Friday 26 April 2013

Summer comes in London



                                    Summer comes in London

After so long a winter with its cold and grey London begins to wake up. All the signs of summer appear as the weather begins to improve. The heat brings out a different sense in people. Soon all the winter clothes are discarded and the world begins to live in the haze of summer. The parks suddenly fill with people and they can be seen sitting in groups and talking, sitting on the grass.

Outside the cafes and bars seats that had been unused for the long winter suddenly fill up with people as all start to enjoy the summer weather. It is as if a whole curtain has been lifted and everybody starts to feel better. Life outside begins to  take on a new meaning. Sociability is enhanced and all are about meeting and speaking.

The summer speaks in the times of barbecues. These are a more recent British invention as they always used to be put off because of the uncertainty of the British weather. However in London the presence of a large expatriate community  has ensured that the barbecue is top of the agenda for the summer.

Summer is mostly about ensuring that life goes on in the spaces and the parks of London. Places like Hampstead Heath and Clapham Common regain a life of their own. The long evenings ensure that all around the word is waiting the joy of summer evenings for the chance to socialize in the great outdoors.

Summer for us of course is punctuated with days of rain and the uncertainty of the weather means a lot of plans can change at the last moment. Prolonged spells of summer heat bring out more and more people on the streets . All the summer clothes come out and people in the parks are exposing more and more flesh to the sweet sun. It is time for Britain’s love affair with the sun to start again.

Soon gardens fill up with people drinking beer and in some cases the alcoholic cocktail of Pimms number one. That of course reflects the class system as the latter is more an affectation of the upper classes. In the heady rush of socializing the warm weather speaks one of the feast times of the year in which plans are made for summer holidays. It is also as if all are finally getting their finances together again after the late winter spent paying off the Christmas splurge!

Thursday 18 April 2013

A cat adrift



                                                A cat adrift

One of the great places to walk in London is along the regent's canal. This is place that was very bound up with transport in the days past. Now no barges work their way up the canal only houseboats stand where people live their lives in the ways close to nature. Now it is a glorious place to walk ad watch life go by almost an oasis of something natural in London's streets. Coots and moorhen swim there in addition to Canada geese and mallard in a small natural oasis.

Walking along the canal today I came upon quite a scene. A cat belonging to one of the barge owners had contrived to crawl along the side of the canal being interested in the coots that were swimming in the water below. All of a sudden being a rather plump and well cared for cat she lost her footing. The next thing she was in the canal. Suddenly she was frantically swimming about loudly mewing. She seemed to get the direction wrong and started swimming towards the opposite bank. I noticed a passerby stop and watch the drama. Round and round she swam veering towards the centre.

I wondered myself about getting a mobile phone out only to find that I did not have mine on me. I was about to ask the other passerby if he could call the fire brigade as the cat was obviously very frightened and was suffering.

Just then the owner appeared round the barge
“Have you seen my cat anywhere?” He called out
“She is in the water “we replied. He took one glance and saw the cat frantically mewing while trying to swim in the water. The barge was on the opposite bank to us which was a problem. Immediately her owner jumped in fully clothed and swam up to her. He got hold off her and pushed her forward to the bank before helping her up the steep step out on to the bank The cat proceeded to get out and shoot onto the barge while he climbed up after her

She won't be trying that again” He joked with us.
All order having been restored, the other passerby departed.”Rather him than me” was his parting shot. It was actually very strange to see this as I have rarely seen a cat lose its footing in this sort of environment. Of course I wonder if she will learn her lesson and stop the interest in the local birds. That remains to be seen.

Sunday 14 April 2013

The Thatcher Divide



                                                            The Thatcher Divide
On the eighth of April 2013 Margaret Thatcher died. Barely had the news flown off the stands  than a whole controversy was created. Questions focussed on the legacy she would leave and how history would view her time in power.

The legacy she made in Britain is actually hard to assess. In some ways she is credited with reinventing the greatness of Britain and making Britain again an influential power. This however is open to interpretation.

At work today I asked the question as to what my colleagues thought.
“It was so long ago” said one “I cannot really have an opinion. “
Certainly in the end there was less national mourning however there is quite a legacy of polarization which reflects to some extent Britain’s own political divides.  To the right she was a cherished icon, a lady who made the country great again. The myth of the “Iron Lady” who took on the unions gained some credence. The prime minister who fought the Falklands war and won three elections is somebody to celebrate.

To the left she is symbol of everything that is wrong in Britain today. Her legacy was divisive and served merely to entrench the privileges of the rich while her policies of deregulation contributed directly to the banking crisis. She is considered socially divisive to the extent that street parties were organized to celebrate her demise. Stories about a party to celebrate her death were common knowledge in alternative circles years ago. To many people she was a hated figure!

How she will be remembered is very much dependent on the standpoint of the viewer and among huge sections of the British population the memories are not so fond. There are memories of the destruction of the manufacturing base of the country. This of course is a decision that is coming back to haunt us and her government along with almost all the succeeding governments put their faith in the service industries to bring future prosperity. The banking crash has of course now put paid to that.

One of the features often remarked on is the youth of a lot of the protesters who came out to hold street parties to celebrate her death. Many of those interviewed by the press could not have been more than about two years old at the time she left office. However, soon delegations of miners whose towns were destroyed by her policies are likely to be joining in these protests. However there is a feeling that her rule took place over twenty years ago. To a lot of the generation who were around at that time there is little wish to celebrate, only to forget her.  While they do not like her legacy they could just not really be bothered to hold street parties as they have enough trouble sorting out their own lives.

In terms of living under her rule I can remember it well. She certainly had a talent for manipulating the tides of public opinion and I would certainly say it was true that half the country loved her and half hated her. I can still remember the day when the news came out. It was a strange feeling to see people almost strolling around like headless chickens. In some ways the appeal was that of a strong woman to save us! The feelings aroused were different in that some were very enthusiastic about her demise. Others complained she had had a bad time because she was a woman.

On the television screens her presence seemed often distant. Many people described her as prissy and not a person who cared about the people she represented. That was a view shared by quite a few of her party supporters as well. As with all politicians, when at first breakneck growth built on credit came she was lionized. When the recession started she was demonized. The moment it became obvious that her policies were not working the calls for her to resign became more and more strident. Until they reached the final point and she was deposed by her own party