit fucking rich considering the much-vaunted ‘affinity with animals’ that secured him the only paid employment on the Runton Hall Estate stems from nothing more than being born next to White City greyhound stadium.

    This hiccup aside, everyone has been having a whale of a time with the film crew, who are unused to territorially assertive Romany children such as Graham’s. Most discourse between the two groups has gone along these lines:

    ‘Do you want to buy a parking permit?’

    ‘No’.

    ‘See that’s a shame. It was a fiver. Now I’ve had to ask you again it’s a tenner. I’ll ask a-fucking-gain if you like’.

    ‘Look. We’re having a little party before we leave – would you like to come to that instead?’

    ‘Can I put your little fucking party in my pocket and buy stuff with it, Jimmy fucking Savile?’

    ‘Um, no’

    ‘That’s fifteen fucking quid then. Not your fucking day is it, Jimbo?’

    IMG-20171102-WA0000.jpgDespite this, and unlike the original glampers at Runton for whom threats of this nature were commonplace, everyone likes the key grips, gaffers, boom mike holders and so forth and, accordingly, Joe and/or Graham mediate such exchanges. The crew are indeed having a party for those of us constituting the staff at Runton, and usually Joe’s children, being as numerous as Graham’s are profane, would act as tiny, endearing waiting staff on such occasions. This time, however, Graham’s team of infant extortionists will also help, sharing in the generous whip round the crew have promised to have for us. Good mediation, if you ask me. It would be poor form to name the film, so discretion must prevail. That said, I will exclusively reveal that it features the grand-daughter of a very famous Hollywood star indeed, and some bloke who has a great aunt in common with Olive from On The Buses. Box office potential was adroitly summed up by Graham’s son, who pointed out that ‘You could sell their autographs on eBay if anyone knew who they fucking were’.

    Most of the crew are glamping near German Field in tents hired from ‘Anton’ and myself, providing a sliver of income at a challenging time of year. Otherwise, we are occupied with the Old Servant’s Quarters, where I have swung into action as a plumber, in the same spirit that I previously swung into action as a nineteenth century cavalry officer. Practically speaking, this means unclogging a couple of u bends and replacing some exposed piping in a bathroom unused since 1983. It is straightforward enough, and as ‘Anton’ amused us by making sparks pour from the light fittings, it occurred to me that I could actually train as an actual plumber. I refuse to believe it’s that difficult, and it would do me good to learn a trade. Incidentally, I’m currently taking a degree in political science with the Open University, to then teach adult literacy in prison, this being the nearest I will ever get to a family reunion. However, that was prior to my involvement in the Runton Estate and all the exciting, cold, wet, miserable middle of nowhere opportunities that might unfold here. There’s enough plumbing work to keep me busy for ages, once I learn how to plumb, and I am following the same thought process that ‘Anton’ did prior to his journey into the glamourous world of the qualified electrician. I began to peruse the dilemma aloud. This annoyed ‘Anton’, who was eager for me to put the water back on as he was confident of having a go on a make up artist from the film crew that evening, and wanted a quick gentleman’s wash* first. Not for the first time, I found myself marvelling that, in the current climate, he remains un-arrested.

    *To recap: the Estate is being used as a location for an upcoming film about the American Civil War, after a recommendation from Confederate re-enactors who recently camped in the East Wood, and now employed in consultative capacity.

    **Whereby an optimistic suitor rinses his cock and balls in a pub toilet sink prior to anticipated sexual congress. It was extremely popular in the nineteen nineties.

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    Photards:

    Main: the Old Servants’ Quarters, lit up for filming. The room with the blue light in it is the one they were using. I was to ride about a bit on Conkers, then run up the stairs and deliver my line, but alas it was not to be.

    Inset top: arc lighting to the side of the Old Servant’s Quarters showing the lawns and trees and everything, which are nice and tidy due to Joe’s top-notch groundsmanship.

    Inset middle: a Shetland pony at Runton petting zoo.

    Inset lower: Archibald al-Fantastique, sleeping deeply.

  • Non-Conspiracy Theory

    Nov 24th, 2017

    IMG_20170719_115541.jpgNovember is slow at Runton Hall. Slow, yes, but not entirely at a standstill. For example, we still have conspiracy groups about the place, although in winter they prefer to stay in the Old Servants’ Quarters where they can gather around flip charts and sort everything out in the comfort of a warm nineteenth century building. The yoga never really goes away either. We have all three sorts at Runton – Bikram, drunk and deaf. I murdered our previous Bikram yoga lady for her own good, and the new one doesn’t expect Joe to maintain open fires all day in the Forest School dormitory where she holds her classes, and thereby clings to life. Drunk yoga is something of a misnomer, now I come to think of it, as only the instructor is drunk. Last week she took her class wearing sunglasses to hide plastic surgery bruises and spent an hour talking about her holiday in Cyprus, and I’m not sure how much longer her tenure will last. Of the three, deaf yoga is the most popular. I’d assumed that in rural areas deaf people would be shot as poor breeding stock, but the instructor claims to be able to ‘fill a coach from Norwich’ twice a week. I for one applaud the East Anglian deaf for their flexibility and commitment, and long may it continue.

