Friday, November 30

Radio and Chris

Sometimes I do write about the past on here, yes my childhood and white I am writing about this week is to do with it because I did have some differing interests  of which one was radio which for me wasn't just entertainment and spoken word programming for people in this country but of different sorts of transmissions.
These included things such as morse code, ship to shore, ham radio and international shortwave broadcasts from all around the world which was a bit out the ordinary for say a twelve year old boy.
There were a number of ways you could receive such transmission but all required a fairly specialized piece of kit to cover the frequencies and transmission modes used and the the one I had had  very important part in our countries "Battle of Britain" because it was actually the the receiver unit as fitted originally to the Avro Lancaster bomber during World War Two where it was used in tandem with a separate transmitter.
It's called the R1155.
As an aside I just loved that airplane.
Mine had a specially made power unit to rain of 240 volt AC mains and speaker unit because as originally designed it it had a power feed from the aircraft and the operator would of used a head set made from leather to listen to it from.
I did have a similar head set to this which was RAF issue at the time for operators.
As this was nineteen-forties technology it used big thermionic tubes which meant compared to more modern equipment it was a little bit noisy but fed with a good long antenna it pulled in lots of stations especially on the 49, 25 and 16 metre shortwave bands and related Ham bands where the ability to receive single-sideband and cw transmissions commonly used  helped even if the selectivity was a bit broad .
Traipsing around the side of the unit to the power supply and speaker were massive and banned for normal usage bulgin connectors. 
Indeed with a metal chassis, it would give PAT testers a nightmare and so be barred from any kind of institutional setting.
The radio came out at the time I was taking my GCE O Levels to our school classroom where I had a subminiture shortwave receiver in my dorm and long wire that annoyed the groundstaff as part of a demonstration or radio equipment and operating on conjunction with dad who is a ham radio operator.
My fellow pupils were in awe of that radio during and after the day it made it's appearance!
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Friday, November 23

Outdoor scouting attire

Last week we talked about Cub Scout inspired challenges. This week it's not that although there is a kind of a  connection.
Part of that thing in challenging myself more brings needs because you need to be prepared for it so something more that a light weight coat or a fleecy jacket to throw on when your outdoors is needed.
For one thing they involve being out not in a car so it needs to be both weatherproof and warm especially at this time of year so I am comfortable and this Parka meets that need quite well.
Something that also really matters in such a coat is having a lot of good pockets to keep things you need at hand that can be sealed so nothing falls out or gets wet and it has two buttoned pockets at the bottom, two zipped ones vertically at the top plus one zipped inner and one velcro inner.
This means things like your cellphone, maps and wallet can be put away as can say a small camera and pen knife.
It doesn't have a hood but I tend to wear a woollen knitted hat when I'm out as it keeps my head warm while breathing so my head doesn't get too sweaty.
The fawn colour is a good match for scouting in spirit blending in well with the natural environment.
It also came on special offer with a watch which is something I really need as I have to learn to tell the time however hard it might be to improve my functioning.

Friday, November 16

A morning totally outdoors challenge

Following on a bit from last weeks posts I planned a morning to be totally out of doors after having my breakfast and gathering what I was likely to need with me together with my new coat (itself subject of an upcoming post).


One advantage of being where I am is it it is quite easy to get out on foot to open countryside and unmanaged  countryside at that so with that I started off walking from my house crossing a road to walk along a canal towpath  where I observed one horse in a field encountered a number of dog walkers and passed some moored narrowboats before descending into a deep valley that is the home to a kennels and upscale cattery.

I made a detour and stopped for a period alongside a small stream where the pipe of a former salt works used to be found but is now below ground is the actual works itself since sinking. 

Looking ahead there was a colourful spectacular vision of of a small plantation with crisp copper leaves upon a blue skyline which was most enchanting to observe. 

The route to and along is covered with trees and hedgerows so one often sees a variety of birds flying overhead before I got to the bottom of mainly unmade lane crossed into a road that leads to a vast mere and imposing property around of it with a large courtyard and clear views toward smallholdings just opposite where I decided to pause.

It was around here while watching the hedgerows I encountered a woman in car who inquired if I'd been looking for an injured pigeon as apparently she'd found it and taken it to be be rescued. Only here would you'd be approached by strangers like that AND feel comfortable with it.  

The land around here is very much sand based, there's no need to drill nor dig to see this as just looking at the  edges of the exposed soil reveals its tell tale orangery brown colour and so it was I stood enraptured watching finches and black birds flying before continuing on and turning into another road.
It was shortly after turning into to it that I observed the sight of one horse and two ponies flocking in the fall sun with the horse actually rolling on the ground and pulling himself up in almost upright position clearly enjoying it and the ponied chasing each other around  before starting to chase the horse.
It was so funny and at the same time interesting to observe first hand.

