I t was raining as I walked to the market in Uppermill this morning. So on the way I took a photo of the sunflowers in a nodding acquaintance’s garden in Dobcross. Just a bit of brightness! There is the possibility of thunder later but at the moment it seems to have stopped raining at least.
Really I suppose I should stop calling it the market. It’s down to the fishman and the shoe and slipper man these days. The cheese and biscuit stall has not reappeared since the new year and recently the fruit and veg man has given up too. Mostly I go so that I can get fresh fish without going too far afield. I usually go to the Italian-owned greengrocery as well as the market buy I could go there anyy day of the week. I also used to go regularly to a delicatessen which sold excellent olives and other good things but that closed some time ago and resurrected as yet another trendy clothes boutique!
So it goes!
Here’s photo of some strange objects: fish shaped soy sauce dispensers.
Here’s an explanation:
“They have been a familiar sight at takeaway sushi shops around the world for decades but it could be the beginning of the end for fish-shaped soy sauce dispensers.
South Australia will be the first place in the world to ban them under a wider ban on single-use plastics that comes into force on 1 September.
The device known as shoyu-tai (or soy-sauce snapper in Japanese) was invented in 1954 by Teruo Watanabe, the founder of Osaka-based of Osaka-bases company Asahi Sogyo! according to a report from Japan’s Radio Kamsai.
It was then common for glass and ceramic containers to be used but the advent of cheap industrial plastics allowed the creation of a small polyethylene container in the shape of a fish, officially named the “Lunch Charm”.”
I don’t eat sushi so I have note come across these “fish”, but now they are being banned in the interests of reducing plastic pollution.
When I visited my older sister recently with my Spanish sister along for good measure, we three sisters reminisced about this and that, as sisters will. And, also as sisters will, occasionally we had different versions of the same event. My older sister commented that now we have nobody we can consult to check the truth of the matter: we are now the older generation, the guardians of the family annals! Scary stuff!
The younger generation are going to have to work rather longer than we did. In fact, there’s a bit of a crisis about the birth rate in the country. There will be fewer workers contributing to the pot which pays the older folks’ pensions and we older folks are living longer!
Meanwhile, if ordinary people are going to have to work longer, sports people are a different matter. Cyclist Geraint Thomas, currently riding his last Tour of Britain, intends this to be his swan song. He’s about 37
And there are commentators wondering how long Novak Djokovic, 38, can keep going. It’s to be hoped that they have squirrelled away enough earnings to continue to have a good life style. Mind you, I expect they’ll find other ways of continuing to earn plenty.
It begins to seem that our government is modelling some of its immigration and asylum policy on what is going on in the USA. Here’s a link to an article about a young man whose family moved from Portugal to the UK when he was twelve. He was arrested while out shopping and detained for a month. The government is apparently taking a hard line on illegal immigrants who work as delivery drivers but this young man completed his secondary education here, has been paying taxes for over 10 years and has a national insurance number - surely indicative of legal status.
Then there are the foreign students who are warned not to overstay their student visas. If they do, they will be “removed”.
And with the news that the right of accepted asylum seekers to bring their families here to join them, here’s an article about a young man from Afghanistan whose life is being turned upside down by that decision.
Will we have our own ICE agents soon?
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone.