Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Spring and Summer 2025 - The Evening Hill Diaries Volume 16



 

The Roman bridge, Chambon-sur-Voueize, Creuse, France (see below).


April 2025

Moving on from my brief blog dwelling on the extraordinary exhalations from the White House, a friend messaged us on April 1st stating that there was no point in trying to hoodwink anybody with an April Fool joke – whatever you said would be believed.  Try these for size:

America is friends with Russia

America is going to take over Greenland

America is going to make Canada the 51st State

America is going to take over the Gaza strip as a piece of real estate.

I’m sure you see what I mean…

 

The United Kingdom has had a remarkable spell of good weather.  Driest March for many many years, and high-pressure sitting centred over Scotland.  A friend lives near Aboyne (inland from Aberdeen) which was the centre of the sunshine and high temperatures, with light winds.  Further south we had easterly winds which cooled us down but the sunshine was unbroken.  In the middle of this, we departed for Andalucia, where the weather, though warmer, was not as settled.

 

Travel teaches us to see the world anew.  Fortunate we are to live in Dorset, within a stone’s throw of the sea.  Yet, we seek the new, the unknown.

‘For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go.  I travel for travel’s sake.  The great affair is to move; to feel the needs and hitches of our life more clearly; to come down off this feather-bed of civilization, and find the globe granite underfoot and strewn with cutting flints.’  (Robert Louis Stevenson.  Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes, 1879.)

In my younger days, many of the paths were strewn with cutting flints, but I eschew them now.


We have all tasted sherry, but to sit outside a bar in the middle of Jerez with a glass of fino and a tapa of red tuna tartare is to know sherry for the first time (pace T S Eliot).  Similarly, to experience true Flamenco in a tiny bar filled with old posters of bullfights is a grand experience.  We only found the ‘globe granite underfoot and strewn with cutting flints’ on struggling through the sand dunes to reach the lighthouse at Cape Trafalgar.  Unsurprisingly the Spanish do not make much of this landmark, and it is not well signposted or particularly easy to reach.  Another remote spot, the lighthouse at the Punta del Carnero has a fine view of Algeciras Bay and Gibraltar.  I had to recite Charles Causley’s ‘A Ballad for Katharine of Aragon’ for Lindsay (it mentions Algeciras Bay, and is one of my favourite poems).  Pedants please note: the usual spelling for Katharine is Catherine, but others abound in the literature.  Causley definitely spelled it Katharine.

True Flamenco at bar El Pasaje


Fino and a 'Croft Twist'.  Tapa of red tuna.



Jean Cocteau's personal sherry barrel, Bodega Gonzales Byass

Old street; inside the Gonzalez Byass premises.



Sunset from Castillo de San Sebastian, Cadiz

Modern bridge, Cadiz

Sancti Petri, a fishing village on the coast, near Sanlucar de Barrameda - home of manzanilla sherry

Painted ceiling, fish market, Zahara de los Atunes (the clue is in the name).



On St George’s Day, it was felt by the members of our little swimming group that we should bathe at Branksome Chine, as we were wont to do when led, or even dragooned, by our friend Morag, who died a year ago on 23rd April.  The sea temperature was between 10 and 11 Celsius.  There was no wind but a storm front in the night had left a legacy of large breakers.  Immersion was generally brief though some tarried – but not long.

 

Branksome Chine beach, early morning, April 23rd.



For reasons I need not dwell on, I recently spent an unconscionably long time sitting in a garage in Yeovil.  Fortunately I anticipated this to some extent and was well supplied with magazines and a book.  But the countrymen smiling at me from the front cover of the ‘Mendip Times’, all clutching trophies, caught my attention.  Of course, I should have guessed.  They were the various division winners in the Wrington & Burrington hedging competition.  Good sturdy folk all.  The picture of the judges did somewhat recall shades of Monty Python.

Champions of Hedging

The Hedging Judges


After a while, a friend picked me up and we visited Montacute House, which I have always wanted to see.

