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Category Archives: Observations

Other People’s Children

HPIM2405When we moved here in the fall of 2011, I didn’t get the memo about the unspoken rule in our British neighborhood (or is it all of the UK?) that if vegetation from your garden grows over the property line into the neighbor’s space, you are expected to go and trim it. Seems like that would have been an important bit of info for the landlords to share with the ignorant Yanks about to take over care of a multitude of unidentified and over-zealous foliage for two years. Or perhaps one of the neighbors who shares a fenceline with us could have popped round and said, “Once this stuff starts growing in the spring, it gets out of control rather quickly. You’ll need to come by and trim your hedges from my side every couple of months through the summer.”

If I’d known the rules, I’d have been happy to play the game, to keep peace in the neighborhood and make nice with the locals.

I didn’t know the rules. I didn’t know how fast or how far British plants could grow. I didn’t know the first thing about trimming shrubbery–when, how much, how often. Throw in three months of respiratory infections in the early spring where I could barely get out of bed, much less think about gardening, followed by a rock-climbing incident that left me with a broken thumb and out of commission for another month, and I freely admit that the garden got pretty wild and woolly.

But I was out there doing what I could, in the chunks of time I had available between jobs, as soon as I was physically able. Not good enough. I discovered, by means of a disgruntled phone call from the landlord, that the neighbors were talking behind my back and ringing up the landlords to complain about the state of the garden. That got my hackles up. And I really saw red when the back neighbor, whom I had never met or even laid eyes on, slipped a snarky note through the mail slot telling me that my rosebushes were endangering her health and safety every time she went to the trash bin and that she did not understand why I had not come round to trim them.

Why? You want to know why, lady? Because I don’t know you. Because I’m not from here. Because I don’t know all your British rules and customs and idiosyncrasies. Because if I walked onto a neighbor’s property in the US, opening a gate to enter the yard, and started hacking away at foliage, regardless of whose side of the fence it originated on, I’d likely be shot, but at the very least I’d be arrested for trespassing and destruction of property. I know y’all don’t have guns, but I don’t have diplomatic immunity and I’m not interested in meeting any bobbies.

But I’m all about trying to change the world’s negative stereotypes of Americans through word and deed, so when the roses and the laurel really started to take off last month, I staged a preemptive strike. I went round to the back neighbor’s house (whom I’ve still never met or laid eyes on) and slipped a very polite note through her door, offering to trim all the greenery that was encroaching from my side. She rang to say that would be lovely, she’d leave the gate open for me. So round I went on Friday morning, armed with my stepladder and pruning shears, and cleared away all of the leaves and branches and thorny rose runners that were invading her space. I was meticulous in the clean-up, removing every single clipping that had fallen into her potted plants and onto her patio. By George, there’d be no complaints of a shoddy job or accusations of my garden endangering her health and safety this year.

I didn’t expect her to pop out the back door while I was working with a pot of tea and scones. But I did truly expect that she’d stick her head out to acknowledge my efforts or at least my presence. Or, if she wasn’t at home despite the car in the drive, that she would call later in the day to say thanks. Not. A. Peep. Even a heathen Yankee like me was raised to say, “Thank you,” when someone does something nice. Sheesh. Other people’s children.

I’ve got four more weeks here. I’m tempted to spike the roses with Miracle-Gro. Good luck getting to your trash bin in August, lady.

 

Superwrong

HPIM2150I am sort of a stickler for accuracy. So it bothers me when companies attempt to use foreign words or phrases on their products simply because they look cool or sound catchy. Unless their designers are fluent in this foreign language or they have a native speaker on the payroll able to translate and proofread the text before printing, the company just ends up looking foolish.

Case in point—Superdry. This clothing brand is all the rage right now in the UK, and judging by stores popping up in more than 100 countries, is rapidly gaining popularity worldwide. “Inspired by a trip to Tokyo in 2003, Superdry fuses design influences from Japanese graphics and vintage Americana, with the values of British tailoring. The result – unique urban clothing, with incredible branding and an unrivalled level of detailing.”

logo letras blancas fondo negro

The Japanese influence is very noticeable in the company logo, which includes both kanji and hiragana characters (two of Japan’s three writing systems). When we popped into the Superdry store at the outlet mall on Saturday, I asked my friend Yumiko, who is visiting from Japan, the meaning of the Japanese writing. She just laughed and said, “I think it is not Japanese.” When translated, the writing is utterly nonsensical to a native speaker. According to the Unmissable Japan website, the logo reads “kyoduko kanso (shinasai),” which could be deciphered as “maximum dry (do).” Perhaps an online translation service’s attempt at “Do Superdry?”

