Hammocks, the wave of the future.
Jun. 19th, 2006 09:55 amPromenading around the palatial grounds of Stately Wade Manor* on Friday evening, glass of something fortifying in hand, I found myself thinking what a pleasant evening it was. "In order to make this evening complete, what the garden really needs", I thought, "other than a rose bower, a forelock-tugging retainer, a couple of fountains, a gallop, a maze and a scullery maid to romp with in the bushes, is a hammock".
So began Operation: Acquire Hammock.
This was hindered by the fact that the Rolls was nicked last week by a denizen of the local estate and, whilst the police have subsequently recovered it (and found that the theif was so mind-boggling stupid that they not only left their dabs all over it but also left their address book on the passenger seat, much to my hoots of derision), they've still got it impounded as evidence material to an ongoing investigation.
You might also be surprised how difficult it is to buy hammocks in the shops these days. Most garden accessories shops carry 'portable hammocks', which are rubbish, but eventually I tracked a proper, hang-it-from-two-trees hammock here.
And what an excellent purchase it was. Only a fiver and, in terms of quality of life, almost certainly the best fiver I've spent in as long as I can remember. An entire afternoon of reclining with booze and a good book in delightful weather. What could be better?
So that's my recommendation to you lot. Tired? Stressed? Borne down by the vicissitudes of life? Get a hammock. They're great, they're cheap, and the cheery feeling of contentment they afford is worth the effort.
Oh, and then I had my evening slightly spoiled by a particularly rubbish episode of Dr. Who. Shame.
*A description as accurate as 'Holy Roman Empire'.
So began Operation: Acquire Hammock.
This was hindered by the fact that the Rolls was nicked last week by a denizen of the local estate and, whilst the police have subsequently recovered it (and found that the theif was so mind-boggling stupid that they not only left their dabs all over it but also left their address book on the passenger seat, much to my hoots of derision), they've still got it impounded as evidence material to an ongoing investigation.
You might also be surprised how difficult it is to buy hammocks in the shops these days. Most garden accessories shops carry 'portable hammocks', which are rubbish, but eventually I tracked a proper, hang-it-from-two-trees hammock here.
And what an excellent purchase it was. Only a fiver and, in terms of quality of life, almost certainly the best fiver I've spent in as long as I can remember. An entire afternoon of reclining with booze and a good book in delightful weather. What could be better?
So that's my recommendation to you lot. Tired? Stressed? Borne down by the vicissitudes of life? Get a hammock. They're great, they're cheap, and the cheery feeling of contentment they afford is worth the effort.
Oh, and then I had my evening slightly spoiled by a particularly rubbish episode of Dr. Who. Shame.
*A description as accurate as 'Holy Roman Empire'.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:26 am (UTC)I had my motorbike stolen once by what I suspect was a little shit used to scooters, not a 600 CC Superbike. They crashed it 300 yards down the road and parked it in the basement of their block of flats.
Also, my flatmate at the time had his car stolen once, but we'd been clubbing that night, so the first we knew about it was when the nice policeman came knocking on our door at 11 am to tell us that it had been recovered. Turns out the gut that nicked it had just got out of prison the day before, celebrated by stealing a car, then, when he spotted a policar on the Vauxhall Embankment decided that the best way not to draw attention to himself was to drive away at high speed. *rolls eyes*
Now, you live in Battersea, don't you? Do you think all these instances were the same guy? Surely there can't be more than 1 person that stupid? Then again...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:36 am (UTC)They don't particularly like the car they have at the moment, and so the ideal outcome would have been for it to have been found written off in a ditch with a dead theif in it. Sadly it wasn't to be.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 09:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 11:37 am (UTC)2) How do you get in or out of a hammock? I've never tried, although I did try unicycling once and you wouldn't belive the bruises.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 11:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-20 11:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-20 11:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-20 04:58 pm (UTC)I guess it depends on how serious you want to take it all. I see Dr. Who as light entertainment aimed at the Family audience. There's only so Sci Fi it can get before Kids don't understand it and stop being interested. I think Russells writing is good for the Audience it's aimed at, as someone else said in thier Journal wait till Torchwood comes out before your too critical of his writing skills in the Sci Fi genre.
Maybe your right and his writing is good.
I try not to be too critical as I know it's better than anything I could come up with and more entertaining. Some episodes are better than others and the ones I have enjoyed I couldn't tell you who the writer was. Maybe if they had a little bit t the end of each episiode with the writer telling us what he/she was going for maybe we might be less critical and more 'ok that makes sense with what you were goign for'
no subject
Date: 2006-06-21 09:38 am (UTC)It's the difference between the 'science' in science fiction feeling more like science and less like magic (such as the talking pavestone in the latest episode, whihc was just stupid). RTD plainly has no scientific education and feels that science doesn't matter so long as he can get his blow-job jokes in.
Dr. Who has always been light entertainment aimed at a family audeince. However, Terrence Dicks and Douglas Adams assumed that the audience would be smart enough to follow clever stuff, whilst RTD plainly has no confidence in his audience to follow anything which might require intelligence or education.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-21 11:36 am (UTC)I must have missed the Blow Job joke either that or it forgot about it. I think they were going for light in Saturdays episode as the previous story was quite dark.
You did see that he was likening the group to the legions of Dr Who fans who followed him for years and then did other things like chat and make bands whilst it was off air, and then coming back later. Well thats what I thought he was doing.
I get the impression you don't like Russell T Davies work whatever the form? or is it because he messed with a classic as it were. (That sentence sounds a bit arsey it's not meant that way)
Mind you i'm not the most scientific of people which is perhaps why I don't feel it insulted my intelligence. After all I don't undertsand how doing maths on a board can prove or disprove time travel, my simple mind would have thought trial and error might work better. Like when you have some nerdy guy doing sums ona board then puts them into a computer which fires up the particle Accelerator to stop time and it fails....he then plays with the equation on the board and types the new one into the computer and stop time? he didn't make any physical changes so I just don't get it.
As I said my scientific knowledge isn't that great or indepth but maybe I just don't take Dr Who that seriously, after all it's only a TV programme nor a way of life. (No insult intended)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-21 11:43 am (UTC)I also know that, since, Babylon 5, the Soap Opera format for SF has been the mainstay of the genre (Firefly, Battestar Galactica, Lost, etc). the things is, all of these tend to be internally consistent - things tend to work, or they don't, and there's a feeling that there's a reason why things work. Okay, there's a suspension of disbelief in things like Faster than light travel, but that is consistent.
The new Dr. Who has had things like Prince Albert building some sort of laser out of a moon-telescope, and the internal consistency of suspension of disbelief just isn't there. I get the feeling that the writers think that the audience will accept anything because it's SF, rather than making an effort to reach both the general audience and those who expect some thought.
I could see the point of the latest episode, and as a soap opera-y tribute to the show it was amusing, but I really don't think it worked as an episode of Who.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-21 01:00 pm (UTC)Oh well we shall see if things improve.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-20 03:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-20 04:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-19 05:19 pm (UTC)entry: spread the netting wide, sit in the middle, roll into it.
exit: roll-out, onto one's feet.
Correction
isin a hammock".To the Extreme!
Date: 2006-07-25 04:31 pm (UTC)http://www.mobuzz.com/shows/3027.html