• Contact
  • Contact
  • About The Runton Diaries
  • About The Runton Diaries
  • About Runton Hall
  • About Runton Hall
  • Home
  • Home

The Runton Diaries

  • All The Dogs In Norfolk

    Feb 24th, 2021

    On the same warm, almost summery January day I posted about finding a lost dog while on the way to a job interview, I found another while cycling through Mundesley. In case you are unfamiliar, Mundesley is one of several small fishing towns marking the line where East Anglia wades into the North Sea, and the pronunciation rhymes rather satisfyingly with Monkees, hence the little rallying call of Hey Hey! We’re in Mundesley! I like to give myself as I approach. Similarities between this tiny map-dot of a place and the gaudy Boomertastic TV show of the same name do not end there. Examining the opening sequence for reference, I discovered that, like the Monkees themselves, many of the residents are bedridden, can only bathe with assistance, are unable to drive any form of motor vehicle responsibly, habitually wear woolly hats, often look confused, fall over a lot and certainly do ‘have something to say’, although in the case of Mundesley in 2021 it is usually at odds with the notion of ‘just trying to be friendly’.

    I am usually there on medicine delivery duty. Since undertaking this, I have discovered that the elderly and vulnerable consider their health more dependent upon their distance from a copy of the Radio Times than any amount of beta blockers or co-codamol I can bike up the coast road. I’ve always assumed the Radio Times was just an eighty page picture of Ainsley Harriot and have never read it, although like a normal person I do buy it at Christmas so that I have something to jot things down on in biro. The infirm are massive fans though, and on the day in question I’d bought a couple of copies from Sheringham Tescos while getting some bits. Sheringham is a larger town further along the coast towards Kings Lynn, considered by Axis High Command a promising invasion site during the war, and also has the only Austrian restaurant I have ever seen, although there would presumably have been more if an invasion had been successful.* It is also notable for its well-mannered, happy and confident children, due to its popularity with Christian groups and the autistic. Tesco has done much to ingratiate itself by, among other things, employing staff from a local college for young adults with special needs. This laudable policy can sometimes catch those of us who consider themselves to have a good grasp of social appropriateness off-guard when, as in this case, a checkout assistant all but hugged me for saying ‘hello’ to her.

    She asked if I had cycled far and if it was raining. I replied ‘no not really’, and ‘no’ respectively.

    ‘There’s nothing worse than riding a bike in the rain,’ she said, thirty silent seconds later in a – and I’m sorry about this – rather too flirty manner, given the circumstances.

    I replied that I’d once known a fella with stomach cancer, and that looked pretty rough, to which she laughed far too much. For the life of me I thought she was going to reach across the conveyor belt and flick me off.

    In a bewildered attempt to highlight our considerable age difference, I said ‘Nineteen eighty one? That was a good year’ in response to the amount I was being charged for my shopping, in the avuncular manner of geography teachers and so forth when I was a child. They would’ve been talking about nineteen forty eight or something and be avid Radio Times readers by now, I suppose. She almost fainted with mirth, took out a ring that had been concealed about her person and asked me to marry her.** Hopefully, I reflected as I cycled eastwards along the coast road, she was just a simple seaside prostitute working at Tesco’s to make ends meet, because you can’t help but worry about how she might otherwise fare in the outside world.

    Despite its efforts, Tesco remains unpopular in Sheringham which, like all the towns along the coast, does not like faceless corporations taking money away from identical tea shops. As I rode, I pondered whether or not the general idea of 90% of wealth being held by 5% of people was really such a surprise. After all,  I should imagine 90% of popular music is produced by 5% of musicians, and 90% of popular literature is written by 5% of writers, and so on. I was unable to develop the idea much beyond this point because, as I reached Mundesley a spaniel fell out of my phone. Well, not exactly, of course. What happened was that while checking Facebook on an unrelated matter I saw a post about a lost dog. Closing my phone case and putting it back in my jacket, the actual dog was literally standing in front of me, as I remarked to the owners, ‘as if she had fallen out of my phone’. I said that yes, of course I’d wait with Fern, the dog, for them to arrive, but could they hurry because I only had so much cheese from Tesco and Fern was quickly getting through it, presumably due to the sea air making her peckish. It occurred to me as I waited that maybe this wasn’t actually their dog, and that I was currently kidnapping someone else’s, but this doubt vanished as Fern hopped into a Ford Focus for the joyful journey home, and I went about my business among the senior residents of Mundesley. Philosophically speaking, I am no clearer about the proportion of wealth to people, but I am certain that, in Norfolk, 90% of lost dogs are found by me.

