@NickDixon@Nina_Power_ Sydney Carter was prolific at this time and so many of his songs are ear worms of mine from time to time.
And the creed and the colour and the name won’t matter. We were eating our lunches thinking about starving children in Burundi around this time.
@Nina_Power_ I found this in a charity shop. The Golden Cockerel and I have seen the Golden Sunshine were favourites when I was in a Catholic Primary School in the late 70s. We had a great piano playing teacher and it was a very musical school but we didn’t sing any ‘serious’ hymns’
This past week, on a test bed in Britain, a Rolls-Royce jet engine ran at full take-off power on pure hydrogen, putting out water vapour instead of carbon.
Nobody on Earth had managed it before. It is the sort of thing that ought to stop the country in its tracks, and it will be forgotten by the weekend.
Leave aside the recent paroxysms of renewed net-zero insanity from Derelict Ed and the pervasive atmosphere of offended envy that greets much homegrown achievement nowadays in Britain. This engineering is a wonder, and it's British to the bone.
We gave the world the jet engine in the first place - Frank Whittle, a Coventry man and an RAF officer, patented it in 1930 while the Air Ministry assured him it was a curiosity. Rolls-Royce is today one of perhaps three firms anywhere that can build a large aero engine at the outer edge of the possible, and it has just done what most of the industry swore was twenty years away.
As usual, you marvel at how little the people who govern us had to do with it. The engineers in Derby are world-class; the stewardship above them is third-rate. They pulled off a global first while paying the most expensive industrial electricity in the developed world to keep the power on over the bench - a weight no German, American or Gulf rival has to carry. We produce frontier brilliance on the shop floor and fritter it away at the despatch box, and we have done for two generations.
That is the maddening shape of modern Britain: brilliance from below, sub- (or, indeed, ultra-) mediocrity from above. The people here who actually make things are still among the best in the world; the state that is meant to back them treats a firm like Rolls-Royce as a photocall today and a takeover target tomorrow, and prices its energy as though it would prefer the next plant were built in Texas.
Progress starts from the other end. Give these people what every rival government gives its champions and we beg ours to do without: the cheap, abundant power their competitors already enjoy, a supply chain built around them, and a state that guards a national asset rather than auctioning it. The hard part of a British revival - the talent, the nerve, the engineering - is already done, and was done again this week, by people who deserve a far better country than the one currently sitting above them.
We just taught an engine to breathe fire and exhale water. The least we owe the men and women who managed it is a government and a state as brilliant as they are.
@shagbark_hick Grief is real but it’s a parallel path outside reality and it’s not a good place to reveal to others. Slipping back over onto the good path feels good and a time will come when recalling your mom will bring a smile and even laughter.
@OrganisedPauper It’s hard to employ enough people and pay them to run a 7-day a week office-based estate agency. When DH and I had our estate agency business we did viewings on Sundays but we ran our whole week more flexibly - and staff we tup’ed when we bought another agency refused w/e at all.
These roses have been in my garden for decades but they spent a good amount of that time stuck to chicken wire round the tree and overcome by ivy. I dealt with the ivy about 8 years ago and cut the rose right back. This year it’s flowered again and their scent is welcome.
@supertanskiii We live in a Global world and for the most part, progressives have thought this is a great thing. Ukraine flags flying here and offering homes to Ukranians is just one example. Why they think it’s awful now is because they no longer agree with a particular message.
It’s going to be windy again tomorrow and EDF Freephase is at 0p from 8am til 4pm so I’ll delay washing clothes til tomorrow and do bedding too as well as charge every gadget and power bank we own and put the immersion on for hot water from the taps. Our house is all electric!
UK electricity with wind is affected by intermittency and curtailment. In a scarcity/overabundance market you may as well play the game, so I have been playing with EDF Freephase since November. Today the game is get the washing done and roast veg to add to dinner before 4.