There was a nice breeze when I was out and about this morning. The day promises to be another hot one. The blue sky and sunshine are very impressive but it must be hard if you have to work in it. Lots of news articles keep going on about how we need to adapt our homes, schools, hospitals, workplaces (basically the whole country) to help us cope with climate change. It was certainly unpleasantly hot in the hospital waiting room where Phil spent a good part of yesterday morning. And our son tells us it’s been hotter in London than it has been in Genoa where he and his family fly to on Friday.
On the subject of Global Warming, here’s something I found:
“This is a complex subject and there are degrees of uncertainty. Isn’t there room for doubt?
The physics and chemistry are very simple: the more we increase greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere, the more we will warm the climate. Those basics have been known since the 1850s, with the first quantification of the effect of increasing carbon dioxide levels being made in the 1890s.
In 1938, Guy Callendar, an English steam engineer, was the first person to show that the world had already warmed by about 0.3C, and linked this to the rise in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere and the amount of coal that had been burned. That was more than 80 years ago. Today, the evidence is overwhelming. There is no doubt among scientists even if other people still refuse to believe it.”
So, basically, we’ve known about it, or someone has known about it, for much longer than they’re admitting to. The industrial revolution messed the planet up. And now there’s the further worry about IT needing to use lots of water, just exacerbating the problem! We really do need to go back to a much simpler lifestyle. Unfortunately that’s another genie that won’t go back into the bottle.
The news sources tell us that Anne Widdecombe didn’t just die but was murdered! Yesterday they arrested a young man but today they have un-arrested him and they are continuing to search for her killer. Strange times when no-longer active political figures are targeted!
Meanwhile, the news comes that actress Patricia Greene, aka Jill Archer, the longest standing actor in The Archers, has died. Imagine spending all your acting life playing the same character through all her various life stages. Quite accidentally and coincidentally we tuned in to Friday Night is Music Night on BBC Radio 3 yesterday evening to find they were having an evening dedicated to 75 years of The Archers.
Royalists will be pleased to hear that King Charles and his younger son, Harry, have gone some way towards reconciliation, at least according to this article.
Nice for Charles to have a chance to get to know his American grandchildren! It would seem, however, that Harry and his big brother, William, have not made up their differences. Knowing how my grandchildren appreciate family reunions where they get to play with their cousins, I feel rather sorry for the princes and princesses but maybe they have compensations.
Families can be strange. There are bits of my extended family where members don’t speak to each except to complain. So I am quite pleased, not to say smug, that my immediate family gets on so well.
Here’s a link to Craig Murray’s blogpost about Nigel Farage. It would be amusing / interesting if Count Binface won the by-election at Clacton.
And here’s a cartoon which brings together Nigel Farage and the Bayeux Tapestry.
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!










