Smoking!

Jul. 19th, 2025 11:54 pm
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Historic NASCAR Chevrolet, Shelsley Walsh, 19th July 2025
169/365: Historic NASCAR Chevrolet, Shelsley Walsh
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I was able to make it to the Shelsley Walsh hillclimb today for the annual Classic Nostalgia meeting. Although it rained a bit in the morning, things dried up thereafter and the day was a good one. A few old F1 cars, including Michael Schumacher's 1992 Benetton; several NASCARs, lots of old sports and rally cars, plus a slew of Colin McRae's old rally cars including the Subaru Impreza that carried him to victory in the 1995 World Rally Championship. My photo today is of one of the NASCARs showing off on a demo run as it leaves the start line. Afraid NASCAR isn't my thing, so beyond "it's a Chevrolet" I couldn't tell you exactly what it is or how old it is or who originally drove it or... anything much, really!

Humidity

Jul. 18th, 2025 11:30 pm
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The Mug House, Bewdley, 18th July 2025

An unpleasantly warm and humid day today. Only 24 °C on the thermometer, but that humidity made it feel hotter. I had to pop down into town in the morning to do something at the medical centre, and it was already very warm indeed in the sun. My photo today is also from Bewdley. This is the frontage of the Mug House pub-restaurant on Severnside North. (The river is behind me.) A pretty nice place, this. Not Wetherspoons cheap, but not ludicrously expensive either, and the food is good quality. Quite a few places in Bewdley put a fair bit of effort into flower displays, which always comes over well.

Voting age to be lowered to 16

Jul. 18th, 2025 12:12 am
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Jubilee Gardens, Bewdley, 17th July 2025
167/365: Walled Garden, Jubilee Gardens, Bewdley
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I'm cautiously in favour of today's proposals, all the more so as it was a Labour manifesto promise and so it can't be claimed to be being sprung on people. I used to be much iffier about the idea, but the Scottish independence referendum in 2014 was the first big vote to set the age at 16 and I was quite impressed by the quality of argument and debate -- on both sides -- I heard from 16/17-year-olds in the run-up to referendum day. Several other countries (eg Austria) already have votes at 16. The Tories' complaint about there being differential ages is silly unless they plan to standardise the age for absolutely everything (driving, sex, adoption, part-time work, the lot) at 18. Which, of course, they don't.

The expansion of acceptable voter ID to include bank cards was something I didn't see coming. I'm actually a bit surprised by this one, since in a reversal of many recent trends it means that not all ID at the polling station will need to be photo ID. As some have already speculated, that opens the door for the potential acceptance of things like NHS cards in the future. Those as old as me can remember when a bank statement was considered good enough for a lot of things, but so few people have paper statements now that I doubt that one's coming back! On a practical note: many, perhaps most bank cards don't bear the holder's full name. Instead of LOGAN BERRY BUNNY they just say L B BUNNY. That will need to be accounted for in guidance to election officials.

Today's photo is from the Walled Garden in Jubilee Gardens, Bewdley's small town park. It's a peaceful, secluded area in which to sit and read sometimes, though at this time of year it can be too hot because of the high sun. (Well, when it's out -- it was mostly overcast and humid today, which wasn't ideal.) Unfortunately this area's very seclusion has made it vulnerable to antisocial behaviour, and so its gates are locked at 4pm, whereas the wider park is open until around 8pm in summer. (It's all managed by the district council, with no rights of way crossing the park, so yep they can do that.) The houses in the background are the back of High Street -- which, as you may remember, in Bewdley isn't the high street in the usual sense. It's called that because it's high above the river.
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Park Lane, Kidderminster, 16th July 2025
166/365: Park Lane, Kidderminster
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Today's photo is one of my occasional "an ordinary street" pictures. This is Park Lane in Kidderminster, at the other end of which is indeed Brinton Park, the town's largest. The large and derelict building beyond the houses was once part of the then-huge Kidderminster carpet industry, but it's been empty for at least 40 years and was gutted by fire a few months ago. (It didn't look much better than this before then.) The area shown isn't at all unsafe, it's just struggling to compete with redeveloped areas very close by. There's a Matalan (discount clothing shop) I occasionally visit just visible to the left.