    The conspiracy groups are a legacy of Runton as a religious/hippy retreat in the seventies, decades before Joe and Becka and ‘Anton’ and I blundered onto the landscape with our Oyster Cards and hatred of rural life. Of all the groups, the Flat Earthers are most often in residence. They are a straight-laced bunch, but I don’t suppose there’s many giggles to be had when you’re up against NASA for what shape the world is. That said, I’ve sat through hours of Flat Earth lectures at Runton because I’m a slag for a good yarn, and a decent conspiracy theory is certainly that. To save you doing the same, shape-shifting lizards from Saturn infiltrated human bloodlines thousands of years ago and created sundry Illuminati organisations with which to exploit the planet earth and everyone on it. That, in a nutshell, is the root of all conspiracy theories. Moon landings, JFK, 911, AIDS, the Mandela Affect, Area 51, chemtrails, new world orders, Paul McCartney being dead since 1966 – it’s all down to the shape-shifting lizards. You can’tIMG_20170914_135401.jpg just hide all the lettuce and hope they go away either, as they feed off a low frequency energy field put out by humans in distress, the little buggers. Although there are millions of people who believe this, it’s not for everyone. As ‘Anton’, currently re-wiring the Old Servants’ Quarters, put it recently – ‘it’s not for us to have opinions on all this total fucking bollocks’ and it’s not for me to, broadly speaking, agree with him.

    Be that as it may, ‘Anton’s enthusiasm for re-wiring buildings has improved significantly since he became a qualified electrician last week. Like myself, he has not been paid for his work at Runton, which in his case amounts to eight months of optimistic rewiring work undertaken  entirely at his own expense. This explains the tacit understanding that ‘Anton’ and I can make a few quid from the glampers as long as we don’t compromise what Runton is – a low key, off-radar place ‘that people can fuck off to for a chill out’, as he assured the Trustees on the one occasion he met them. He is gambling that, with the coming of our Lottery grant and the subsequent establishment of a limited company consisting of him, me, Joe and Becka, he will effectively be hired by himself at consultant rates to check his own wiring, which there is nothing wrong with, thereby enabling him to take a long and extremely well paid holiday throughout the back half of 2018. I think this sort of thing might be how Freemasonry got started, and I certainly see the appeal.

    wp-1510523183760..jpgWhile Runton does have links with Freemasonry, which I’m not sure the conspiracy groups are aware of, religious visitors are less common and mainly confined to the hermitage in the remotest part of the Estate. Officially, Runton’s religious affiliation is secular humanism. In case you are unfamiliar, secular humanism replaces an irrational faith in God with an irrational faith in humans, leading me to wonder how many humans the average secular humanist has actually met. Recently, this line of thought enabled me to formulate my own non-conspiracy theory about the space lizards, centred upon my belief that humans don’t really need help to exploit and suppress each other. Humans are perfect vessels for malice, and while kindness and civility exists on a local and interpersonal level, these qualities are scarce in a wider context amid societies which ultimately exist to be pitted against each other. Therefore, the space lizards act as a form of interstellar ‘othering’: they can be blamed for everything, because the fundamental realisation that humans tacitly demand a permanent state of atrocity in which to flourish is simply too much for us to admit. I am therefore inclined to think that the interstellar shape shifters are a product of a flawed human psyche that refuses to accept that we are all a bunch of wankers. There, I’ve said it.

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    Photards:

    Main – A little semi-outdoor kitchen that the Forest Schoolers use. There are no Forest Schoolers at the moment, so we use it to get pissed in.

    Inset top – House martin chicks in the petting zoo earlier this year. They had a lovely time, fledging successfully in August, just in time for the new school year.

    Inset middle – Grapes grown in the Victorian greenhouse at Runton. Note Joe’s stubby fingers, ideal for manual labour and showing a lack of education.

    Inset lower – Christmas tree at Leadenhall Market. They do a lovely carol service, too. Be careful though, because Leadenhall is in the City of London, and the City of London crest is flanked by dragons, which are Illuminati symbols and what not. I think I might need to stop going to conspiracy theory lectures for a bit.

