Coming up in October

Here’s my selection of events, celebrations and customs that are happening during October.
Reminder: These listings contain an eclectic mix of interesting (to me) anniversaries, historical events, red letter days and upcoming “awareness events”, mostly UK-centric. My rules for the inclusion of awareness events are that they must not be medical, nor aimed specifically at children, nor must they be too obviously purely commercial; and they must have a useful website. (It is surprising how many get cast asunder by the lack of a useful website.)
Anyway here’s this month’s list …
4 October
French painter Jean-Francois Millet was born on this day in 1814.


Jean-Francois Millet; The Goose Girl

6 to 12 October
National Knitting Week. Celebrate by bringing knitters together, sharing techniques and learning something new. More information over at www.ukhandknitting.com/.
6 October
National Personal Safety Day is an annual event aimed at highlighting some of the simple, practical solutions that everyone can use to help avoid violence and aggression in today’s society. It’s about helping people live safer, more confident lives. Find out about this year’s campaign and getting involved at www.nationalpersonalsafetyday.co.uk/.
10 October
Tavistock Goose Fair has been held on the second Wednesday of October since 1823 (but with roots back to the 12th century) and it is one of only two historically established traditional goose fairs in the UK, the other being the larger Nottingham Goose Fair held in the first week of October.

Waltham Abbey Church, East End,
with the alleged burial place of King Harold in the centre foreground

11 October
King Harold Day. Waltham Abbey in Essex (very near my childhood home) celebrates each October the life and death of our last Saxon King — Harold — killed at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066. Harold founded the abbey at Waltham and took “For the Holy Cross of Waltham” as his battle cry. He is allegedly buried under the old high alter of the abbey church (now outside the remaining church). More details of the day’s events can be found at www.kingharoldday.co.uk/.
13 to 19 October
This is a massive week for Britain’s food lovers with the concurrent celebration of Chocolate Week, National Baking Week and National Curry Week. Mmmmm … yes … curried chocolate cake! Well maybe not!
21 October
Apple Day. Sponsored by Common Ground, Apple Day is intended to be both a celebration and a demonstration of the variety we are in danger of losing, not simply in apples, but in the richness and diversity of landscape, ecology and culture. More information over at commonground.org.uk/projects/orchards/apple-day/.
31 October
All Hallows’ Eve (or Halloween) is a celebration on the eve of the Western Christian feast of All Hallows’ Day, the time in the liturgical year dedicated to remembering the dead. Although it may have roots back into Celtic harvest festival celebrations, many of the present-day customs are recent innovations.
This day is also the Pagan feast of Samhain, a Gaelic festival marking the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter or the “darker half” of the year. It is celebrated from sunset on 31 October to sunset on 1 November, which is almost midway between the autumn equinox and the winter solstice. Along with Imbolc, Beltane and Lughnasadh it makes up the four Gaelic seasonal festivals.

Word: Œnology

Œnology
The study and science of making wine.
Hence, œnologist, one who is knowledgeable about wine.


The word derives from the Greek οἶνος wine, with, according to the OED, the word œnology first being used in 1814.

Weekly Photograph

Time, this week, for another round of pussy porn yawn.
Not a great shot, but at times like this it is a question of shoot and hope. AS you’ll all guess this was Tilly mid-sunbathe on the study windowsill.

Click the image for a larger view
t-yawn2
Tilly Yawns
Greenford; September 2014

Oddity of the Week

Rocky Mountain Oysters: bull or ram testicles boiled then sliced into ovals and fried. The oysters are served with a spicy sauce. Other euphemisms include barnyard jewels, cowboy caviar, fry, swinging beef and Montana tendergroin. Clifton in Montana holds an annual Testicle Festival, serving up over 2 tons of bull’s balls to 15,000 visitors. In France testicles are served as animelles, while in Greece kokoretsi is a stew involving a variety of offal, including testicles.
From: Ian Crofton; Brewer’s Cabinet of Curiosities

Buggered Britain #23

Another in my occasional series documenting some of the underbelly of Britain. Britain which we wouldn’t like visitors to see and which we wish wasn’t there. The trash, abused, decaying, destitute and otherwise buggered parts of our environment. Those parts which symbolise the current economic malaise; parts which, were the country flourishing, wouldn’t be there, would be better cared for, or made less inconvenient.
This is the walkway to the offices of one of our local solicitors! (Yes I was sitting in the safety of the car.)