    *Not as ridiculous as you might think. East Anglia is flat once you get inland, ideal for assembling panzer formations and building airfields, with tactically important choke points that could, in theory, be captured by paratroopers. In the end though, the plan was abandoned when everyone agreed it was a beastly idea.  

    **NB This last bit did not happen. If I had ever been married I would have noticed by now.

    Photards:

    Main: Idiots.

    Top inset: Resident of Mundesley being wheeled along the seafront for a complain, taken from the opening credits of the Monkees’ telly show.

    Middle inset: Unable to bathe without assistance – again, from the telly show.

    Lower inset: Menu of Austrian restaurant in Sheringham. It might be called Crofter’s these days because it is less frightening than Das Krofterhausen but make no mistake – this is pitiless food, ruthlessly served by automatons.  They give you an armband with your table number on it when you enter, which is off putting. Nonetheless, it is a highly regarded, much loved and by all reports superb local establishment. I think some people did complain once, but they were never seen again.

  • Popcorn And Warm Dust

    Feb 13th, 2021

    Public Service Announcement – this is a Part 2 to the last entry. If you can’t be bothered to read the last entry, Joe managed to get us signed up as the customer service/technical support staff at a failing conferencing app that is like Zoom, but not Zoom.

    My main task thus far has been to rewrite the app’s user guide. I am an unconventional choice for this task because, if we’re going to get down to it, I don’t know how to use the app, and am in no position to guide anyone anywhere. However, it has far fewer ‘yummy’s and ‘super dupers’ and ‘yay!’s than before I got involved with it because, while it’s nice to be informal, it is conferencing software designed for adults and not a smoothie aimed at twats. Also, the entire customer facing side of the business is only me and Joe and he can’t be arsed to do it so, considering he landed us the job in the first place, I feel I should do my bit. If certain key parts turn out to be wrong due to me guessing them – which seems likely – it will generate more Technical Support issues, and therefore more work for us, the Technical Support team. I am therefore safeguarding our future.

    In Joe’s situation, I would’ve hired other, competent, people to do the job, charged a percentage on their wages as my ongoing commission, and stepped gently out of the loop. Joe, always more hands-on, just learned the important stuff pretty much overnight, and then taught me it. Admittedly, it was a long night because this is winter in the countryside and it is only daylight between midday and two o’clock, but still. At first, I referred to us as ‘Technically Support’ as we were not at our best when called upon to support customers in a technical capacity, which is what they always seemed to want us to do. For this reason, we quietly removed the phone number with ‘Technical Support’ written next to it from the website and replaced it with an email address, which is far more civilised. Wading into the fray, I would always sign off emails that were of no help at all with ‘Hope that helps!’ to show the customers that I was with them in spirit, which I felt was the main thing. In the aftermath of the great Christmas upgrade when there was not a single thing we could do because the server had melted, I suggested starting our replies with ‘Hey Baby!’ to cushion the blow, or not writing anything and just sending webcam footage of my dog looking sad instead, but this was veto-d.

    In addition, I am still doing a fair amount of Union Rep work, making me well placed to negotiate pay rates in the alternative Technical Support scenario outlined above. Everyone knows that boring things are exciting, so hacking through employment law and associated legislative precedent is, for me, a lovely way to spend an afternoon. Also, my fellow reps are the only people in the world who still retain the faint but reassuring aroma of cigarette smoke in their cardigans. Nowadays, this seems an aroma from a bygone age, like tallow candles or parchment, but as someone with an array of childhood relatives who reeked of Player’s Number 6, it is a great comfort to me. Sadly, none of them are still around – they all died early because their lungs were fucked – but they smelled of beer quite often too, and I suspect the look of placid benevolence they maintained as I jabbered on about football stickers was because they had been in the Rose of Denmark all day and were absolutely steaming. This has genuinely only just occurred to me, and I think it signifies a final, last, definite, end of innocence. It is an unwelcome realisation but, as Sid is fond of saying, ‘Don’t be sad, Daddy – you are brave’, so I shall regard it with manly stoicism. Incidentally, in these Lockdown times, my own cardigan smells of Gold Blend and dogs, so perhaps this will be comforting to Sid in years to come, although I should for the record like to point out that my dog smells of popcorn and warm dust, so it is a more pleasant smell than you might imagine.