More than meets the eye

Jul. 15th, 2025 11:31 pm
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Stanley Baldwin statue, Bewdley, 15th July 2025
165/365: Stanley Baldwin statue, Bewdley
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I fear that today's revelations about 7,000 Afghans being relocated to Britain, but this being covered up for three years by successive governments, make it even more likely that Reform will win the next election. Superinjunctions are enormously unpopular (deservedly so) and immigration has become a major wedge issue in Westminster politics. Both the Tories and Labour will suffer politically for this, all the more so as parts of the (original, non-super) injunction remain in force. There's also the underlying data security issue, in that (it's been at least suggested) personal data of these Afghans was kept in a simple Excel file. That's absurdly bad practice for something as sensitive as this. As I've seen elsewhere, maybe this was a reason Ben Wallace (then Defence Secretary) refused to stand for Tory leader after Boris Johnson's exit. He'd probably have won -- but maybe he didn't want to be PM when this came out.

Embarrassingly, much of the media is not leading on that but on John Torode's "sacking" (actually contract non-renewal) from Masterchef. The BBC says it relates to "an extremely offensive racist term" being used in the workplace -- not specified, but I'm sure we're all thinking of the same word here. Torode says he can't remember the event. Myself? If he did use that word then it's clearly unacceptable -- but I still confess to being pretty uncomfortable with one stupid remark, eight years ago, which other people around for apparently didn't see as malicious, having these consequences. It's not "cancel culture" exactly, but I'm not sure anyone will have gone eight years without saying something out of line, even if not this kind of out of line. I do have to wonder if this is all there is to the Torode story. But we may see.

Then we have the 12-year-old girl prevented from giving a speech on a school's culture day when she wore a Geri Halliwell-style Union Flag dress (in a more school-and-age appropriate design). The school's apology and statement, reported in the Guardian article linked to, is boilerplate waffle and so it's hard to tell what actually happened. If the girl was prevented from talking about British culture purely because it was British then that wasn't fair. I don't think it's analagous to the old "But where's Straight Pride Day?" whines, not really. Now, if there were other factors -- some of which may not be reportable due to privacy, safeguarding etc -- then there may be more to it. The father's Facebook post, also in the article, can be read in various ways. But I'm absolutely certain Reform will make hay with it.

Anyway, talking of British culture, have that rare thing these days -- a relatively new statue of a British politician! Stanley Baldwin, three times Prime Minister, was born in Bewdley in 1867. Various local groups including the Civic Society had wanted a statue in the town centre for decades, but it was only finally unveiled a few years ago. As far as I can tell, it hasn't caused any controversy at all.

Going to the dogs

Jul. 14th, 2025 11:37 pm
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Perry Barr Stadium, 14th July 2025
164/365: Perry Barr Greyhound Stadium, Birmingham
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I couldn't resist that subject line! What you see here is the very last weeks of Perry Barr Stadium in Birmingham, mostly known as a greyhound track. I have little time for greyhound racing, and I suspect the decision to amalgamate both this and Monmore Green in Wolverhampton on a new site at Dunstall Park (already a horse racing track) elsewhere in Wolverhampton only puts off the inevitable for a few years. The sport is in steep and probably irreversible decline and the days when the Greyhound Derby at White City, London attracted 92,000 fans, and the sport was beaten only by football for total attendances in some years, are long past. As I say, I'm not keen on greyhound racing itself. I'm more saddened by the fact that the Birmingham Brummies, the speedway team who race here, will go out of business altogether when the stadium is closed next month to be redeveloped for housing.

Greyhound racing is on its way out for several reasons. First among them is concern for animal welfare, more so than with horse racing. The sport is also almost totally dependent these days on internet betting, which means both tiny crowds (in the hundreds) and a nearly impossible task in attracting new blood in the shape of families. The format of greyhound racing means short races with long gaps, and there's far less peripheral entertainment (food, bouncy castles, etc) than at horse racing courses. Regardless of the Dunstall Green move, even without England following Wales' imminent ban¹ I suspect greyhound racing will effectively die in Britain in the next decade. Most people, including me, are unlikely to mourn it -- but the stadium is a part of Birmingham's sporting and social history, so I thought it worth documenting before it disappears entirely.
¹ This is largely symbolic, as only one Welsh track remains anyway.

I was mostly in Perry Barr for boring reasons unconnected with the stadium, but I will note that the suburb is also home to the far more successful Alexander Stadium, the biggest athletics venue in the UK (capacity 18,000) and the host for the athletics competitions in the 2022 Commonwealth Games. The other notable feature is a medium-sized shopping centre, which has fewer closed units than some (though certainly not none) and boasts a quite decent Wetherspoons, the Arthur Robertson. The pub is named after the first member of local athletics club Birchfield Harriers (still in existence) to win an Olympic event, when he took gold in the three-mile run at the 1908 Games in London. The still-continuing bin strike was sadly obvious in the startling amount of litter on the verges, though oddly a few streets away (still in Birmingham) things were a lot less unpleasant. Still, Perry Barr could really do with some proper community-centric redevelopment. We'll see.

