This week an amusement. Spotted these “health and beauty” offers in my local Waitrose supermarket last Friday!
Health & Beauty
Harrow; September 2014
This week an amusement. Spotted these “health and beauty” offers in my local Waitrose supermarket last Friday!
In anticipation of the Scottish referendum. Oh, and also for my god-parents.
So something different for my ten things for September.
10 Curious or Amusing London Bus Stop Names
London has over 20600 bus stops and every one has a name, so there are bound to be a few amusements, including …
And as a bonus I have to add …
Diamond Geezer provides a lot more for your amusement, and there is a full downloadable list of every one of the 20600+ bus stops on the WhatDoTheyKnow website.
This postcard is being sold on eBay …
Another selection of pieces which you may have missed and will definitely wish you hadn’t.
It’s no wonder that bites hurt and itch when you see the chemical composition of insect venoms.
Now here’s a brilliant demonstration of the way in which evolution happened. Fish adapt to life outside water by learning to walk.

Following on the family history theme from the other day, this week’s photograph is another from our trip to Kent last week: a view of an English country churchyard. Specifically this is the churchyard of St Mildred’s, Tenterden and shows the headstone to my ggg-grandfather, Samuel Austen — that’s the large browner stone in the middle; it’s the back, so you can’t see the inscription.

Yesterday we had a day out hunting my ancestors — my father’s direct line — in Kent. And what a splendid day, despite not making any new discoveries.
We trotted off from home about 7am and arrived in Goudhurst about 9.30; just in time for coffee and apple cake.
Having been refreshed we pottered on to Benenden from where, if the connections I think are there are right, my family lives for several generations in the early 18th century and probably earlier. Benenden is such a gorgeous village with houses and the church round a large village green which doubles as the cricket ground — just as it should be.




This week we feature a photograph I took many years ago — somewhere around 2005-6. This is the church of St Mary in the Marsh, one of the delightful churches on the Romney Marsh. Children’s author Edith Nesbit is buried here and has a simple wooden grave marker in the churchyard near the south door.

Muselet
A wire cage that fits over the cork of a bottle of champagne, sparkling wine or beer to prevent the cork from emerging under the pressure of the carbonated contents.
The muselet was invented in 1844 Adolphe Jaqueson to improve the seal on champagne bottles. The design has been improved over the years with the use of twisted steel wire for added strength and a metal cap.
The word is derived from the French museler, to muzzle.