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Squirrel
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Smiles and tears in today’s Guardian
In today’s Guardian, this item, part of a very funny series about the writer’s experience with online dating, made me smile:I’ve learned not to make snap judgments. Sexual chemistry can surprise you
[“Miles thought I was being overcautious. Caution will gain us nothing, at this stage of our lives, he said. As he’s 59, about to be 60, this was perhaps a little over-inclusive.”]
Being a dad and grandad, and being the eve of Father’s Day, this item made me cry:
A letter to … My dad, who didn’t live to see my sons
[“I yearn for my boys to have known you and to have kicked a ball with you, or to have seen what an amazing golfer you were. I love to have seen them sitting on your lap, laughing with you, being tickled by you, cuddling you, hearing them say the word grandad.”]
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The Blue Tango – Eoin McNamee
The Blue Tango by Eoin McNamee is based on the 1952 killing of a Northern Ireland judges’s daughter. Beautifully written, it effortlessly meanders around the events and characters. It’s a terrific read and is highly recommended.A visit to Skoob Books, which is less than 10 minutes walk from Kings Cross, turned up five novels including a Cornell Woolrich novel Rendezvous in Black. It would have been really great if I had managed to find his 1941 novel The Black Curtain which has disappeared from my shelves and which I’d love to read again. If you borrowed it from me, can I have it back, please?
Skoob Books is a great place to find secondhand books, though at £4-£5 for a novel it’s not as cheap as Oxfam Books.
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Chloe shows an interest in photography

It’s a great lens cap, grandad! -

Southampton & Warsash
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£7.10 for 2 cups & a teabag in a pot, & no biscuit!

The Haycock Hotel
Wansford
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Scarborough – the last pictures for a while
The last pictures from Scarborough for a while. An alternative image of the harbour, a sunset viewed from granny and grandpa’s flat, and a view of Castleton on the Yorkshire Moors on a very blustery day. Yet again I made the mistake of concentrating on the aperture and neglecting the shutter speed. A forty-fifth of a second is too slow when the wind is blowing a gale. Will I ever learn?

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Whitby
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Scarborough to Filey – a stunning 9 mile walk
Yesterday I walked this stunning walk along the cliff top of the Yorkshire coast. These are my pictures taken on a sunny and cloudy day.
My late father-in-law, Bill Bourne, loved walking and he did this same walk as part of a 14-day walk from Spurn Point to Redcar, some 130 miles or more.
He wrote about his walk and this is how he described his day on the Filey to Scarborough section, which he walked in the reverse direction to me.
“I arrived at the start point on the cliff top above Filey Brigg in brilliant sunshine with a lovely blue sky. There was a keen north-west wind which meant I should be walking into a head wind today but I didn’t mind this because it was so clear. The first 3 miles are a gradual uphill all the way to Gristhorpe cliff and for most of that 3 miles there is a wonderful view up the coast to Scarborough’s south bay and castle and beyond to Ravenscar.
With the sun shining directly on to it, every detail could be picked out so clearly. There is also a fine view backwards over Filey Bay to Bempton cliffs and Flamborough Head but today, facing south, the sun was so dazzling. With the sun behind the headland everything was in shadow and the white cliffs appeared dark grey. You could see the skyline against the light blue sky but you could not tell where sea finished and cliffs started.
For the next 2 miles there are 3 or 4 huge caravan sites. Due to falls of cliff one section of the path on the way up to Lebberston cliff is dangerously close to the edge. The path now drops down to Cayton Bay, a popular place in summer, but quite deserted today, and then up through the woods and over Knipe Point. Two more miles brings us to the outskirts of Scarborough – another fine view of Scarborough’s south bay and castle from here.
We pass the site of the Holbeck Hall Hotel, a first class country house style hotel which was completely destroyed by a landslide when a large area of cliff slipped down into the sea in the middle of the night. I have it on very good authority from someone who was present at the time, that when the alarm was raised, one or two guests were not in their own bedrooms! Fortunately there was no loss of life, but everyone had to get out fast in their night attire.” [Bill Bourne]The following images I took during my walk. Bill would have loved them and would have been able to immediately identify their location.

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I messed up after the funeral
I only took a few informal pictures at the reception. I was using my discreet, pocket camera, which I don’t use very often. I set the aperture and the sensitivity and left the camera to work out the exposure time. Big mistake! I have lots of pictures taken at a tenth and even a third of a second, resulting in mainly blurred pictures.I won’t make that mistake again!