Like a wolf on the fold

Jul. 13th, 2025 11:45 pm
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Holding Pens, Bewdley, 13th July 2025
163/365: The Holding Pens, Bewdley
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My cheery historical reading today has been on the ancient Neo-Assyrians of around 700 BC, who -- it turns out -- were absolutely detested for their apparent revelry in cruelty. They not only went in for flaying alive, impalement and much more besides, but unlike other harsh empires they made a point of depicting the atrocities on their monuments as a way of ruling by fear and terror. They called this "calculated frightfulness", and they were hated for this even by other civilisations in that violent age. From what I've gathered, which is inevitably partial (in both senses) this contributed to their downfall, with some other rivalries suspended for a joint assault on the Assyrians.

Meanwhile, back in the modern world, it was a mere 28 °C today. I still had an ice cream, though (orange and dark chocolate flavour) and was very glad to get it. Today's 365 photo comes from Wribbenhall (the part of Bewdley on the eastern bank of the River Severn), very close to the Severn Valley Railway viaduct -- in fact, that's just about visible in the extreme top left. This is what's left of the Holding Pens. Before the railway arrived in the 1860s, there was a butcher's shop close by, and this is where animals were kept before slaughter. The more regular of the holes you can see in the sandstone are artificial, and once held fence posts and the like.

Hot again... but less hot!

Jul. 13th, 2025 01:11 am
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Worcester Engine Works, 12th July 2025
162/365: Worcester Engine Works
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It was a mere 32 °C today. I was in Worcester, and it was still fiercely hot in the unbroken afternoon sunshine. Today's photo subject will be a familiar sight to those who know Worcester, as it's very close to Shrub Hill station. This imposing (if rather neglected) structure is the Worcester Engine Works. The company of that name existed for under a decade, having been set up in 1864 as a reaction to the Great Western Railway moving its carriage works from Worcester to Swindon after a fire. The Worcester company did well initially, but it faltered during the Panic of 1866 and never really recovered, going into liquidation a few years later. In recent years the Works building has rather struggled to find a role: its Grade II listed status restricts how much alteration can be made, and mostly it's been occupied by a succession of small commercial offices.

34 °C today

Jul. 11th, 2025 10:00 pm
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Hottest day of the year, Bewdley, 11th July 2025
161/365: Hottest day of the year, outskirts of Bewdley
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As the subject line says, it was indeed 34 °C here today, and Astwood Bank elsewhere in Worcestershire seems to have taken the daily record at 34.7 °C. Looking quickly back, I think the temperature I recorded makes it the third hottest day where I am since I started keeping notice over 20 years ago. Only 18th and 19th July 2022 beat it, and then only by one degree. Certainly it felt unpleasantly hot when I briefly ventured outdoors. Tomorrow looks like being very similar, perhaps only a degree or two cooler at best. That said, it's probably the lack of rain that's bothering people more, especially farmers. You can see pretty well why that is in the photo. That grass is not often this yellow even at the height of summer. It certainly wasn't with all the rain last year!

Duck season!

Jul. 11th, 2025 12:41 am
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Ducks in Dog Lane, Bewdley, 10th July 2025
160/365: Toy ducks, Bewdley
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An even warmer day today (Thursday). My highest reading was 31 °C, which is the equal hottest day of the year for me. There's a strong chance that Friday will beat this mark. I needed to go down to Sainsbury's in town for a couple of things, so I made sure to do that well before nine. On the way I found these amusing toy ducks in Dog Lane, not far from Sainsbury's. The road name's etymology is not certain, but it may be a corruption of "Duck Lane", since the road runs down to the river and the town's ducking stool may have been situated there centuries ago. The residents of this house have given that possible earlier name a much cuter interpretation in their tiny front yard!
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Ukrainian APC, Kidderminster, 10th July 2025
159/365: Armoured personnel carrier on back of lorry, Kidderminster
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Another very warm day. I saw this armoured personnel carrier on the back of a lorry in Kidderminster today. If you look carefully, you can see a Ukrainian flag near the front (left) of the vehicle. I'm afraid I know very little about military vehicles, so I can't tell you what model it is or anything. I have absolutely no idea what this thing was doing in Kidderminster at all, let alone this particular road; this area is a boring stretch of offices, commercial warehouses and the like with no obvious military relevance. I suppose it could be being repaired, but why here? You can't see the number plate in the photo, but I did check something: the lorry carrying it has an ordinary UK civilian number plate.