Montacute House, a late Elizabethan masterpiece in Ham Hill stone

 

Returning home, the news was filled with the death and subsequent transfer of Pope Francis’s corpse to St Peter’s Basilica for general mourning.  He died suddenly the morning after a taxing Easter Day, when he appeared to give the traditional blessing and to be wheeled around St Peter’s Square.  The choral activity included the ‘Litany of Saints’, a very long list indeed, with the words ‘Ora Pro Eum’ intoned after every name.  Now we await the excitement of the Conclave of Cardinals, and the black or white smoke issuing from the Sistine Chapel.  I am sure I have read somewhere that the vast number of saints worshipped in the Catholic Church was substantially inflated in the early and later mediaeval period in order to generate income, but was interested to read on Google that AI rejects that assertion.  The assertion which AI is so anxious to deny, appeared, I think, in Barbara Tuchman’s book, ‘The March of Folly’ in her chapter on the Renaissance popes.  (I gave my copy away – please tell me if I am wrong).

 

One of the jewels in the crown of sporting commentary is, or was, the Test Match Special programme.  After WWII the BBC decided that a little known poetry producer, John Arlott, should join the famous journalist Howard Marshall, in the commentary box.  Arlott’s Hampshire burr became the voice of cricket.  At that time, before the new media centre at Lord’s, they were ensconced in a tiny space high up in the pavilion.  In an aside, one day in the late 1970s, probably linked to the excitement of the two closely linked conclaves of the John Pauls, some white smoke was seen billowing over the London skyline.  ‘I see Jim Swanton has been elected Pope’ was Arlott’s immediate response.

Swanton was a distinguished, though somewhat egotistical cricket commentator.  Ray Illingworth’s remark that he was such a snob he didn’t even travel in the same car as his chauffeur is probably fairly near the mark.  John Arlott (in private, though the quote has come down to us) said of him, ‘Can you imagine what it must be like to write as much as Swanton did over so many years without leaving one memorable sentence?’  And John Warr, cricketer of the post war era, described his writing style as ‘Somewhere between the Ten Commandments and Enid Blyton’.*

* See the book; ‘Arlott, Swanton and the soul of English cricket’, by Stephen Fay and David Kynaston.

 

Invited to friends for coffee in their wonderful garden, here is just one of its beauties, a honeysuckle which is thought to be over a hundred years old:

Honeysuckle 'tree', Hampreston, Dorset.

 

Then to walk along their sunken lane which is one of Dorset’s forgotten drove roads is also a pleasure; to admire a hedge which may be more than a thousand years old; to watch the mayflies crowding the air over the river Stour is a special and sobering delight.  Curiously, we also admire a novel use of discarded astroturf – when the cows come home from pasture they prefer to walk along it placed at the edge of the field rather than the drove road, with its sharp flints which stick in their hooves.  Cows, it seems, unlike Robert Louis Stevenson, do not like ‘the globe granite underfoot and strewn with cutting flints.’

 

Today I decided to catch up on my CAM magazine (Cambridge Alumni Magazine).  When reading of the many brilliant people who are at, or were at, the University, I experience a severe case of impostor syndrome, but I also learn things.  A Professor at the Scott-Polar Research Institute, in collaboration with a Danish group at University of Aarhus, has shown that planting extra trees in high latitudes is actually counterproductive, and of no help in reducing global warming.  This relates to the ‘albedo’, a word I had never heard before.  The albedo is the amount of energy from the sun that is immediately reflected back into space.  High latitudes, with an abundance of snow, reflect more than 90% of the sun’s rays away from the earth.  The carbon capture by trees, which can now survive in the tundra regions, is minimal compared to the increased absorption of solar energy that the trees will generate by displacing snow or ice.

 

Thursday May 29th

There is much to capture in the interim but I hasten to record a memory, which was engendered by being dragged into the garden to play football (soccer) against grandson Louis, aged 7.  The curious link takes in football in the playground at the old Broad Street school of King Edward’s in Bath, and is juxtaposed with my much older self, sitting in the boardroom of St Mary’s Hospital in London hearing the deliberations of the CQC – the frightful Care Quality Commission – of which I was for a short period of time, a member.

Seventy years younger than I, Louis is, as you can imagine, somewhat more nimble.  My mind went back to informal games in the school playground, when Alan Williamson, a lithe and quicksilver schoolmate, always had the ball at his feet, as though it had been tied there with string.

