It was already hot when I went out running earlier this morning. I must not have run fast enough because my Fitbit only recognised it as a walk! It’s a good job I don’t take this stuff seriously. My weather app tells me it’s 26° and, stepping out into the garden, I find it’s warm even in shady places!
News reports of the heatwave concentrate as ever on the south of the country - the only place that really has weather:
“The latest heatwave is expected to push temperatures close to record levels for June and result in the hottest ever start to Wimbledon.
Amber heat alerts remain in place until Tuesday evening for all of southern, western and eastern England with a warning of excess deaths particularly among those over 65, and increased demand on health and social care services.
Meanwhile, the London fire brigade has highlighted a “severe” risk of wildfires.
After the temperature rose to more than 30C (86F) in parts of southern England this weekend, it is forecast to hit 34C on Monday. This would make it the hottest day of the year so far, and just short of the UK’s record temperature for June of 35.6C, recorded in Southampton in 1976.”
I remember the summer of ‘76. I succumbed to heatstroke while camping in Brittany in June. We returned to England to find that not only Brittany but even Oldham had had brilliant sunshine. The final weeks os term in a hot school building were sticky! And it went on until some time after we all returned to school in September. At the school where I worked a young Frenchman, employed to give conversation classes, arrived on the day the weather broke. It rained so much in the ensuing weeks that he refused to believe we had had such a hot summer!
As we all depend so much on our electronic devices, here’s a cartoon which made me smile.
I read something recently about children starting school unable to climb stairs, unable to sit on the carpet to listen to a story - sitting on the carpet in reception class is quite an important social activity to round off the day. “I’ve got two children [in my class] who physically cannot sit on the carpet. They don’t have core strength,” a reception teacher in the north-west told researchers. They are unable to do these things because they spend so much time slumped on a sofa watching stuff online. Not enough running and jumping!
“Less than half (44%) of the 1,000 parents of reception-aged children who replied to a survey said they thought children should know how to use books correctly, turning the pages rather than swiping or tapping as if using an electronic device, when they started school. But most, three in four, agreed that toilet training was something a child should have achieved before reception.”
“Parents are busy working and I don’t think they’re actually spending a lot of quality time with the children, having those basic play skills and conversations,” a reception teacher in the north-west said.
Here’s a link to an article about Jonathan Haidt who wrote a book called “The Anxious Generation”: he recommends no smartphones before 14 and no social media before 16. It’s very hard for parents to impose such restrictions nowadays without subjecting their offspring to bullying peer pressure and being labelled “geeks”.
Life was simpler before smartphones and social media came along. We reflected on this yesterday when we walked into the village to find a crowd on the bridge overlooking the river.
The annual ‘duck race” was taking place.
Plastic ducks, purchased by members of the public, are released into the river somewhere further up the valley. A barrier is constructed by the bridge in the village and presumably there are prizes for the first ducks to make it into the village!
It is an activity reminiscent of our 1950s and 60s childhood with beetle drives and housey-housey (bingo) at the church hall. Oh, yes! We knew how to have a good time!
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!