    Anyway, there we are. I smell of dogs and I work in the gig economy. There is no contract, no set working hours or level of customer service. At the end of the month, I send a PayPal invoice to some bloke in, I think, Vietnam for an uncheckable number of hours, and I get paid in dollars the next day. Where does the money come from? I don’t know. Why dollars? I don’t know that either, and neither does Joe, but if the predictions of sterling’s imminent post-Brexit collapse prove accurate we’ll be very rich men indeed, so that’s something.

    Photards:

    Main: There has been crazy snowfall in Norfolk, and here is my dog wandering about in it. He is Egyptian by breed and has no idea what is going on.

    Top inset: Egyptian dog larking about, wondering where all the deserts and pyramids and camels and what not are at.

    Middle inset: The Old Servants’ Quarters, Runton Hall, which I am not seeing much of at the moment.

    Lower inset: Al fresco Norfolk carol service, which did not happen last year of course.

  • Helpline Operator

    Feb 5th, 2021

    Towards the end of last year, a small but ambitious software app which is like Zoom but not Zoom applied a software upgrade to its operating system. The work was carefully planned by experienced engineers, with the co-operation of front-line support staff. A schedule was drawn up and agreed to and, preliminary work was undertaken without incident, and everything seemed to be progressing smoothly. Well, not entirely, as it turned out. The house-sized housefly hurtling towards the ointment was the sudden decision by a major search engine to review and tighten its security policy. For arcane but important reasons, the upgrade now had to bought forward and Frisbee-d at the server with fingers crossed months ahead of time. Initially, the server swayed but remained standing. However, small stress points began to appear deep within the binary algorithms. Stress points became frayed, and then slowly began to dismember themselves. Patch after patch was thrown into the gathering mayhem but the damage was irreversible; whole blocks of code slipped their moorings and drifted into each other. Some parts of the now bewildered server began to shut down. Others started to overload as software that had hitherto performed excellently and without complaint now went bananas, and the whole thing began to buckle as the various components waged murderous war upon each other. The app which is like Zoom but not Zoom begun to stagger and lurch.

    Phones rang and rang and rang.

    Emails bayonet-charged their way into inboxes where they sat, unread.

    The people behind the inboxes and telephones, struggling gallantly, were overwhelmed. Starved of the support of the engineers, who were engaged in a furious struggle to prevent the entire platform collapsing, they left. There was now nothing between the stricken app and beckoning oblivion. In short, it had all gone completely tits.

    At this critical salient, in rural East Anglia during a tiny gap in COVID tiers, the app’s fraught designer was collecting his daughter from Runton Hall, where she had been running around the woods dressed as Dory from Finding Nemo. A conversation took place between him and Joe. From what I gather, it seems to have gone like this:

    Designer: I’m having a shocker, Joe. What I need is a small, elite customer service team with an excellent level of front-line technical ability that can wade into an absolute nightmare and stop my business destroying itself.

    Joe: Yeah, I can do all that.

    Designer: Really though? It’s just that this is incredibly important, and I only ever see you mending fences and getting bitten by goats.

    Joe: No, honestly, I can.

    App Designer: OK then.

    Even my last interview up the Council was more rigorous than this, and that was basically dictated by public sector nonsense. For example, with all the important stuff out of the way, I was asked if I had had any new experiences recently. I replied that yes, I had listened to Stairway To Heaven properly for the first time on the way in, and didn’t really rate it. It just seems a bit up itself, I explained. Remembering that this was an interview, I hedged my bets by saying I did like the bit where the drums come in, in case that was the answer they were looking for. Basically, I’m all about pop and ska and almost biologically incapable of listening to classic rock, although I didn’t say that in the interview in case they thought I was mad. I got the job, too, although did come unstuck at a previous one where I was able to garnish my ‘Thanks for coming in’s and ‘Did you manage to park OK?’s by mentioning that I had just found a beagle on the A140 at Marsham. It was a heart-warming experience to see an A road – or, as we call it in Norfolk, motorway – come to an immediate and uncomplaining halt as dog food and water bowls appeared out of nowhere and people formed a gentle rolling cordon to herd the lovely old lady, untroubled by the experience, into the car behind ours. From there, she went to the vet at Aylsham for a nice nap and then, I am happy to report, safely back to her owners. ‘Were you looking for a dog?’ asked the horrendous old slag conducing the interview. ‘Yes – and then I found a dog’ I replied, seizing upon a chance to reference the Smiths’ Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now, which got minor lols but essentially fell upon fallow ground I think. In failing the interview I became the only person ever to have not got the job they had already been successfully doing for six months, although I did hate it with an intensity that bordered upon homicidal fanaticism, so it was probably for the best.

