Having had no option but to arrive early in London (think Iran, other people’s business diaries), I have been doing a bit of the Tommy Tourist, which one day meant going to Hampton Court.  It would have been a pleasurable experience if not for the hordes of small children running around.  I have never understood how parents think it is fine to inflict their children on the rest of humanity.  They should just accept that life as they know it is over and not come out for twenty years.  I was tempted to retest my punting skills from my rugby days.

I was not alone in this view as I popped my head into The Mute Swan on the river at Hampton Court.  Not only was it a large, smartly elegant pub with good food and beer, it had an admirable child policy.  Clearly the pub had a history of being swamped by the hordes of children from Hampton Court.  Children are not allowed in the ground floor bar but only outside or in the upstairs bar, which could only be accessed by a spiral staircase and so prevented any access for prams.  Dogs however were allowed anywhere.  Eminently sensible.

                                                                                        ***

Last weekend was a sad affair in London as rather than being swamped by children it was swamped by Arsenal fans.  Moving around London on Saturday afternoon there seemed to be an impossibly large number of fans in the club shirts in every inconceivable pub imaginable.  Why they could not have watched the game at home or at their local I do not know yet instead they had to flock to London.  I suspect it had everything to do with the upcoming Soccer World Cup with loyalty to the England team reflected onto the Arsenal team.  While I can appreciate this loyalty it seemed unlikely that everyone with an Arsenal shirt was an Arsenal fan.  Rather sad really.

As an aside I recently watched Twenty Twenty-Six, which is a six-part comedy series making fun of the organisers of the World Cup.  It is based on the comedy series of the organisers of the 2012 Olympic Games, but is far funnier in illuminating the absurdities of organisational decision-making.  Highly recommended.

                                                                                         ***

I am clearly getting old, or at least looking old, as I was offered a seat on the Tube by a young man.  My protestations counted for nought and it seemed impolite not to accept once he had stood up.  I asked if he could bring me a gin and tonic, but he seemed disinclined to bring one.  Typical of the youth of today.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jesus wants me for a sunbeam

 

It is that time in the cycle again.  Every two years the government sends me a bowel cancer testing kit with which I am meant to return a faecal sample.  The problem is I have lost the test kit and the return envelope.  Undeterred I have laid a deposit in a normal envelope and I have sellotaped it as best as I can.  There is a little seepage from the sides, but I am sure Australia Post can handle that.  Not knowing where to send it, I have sent it to the Prime Minister’s office as our newly elected Prime Minister seems to have a solution to all of Australia’s problems.  I am sure he must know the relevant department.  I’m hoping for confirmation of receipt.

***

I recently had the chance to go to a ZZ Top concert, which for all who know me must surely regard as an aberration.  Always game for source material I was undeterred in putting on my sensation seeker’s hat.  I was looking forward to it as I had listened to ‘Gimme all your lovin’. It was the first time I had been to a concert of contemporary music as my usual gig, if you will excuse the pun, has been classical concerts including opera and ballet.  My fellow concertgoers were slack-jawed when I told them it was my first time.  It was if I had just admitted to being a virgin.  Each to his own. 

 

It was certainly throwback time.  There were a lot of aged rockers, both on and off stage, while numerous rocker chicks, both young and old, wore jeans far too tight for them.  As ZZ Top has been visiting Adelaide since 1981 some of their original supporters had turned up, beards and all, with younger members of their family trying to emulate their granddads.  You do not often see that in modern society, but this was clearly a family event.  I was impressed by the number of ZZ Top beards given their scarcity in the circles in which I move.  Where these people live, I know not.  Clearly not the eastern suburbs.

 

Ahead of sitting down I inserted earplugs, but on second thoughts I added two others just to make sure.  I am now waiting to get them surgically removed at the end of June.  An eight week wait, but that is why you pay for private health insurance.  The first act was George Thorogood and the Destroyers.  They all had surprisingly good heads of hair even though they were all 72.  Though not all was well with their bodies.  The bass guitarist at one stage had his legs spread so wide he seemed to be attempting the splits.  Either that or his hips had locked.  After 10 minutes, having been immobile from the hips down, we knew his hips had actually locked.  Their session ended early so he could be taken off.

 

Returning to our seats post interval, the stage was literally a wall of speakers.  With two sets of earplugs in place I felt confident I could survive.  I had not reckoned on the G-force of the blast.  I looked round and it all looked as if we were all skydiving as the flesh of our faces was flattened.  A few days later I was asked what the concert was like.  ‘LOUD.  VERY LOUD.’  My questioner could not understand why I was shouting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jesus wants me for a sunbeam

 

It is that time in the cycle again.  Every two years the government sends me a bowel cancer testing kit with which I am meant to return a faecal sample.  The problem is I have lost the test kit and the return envelope.  Undeterred I have laid a deposit in a normal envelope and I have sellotaped it as best as I can.  There is a little seepage from the sides, but I am sure Australia Post can handle that.  Not knowing where to send it, I have sent it to the Prime Minister’s office as our newly elected Prime Minister seems to have a solution to all of Australia’s problems.  I am sure he must know the relevant department.  I’m hoping for confirmation of receipt.

***

I recently had the chance to go to a ZZ Top concert, which for all who know me must surely regard as an aberration.  Always game for source material I was undeterred in putting on my sensation seeker’s hat.  I was looking forward to it as I had listened to ‘Gimme all your lovin’. It was the first time I had been to a concert of contemporary music as my usual gig, if you will excuse the pun, has been classical concerts including opera and ballet.  My fellow concertgoers were slack-jawed when I told them it was my first time.  It was if I had just admitted to being a virgin.  Each to his own. 

 

It was certainly throwback time.  There were a lot of aged rockers, both on and off stage, while numerous rocker chicks, both young and old, wore jeans far too tight for them.  As ZZ Top has been visiting Adelaide since 1981 some of their original supporters had turned up, beards and all, with younger members of their family trying to emulate their granddads.  You do not often see that in modern society, but this was clearly a family event.  I was impressed by the number of ZZ Top beards given their scarcity in the circles in which I move.  Where these people live, I know not.  Clearly not the eastern suburbs.

 

Ahead of sitting down I inserted earplugs, but on second thoughts I added two others just to make sure.  I am now waiting to get them surgically removed at the end of June.  An eight week wait, but that is why you pay for private health insurance.  The first act was George Thorogood and the Destroyers.  They all had surprisingly good heads of hair even though they were all 72.  Though not all was well with their bodies.  The bass guitarist at one stage had his legs spread so wide he seemed to be attempting the splits.  Either that or his hips had locked.  After 10 minutes, having been immobile from the hips down, we knew his hips had actually locked.  Their session ended early so he could be taken off.

 

Returning to our seats post interval, the stage was literally a wall of speakers.  With two sets of earplugs in place I felt confident I could survive.  I had not reckoned on the G-force of the blast.  I looked round and it all looked as if we were all skydiving as the flesh of our faces was flattened.  A few days later I was asked what the concert was like.  ‘LOUD.  VERY LOUD.’  My questioner could not understand why I was shouting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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