Quotes of the Week
This week’s ragbag of amusements masquerading a thoughtful quotes …
We need to have more Europe.
[German Chancellor Angela Merkel; BBC News, 8 December 2011]
Never has Europe been so necessary. Never has it been in so much danger. Never have so many countries wanted to join Europe. Never has the risk of a disintegration of Europe been so great. Europe is facing an extraordinarily dangerous situation.
[French President Nicolas Sarkosy; BBC News, 8 December 2011]
After which one is forced to agree with Shakespeare …
Hell is empty and all the Devils are here.
But then again …
Perhaps imagination is only intelligence having fun.
[George Scialabba]
So are Americans any better than us?
Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.
[John Steinbeck]
Guess it explains some differences in attitude though!
When I was born I was so surprised … I didn’t talk for a year and a half.
[Thoughts of Angel]
One of the great things about books is sometimes there are some fantastic pictures in them.
[Thoughts of Angel quoting George W Bush]
Which could also explain quite a lot especially when bearing in mind …
When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion, it is called Religion.
[Robert M Pirsig]
So there is only one solution …
Don’t worry, just breathe. If it’s meant to be, it will find its way.
Advent Calendar 15
Who ever thought this was a good idea?!?!?!
[50/52] Ring-Neck Parakeet

Click the image for a larger version
Week 50 entry for 52 weeks challenge.
Ring-Neck Parakeet this afternoon on one of our seed feeders. We seem to have two or three visit several times a day; I’ve no idea if they are the same birds all the time, but it wouldn’t surprise me if they have their own defined feeding territories.
I know a lot of people don’t like these birds, but I do. OK they’re not native but they are colourful, brash, noisy, intelligent and incredibly comic to watch. Their body isn’t a lot bigger than a blackbird, but they’ll stand their ground against a magpie, which is noticeably bigger. One bird will be respectful of a magpie but won’t give in to it easily. Two birds is more than a match for a single magpie. I’ve noticed this recently as our magpies have decided to try raiding the seed feeders, which they don’t find easy but they’re determined birds! Two parakeets on a feeder beats one magpie. One parakeet will give way, but not by a lot!
I also discovered recently that there is a big (like 2500 birds) parakeet roost at Wormwood Scrubs (the open ground and trees just north of HM’s hotel), which is only about 5 miles away as the parrot flies. I suspect our birds belong to this roost as we often see them and others flying in that direction around dusk.
Advent Calendar 14
Cartoon of the Week
Advent Calendar 13
Word of the Week : Callipygian
Callipygian.
Of, pertaining to, or having well-shaped or finely developed
buttocks. A nice bum.
Eating Children is Good
Our friend Katy is having trouble with her children’s willingness to eat meals — or rather, their lack of willingness. And having seen said children in action I can quite understand why Katy is losing it with them; I’m only surprised she’s stuck it as long as she has. She has my sympathy — for what little that’s worth. Beyond that, not being a parent myself, I feel I should have neither an opinion nor a voice. So here’s (mostly) my experience of childhood.
I don’t remember any fights over food when I was a child. I ate whatever was put in front of me and I was expected to eat adult-style meals. There were, as far as I know, no threats like “Eat it or you go hungry”. I maybe knew I wouldn’t be given any alternative, so I’d better eat what was there; but if so it was an internal rather than an external decision. At least that is my memory.
Looking back my mother had a bad enough time coping with my father without me making things worse. I was going to say that my parents were semi-vegetarian, but that would be wrong. My father was a wannabe vegetarian; he would eat some meat (sausages and bacon always disappeared) and some fish. He would never eat offal or shellfish on the grounds that they’re all scavengers and thus unhealthy. But my mother was more wedded to meat; and it was noticeable that when my father died the vegetarian cookery books went out the house within days! So she would often feed herself and me on meat at lunchtimes, when father was at work, and then provide (semi-)vegetarian regularly in the evenings. (We kept chickens for many years so there were always eggs to be had.) And she always provided good, wholesome, balanced meals. I always enjoyed anything with cheese sauce, and her nut roast was also always good (especially as it usually appeared with a rasher of bacon!). Now how many kids would admit to liking nut roast?
I so much ate everything that my parents were surprised when, in my late teens (I guess) I did start to admit to things I didn’t like.
So I ate whatever was put in front of me. And with a few exceptions I stll eat pretty much everything. The exceptions? I can’t eat grapefruit (because of my medication; shame as I love pink grapefruit) and honeydew-type melon gives me a sore throat as does pomegranate. I dislike (but can eat if I have to) egg custard, absinthe, Pernod, jellied eels, unadulterated egg white (eg. on fried egg), raw milk and milk puddings, sweetcorn, sweet potatoes, baked apples, rum flavouring and the combination of meat with sweet. I won’t eat veal on principle. There are also few things — tripe, oysters, eyes, anything still alive — which I cannot even think of trying. With a lot of these it is a question of texture as much as flavour; with the eggy things and baked apples it is probably down to having had them too much as a kid. I actually like many of the things people generally dislike: liver, kidney, black pudding, haggis, squid, fennel, broccoli, spinach.
So does it matter how you train your children to eat? Insist they eat what’s in front of them or cater to their whims? In the short term I suspect the secret is to manage not to let the meal table become a battleground, however you achieve it. In the long term it probably doesn’t make a lot of difference what you do. Children’s palates have to mature; their tastes do change as they get older, so the trick is probably to get them to at least try everything and then probably repeat the trial every couple of years or so. Many people have to acquire the taste for things like anchovies, olives and beer; and some never will. All adults have a few things they can’t eat for whatever reason and a clutch of things they really dislike. Some have bigger no-go areas than others. But ultimately few are really very picky eaters who will tolerate only four different meals the way many kids seem to.
Now remind me why didn’t we have children?



