Recently I commented that the blossom trees seemed to be flowering early this year. Well, here’s something else. Last night it was reported that a huge moorland fire broke out not far from here, on Scout Moor, between Ramsbottom and Whitworth. Big enough to be seen from Rochdale and parts of Oldham.
That’s not the first local fire this year. Saturday was a beautiful day, warm and sunny. Uppermill was crowded with what a friend of mine refers to a “grockles”: people who are not local, who have come to browse the charity shops, the secondhand book shops, the assorted tat shops (clothes, jewellery, ornaments, souvenirs), and of course to sample the numerous cafes. A few miles further along is Dovestone reservoir, a local beauty shop, probably also crowded. Late in the afternoon Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service were called to a 'small fire' near to the reservoir, a fire which was suspected to have been started by a barbecue found discarded at the scene.
So it would seem that the fire season has also begun early. A week of fine sunny weather brings out the urge to go to an out of doors place and have a barbecue … and then in some cases leave the portable barbecue behind to cause whatever havoc it likes.
However, it rained in the night, for the first time in a week. I ran round the village in the drizzle this morning. Hopefully the rain will damp any remaining fire and damp the enthusiasm of those who like to make fire on the open air.
It’s unusual for me to be grateful for rain. After all, it’s taken the better part of a week for the footpaths to dry up and the muddy puddles to shrink. But the moors around here are basically peat bogs. People used to dig up dried peat to burn on their kitchen stoves. If it catches fire (or is set alight deliberately) it can smoulder below the surface for days. Just another bit of chaos in the world.
And, of course, the chaos continues in the wider world. We talk hopefully about the so-called ceasefire in Gaza and then Inread about the death of Abed Elrahman Hamdouna, a volunteer ambulance driver in northern Gaza.
Abed Elrahman Hamdouna, a 31-year-old father of two, was killed in a reported drone strike west of Gaza City two weeks ago, as he was on his way to a family Ramadan iftar, to break fast with his brothers. He wasn’t doing anything remotely military; he was just on his way to celebrate with his brothers.
Here are some statistics:
- Since the ceasefire was announced on 10 October last year, Israel has killed 677 and injured a further 1,800 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s health ministry.
- Israeli strikes in Gaza have averaged about 10 a day across the territory over the past five months.
That’s not what a ceasefire should look like.
And here’s a link to an article about a doctor treating migrants who are injured trying to get into the USA from Mexico
And, going in the other direction, here’s a link to an article about a ‘self-deportee’, a young man of Mexican origin but who lived in Los Angeles from being only a few months old. Now 38, he has grown tired of worrying that ICE might come and find him. So he has gone of his own volition to a country whose language should be his own but which he speaks haltingly because English has become his first language: a mother tongue which has turned out to be the tongue of a wicked stepmother.
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!



















