Monthly Archives: October 2009

Heady feeling

Another picture from Lisa's party, with daughter Blossom bemused by her large portion of pizza. Or more accurately, the large plate of pizza that had inadvertently been placed in front of her.
Another picture from Lisa's party, with daughter Blossom bemused by her large portion of pizza. Or more accurately, the large plate of pizza that had inadvertently been placed in front of her.

Strange heady feeling at the moment. This could be down to some sort of virus, or the fact that I won a chess game this morning in 17 moves. I was playing Andy Pandian (oh yes I was), who was kind enough to come round to my house to play a much-postponed club knockout game. After a fairly innocuous opening he allowed a winning pawn sacrifice. In fact it was so winning that it wasn’t even a sacrifice.

After 13 f6, White must win a piece.
After 13 f6, White must win a piece.

Quite a relief after a series of long games, most of them lost, like the one yesterday against William Boulton of Norfolk & Norwich club, who is a really top-rate junior. Good game, but he had the edge almost all the time. One of my recent games has been annotated by our star annotator Mike Read, for inclusion in the January edition of En Passant, the Norfolk chess magazine. He is very complimentary, but as I suspected, I missed a couple of things. Using “couple” in a rather loose sense.

Spent most of Sunday recovering from Saturday’s lunch, but then had a date with a curry on Magdalen Street. With the curry came Heather, Simon and Sam – Heather with a new dark-haired look, as well as a new no-smoking lifestyle, and a new intention to move in with Simon. Sam is very pleased with this, as it means he gets a larger room. They all go very well together. Good curry, too, at Ali Tandoori, where the waiters quickly become personal friends, which is sort of extremely nice and rather over-the-top at the same time. Had my usual Biryani, which was as usual good. Not much to eat at all yesterday. Caught up on phone calls, in-tray etc.

Dot is now off to see Barbara, leaving me to organise tonight’s Tuesday Group meal, which will be quite fun and extremely straightforward. When it comes to meals I only do straightforward. I may be earning a little money again soon. Three of my poems have been bought for a website, and a teacher has offered me a fee to go in and talk about poetry. I am also planning a course for church magazine editors with Anne Coomes, who runs the website in question. This will not be paid for initially but could lead to some income later. Dot’s accountant was round here yesterday finalising her accounts for the year. His daughter has written a book, and I was able to direct her to the right place to get some publicity in the EDP. I hope.

Weather is slightly warmer than yesterday, but very cloudy, in an anticyclonic sort of way.

Long lunch

Poet Lisa D'Onofrio, founder-member of InPrint due to return to her native Australia next month. Children Blossom and Dashiel modestly avoiding camera in foreground.
Poet Lisa D'Onofrio, founder-member of InPrint due to return to her native Australia next month. Children Blossom and Dashiel modestly avoiding camera in foreground.

Recently returned from West Norfolk, when we had a very long lunch at Congham, home of Sue and Richard Moore. Gave a lift to Teri and Sidney Lockton. Also present: Jo and Mike Stone. Very inventive vegetarian food from Sue, climaxing in a stunning pavlova with lichees. Much talk on various topics, with some political disagreement. Not me, mate. I stay well out of all that. Teri is a stained-glass artist who had produced a lovely window for Sue and Richard. Before we set off I drove to Swardeston to deliver some poetry leaflets for the Edith Cavell festival. Had some difficulty finding Nick Miller’s house and am still not sure if I delivered them to the right place! (As it turns out, I did.)

On Thursday had a small party for Lisa, who departs for Australia next month. Excellent food by Dot. For more details, see the InPrint website. Earlier that day paid another visit to the hospital for demonstration of an interesting device that might help complete my recovery. Afterwards walked across to the university and then over Eaton Park before catching a bus full of students which made its slow but irresistible way through the city and delivered me to Thorpe Road, tired but quietly satisfied. Also went for a walk on Mousehold yesterday, covering two miles plus. I wonder if anyone but me would go for a walk if dogs didn’t exist. Looked out for lost cat whose owner spoke to us earlier in the week, but no sign of course. I suspect one of the dogs had it, though of course I have no evidence…

Hotel in Venice now sorted, by the way. All systems go.

Chess and darlings

Dave, Julia and Dot on a fishing pier at Yarmouth. Low tide.
Dave, Julia and Dot on a fishing pier at Yarmouth. Low tide.

Clash between god-daughter’s wedding and Italian holiday appears to be resolved. I have made myself unpopular in Canada by pushing the holiday forward a week. Barbara has changed the villa dates, and I have e-mailed the hotel in Venice. Awaiting a reply, but should be OK. Have also just paid off the roof work, which is a relief. Glad that’s over.

