Well, the promised snow has not arrived … yet. It was, however, bucketing down with rain when I snoozed my alarm. Listening to the rain, I decided that I wasn’t going anywhere early and that snoozing my alarm was not sufficient. So I reset the alarm and went properly back to sleep for a while, much better than snoozing my alarm every 8 minutes or so and dozing between alarm calls.
In the days before mobile phones served as alarm clocks, most of us used an actual clock which was much harder to set to “snooze”. Perhaps we slept better for it. Certainly an actual alarm clock could not wake you at 7.00am with the ‘ping’ of a text message, usually not so urgent that it could not have waited until a more civilised time but which has you feeling that you need to look at it just in case! One of these days I’ll ignore a genuinely urgent message because I have dismissed the ‘ping’ as yet another enquiry about the Italian conversation class from a fellow class member.
Here is a cartoon - ‘The Pocket Telephone; When Will it Ring? by W. K. Haselden - first published in The Mirror in March 1919.
The rain had stopped by mid-morning. I suggested a walk round the village after breakfast but Phil was expecting a delivery and so we waited … during which time it could well begin to rain again. But the parcel arrived and we walked without getting wet! Our river is running high though.
In other parts of the country the rain has been much worse than here. The River Ex has flooded land around Exeter, for example.
In Australia they are suffering from the heat. Quite how you operate when the temperatures reach close to 50° is a great mystery to me. On the other side of globe a good deal of the USA is gripped by snowstorms, as if they didn’t already have enough problems with ICE!
I still have a driving licence but have not actually driven for years and years. It becomes increasingly unlikely that I ever will again as I find modern traffic so daunting. I have undoubtedly mentioned before that my very first car, in the mid 1970s, was a much loved bright red Citroen 2CV. I look at photos, even very occasionally see a Deux Chevaux while I am out and about and shudder at the lack of safety features. It might be rather like driving a sardine can. And modern cars are all so large! I have great admiration, by the way, for the bus drivers who manoeuvre the roads around here where huge vehicles are parked all lver place, making driving on the narrow roads rather like a slalom.
Now I read that huge pick-up trucks, described in this article as US-style ‘battering ram’ pickup trucks, are becoming more popular on UK roads. Our next door neighbour has one but he does have horses in a field somewhere reasonably close by and the rear section of his pickup is often full of hay. But I am willing to bet that many drivers of such vehicles do not really need that facility. As the article points out, they are a danger to cyclists and pedestrians, especially child-sized pedestrians and in the event of collisions probably cause more damage because of their sheer height!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!





