This is an autumnal experiment. I am sitting in my garden, looking at a fabulous expanse of clear blue sky, with only the haziest trace of a cotton wool attempting a slow scud from left to right. I am seated on a sun lounger, even though I have chosen a shady spot. The reason for this is that it is difficult to see computer screens in the sun. In fact my notepad screen is barely visible as it is. I think my touch typing skills do help in this regard. Maybe I could come out here and do a blog on Guy Fawkes night and tell you about the pretty fireworks. I might need some fingerless gloves for that. That would be an interesting experiment, too.
Anyway, I have checked my garden thermometer and it is 11 degrees Centigrade. I am wearing: thermal undershirt, cotton shirt, thin woollen cardigan, thick woollen sweater, an old padded gillet, a woolly hat, underpants, jeans, socks and trainers. I am just about warm enough. Five more degrees and I would consider a BBQ but to have one in these conditions might be thought a little eccentric.
Earlier this morning I went for my piano lesson. My teacher was very patient and managed to find something positive to say about my playing as I mangled my way through the exercises that I had been learning this past week. She made a few suggestions for me to try in terms of my vamping technique when I play my internet concerts and I shall think about them later today.

Veg patch full of hope & promise
When I got home, I came straight out into the garden and planted three rows of onion bulbs in my vegetable patch. I also put down a couple of rows of spinach seeds, since it said on the packet that you could over-winter them. Once they left my hand, they take their Darwinian chances.
I do have a pair of trainers I keep especially for garden work but this morning, in my eagerness to get planting, I was too lazy to put them on. The result was that my general purpose household trainers became caked with mud from the vegetable patch. I then needed to sit down and scrape this off each boot with a knife and a stiff brush. It would have been much better to have changed shoes in the first place. However, the activity sparked a memory of sitting on the stone steps at my junior school, scraping mud off a pair of football boots.
Of all the many, many, many things I hate about my schooldays, playing bloody football comes pretty high on the list. Looking back, I bitterly resent having being forced to run around after an inflated leather ball for what must have amounted to hundreds, if not thousands of hours. It constituted a complete and utter waste of time and opportunity in terms of my childhood development, although I accept that hanging about at square leg or whatever on the cricket field was almost as bad, if not worse. These recollections have put me in a really foul mood. I think I’ll go indoors and play a bit of piano. Speak to you later.
… It is now Sunday morning. I am pushing my cart around the supermarket, throwing in a couple of pizzas and a loaf of bread. This is a light shop, today. I breeze through the tills and sit on a handy chair while I wait for she-who-must-not-be-named. To pass the time, I take my A6 sketch pad out of my pocket and crack open my .05 drawing pen. I look at the girl working at the check-out and quickly get the shape of her head, suggesting the flowing pony tail as I drape a few lines across her shoulder. Less is more. I should have left it very sparse, but it will have to do. It is a 30 second sketch. I feel myself being careful not to stare too hard at the woman, even though that would be better from an artistic standpoint. I have no wish to get into far-fetched explanations of what I am doing with the security guards. I flip my pad shut and move out in convoy with she-who-must-not-be-named to stow the goods into the boot (= trunk in North America) of my car.




I am in the garden, yesterday, walking around aimlessly. What is this, by the path? A clump of fungi. [Cut to my bedroom bookshelf… opening the book on mushrooms and toadstools… flip, flip, squint, sigh… can’t find it… return book to shelf] So, do you know what they are? If so, please tell me in a comment here.
I spot a red rose, solitary. I capture its moment of extreme autumnal beauty with my camera. I am thoughtful. I am taking this picture in order to share it with you. I can think of no other reason. This triggers further thoughts. What am I doing, writing this blog. I am sharing my life with you. Esse est percipi, as Bishop Berkeley is reported to have once said: To be, is to be percieved. You, my dear blogophiles, are the ones who percieve what I am thinking here, and thus indirectly assist me to be. A couple of centuries ago I might well have been writing in my leather-bound journal with my quill pen; writing for posterity. The journal, with its copperplate hand, would have held the promise that one day someone, perhaps you, would have stumbled upon it as you poke about some dusty junk shop back room, nosing through the fruits harvested from a cash-in-hand house clearance. In your act of reading, you would have retrospectively bestowed existence upon my hypothetical being of the past.