After this many years, I do not think I can offend anyone in saying that Alan’s family was poor.  There were three boys of which he was the eldest.  Poor nutrition had made him thin, and had he been fully developed I feel sure that he would have been an outstanding athlete.  As it was, his quickness, ball skills, and light frame did not debar him from playing scrum half for the first fifteen, where he usually managed to elude the attention of giant opposing wing forwards.  I once witnessed him taking a remarkable one-handed catch in the outfield at cricket, running backwards and facing the wrong way.  I thought of it in 2019 when Nasser Hussain who was commentating, said; ‘No way, no, no way, you cannot do that, Ben Stokes.  That is remarkable, that is one of the greatest catches of all time.  You cannot do that.’  It was a similar catch.

Another memory is of our visit to Greece in 1965.  This was for those of us who studied ‘O’ level Greek and was masterminded by an eccentric classics master.  We travelled overland in the school minibus, which should have been condemned.  It almost killed us on one occasion but that is another story.  On reaching, against the odds, the old site of Olympia, where the ancient games were held, Alan and I jogged around the stadium, or what was left of it.  It was the middle of the day and the silence was profound, except for the cicadas.  The temperature was absurdly high.  Yes, we were stupid; but yes, we were young.

Alan wanted to go into medicine, and in view of the family finances, he went straight to St Mary’s Hospital Medical School in Paddington and qualified quickly.  He became interested in tropical medicine and worked in risky and poorly developed countries for the Medical Research Council.  During one of my junior appointments, when I returned to London, I met Alan for a drink.  Working in rural India, he had suffered multiple tropical illnesses including malaria and amoebic dysentery.  He looked even thinner, but was his usual calm and composed self.  He had been sent home to recover.  He volunteered to continue to work for the MRC and went out to Nigeria.  While working there he contracted what was probably viral hepatitis, but may have been Lassa fever, and died.

So, sitting in the St Mary’s Hospital board room, listening to the platitudes from the CQC, surrounded by portraits of the supposed great and good, I could not help wondering if my friend, Alan Williamson, who truly gave his life for medical research, should surely be there commemorated…

 

Later Spring and early Summer.

By the beginning of June, we have already had more sunshine than in the whole of last year.  Of course it has been dry too.  I cycled past some fields near Milton Abbas on the first of June where the corn (maize) was alive but pitifully small.

To compensate for lack of golf or other reasons to venture away from home, we booked a week in Cyprus in mid-May, for warmth and swimming, with swimming pool or sea based exercises for my mangled shoulder.  A five star hotel for one week is not our usual milieu.  It is a truism to say that a very luxurious/expensive hotel does not guarantee a better quality of guest; only a guest who can afford to stay there.  The sea was fine – warmer than Sandbanks ever gets, anyway, and the pools were warmer.  There was an adults only pool, which was unfrequented.  There is a lot of money in Cyprus, much of dubious origin.  There were a number of exquisitely beautiful girls in exquisitely beautiful, exquisitely small, and no doubt exquisitely expensive, bikinis.  I was reluctant to look in case the Eastern European looking beau by their side was a Russian mobster who took a dislike to me.  Although our room was only on the second floor it was quite high enough not to want to fall out of.  The shops in the hotel contained items such as jewellery worth the price of a house.  The shop assistants appeared to speak Russian.

One of the shops at The Four Seasons

 

Much of our time was spent away from the hotel however.  Cyprus has been a melting pot of civilizations since the Myceneans came to it around 1000 BCE.  A stopping place for crusaders, the Knights of St John, the Knights Templar, etc.  A strange fragment of history is that Richard the Lionheart got married there – to Princess Berengaria of Navarre en route to the third crusade in 1191.  Poor Berengaria then had to spend two years as a camp follower in the Holy Land.  When Richard died in 1199 she retired to Le Mans and is thought to be buried in L’Epau Abbey, which she founded.