It seems odd to me, not to mention downright lazy (maybe even irresponsible?), that a company touting its “unrivalled level of detailing” would allow such gibberish in its logo. Obviously the designers assume their target market has no working knowledge of the Japanese language and would therefore be blissfully unaware of looking the fool. I, for one (and maybe the only one, looking at sales revenues), am refusing to buy Superdry products on principle. In my opinion, a company with £178.8 million in gross profit for 2012 can afford to hire a translator. When Yumiko tells me she can read the logo, then I might consider purchasing a new hoodie.

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Posts I commented on today:
(In case you missed the reason for this, I participated in the A to Z Blogging Challenge in April, and though I posted every day, I was lousy at visiting and commenting on other participants’ blogs. So for each day in May, I’ve vowed to visit and comment on three posts from the various blogging communities whose members have supported my efforts. At least one post MUST be from a new blog I haven’t yet visited.)
What I learned as I made my way through the A to Z Challenge (Paula’s Place)  new blog of the day
Friday Fictioneers–Flying Her Colors (This, That, and the Other Thing)
The Dress (40again’s Blog)

 

Tomodachi

HPIM2114Seeing England from a fresh perspective

I don’t think I am immune to the beauty that surrounds me here in England, but after living here for 20 months, I must admit I have started to take some of it for granted. The neat hedges, the fluffy sheep dotting green fields, the storybook stone cottages with their thatched roofs, wisteria climbing up walls and dripping over doorways–I’m so accustomed to seeing these things that I don’t always stop now to appreciate them for their individual merits. These characterful features of the country’s landscape were once the primary focus of my photographs, but now they are more often in the background of candid portraits and architectural close-ups.

Fortunately, a very dear friend (ともだち tomodachi) has just arrived from Japan for a visit. Having moved here from Japan myself, I understand how different the land, the vegetation, the roads, and the houses look to her. In fact, she is so in awe that, as we’ve been driving around the past two days, she keeps saying, “It looks so fake!” It took me a moment to understand she doesn’t mean that in a negative way…she only means that everything looks so perfect, like it’s been designed for a movie set (she even said this yesterday in the howling wind and sideways rain). Or, more accurately, in her words, “It looks like Disney!” So today we tuned out the siren song of the outlet mall long enough to pull off on the side of a single-track road bisecting a field of rapeseed flowers, gilded and glowing under a brilliant sun. Witnessing her utter joy as she snapped away with her iPhone, storing images to share with her friends and family when she returns to her home halfway around the world, I was reminded not to take England’s natural beauty for granted. With but three short months left to enjoy it, I should be pulling off the road to capture my own memories every chance I get. Because, frankly, I don’t think even Disney could recreate this magic.

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Posts I commented on today:
(In case you missed the reason for this, I participated in the A to Z Blogging Challenge in April, and though I posted every day, I was lousy at visiting and commenting on other participants’ blogs. So for each day in May, I’ve vowed to visit and comment on three posts from the various blogging communities whose members have supported my efforts. At least one post MUST be from a new blog I haven’t yet visited.)
Zoned Zebras (FlashTyme–The Blog by M.J. Joachim)  new blog of the day
My Top Three Terrible Traits? Is That Even Possible? (Janice Heck: My Time to Write)
W is for Welcome to Washington (Gwendolyn Rose: Living with a Corgi Princess)  another new blog!

 
5 Comments

Posted by on May 25, 2013 in How It Is, Observations, True Life

 

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Knots

100_1135-001
On Thursday, The One Minute Writer asked its readers very simply to write about a knot. The first knot that came to my mind was the Stafford Knot, which represents the county of Staffordshire, England. It can be seen everywhere in the county–emblazoned on road signs, carved into buildings, pressed into bricks, embroidered in military insignias (to represent the local regiments), embossed on police badges, glazed onto the bottoms of local pottery, and spray-painted as graffiti in area parks.  At a local antique fair I even picked up an old horse brass for my collection, cast in the shape of this famous knot.