     

  • Feeding The Four Hundred

    Nov 16th, 2017

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    It is early on a November morning, and the Runton Estate lies sullen under silver mist. In the East Field, Archibald al-Fantastique is thrashing through the soaking grass in pursuit of mice. They turn too sharply and accelerate too quickly to be in danger of anything other than inconvenience but, elsewhere, other wildlife is less fortunate. I first heard gunfire as a schoolboy outside the Bedford Park Hotel in Streatham, where it made sense. Here, it drifts from German Field where Graham is shooting at something that, given the poor visibility, is either very large, or which he is very close. For a moment, it occurs to me that he might be shooting himself, and I mention this to ‘Anton’, who emerges from the wet air pushing a surveyor’s wheel with which he has been measuring the East Field, now sporting a smart perimeter fence installed by Joe. By now, Graham has fired twenty or thirty shots, and if this is indeed a suicide attempt he will be in a sorry state. ‘Anton’ points out that Graham is a professional marksman and ‘would be able to Cobain himself straight off’. He is right. Archie’s head appears above the grass. Seconds later he cannonballs after us with what I estimate to be seventeen feet of tongue flapping delightedly behind him, and we leave the field. In violation of the Countryside Code, which states that you should always leave gates open to let the air circulate, I shut this one behind us and we wander off to Joe and Becka’s yurt for tea and toast with their numerous children. It is not yet dawn. I don’t know why we are up so early. God I hate the countryside.

    We needed to measure the East Field to see how many Bellwether glamping tents we can fit into it next spring. About thirty, as it goes, raising our overall capacity to eighty, potentially housing four hundred glampers at a time. That amount of middle class people could have as many as three thousand food intolerences and gender issues between them, as well as having to deal with the Hampstead Holocaust, ie Brexit, so they need a lot of managing. That said, since ‘Anton’ and I commandeered the Runton glamping operation, I have become fond of them, and miss their silly white nonsense tremendously. Feedingwp-1510519910833..jpg them is tricky though, and this is main reason I want to promote self-sufficient glamping. Truthfully, it’s the only option that can be made to work, practically speaking, as I have stated in the Smith Plan for Runton, due to go before the Trustees in March. As you may recall, getting glampers to hunt their own rabbits with Graham’s dogs was briefly considered but rejected as insane; however, their gender-neutral children could pick veg from German Field, under Becka’s supervision. There is nowhere near enough veg for everyone, obviously, but we can always nip in in the middle of the night and plant more from Morrissons. Splendid.

    Another feeding alternative is letting them do summer roasts in the pizza ovens, even though summer roasts are a bit suspect. For a start, they are based upon cous cous, which I refuse to eat, along with pesto, kale, quinoa or anything else from Morrisson’s ‘Food for Wankers’ aisle. This may well be its own form of food intolerance, but I’m just not eating it and there it is. Until recently, avocado was on this list, but after trying it inadvertently I have grown rather partial, and after all there is guacamole to consider. My cousin Helen and I were reminiscing recently about a far-off family gathering wh2017-05-31 16.35.30ere avocado was served as a starter for the adults, probably with chips and Carling Black Label. I think the rest of us had Chewits. This was followed by a forgotten main course and a real coconut smashed open with a hatchet in the back garden by Uncle Roy for pudding, and with which I was disappointed. How and why this was considered fun is entirely beyond me, but we both swear that it was all to celebrate that evening’s screening of the Incredible Hulk, starring Lou Ferrigno. Yes, it seems bizarre to me too, but we both independently recalled it, so it I can’t just be some story from the Blitz that we’ve mis-remembered as happening to ourselves. Whatever the occasion, it was clearly a fancy evening, and I shall ask Helen, who took to weightlifting and is now officially the strongest woman in Colchester*, for further info the next time I see her.

    Anyway. The issue of feeding the glampers was discussed among a veritable tea-and-toast-athon prepared with various degrees of expertise by Joe and Becka’s numerous children in their cosy Iron Age house. At least three had Marmite, presumably as a punishment for poor behaviour. After a while Graham and his eldest daughter, who recently celebrated her seventh birthday, joined the cheery rural scene. When questioned, he announced that he had been ‘generally shooting things’ earlier, as his daughter cast aside an endearing pair of child’s binoculars made in the traditional playgroup manner by Sellotaping two old toilet rolls together, describing them as ‘fucking useless’. I alone refused tea and toast, and instead had Nescafe Gold Blend from my flask and a bowl of double cream with peanut butter in it, because I am on a low carb diet and toast might make me fat. Thus fortified, we awaited the onset of winter.

    *this is a genuine fact. She’s holding up the sky above Essex.

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    Photards:

    Main: Archibald al-Fantastique on a midsummer beach at dawn, north Norfolk coast.

    Inset top: The bike I cycled through the Confederacy on. It’s a 2001 Specialised Hardrock A1 Comp, a widely-available mid-range mountain bike, and it did a fine job. Note Alabama sticker, purchased from a petrol station in Childersburg, after riding for two horrifying days through Talladega National Park. A tradition was born with this – all my subsequent bikes have incorporated a reference to one or other of the states I unwisely traversed.

    Inset middle: Leadenhall Market, London EC1. I always enjoyed trading here on a Friday afternoon. It was a short, easy day – arrive around ten and be away by three – and made a nice change of pace from Camden or Greenwich.

    Inset lower: tiny Stonehenge build by prehistoric midgets, Runton Hall estate.

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