Statue of Michael Cacoyannis, film director, near Limassol


There are Greek (Hellenistic period) and Roman (pre and post Christian) edifices on Cyprus too.  Lindsay insisted on a trip to see ‘Aphrodite’s Rock’.  Opinions on Trip Advisor varied.  ‘It’s a rock’, one writer declared.  True, it was a rock, but which one was a bit unclear.  It did not look anything like Botticelli’s version of the ‘Birth of Venus’, no giant shells or nymphs telling her to put some clothes on, but it was scenic, the water was of a turquoise hue, and there was a good café.

Aphrodite and her rock - but which one?

Roman mosaics at Kourion.  This site changed hands many times.  Mycenean, Alexander the Great, Hellenistic, Roman, and Roman Christian.


 

As a child, I remember living in Malta during the Cyprus emergency, when the British persistently failed to find the self-styled ‘General Grivas’, a guerrilla fighter of the EOKA movement, whose aim was to pursue Enosis (union with Greece)  He hid in the Troodos mountains, and the British were unable to find him.  The result was a stalemate.  The Independence of the island in 1960 and the subsequent internecine activities later resulted in the 1974 demarcation (after a Turkish invasion) into Greek Cypriot (largely south and west) and Turkish areas (largely north and east).  There were disturbances and forced removals similar in nature, though less in scale, to the Partition of India.

Part of the 20th Century history of the island can be traced back to the fact that it was virtually handed to Britain in the aftermath of the Russo-Turkish war in 1878.  This is responsible for the curious anomaly of cars driving on the left hand side of the road.  Britain retains two strategically important bases and areas of land in Cyprus (‘Sovereign Base Areas’) – at Akrotiri and Dhekelia.  British rule, though benign (Greek and Turk lived in relative harmony in the same villages), was the key factor in the support that EOKA gained.  Yet again, a movement that resulted from colonial ownership.

 There are now some fine wineries in the mountains, and many chapels, monasteries and churches called ‘The Chapel of the Holy Cross’, thanks to a visit by Emperor Constantine’s mother, Helena (250-330 AD).  She is claimed to be the discoverer of the true cross of Jesus, and brought substantial fragments with her to the island.  But if one were to collect together all the fragments of the ‘true cross’ spread around Greek orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, they would probably be sufficient to build HMS Victory.  The Troodos mountains remain very difficult to walk through, many of the paths being rocky and steep, and crucially hidden from overhead view by trees.  We hiked one of them to the picturesque Kalidonia waterfall.

Kalidonia waterfall, Troodos mountains.


 

With a late flight back at the end of our week, we had the good fortune, courtesy of the hotel, to be invited on a tour of some of the areas southeast of Troodos.  This was led by a jolly and well-informed guide, Mr Andreas Alkivides, who carried the designation ‘Guest Relations Manager’.  A minibus with a Romanian driver (“It’s a better job than driving for Yodel in London”) led a smallish group of us up to the lace-making village of Lefkara, and the winery of Dafermou.  Subsequent to this, a vast lunch with wine was provided at Maria’s restaurant, high up in the mountains.  The appearance of our largely elderly party was enhanced by two very pretty young girls from Armenia.  They giggled and took selfies and videos, and looked about 19, but when we stopped for lunch it was clear that they were older, and the one sitting opposite me told me she was a travel agent.  Hence the multiple photo opportunities.  They kept themselves to themselves until we were back on the bus for the trip home.  The driver then put on singalong songs on the HiFi and everybody joined in.  We started with ‘Sweet Caroline’, progressed to ‘Living next door to Alice’ (the alternative words version), ‘La Bamba’, ‘Twist and Shout’, ‘Hey Baby’, etc.  But as we rejoined the flat motorway leading west back to the hotel, ‘Dancing Queen’ and the ‘Macarena’ brought the girls into the aisle and together with Konstandinos, a rather tubby delightful gay manager from the hotel, the dancing became frenetic.  It was a special day for Konstandinos, because it was his Saint’s name day, which seems to be rather more important in Cyprus than one’s actual birthday.  Falling out of the bus, we still had time for a swim in the pool and a last shower, before a departure for Paphos airport and the melee of the check-in queues.  It was a good week.

 

 

 

Largely dry and sunny weather has remained, at least in Southern Britain, for around three weeks afterwards.  From the house I can watch, somewhat forlornly, the distant figures on the 15th hole of Parkstone Golf Course.