The knot itself is nothing special. It’s merely an overhand knot, the simplest of the single-strand knots. Rather, its uniqueness lies in the mystery shrouding the true origins of the knot as the county symbol. For those who favor datable relics to ensure historical accuracy, it seems the earliest verifiable appearance of the knot was on a seal (now housed in the British Museum) that belonged to Joan, Lady of Wake, who died childless in 1443. How the knot came to be part of her seal, and from whom it was passed, are still unanswered questions. At the time of her death, her personal possessions, including the seal, passed to her nephew, Humphrey, Earl of Stafford. Humphrey adopted the Knot of Rope (thereafter to be called the Stafford Knot) as his badge and both he and his descendants used it to adorn the livery of their servants and retainers for easy recognition. In the feudal system, the townsmen of Stafford were lieges of the Stafford family, so they also used the Stafford Knot as a badge. Over time, feudalism ended and free citizens of Stafford adopted the badge as their own, ultimately including it in the Borough’s coat of arms, where it remains today.

For those who prefer their history a little more macabre, legend has it that the Stafford Knot really symbolizes the execution of three criminals sentenced to die by hanging in Stafford. It seems that when the executioner arrived in the borough, he realized he had only one length of rope. He thought it a bit cruel to hang the condemned one by one using the same rope for each execution, so he fashioned a knot that would allow all three to hang simultaneously. Who says there was no compassion in medieval times?

And those who like pure romanticism in their version of history will gravitate to the Dark Ages story of Ethelfreda, daughter of Alfred the Great, wife of Ethelred, Lady of the Mercians, and all-around bad-ass. In the early 900s, after her husband’s death, she assumed control of his armies and set about building fortresses all over middle England from which to harass and repel the invading Vikings. Legend has it that during a speech to rally local lords from three different geographical areas, she removed her girdle and said, “With this girdle, I bind us all as one.” Apparently, the speech worked, for the region became collectively known as Staffordshire.

Regardless of the true origins of the Stafford Knot, it is a beloved and easily recognizable symbol of Stafford and Staffordshire today, even making its way onto the dance floor where dancers move in formation to the shape of the knot. What clearer illustration of the motto, “The Knot Unites,” could one ask for?

Information for this post came from the Stafford Borough Council and the BBC.

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Posts I commented on today:
Paw-sing to Share Love (Wiley’s Wisdom)
Byron van Zant (Northwest Photographer)
Violin, looking for a new tune (galeriaredelius)  new blog of the day

 
3 Comments

Posted by on May 19, 2013 in Observations, Sunday Best, True Life

 

Operations

HPIM2059I live in a small village. The only way in or out is via two roads which intersect in a T…travelling along the top cross-bar of the T, the village is exactly 0.65 miles wide. As you enter the village on either end of this cross-bar, a lovely planter made from local stone sits at the base of a sign which welcomes you to the village and simultaneously reminds you to drive carefully, namely by reducing your speed from 60 mph to 30 mph.

Two and a half weeks ago, a friendly blue sign appeared next to each of the speed limit signs, presumably placed by the Thames Valley Police, declaring, “POLICE OPERATION IN PROGRESS.”

Ooohhh. Intrigue. I wonder what kind of police operation? It is not uncommon for these signs to be placed in the vicinity of a speed trap or where an accident investigation is underway, so as I drove through 0.645 miles of the village to reach my neighborhood, I was on high alert. No sign of a patrol car (they are impossible to miss, being that they are painted in a high-vis yellow/neon blue checkerboard pattern, with neon orange stripes on the boot) or officers on foot (also impossible to miss in their high-vis yellow vests and jackets). Oh okay, so maybe it’s a covert operation (we’ll ignore the fact that advertising the operation so blatantly would, in some ways, diminish its covertness). Maybe they are hiding nearby to catch lead/metal thieves or number plate thieves or fuel oil thieves who have been active in the local area of late. If that’s the case, they are really good at this covert operations stuff, because I have not seen hide nor hair of them in the 18 days that the POLICE OPERATION has been IN PROGRESS.