Just a little further down the road on the same side were a group of older horses although proceeding from here  I did have to be careful because the pavement stopped so you had to walk in the road with just narrow grassland strips either side to jump into to avoid any oncoming traffic.
Having successfully completed going down that road I was at the crossroads where I encountered a horse rider two dog walkers  and a some walkers with a matter of minutes by this well known public house.
I remember it very well as I lived a matter of a few hundred yards the opposite way in my earlier years where we could see it from the tree lined pavement we played on and crossing the road, I could see the farm where occasionally we'd catch a lift with the farmer  and his children a boy and a girl, Deborah, the latter being in my class in a Landrover vehicle  that smelt of farm!!!

Walking along the road was in many ways a walk in the past because that was a part of the walk to school we had before moving so I passed the cottage where a school friend of my younger brother lived and where we'd have what today are called 'play dates' plus the Nursery we'd get what nowadays are called organic vegetables were grown and bought from. 
The whole area has not change much in years  to be honest beyond a patch near the urban sprawl of the neighbouring town linked to the nine by seventeen miles of the subregion which is a near miracle in today's environment.

Having stopped and reflected upon how what I saw was so much of my own past I turned toward a path before a smallholding often used for horse grazing is and sat on a gate enjoying the fall sun talking with people.

Slowly making my way back I paused first to observe a group of horses in a field playing  and the on the opposite side coming into view were two swans swimming in a pool with other birds flying around.

I then noticed the equestrian centre  with it's horses some of which were being taken through their paces  and in a another field another horse  which I also noticed oddly enough a orangy and white coloured cat  in the undergrowth which I was not expecting at all. 

The thing I would say about the whole experience was being alert to and being engaged with the lore and the way of nature allowing oneself to be absorbed in what is going on, taking an active interest it.
It invoked something of the explorer feel learning about nature, being able to identify different species and take care of myself while out.
In many ways it has and had many of the things within scouting that I had missed on so while it was physically tiring for me I just felt so alive for having been out and achieving it leaving me feeling great about myself. 
Being challenged is really what I need.

Friday, November 9

Cub Scout Badges

I have written a bit across this blog about scouting, specifically cub scouts and you cannot help for sure noticing the increasing sense of nostalgia around this with such things as handbooks, annuals and patch badges being sold in various places on and offline.
Some people do actually have a thing for collecting often 'vintage' ones so it's not uncommon for collections to come on to the market.
My interest in such things isn't centred around collecting in that at an ethical level I tend to see such things as having been 'earned' - beyond material value in someways like war medals - so I'd be interested only if there was direct connection and certainly not for material gain.

I have gotten a number bought under a personal and painful criteria alone, namely having not been given the opportunity to gain them first time, they have to be things such as proficiency badges that I have evidence from either that I did do first time around in childhood or later in life that indicate that I would of earned them on the basis  of actual abilities demonstrated as any originals would of to meet the then requirements to had been awarded.
In other words for me to have them, I feel they also need to be earned  because they then represent what I would of been awarded for that effort on my own merit, a kind of compensatory awarding. 
Going from the top the Green Cap Badge and Silver Arrow, the Photography, Hobbies and Swimming stage two proficiency badges and Naturalist stage one proficiency and cub scout award.
It is also the case some have been bought from scout leaders raising funds to help children develop new skills and interests through boy scouting UK which I feel really matters in raising a generation  of caring, disciplined and capable  young adults.

Friday, November 2

Kickaround

This blog has always had a mixture of the new and the old and this week it's more the new with a difference.
I have written a bit about comics and magazines from my original childhood that I read either as the person who bought or had them bought to me in addition to those as boys we shared with each other.
Football is and remains a common link between boys although it is 2018 and some girls play the game as do women in their own leagues but one good development this year has been the launch of a new monthly football magazine aimed at 7 to 12 year olds aka Juniors from the people who publish the adult soccer magazine When Saturday Comes (W.S.C).
The sampler came out in February's W.S.C (issue 372) and unlike many publications as the name suggests its not just about a few big Big Clubs but about participation in footballing from the park or street corner kickabout between friends to schoolboy/girl team play and the benefits physically and mentally of playing out of doors.

Thus you get obviously pictures and writing around club matches but also youth teams, news from wider world of soccer and features such as this months (Issue 6 November 2018) on football for people who like me have cerebral palsy, like we even have own teams today with slightly different rules to help us play.
It also encourages writing, art and geography by acting as means of encouraging interest  through interest in the game and has a few cartoons too.
While this isn't a classic 'boys own' publication it's good to see something that has much of the ethos of older publications such as Roy of the Rovers is being produced, marketed and sold in print for today's juniors that for people like me who do struggle with grown up texts also are a good read.
It makes a good substitute in my adult-child life.