Click the image for larger views on Flickr
Buggered Britain #23

Autumn Auction Oddities

We bring you another right royal selection of oddities from the catalogues of our local auction house. Their last sale wasn’t interesting enough to make a post on its own but the current sale has well and truly made up for it. As so often it is not just the strange things people (try to) sell but the variety of old toot that gets put together as a lot. Here are the highlights(!!) of the two sales.
Some cigars, a bottle of absinthe and a boxing photograph of Jack Bloomfield against Bombadier Billy Wells, and a book on absinthe, etc.
Two small oak lecterns and a book on Jerusalem — The Saga of a Holy City, limited edition with hand coloured plates.
A tooled brass powder flask by J.W. Hawksley, a pair of 19th century andirons and a 19th century chamberstick with naïve decoration.
A large African storage bucket covered in animal hide
A large Oriental chrysanthemum decorated figure of a rabbit …
Two old gaucho spurs
A Teletubbies lot, incl. 5 unused Teletubbies in original packaging, plus a boxed one, Teletubbies posable figures (smaller), a Teletubbies giant Tiddleywinks, a beach ball and a video
A large collection of ladies tights including fishnets …
Various Roman pottery and fossils in two boxes, a rolled-up ‘Scotland of Old’, a collection of posters including Howe Bicycles, tricycles, a Few Translations of the 13th Century, La Dame aux Camelias, etc.
A box containing 125 small boxes, each containing two magnetic bracelets including freshwater pearls.
A framed, signed and sealed manuscript for the United Ancient Order of Druids.
Two shelves of decorative china and brassware, including table lamps, trays, vases, candlesticks, animal figurines, goblets, eggcups, etc., a large copper kettle and tray, silver plated comport, a blue 1980s Metropolis telephone, a quantity of decorative tins, a set of Le Jockey Club, Paris binoculars, a small quantity of planters, a figurine of a horse, a Holy Bible and Book of Common Prayer, onyx table lamps, a glass milk bottle, a Heald Ltd Foodbank Farm, Didsbury, and another similar, a barometer, lacquer box and cover, an old miner’s lamp, tea caddy with mother-of-pearl cartouche, a military Burroughs tin box.
An old brass Valor fire extinguisher, a Trio TS530S HF transceiver, a large green and clear glass outside lantern, a stoneware hot water bottle by The Old Fulham Pottery, a large jasper ware cheese dome and cover, a pair of modern silver plate and leather table lamp bases, a Mackintosh style butterfly table lamp, etc.
Two pokerwork boxes, one decorated with cherries, a pair of German cases binoculars, 8×22, Kodak Retinette 1A camera, a PD15 camera, Bakelite flash, three brass candlesticks and a small quantity of silver plate including candlestick and bowl, Art Deco figurine of a fawn, plus other animal ornaments including birds, zebra and monkeys, a quantity of silver plated cutlery and a handmade interesting figure of an elderly couple sitting in their drawing room made by Magda Watts.
Interesting items incl. an Agfamatic 1A cased camera, a Comet 2 cased camera, and a boxed Brownie, approx. 8 African figural wooden carvings, a Murano green glass decanter with gilt and floral decoration and 6 matching wine glasses, stoneware mug set, etc.
A pewter tea and coffee set on matching tray, an old leather suitcase and green lady’s hat by Della
An old knobkerry, slightly curved, a carved African throwing spear and twisted walking stick, and a shooting stick
A percussion cap musket with ramrod and a Second World War papier-mâché helmet
An Oriental boxwood walking stick, well carved with rats on a length of bamboo, with hidden compartment
A box of various door locks, handles, fittings, etc., three cartons of old tools including moulding planes, a fire, and two cartons of Kilner jars and jam jars.

A mixed lot to include Royal Doulton Morning Star chinaware, treen, old Christmas decorations, stationery, old tins, metal ware, cutlery, old phones, etc.

Seven various leaded windows.
But the pièce de résistance has to be …
A purple porcelain sink and toilet, a blue and white decorative sink and a concrete garden urn.
However these sales were stuffed (and I use the word advisedly) with taxidermy and similar …
A cased set of mounted butterflies incl. the Jay and Lime butterfly [plus lots of other toot]
A quantity of dik dik horns, claws, etc.
Three items of taxidermy: a bird of prey in a good mahogany and glazed case, a show pigeon, again in a glazed display case and a stoat.
A taxidermy stag head, and further horns and heart-shaped mahogany mounting board
A small quantity of taxidermy including a pheasant, jay and one further small bird.
A small quantity of taxidermy including a mounted deer head, another mounted doe and mounted jackals.
A stuffed gannet on a rock, in glazed case
A quantity of taxidermy items incl. a wooden glazed case with a trio of squirrels and a bird, a mounted crocodile’s head, a fox’s head, stag head, and a humming bird
And again we leave the pièce de résistance to the last …
Caught by the vendor in an exotic location, this Hammerhead shark has a manmade skeleton covered in the original skin that was preserved in Formaldehyde prior to being carefully stretched over the bones.
As Kenny Everett would have said “All in the best possible taste”!

Weekly Photograph

This week’s photograph is one I took earlier in the summer. One? Well no actually it is four images because this is a montage of some excellent mosses growing on the top of a headstone at Churchill, Oxfordshire (just outside Chipping Norton) and from where I have ancestors in the 18th century.

Mossy Grave
Mossy Grave Montage
Churchill, Oxfordshire; May 2014

Yes, for the eagle-eyed amongst you, I know the images don’t quite align — they weren’t taken with the idea of aligning them in a montage — I felt the individual images didn’t really stand alone but were too good to waste! Nothing wrong with that; it’s only one step removed from David Hockney’s joiners.

Word: Nugatory

Nugatory
1. Trifling, of no value or importance, worthless.
2. Of no force, invalid; useless, futile, of no avail, inoperative.
From the Latin nūgātōrius, past participle stem of nūgārī, to trifle. The word was first used in 1603 in a translation of Plutarch. Perhaps slightly surprisingly the word appears to have no connexion to nougat.