    Public Service Announcement: We’ve cut off a bit abruptly, as this turned out to be an enormous ramble and I’ll put the next bit up in a couple of days. As cliff hangers go, it isn’t the most nail-biting, unless your idea of winning against the odds involves becoming a part time IT help desk. If that is your idea of winning against the odds, then hang on to your hat because there’s a roller coaster a-coming. Nonetheless, it is entirely down to Joe’s fortitude and hard work, although I will be overlooking that and claiming all the credit for myself.

    Twitter

    Facebook

    Photards:

    Main: my entry-level fixed gear workhorse bike. Unglamourous but reliable, this has cranked out thousands of miles. I can’t bothered to explain what a fixed gear bike is at this time, and I know the chain is looking a bit unhappy. They get stretched because you are obliged to ride quite aggressively with this type of bike, and it was just about to go for a service. Incidentally, the frame stickers are the crest of the City of London, the crest of the State of Alabama, both places I have spent more time than most cycling through, and at the rear my competitor number from the 2018 Norfolk Autumn Classic.

    Top inset: Michael Caine by Brian Duffy, and an oil painting of Ronnie Barker. Christmas gifts a few years ago from John the Boxes, London’s richest market trader, still adorning the dining room.

    Middle inset: Food hub from last year. Spent days splitting pasta and rice and noodles into 500g bags and putting a nice sticker on them during the first Lockdown. Myself and one of the Council’s licensing officers could eyeball it to within 10g after a while.

    Lower inset: Beagle about to go to the vet in Aylsham with this nice man and his basic tattoos.

  • One Of Your Own

    Jan 30th, 2021

    I found myself on hold to an insurance company on Tuesday and decided to pass the time by tracing my natural father. This proved to be much easier than you might imagine. Facebook had come up trumps with a local builder for my old dear’s garden wall – which is why I was talking to the insurance company in the first place – so I typed in ‘feckless ne’er do well who no-one’s seen for forty fucking years’, and there he was, with a profile picture indicating that he had at some point in the recent past visited an area of woodland with a small waterfall in it. Not being a great sentimentalist, I was more shocked that someone I am related to has seen a real waterfall than experiencing any significant emotional response. If I were to get in touch, it would primarily be out of curiosity, or to borrow the car. That said, we all know what curiously killed, even though it appears to have spent less time in Wandsworth for it than my old man. That was only a cat though, and they have nine lives, which I suppose accounts for the difference in sentencing.

    Interestingly, he ended up in Leeds, fairly near ‘Anton’. I have to put a jumper on if I even think about the north of England, but his massive family thrive in the harsh climate, where they appear to make up the entire workforce of every branch of Asda in West Yorkshire. My trawling brought forth a half-brother with a career in avionics, presumably acquired so he could build his own plane and get the fuck away from stacking shelves in a green overall. It seems to have paid off, too, because he is the only person who lives further from West Yorkshire than I do, settling in Melbourne with a nice lady with whom he is pictured on a golf cart. He also seems to be the only one not obsessed with a) stylised pictures of St George holding aloft an English flag on a presumably English horse and b) Asian grooming gangs. For the record, being English is marvellous, and I can see why everyone loves us. However, while I am sure we English share a human concern for the welfare of children, most of us are usually happy leaving the two happenstances un-conflated with robust yet spurious observations about migration patterns in former industrial regions. Still, it is hardly fair to focus upon one unpleasant aspect of Leeds when there is so much more of this cold, wet, gloomy city to enjoy, and I shall now move on.

