...and breathe
Jul. 20th, 2009 10:57 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Friday: an excellent night at Black Plastic, which
augstone has already written up pretty much perfectly, but then locked. Bah. A dreamlike quality to events, right from the start where I walked past the venue three times in spite of having been there before. More space than at the Star, which I know is always more of a benefit for the crowd than for the promoters, but nor did it feel empty - and crucially, of the people who were there, emphatically unlike the Star, they were all the right sort. I approve.
Saturday: out to Epping for one of the more rural Tubewalks, complete with bunnies, a friendly horse and a huge amount of butterflies. Plus, a peculiar gate, my first nettling of the year (symptoms totally eradicated by the quick application of Vaseline Intensive Care, so that's one to remember) and a fun time walking around the Theydon Bois perimeter defences. Also, did you know there are cattle grids to stop cows walking on to the the M25? Which is handy, but no obstacle to a Tubewalker (in your face, cows), so I went down and briefly stood on the M25, just because. In the evening I was planning to have a quiet night in, or maybe just the one. Or two. Or oh no, not gin too.
Sunday: a very pleasant day, but one which ended early on account of my being dead.
So, I'm assuming we've all seen the eleventh Doctor's outfit and the new companion's name now (Amy Pond? Between this and River Song, does this mean we can also expect him to meet Veronica Lake in the next historical?). But, were we all aware that Tom Baker is finally reprising the role of the Fourth Doctor in a new run of audios by Paul Magrs? And in Who related news, Sherlock Holmes (a fictional creation of Arthur Conan Doyle's inspired by his meeting with the Fourth Doctor, as well as a real person with whom the Seventh teamed up - don't ask) is getting a new TV series written by Who's Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss. Only problem being, it stars the rather bland Benedict Cumberbatch and will be "remaking Holmes as a “dynamic superhero” figure" - apparently the exact same take as the forthcoming Robert Downey Jr film, but with a vastly less charismatic lead and presumably a far smaller budget. Wouldn't a more distinctive approach be a better idea?
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Saturday: out to Epping for one of the more rural Tubewalks, complete with bunnies, a friendly horse and a huge amount of butterflies. Plus, a peculiar gate, my first nettling of the year (symptoms totally eradicated by the quick application of Vaseline Intensive Care, so that's one to remember) and a fun time walking around the Theydon Bois perimeter defences. Also, did you know there are cattle grids to stop cows walking on to the the M25? Which is handy, but no obstacle to a Tubewalker (in your face, cows), so I went down and briefly stood on the M25, just because. In the evening I was planning to have a quiet night in, or maybe just the one. Or two. Or oh no, not gin too.
Sunday: a very pleasant day, but one which ended early on account of my being dead.
So, I'm assuming we've all seen the eleventh Doctor's outfit and the new companion's name now (Amy Pond? Between this and River Song, does this mean we can also expect him to meet Veronica Lake in the next historical?). But, were we all aware that Tom Baker is finally reprising the role of the Fourth Doctor in a new run of audios by Paul Magrs? And in Who related news, Sherlock Holmes (a fictional creation of Arthur Conan Doyle's inspired by his meeting with the Fourth Doctor, as well as a real person with whom the Seventh teamed up - don't ask) is getting a new TV series written by Who's Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss. Only problem being, it stars the rather bland Benedict Cumberbatch and will be "remaking Holmes as a “dynamic superhero” figure" - apparently the exact same take as the forthcoming Robert Downey Jr film, but with a vastly less charismatic lead and presumably a far smaller budget. Wouldn't a more distinctive approach be a better idea?
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:27 am (UTC)There are ones near hollow ponds where neen had her party too because there used to be cows that were allowed to graze on free land. I believe this is still the case but no one feeds cows there. A lady in Cambridge has started having cows again. I vaguely have this down as a thing To Do.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:28 am (UTC)I think scholars at come colleges were entitled to keep cows, but I never knew any who did. Maybe now home farming is more fashionable, that has changed.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:30 am (UTC)I saw the horse, it seemed friendly. I want to keep chickens but I think the dog next door will be sad.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:34 am (UTC)Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:40 am (UTC)Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:48 am (UTC)I think dog would be less unhappy with chickens than with Ginny.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 11:56 am (UTC)Does this mean if the martians land in Wanstead I will be fine? I think this is reassuring.
I might ask the lady next door who owns betsy what she thinks. I could give the chickens names.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 11:59 am (UTC)HG Wells did suggest that the Martians showed a particular tendency to land in the Home Counties, so it is worth knowing about such safe spots.
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 12:16 pm (UTC)Like Ben's Zombie plan video?
Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 02:45 pm (UTC)Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 02:52 pm (UTC)Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 02:53 pm (UTC)Re: Moo
Date: 2009-07-20 10:33 am (UTC)