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Grey with hints that there might just be blue sky and a wan sun somewhere.
Cooler in here at 19 deg, 18.5 in the kitchen, 17 in the leanto.
1012 mBar, 29.88 in Hg, 759.1 Torr, 14.6778 psi, (up from 1005 last night), 64% RH (Lidl electric).
Meanwhile on the 18th of February 2020 BR14 and Churchill popped in, along with LM, WTFH, and NF, whereas in the library, it being half term or something, it was LEGO day. . But not, as it transpired, for very many more weeks. Whilst elsewhere it was merely cold, here, as per, it was cold and wet.
Walk (towpath, unabbreviated) walked in the grey gloom. More people about today.
Lunch: brunch. Entertainment: something about the woman who's in charge of the RFU.
Tonight, I started reading The Andromeda Anthology by Fred Hoyle and John Elliot, being A for Andromeda and The Andromeda Breakthrough in one volume. I vaguely remember getting A for Andromeda out of the library when I was about fourteen, but don't remember anything much about it. Of course, I'm too young to have seen the original 1961 TV series!
There's been quite a lot of rain in the last hour, but it seems to have eased off a bit now. I noticed it was getting quite windy too
Goodnight all
I can remember the TV series. scared the stuffing out of me!
I blame stuff like that and quatermass for my lifelong addiction to scifi.
for which i'm eternally grateful
oh, sorry, - morning all
lovely sunny morning here, after yesterday's deluge.
no extra trampolines or sheds in the garden either.
Sunny out, with just some patches and wisps of high, thin cloud here and there. The warm spell is over though: it's a mere 10°C ("feels like" 8°) and not getting any warmer than 14°, though the wind seems to have eased off quite a bit. The barometers are up again at 1006/1014mB
Tonight, I started reading The Andromeda Anthology by Fred Hoyle and John Elliot, being A for Andromeda and The Andromeda Breakthrough in one volume. I vaguely remember getting A for Andromeda out of the library when I was about fourteen, but don't remember anything much about it. Of course, I'm too young to have seen the original 1961 TV series!
There's been quite a lot of rain in the last hour, but it seems to have eased off a bit now. I noticed it was getting quite windy too
Walk with loony lady 2 was too difficult for her. She wasn't up to walking back and a bloke at a campsite gave us a lift! There are some nice people around. Had a nice lunch at pub overlooking a lake and I had a lone wander while she sat chatting to another old lady.
Managed to submit my damn company accounts to HMRC. Hadn't been able to do a submission to Companies House as I had not received an authentication code and was a bit worried I might not get it on time so applied for a filing extension. Just had email that said it had been extended to Dec 31st! Think I'll just keep applying for extensions so I don't have to bother with submissions at all.
Cloudy day out, and it's quite likely to start raining before too long; probably just showers, though. The heatwave is tailing off, so we're only at 19°C and not getting any warmer, while the barometers are heading back down at 995/1002mB
Wet: started as drizzle & got heavier as time went on.
Grey.
Sunless.
Misty.
Cool in here at 19.6 deg, 20 in the kitchen, 18.5 in the leanto.
1002.5 mBar, 29.6 in Hg, 751.94 Torr, 14.54 psi, (down from 1007 last night), 67% RH (Lidl electric).
Meanwhile on the 17th of February 2020 DaveB popped in, LM watched someone nearly getting totalled by an ambulance with blues & twos on, everyone had tea, I'd been to that Swansea and it rained on me in Neath, followed by me watching "Highlander: Endgame" & not understanding WTF was going on since it's a continuation of the tv series.
Walk (unabbreviated, towpath) walked, initially dry, then very light drizzle, and eventually full on rain. Feet wet now.
Lunch: brunch.
Entertainment: FOOC.
Freecell score: 95%, running average: 84%.
Another little flock of swifts/swallows/martins spotted on their way to that Africa.
Hammering down now: rivers running down the road. Next door's garden will be under water again at this rate.
Sun was out for at least 30 seconds just now.
Tea: soup etc. Entertainment: PM.
Maigret "Shadow Play (1961)". The two hour version was on a couple of weeks ago.
Railway thing on 4. Britain's Railway Empire (2 of 2).
Blaze: The Real Hunt for Red October: the hunt for K-129. Revamping the story of the GloMar Explorer, the CIA, and Howard Hughes.
Overcast. Currently 17 degrees with a high of 21 expected. There may be rain this afternoon, followed by the sun coming out. Barometer down to 1010 mBar.
Sunrise 06:44; Sunset 19:04 BST
Last night I set the WM to a delayed start with some minor laundry. It finished shortly before I got out of the shower, and the cleaned clothings have now been draped on the airer.
I will pop over the road to the farmers' market to see if the Caribbean sauce lady is there when I've finished my coffee (which I'm not supposed to have but one cup a day can't hurt?).
Then the wall painting person is set to arrive by 10:30 to finally finish the garden wall. Once they get here, I will drive down to visit Mum, leaving them to paint and hope they don't nick my stuff.
Tonight's major motion picture was one of those where I wasn't sure if it was a premiere or if I'd seen it on the telly years ago. But when it featured a PDP-8/e being actively used in the first minute or two, I realised I couldn't have seen it before, as I would have remembered that
So it was the premiere, for me, of Three Days of the Condor (1975) in which a PDP-8/e is seen not only scanning the text of a book printed in Chinese (horizontally) but also converting that text from ideograms into a Latin alphabet transcription and, furthermore, an English translation, all in real time! Yeah, no. A PDP-8/e can't do that. Anyway, the rest of the film isn't about that but is a great example of those 1970s thrillers that directors have been trying, and often failing, to copy ever since. Excellent stuff, I thought
And later, a rewatch of Code of a Killer, the ITV drama about Alec Jeffries' invention of DNA fingerprinting and its use in catching Colin Pitchfork for the murders down near Narborough in the 1980s. Last time I watched this was in the old flat, where I was thinking that the crime scenes were just three miles or so down the road; here, the labs in which Jeffries worked are about half-a-mile away across the park on the university campus. Strange how awful tragedies and major breakthroughs can all happen so close to home
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