The downstairs neighbour has started work on his garden
- after three men cut branches from trees for one day, it looked like this -
Several days later the decking and the shed are in place -
...until we have a Grand Finale -
and the dig-sift-replace work has rounded another big corner -
Clematis seen on a walk, heading to the "old man's beard" stage -...a walk during which I investigated this sideroad - presumably this is where the brickmaking for the 1880s development of Whitehall Park took place -
Last look at the little exhibition at City Lit - I loved Lucy Bradshaw's piece, which is "simply" a sawn-up door -
One moment there's a great flurry of pigeons wheeling round your head, and the next moment they've all landed on one of their usual roofs -
At the Science Museum late, some food prepared for eating in space was on show - that's a beefburger in the bag (add water to rehydrate it) and on the left, at the chef's insistence, is a metal can encasing the bacon sandwich he developed - a very luxurious bacon sandwich, thanks to Heston Blumenthal (no pushover, he) -
This tide-predicting machine from the 1870s is in the mathematics gallery - turning the handle (at the side) for 4 hours produced all the tide timing for the year -
"William Thompson gathereda large amount of tide data from around Britain's coastline. Then he used the mathematical technique known as harmonic analysis to break down the complicated tidal motion into a series of simpler components. Finally, he used this machine to recombine them for future tides."
Creative activities included wiring up a flashing light with "electric paint" -
The TV programme Tomorrow's World was being filmed right next to Tim Peake's space capsule -
The museum is so different at night - no schoolchildren, for a a start!
More walking, this time in the hinterland of Muswell Hill. These double doors are on a steep street, and alternate houses have a single door ... I couldn't figure out how that worked ...
Round the corner, some doors were for the ground floor and others for the upper flat -
Elsewhere, many had original glass -
and the sculpted tree gave these houses a fairy-tale look -
Love those olde-worlde signs -
Remember how Swiss Army Knives used to have a tool for getting stones out of horses' hooves? Where was it when it was needed ...
But Lady Luck came to my rescue - I found this handy bike combi-tool in among the plants in my garden recently, and it has a tool for getting stones out of corrugated soles. (Alas, judging by the state of the heels, these most comfy shoes will soon need replacing.)As for my own garden, it's looking a bit neglected -
Let's reword that - it's looking "quite mature". (And even mature things - gardens, people - benefit from care and attention.)
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