    I do, however, share the conviction voiced in several profile pictures that Yorkshire got stitched up in the War of the Roses five hundred years ago, at around the time it last produced a decent football club. Incidentally, in case you are unfamiliar with the War of the Roses, it was an interminable shouting match for the comfortably well-off – Twitter with axes, basically – upon which Games of Thrones is based. I have never seen Game of Thrones, or been to Yorkshire other than to see West Ham repeatedly get beaten by substandard football clubs and, while I understand that both those things enjoy justified popularity, I have no plans to change this anytime soon. I suspect that my Facebook investigation was the matrix’s way of warning me how many times I would have to patiently explain to new found relatives that the reason St George’s Day is not widely celebrated is because he is a Catholic saint in a culturally Protestant country. In fact, in the early days of the modern English nation state you could’ve saved money on a St George’s Day party by buying a sign with ‘Please Burn Me’ on it instead – but, as stated, everyone loves us because we won World War Two, so it all worked out in the end.

    In response to the remarkable news, ‘Anton’ offered to scout branches of Asda and report back on the state of my genetic windfall. Usually, his interactions with people from Leeds are limited to chants of ‘That Jimmy Savile – he’s one of your own’ with his fellow Millwall fans to the tune of, now I come to think of it, Sloop John B by the Beach Boys. I declined the offer. It is most likely that, as far as my natural father and his subsequent reproductive triumphs are concerned, I simply don’t exist. I existed at some point, because there are photos of the pair of us, but I was very young when they were taken. In fact, Sid has just wandered downstairs for breakfast saying ‘Daddy, someone has wet my bed’, and I wasn’t even as old then as he is now. Still, you can’t choose your family, as they say. Well, whoever says that is obviously not me, of course, because I absolutely can, and I might just do exactly that by leaving this vast litter of Northern supermarket workers where I found them. We shall have to see.

    Twitter

    Facebook

    Photards:

    Main: Suffield Park Christmas lights, still going strong in the last week of January.

    Upper inset: I have been teaching Sid Illuminati signs to freak out the conspiracy nuts if we ever get back to Runton. He’s made a bit of hash of it here, but when done correctly it symbolises looking with the eye of an owl, with owls being important Illuminati symbols for some fucking reason. He has recently been put in charge of every major High Street bank in the UK though, so it’s been worth it.

    Middle inset: A little wood outside the bedroom. Quite sweet. The dog likes thrashing about in it, and it is popular with owls, presumably as part of an avian Illuminati army to protect Sid.

    Lower inset: Scaffolding up the side of our house. I think they were doing something with the chimney. Not sure.

  • Herbie Rides Again

    Jan 16th, 2021

    2020 was a difficult year to love, as you may have noticed, and thus far 2021 isn’t shaping up to be much of a giggle, either. As I discovered shortly before Christmas, you can’t even try and do something nice, such as visit your old dear to reminisce about Christmases past over Gold Blend and shortbread fingers, without someone driving their fucking car through the garden wall. I use the word ‘driving’ generously, because there was no one actually in the car at the time. The owner appeared a few moments later, with the happy-go-lucky explanation it wasn’t really her fault. I mused aloud that it must be someone’s fault, because her ‘…Ford Focus isn’t fucking Herbie, is it?’, referencing a self-driving Volkswagon from an obscure cinema franchise that I had forgotten about until that moment. What had happened, she said, was this: she had parked and nipped into the shop, but the car’s handbrake had then disengaged itself, causing it to reverse out from between two other cars and down a hill, whereupon it turned right and mounted the pavement, before 9/11-ing my old dear’s garden. I said that seeing that as this was obviously a miracle, we should leave the car where it is and charge people to touch it for good luck. With the concept of plausibility looking on in stunned silence, she drove out of the garden again. I offered directions in case she wanted to finish the job by parking in the kitchen, but there was no further calamity.

    The incident raised the ethical question of whether calling the insurance people counted as snitching – something that, to say the least of it, we frown upon in our family. Back in the living room, we weighed the evidence. By way of opening remarks, I suggested that having insurance in the first place could be considered Intent to Snitch and that, if my old dear hadn’t been looking over her shoulder since taking the policy out, she is already at ease with snitching as a concept. Furthermore, if this was the case, she could no longer have Sid round after nursery, because I will not have a grass in the family. She countered with the assertion that insurance is for burst pipes and what not, and not people talking panicky nonsense about traffic accidents. I seized upon a compromise: I had asked the woman if there was ‘anything she wanted to tell me about’ off the record that might help us settle the matter between ourselves, instead of trying to play us for chumps. She had declined to do so, sticking to her story. Therefore, I concluded, we were snitching on the car for crashing itself, which is no worse than snitching on the pipe in my old dear’s example for bursting itself all over the upstairs landing. Satisfied, I set about ringing the insurance company which, I have discovered, is significantly more annoying than having a Ford Focus take out sixteen feet of garden wall. Happily, they are going to pay out, and everyone around here who isn’t a dog or a horse is a handyman of some description, so it should be alright.