Walking in the forest

Jul. 8th, 2025 11:34 pm
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Eastern edge of Wyre Forest, 8 Jul 25
158/365: Eastern edge of Wyre Forest
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Well, on the outskirts of it, at least. The Wyre Forest is a pleasant place on a warm day, given the shade it provides. Here's a photo from near the eastern edge of it at Coppice Gate. As you can see, this afternoon was pretty much cloudless, and although the air itself wasn't uncomfortably hot, we're at the peak of sun strength with UV up to 8 (as high as it can get here) so I was careful to keep to the shade as much as I could. This particular location has no facilities bar a small car park and a simple map board, so it isn't usually very busy. That was the case today -- I only saw one person walking her dogs all the time I was there. The lack of rain is starting to tell, though, as you can see from the yellowing of the grass here.

Also, have a meme question I noticed somewhere:

What is an unusual form of transport you have used?

(The original says "transportation", but I ain't American! :P )

To many people, I suppose "steam train" would count, and I've been on those masses of times -- but it's not unusual to me. That being so, the obvious answer is "hovercraft". Back in 2007, I flew (you don't sail a hovercraft) from Portsmouth to Ryde on the Isle of Wight (and back) with Hovertravel. That route remains operational and is the only regularly scheduled year-round passenger hovercraft service in Europe.

Thought for the day

Jul. 8th, 2025 01:48 pm
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("You" here is a general term, not aimed at any specific person.)

My feeling is that it is almost certain that you have already seen and liked and/or favourably commented on an image, song or video that has been created at least partially with AI, without knowing it. Unless you're in the industry and/or a specialist, I suspect you are quite a bit less good at picking human from AI than you think you are. I know I am. It's not 2022 any more. As an imperfect analogy, think back a couple of decades to when 320k MP3s first became widespread. Lab tests at the time demonstrated that most people, including self-professed audiophiles, couldn't reliably tell the difference between 320k MP3 music and lossless under remotely normal conditions, however much they'd previously insisted they could. I suspect something similar is going on with AI imagery/sounds. Cheerful, eh?

7/7

Jul. 7th, 2025 11:39 pm
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The White Swan, Bewdley, 7th July 2025
157/365: The White Swan, Bewdley
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It is twenty years to the day since more than 50 people were killed and nearly 800 hurt in the London bombings, caused by extreme Islamist suicide bombers. This was the first Islamist suicide attack in Britain, as well as being the deadliest terrorist attack since the Lockerbie bombing in 1988. It was a terrible shock at the time, all the more so because the targets were public transport vehicles: three London Underground trains and one double-decker bus. At first the news was simply of a "power surge" on the Tube, and it took a couple of hours before it was fully clear that it was something more sinister than a simple fault.

On a happier note, someone on my list here asked me recently whether the White Swan pub in Bewdley was still around. I said yes to them at the time, but here's some visual evidence! The White Swan was for a long time a slightly down-at-heel pub -- not dangerous or anything, just rather shabby and tired -- but it's had a substantial makeover in the last year and has gone significantly upmarket. It's recently started to sell itself more on food than beer, and the patio area at the back has been given a good polishing up as well. It's at the top of Load Street, Bewdley's main street.

Blackberry!

Jul. 6th, 2025 11:42 pm
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Blackberry, 6th July 2025
156/365: First wild blackberry of the season
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I always look forward to the start of the blackberry season. I'm not a proper forager, so blackberries are the only fruit I regularly pick wild. In fact, they're about the only fruits I don't really eat much at all out of season; it's extremely rare for me to buy tinned blackberries, for example. The law in this country allows non-destructive foraging, as long as it is for personal use and not for commercial purposes. Obviously you can't go into someone's garden and pick their carefully planted fruits, but a wild bush by a right of way? Yep. Anyway, here's a photo of the very first blackberry I picked this year: 6th July is a bit earlier than usual, which says something about our dry, warm summer so far.

In other news, it's always irritating when people do idiotic things that mean I have to come down on the side of other people I dislike. There's been an example of this today: the leader of Brighton & Hove Council, Bella Sankey, has said she has reported Rod Liddle to the police for a Spectator article in which he said things would be improved by a nuke on Brighton and another on Glastonbury. I detest Rod Liddle, for a whole variety of reasons -- but in this specific case, the Spectator article in question is very obviously satirical and about as worthy of police attention as John Betjeman's "Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Slough!" was -- which is to say, not at all. Please, Ms Sankey, don't make me defend Rod Liddle again. It's really not something I want to be doing.
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