Geriatric OE

The weekly musing of a couple of Kiwis on their geriatric OE in The UK






Monday 26 December 2011

Only another 364 to go...

Was a lovely day, slept late, woke up next to my best friend. B
reakfasted on bacon, eggs, tomato, beans and toast..Late lunch, with my best friend, at a local hostelry. Yummy roast pork, gammon (ham really) yorkshire pudding, roast veg. Topped off with christmas pudding and custard. Excellent fare and just the best company a person could ask for. Now lest see where shall we go for next year...

Friday 23 December 2011

Greetings

Can't say it any better than Dickens
...and a merry Chistmas to ll and to all a good night...

Tuesday 20 December 2011

Ramblings

When we switched channels a few moments ago it was to catch the tail end of a programme about the music of the sixties. Dave, Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick, and Tich, singing Hold tight. Ah what a trip down memory lane. And the Sonny and Cher were on singing I Got you Babe.
It made me think about how music has changed and just what we respond to. I wonder if it is the sentiment behind the words of the song, or is it the beat perhaps. Sometimes I think the words can be so simple that it has to be the beat. I love Cecelia by Simon and Garfunkel. And in this particular one it is definitely the rhythm of the music rather than the lyrics.
So what you may ask….go on ask away... what is my favourite piece of music?
These days it would be a classical piece, but when I was a pupil at Petone Central School it defiantly was ‘Sailor’, sung in German of course. That was because my mostest favourite teacher in the world was the lovely Mrs Rose. The year 1960, I think, and the whole class was involved in a project to build a little trampoline for or vaulting horse. Instead of springs we cut tyre inner tubes. We raised money to buy some pipes then we all traipsed around to the workshop to watch somebody’s dad bent the pipes into shape to make the frame.
Then there was the class Christmas party. Everyone volunteered to bring in goodies to eat. I lived with my Mum and Dad above the cafĂ©/dairy that my parents ran and so t ws easy to put my hand up and say I‘ll bring the Ice cream.
Another teacher at Petone Central was  Mrs McGarry. She wanted us to all take read the parts in a play. Not to perform in it but I think it must have been reading aloud exercise. I was fairly shy and had th misfortune to be given the part with the very first lines to read out. The play was about a group of children who were returning home after fairground visit.
My first line was  “I’m sorry that’s all over” Now I ask you would a child of 10 or 11 actually say those words?  Probably not. Well Mrs Mcgarry wasn’t happy with the way I said it, not enough sadness or enthusiasm or regret that it was over… Well if I read that line once i must have read it a dozen times. And never with enough emotion behind it to satisfy the teacher. I was never very fond of her after that.



Sunday 18 December 2011

It's in the local paper so it must be true, unfortunately it really is ...

The Man read this information in the local paper yesterday.  
During the Olympics the train drives are asking for and getting, wages are £52,000 per year, deals for extra payment include £1200 each per driver there are 3200 of them, £1000 for the 1000 overground employees and £500 for the 800 maintenance people making a grand cost of £27 million pounds and that in a falling economy, bus drivers on the other hand who are poorly paid by comparison earning £24,000 less than half that of the train drives are asking for £500 for that Olympic period and there are 28,000 of them. The rationale is that they will need that for just turning up to work cost the buses will be so busy
Also recently the train drivers struck for an extra 7% increase per year, and the average income in this country is £24,000
Another item was about a woman who tripped over a piece of litter in Santa’s a Grotto in 2009, seems she  is claiming £30,000 damages from the grotto cos her leg is still not right. It is a very litigious country over here