Much has happened since I last posted. I had lunch with Lucy last Friday and conveyed Naomi to the station afterwards, for her onward journey back to Durham University. Lucy seems quite a bit better. Over the weekend I played in the Norfolk Chess Championship. I’d forgotten how tiring that is, and I’m still suffering from the after-effects. I played some good games, but only won one. As the people I lost to were all stronger than me, my grading wasn’t affected much. The tournament was in the Tithe Barn at Horstead – which would be a perfect venue if it had a couple more toilets. Handy for the chip shop, and tea and biscuits were free. Good atmosphere throughout: Norfolk chess players are pretty pleasant people – none more so than the winner, Mike Harris. He won on tie-break from Caius Turner, who I lost to in Round Two. I had lost to his father, Terry Turner, in Round One: used to play against him when I was at school. Took a bye in the fourth round so that I could go to church: happily it was also church lunch.

Dave and Julia have been with us since Monday, returning home after lunch today. The weather turned out to be much better than forecast,and we dodged what rain there was. Walked in the city on Monday afternoon and went to Caffe Uno for dinner. Yesterday we went to Yarmouth and the marvellous Time and Tide museum, followed by a snack in the Silver Darlings cafe, a walk on the seafront and a drive to Caister, where Julia apparently spent time in a caravan when she was a child. The seafront there now is bleak and unappealing, possibly the least appealing in Norfolk, though Happisburgh runs it close. Signs of dereliction everywhere, with walls and stone falling apart. People appeared to be living in the caravan park, but otherwise it was pretty empty. On the plus side, the car parking was free. Today we walked on Mousehold Heath, autumnal and soggy after overnight rain, and had lunch at Frankie and Benny’s after inspecting the new footbridge over the Wensum. Extensive research by Dot and Julia (they asked a workman) established that it was a swing bridge.

Going back

Fish on Cromer pier on Sunday: no sign of loaves
Fish on Cromer pier on Sunday: no sign of loaves

My major achievement this week has been to retune the TV for the new digital set-up. Rather more accurately, I pressed a few buttons, and the TV retuned itself. Now we can get some new channels, as if we needed them. Tonight, for instance, I can’t find anything at all worth looking at. Not that I’ve been trying very hard. I’ve just had my hair cut, and Linda and Dot are discussing the pitfalls of teaching (Linda teaches hairdressing at City College). These pitfalls seem to be (a) the students and (b) the staff.

Earlier today I visited my aunt Kathleen (88) to show her some pictures that an Australian guy had sent (see earlier post) of his father and an anonymous farm scene. His father had visited the Lentons at Caistor Lane towards the end of the war, and Kathleen does remember him, but she hasn’t been able to help with any of the pictures. However, I did persuade her to tell me about her own life, during which she has lived in various parts of Africa,from the former Bechuanaland to Zimbabwe. She married twice, and both of her husbands died tragically young. Now she is back in one of the less exciting parts of Norwich and really hankering for Africa, I guess. I discovered that she looked after me when I was 10 and my father had just died. Apparently I was indignant when I discovered from the death notice that my father was 42: he had always told me he was 21 and a bit. She also revealed that she let me take my brothers on the bus to meet my mother from Coventry station, a move my mother did not much appreciate. Kathleen is going strong, with only one brother remaining: Paul, who is 86. His wife Thelma is now very ill in hospital with severe complications from Alzheimer’s Disease, but he seems as fit as ever.

During my chat with John on Sunday he mentioned that there was a site that gave distribution of surnames in the UK. It’s hosted by the National Trust, and it reveals that Lentons were roughly where I had imagined they would be – in the Peterborough area and more to the west, around Coventry and Northamptonshire. In fact the biggest concentration is in the Coventry area, but I have this theory that they originated in Nottingham, where there is a Lenton district, and moved south pretty quickly, then spread out from there. It would be fascinating to be able to go back further. In 1881, there were virtually no Lentons further north than Linicolnshire, none in Norfolk, and none in Scotland or Wales. Of course statistics can be misleading. In 1953, for instance, our family were in Coventry, but in fact my grandfather was born near Peterborough and my father in Norwich: we moved to Coventry when he got a job there as assistant education officer. All fascinating stuff. The Cousens – my wife’s maiden name – were mainly in the Southampton area in 1881: nothing in east Norfolk at all, whereas the Beales (her mother’s name ) were solid Norfolk.

The other thing I have achieved today is to book flights with British Airways to Toronto in February next year (and back in March). Always makes me a bit nervous: what if… what if…   On the down side I have discovered my god-daughter is getting married on June 5, when I am in the middle of an Italian holiday. What is she thinking of?