    Sid, and the several tons of Christmas presents my old dear had bought him, were the main focus of our pre-incident conversation, of course. He is growing fast and describes himself as ‘not a baby, but a tobbler’ when he is in fact a bona fide little man who can almost spell Christmas, despite his insistence that the middle part of the alphabet is ‘H I J K mellow mellow P’. This academic breakthrough was not enough to avert another tiny COVID Yuletide tragedy when, shortly after eight thirty in the evening of the 23rd, he thumped downstairs, hid under the dinner table and then, in a hysterical, gulping, sobbing, wailing outburst explained that he had ‘been up all night’ and missed Father Christmas because his bedroom doesn’t have a ‘…chin me for him to come down’. I explained that chimneys don’t really exist and that Father Christmas would come through the lean-to by the back door like everyone else. After half an hour of Elf he fell asleep reassured and, when Christmas finally arrived, had a lovely time.

    The same cannot be said of many other residents of North Norfolk. Being remote, a tiny bit creepy, but undeniably glorious, it is a great place to forget about a world that often, in return, appears to have forgotten about it. It also showed itself to also be a great place for people from the nicer London boroughs to forget about how a virus is transmitted, as hundreds of them descended on the place in hastily-purchased luxury caravans, elevating the region from the lowest rate of infection in the country to the second highest, behind only London itself. There are now no functioning medical services within thirty miles of where I am sitting. Still, the incoming Bens and Lauras are right to blame the Government, as they assuredly will – like many of us, I was appalled when the Prime Minister told them to fuck off to the countryside and directly contribute to the deaths of vulnerable people by tactically annihilating the NHS they are so fond of banging on about. Flashing blue lights now regularly illuminate Sid’s bedroom at night, and he likes to count the ambulances, more common than agricultural machinery – which is very common indeed – as they trawl up and down the inland road. I’ve never been entirely convinced by the general coronavirus narrative, but something out there is certainly happening, and happening often. I feel like someone in Pompeii looking on curiously as the first specks of ash begin to gather on the roof.

    Chin up, though. I have volunteered to cycle around the frozen lanes delivering medicines and such to the elderly and isolated, and feel that I am, in a small way, fighting back. ‘Elderly and isolated’ does not necessarily equal vulnerable, incidentally. I discovered this via a lady who has lived in the same house for 87 years and refuses any help whatsoever, including me delivering her medicine. I offered to throw it into the garden so she could find it herself, explaining that I do this with the dog and a chicken leg sometimes and he loves it. After some to-ing and fro-ing, we agreed that I would leave it just outside her garden gate so technically she is still getting it herself, but won’t risk renal failure trying to fish it out of her pond, and she agreed that yes, this was a good compromise, and that I was a very clever young man. This was on New Year’s Eve, and to see 2020 off I drank two bottles of rioja in front of Withnail and I, which seemed appropriate. With the first days of 2021 annoying almost everyone, I have been heartened by the actions of Suffield Park post office, whose employees refuse to take down their enormous Christmas tree and the strings of fairy lights criss-crossing the road outside because ‘…it’s something a bit bloody cheerful’. And yes, it is. It looks really nice. Well done. We should all do it.

    Twitter

    Facebook

    Photards

    Main: Oh for fucks sake.

    Top inset: Dog in snow. Considering he belongs to a breed intended to chase animals across the Egyptian Sahara until they collapse, he is surprisingly delighted by snow.

    Middle inset: Can’t even keep an extremely heavy jumpoline at the end of the garden without a freak coastal storm almost demolishing the house with it these days.

    Lower inset: Sid and my old dear, before the Pestilence.

←Previous Page
1 … 4 5 6 7 8 … 19
Next Page→

A WordPress.com Website.

 

Loading Comments...
 

    • Subscribe Subscribed
      • The Runton Diaries
      • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
      • The Runton Diaries
      • Subscribe Subscribed
      • Sign up
      • Log in
      • Report this content
      • View site in Reader
      • Manage subscriptions
      • Collapse this bar