Which leaves me to ponder the small print on the sign: “Please excuse any inconvenience this might cause.” Uhm, I’m sorry, to whom are you apologizing? To me for blocking up the road and snarling traffic through the village with your non-existent patrol cars and foot officers? To the lead-footed drivers who could have potentially been caught in your non-existent speed trap? To the thieves who could have potentially been apprehended in your non-existent covert sting operation? The only inconvenience you’re causing, as far as I can tell, is to the good Samaritans who’ve had to pick up your bloody signs every time they’ve blown over in the squalls of the past week! Either come do something that warrants your signs being posted or come collect them to display in some other village, because obviously they’re just taking up space here. Better act quickly, because my hoarder voice is whispering that one of those would make a very unique souvenir from England!

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Posts I commented on today (including three that I should have commented on yesterday but didn’t):
Successful Completion (K’s)
Y- Yogurt (ridgesandripples)
A to Z Reflections from around the bay (that girl from around the bay)  new blog of the day
A Little Blogiquette (Life Is Good)  new blog of yesterday
Death of an Alarm Clock (Phenomenal Lass)
A Walk on the Beach (Northwest Photographer)

 

 

Housecats

100_1194Until a year ago, when some form of evil kitty cancer stole her, I had a lovely cat named Alina. She was strictly an indoor kitty, as her former owner had already had her front paws declawed when I adopted her from the SPCA. But even if she hadn’t been declawed, she still would have been an indoor kitty. I wanted a companion to sit on my feet while I worked in the office, a silent friend to listen without judgement when I talked to myself, a warm furry body to purr by my side on those nights when the hubby was away on business…and the cat would need to be inside to fulfill all those wishes. Tell me, what is the point of having a HOUSECAT if it is going to live outside?

Unless you have a farm and need a cat to hunt the mice that are stealing grain from your barn, I don’t understand the rationale for putting a cat outside. Why have a pet if you never see it? The Humane Society of America says that free-roaming cats live, on average, less than five years, compared to a life-span of around 17 years for indoor cats. Outdoor cats don’t die peacefully or painlessly; they are killed primarily by cars, but also by poisoning, animal attacks, traps, human abuse (you’ve heard that serial killers often start with animals, right?), exposure, and disease. With all those risks, it seems that only an irresponsible or uncaring owner would allow his/her cat(s) to wander around outside.

Plus, outdoor cats can really piss off the neighbors. Despite my general love of cats, I am quickly growing to despise the black and white feline that roams my neighborhood. First of all, it is a snob. It scorns all my gestures of friendship and trots off, snooty nose in the air, whenever I approach, which really hurts my cat-lover feelings. Secondly, it has crapped in every one of my flower beds–there’s nothing quite as revolting as the smell of cat feces emanating from my gardening gloves because I innocently scooped up a pile of dead leaves from under the rose bush. (Despite online reports, lavender is NOT a deterrent, as I have two thick rows of it on either side of the front walkway that are hiding plenty of evidence of its uselessness underneath.) Thirdly, the cat routinely sprays my car tires, marking its territory and making it impossible for me to roll down the windows on the back country roads without gagging. (If I didn’t live in a land of 240V mains electricity, I’d consider stealing a page from my grandfather’s book and hot-wiring the hubcaps as a deterrent.) Finally, and worst of all, the neighborhood cat kills the birds in my garden. Last year, I came back from a family-emergency trip to the States to find a decapitated pigeon on my patio. (I’m guessing the head was on a bedpost somewhere.) Ewww. This afternoon, I looked up from the kitchen sink to find it murdering a sparrow in the back yard. So now I’m officially a pissed-off neighbor.

If you are going to have a cat, keep it in the house–not only for the health and safety of the cat, but for peace and goodwill among the neighbors.

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Blogs I commented on today:
Spirit Animals (Underachievers Anonymous)
There Is No Tragedy in Falling (…So Help Me Cats)
A La Ronde, Exmouth Devon (Anglers Rest)  new blog of the day

 

Dance

Today’s post is my contribution to this week’s challenge, Travel Theme: Dance at Where’s my backpack?

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Posts I commented on today (well, actually on Friday, as I’m away from my computer cruising across a World Heritage aqueduct in Wales today):
A to Z Reflections (The Beveled Edge)  new blog of the day
Floral Friday Fotos: Maarn Dahlia (Cee’s Photography)
A Deconstructed Ocean (Wiley’s Wisdom)