Man held over letter bombings is a cyclist

Posted by Stokie Taid on Feb 20th, 2007

 

When I read this headline in today’s Times I began to wonder whether I had picked up The Sun by mistake.   Then I got cross at such a ludicrous piece of journalism.  But maybe I’ve been done a favour.  Riding a bike in London can be hair-raising at times.  If motorists suspect that I could be a bomber they might give me a bit more road.

The headline also made me think of ‘ Man bites dog’ journalism.  * Wikipedia has an interesting entry on this subject which made me think that the reason for this headline was that the scribbler thought that bombings in the UK had become such a frequent event that he or she needed to add something unusual to the story to make it newsworthy.  As Private Eye says,  “Shurely some mistake.”

Happily the squirrel decided to have a go at the sunflower head I rescued from him in the summer and having put it aside for winter feed for the birds, hung up on the wire last week.  The birds ignored it so I didn’t mind him having a go today.  As he tightrope walked along the wire he provided the entertainment and interest lacking in The Times.  Should I have headed this blog, “Non-cyling squirrel eats sunflower?”  Or, “Squirrel influences rural depopulation in mid-Wales?”

* “The phrase Man bites dog and the related phrase Dog bites man are used to describe a phenomenon in journalism, in which an unusual, infrequent event is more likely to be reported as news than an ordinary, everyday occurrence. This can be explained by the fact that the news media generally considers an event more newsworthy if there is something unusual about it. On the other hand, a situation which is completely normal is unlikely to be taken as newsworthy. The result is that it may seem that news items which carry titles such as “Man Bites Dog” occur more often that those which carry ones such as “Dog Bites Man”. The remarkable thing is that the observation can be made even though examples of the latter occur far more frequently than the former.

The phrase comes from a quote attributed to New York Sun editor John B. Bogart: “When a dog bites a man, that is not news, because it happens so often. But if a man bites a dog, that is news.”[1]

2012 Olympiad. February 13 2007. Work has started.

Posted by Stokie Taid on Feb 14th, 2007

 

Swans happily gliding along the River Lee in North London oblivious to the fact that a few yards away to the East of the river work has already started on the site of the Olympic Park.

 

 

 

 

 

To create this first test pit earth moving vehicles have been traversing the well used cycle route dropping lumps of mud as they go.  Will the cycle route survive the actual construction work?

 

More global warming/cooling

Posted by Stokie Taid on Feb 9th, 2007

 

On 06 February it was a nice sunny day in London.  On that day and on the two previous days the foxes had been out sunning themselves for most of the day.  if you look carefully at the centre of this picture you will see one of them snoozing on the bank.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then on Thursday 08 February the weather forecasters were amazingly accurate and it started to snow, as predicted, at about 5 am.

By 8:30 am the view of the garden had changed to this,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

and the road was looking like this.     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then the winging started on Radio, TV  and in the papers.   Why can’t London be like New York and Moscow where they manage to clear the snow within minutes and their traffic does not come to a halt within seconds of the first flakes hitting the ground?

The simple answer is that we could.  We would need to close a few  hospitals and invest in snow clearing plant which on average would be used once every ten years - and sit idle for nine.

No, we prefer to keep the hospitals open and have an unofficial public holiday when the snow comes - far more sensible.  Oh and it enables the drivers of Chelsea tractors to sooth their environmentally seared consciences and claim that they really do need their gas guzzling monstrosities.

Global warming hits North London?

Posted by Stokie Taid on Feb 3rd, 2007

 

Pictures taken on 03 February 2007.