Netherfield
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Community Radio: I guess that my plea last week on trying to communicate with other people pondering the idea of a “Community Radio Station” was missed by everyone. It was either that or everyone fell asleep reading it. I know I did. It is really just to see whether people care enough about their local community to see if this would help to raise matters to a wider audience. For us fellows it is a way of multi-tasking, which we are supposed to be unable to do, as we can listen to the radio while doing the washing up. I will explain at some other time what those last two words mean if you are unsure.
As I mentioned last week, community radio is not about trying to vie with Radio 1, 2, 3 or 4, but all about “beaming” the community to everyone in the area.. The idea is of course in its embryonic stage but I would love to know what people think. Email me at [email protected] and we will see where we go from there.
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Hide AdReflections on a garden: There was ice in the water reservoirs scattered about the garden, which seemed to me, as the person charged with breaking them up, about ten feet thick. I was thinking that glaciers in the Himalayas have got nothing on Netherfield. Even the pond become covered in an icy mantle. I thought I would wake up one morning and see Robin Cousins or Torvill and Dean practicing their moves while looking at the goldfish swimming safely underneath. But no, it was not to be. All I saw was frost, so intense, that it looked like snow, languidly stretching along boughs of our ash and covering our lawns with a sheet of white, only permeated by the tiny footprints of our feathered friends as they sought to feed on soft apples, seeds and breadcrumbs, strategically placed to promote safe, varied, eating.
It is amazing to see, how the wildlife spends more time protecting a piece of cox apple from other bird species, than it does in eating the said article. Blackbirds, especially the male side, show much aggression when protecting their food source, but only ever from about a foot behind the aggressor, and they do it with their head down in a pointy motion which makes them look about two feet long. Weird!
More next week.......
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