|
1 June 2010 (Tuesday) - An
Anniversary Today is an anniversary - I’ve been blogging here on Blogger for a year now – and three years before that over
at Yahoo. Where has the time gone? Looking at my archived stuff I’ve
got over one thousand three hundred blog entries and (together with the piccies that go with it) it takes up nearly 30Mb of
disk space. I might get it published eventually. With an average of forty different people tuning in to the
thing daily, from all over the UK, to say nothing of the US, Canada, Belgium,
Russia and Australia (to name but only a few of the places that pop up in
the tracking software), I’m amazed at the success of the thing. I wonder
if I oughtn’t organise a meet-up of my loyal readership
– that might be quite a party… Meanwhile I woke up this morning aching more than usual –
I’m wondering if spending an hour playing leap frog with my niece yesterday
was a good idea. And then I got just a bit wound up with the morning’s post.
I got a letter from the company who’ve just loaned me a squillion
pounds to buy my new car. They told me that appreciate my custom, and went on
to say that should I wish to borrow another squillion
pounds, then maybe I would be interested to learn that they lend money, and
maybe I might like to consider borrowing it from them. Dur!!!
Do they think I’ve never heard of them? They’ve demonstrated that they are
happy to lend me money – where do they think I’m going to go for more loans –
the fishmongers? If they wasted less money on unnecessary expenses (such
as producing and posting this letter) then I would have to pay less in
interest repayments. I was home early from work today – having had to go into
work during the night. It suited me to come home early – I thought I might
get the roof bars put back on the car in readiness for the camping season.
But it was raining. Pouring hard. So I played on the internet until the rain
stopped. After an hour’s wrestling I got the roof bars in place. Now they are
on, I’m not sure there isn’t a front and back bar, and a left and right side
to each. But they are on, and (hopefully) will stay in place until
September. I then collared Martin to help me get the top box into place. I’m
sure that the box has shrunk over the winter – it seems a lot smaller than I
remember it being. And it’s a shame the bars and box’s colour doesn’t’ match
the car, but I’m not shelling out for new ones. I’m mean like that. Now all I
need to do is remove the rear seats from the car and go to the farm to
retrieve all the camping gear... I’ll do that another time. |
|
|
2 June 2010 (Wednesday) - I stumbled upon something that made me smile this morning – when attempting to translate a direction sign into Welsh, the signwriters thought the automated email response was actually the translation they’d asked for. And so rather than giving the required instructions, the sign they produced read (once translated) "I am not in the office at the moment. Send any work to be translated". And from that article it didn’t take me long to find a whole load of mis-translated signs in Wales – left and right being mixed up is an easy enough mistake to make (just ask my beloved!). But surely confusingcyclists with cystitis is somewhat more difficult to do? And then some signs have just been rendered into gibberish.Having one sign done wrong is funny. Having loads of
mistakes – that’s a bit more serious. On reflection I can’t help but feel
that since the country is billions of pounds in debt, and these translations
(demonstrably) are not being done very well, surely translating
everything into a redundant language is a waste of time, to say nothing of an
unnecessary expense. After all, I’ve been to I can recall my having a similar rant about the Celtic
language a while ago, and being branded a Nazi racist. I’m expecting a
similar response from the reactionary fringes for today’s rant, but why? I am
posing a serious question. Why do we persist in keeping the Welsh language
alive? It’s not needed – it’s not as though anyone actually relies on it
rather than using English. And I don’t get the “preserve your heritage”
argument. Preserve it in a museum, yes. Preserve it the costly way it’s being
preserved – I really can’t see it. After all, there are those with a minority
language who don’t cost the tax payer a penny – namely the Klingon-speakers. But, as usual, on further research I’m in the minority with my opinion. It’s not just the Welsh – the Cornish have apparently revived a languagethat’s been dead for a century. As have the Manx and various forms ofCelts . |
|
|
And the
politicians would have us believe there’s a recession. |
|
|
10 June
2010 (Thursday ) - see you all soon..... |
|
|
11 June
2010 (Friday) - Soaking Wet |
|
|
13 June 2010 (Sunday) - Teston Kite
Festival (Still) |
|
|
15 June
2010 (Tuesday) - Gone Fishing |
|
|
17 June
2010 (Thursday) - Correspondence Being in a
“letters” frame of mind I wrote a letter of complaint to the council:
I wonder
what response that will provoke? None, I suspect. But time will tell – it
usually does. |
|
|
19 June
2010 (Saturday) - Shopping |
|
|
20 June 2010
(Sunday) - Tidying Up, Washing Lines... |
|
|
23 June
2010 (Wednesday) - A Bit Fishy |
|
|
24 June
2010 (Thursday) - Stuff
|
|
|
And then
home to watch the last episode in the current season of Doctor Who. Bearing
in mind how good last week’s episode was, tonight’s was a disappointment…. |
|
|
28 July
2010 (Monday) - Football (Sorry!) I hear we
have been knocked out of the world cup. And I am
left wondering how on Earth did |
|
|
30 July
2010 (Wednesday) - Dull, so Dull.... |