 

Private Eye magazine has been commemorating the career of Barry Fantoni (1940-2025), who first joined the magazine as a cartoonist, but was later recognised to have the required satirical streak.  He it was, for example, who first started the ‘Colemanballs’ section.  David Coleman was a BBC sports presenter and commentator, ubiquitous during the 1960s, whose habit of making gaffes and using clichés led to coining of the verb Colemantating (Clive James).  At the 1976 Olympics, the 800m was won by the Cuban athlete Alberto Juantorena.  The fashion at the time was for extremely small running shorts.  His burst of speed in the final straight led Coleman to say, as he outdistanced the field; ‘He opened his legs and showed his class.’  Another Coleman statement which Fantoni picked up on for his pieces was; ‘…and that bronze medal is worth its weight in gold.’  The section continues to this day in Private Eye.  Other terrific Fantoni spots were: the former fast bowler and commentator Fred Trueman, who perhaps originated the original persona of grumpy Yorkshireman, a crown since handed to Geoffrey Boycott; ‘We didn’t have metaphors in my day.  We didn’t beat about the bush.’  And horrifically inappropriate, Anna Ford, newsreader, in 1997; ‘And let’s not forget the other people in this tragedy – such as Dodi, whose death seems to have taken a back seat this week.’

 

News this week in mid-June that GPs will be allowed to prescribe tirzepatide (Mounjaro) for weight reduction.  A friend, who is about five foot tall and seems almost as wide decided to apply.  To make sure he put lead weights into his trouser pockets (the criterion is a BMI of 40 or more).  Unfortunately while being weighed his trousers fell down.  I haven’t heard yet whether his subterfuge was discovered.

 

Sunday, June 15th

Cycling in France.  The ‘Tour de La Creuse’.

 

La Souterraine.

He is short and stout and his eyes are rheumy.  His hair is long, uncombed, greasy, and was possibly once ginger.  Or perhaps he forgot to dye it this month.  He wears a dark green jacket, which has seen better days.  His open-necked shirt was once upon a time, unstained.  Unlike most of the inhabitants of this town, he is not in Sunday mass at 1030am.  Almost as soon as I gratefully ease my legs off my bicycle in the town square of La Souterraine, in Creuse, central France, he waddles over.  My French is imperfect, and I am about to ask him what the medal is that he is wearing, when Lindsay points out that it is the scallop shell bronze brooch of a pilgrim of the Route de Compostelle, or Camino de Santiago, which, if he ever walked it, must have been many years ago.  ‘Toutes sont fermées’, he says – or at least something like that.  He gestures hopelessly around.  Then points to a small café in the corner of the square, which I had overlooked.  ‘Don’t do a ……’; Lindsay hisses, reminding me of a friend who is apt to gather hangers on wherever he goes, simply because he is too polite to dismiss them.’  So, I politely thank him and wheel the bike over to the café.  Nervously I watch as in an unhurried way he follows.  Fortunately, he does not accompany me to the bar, where I order coffees, but makes his way to another table and demands a glass of rosé, which could well be the first of several.  He sits gazing into the middle distance.

 

It is our last day of cycling the Tour, and we have many miles to go.  We started early and need to rest, take coffee, and recharge our e-bike batteries for the next phase.  I have a tendency to visit places on a whim; for example, I once signed on to sail around the Lofoten Islands because I saw a dramatic black and white picture of them in a Geography book at school some thirty years before.  When searching for an area of France which we have not explored before, my daughter mentioned camping by the side of the river Creuse at La-Celle-Dunoise.  ‘It was beautiful’, she said.  We decided to try it.

The Creuse département lies in the middle of the foothills to the west of the Massif Central.  It is an upland area between the mountains and the more gentle slopes of Limousin, as it gently descends towards Limoges.  It has almost no vineyards, which must be nearly unique in France.  It is intensely rural, with many Limousin cattle and some Charolais.  It is characterised by soaring, dense stands of trees; oak, ash, beech, and the pervasive châtaignier (sweet chestnut).  The population is sparse – the entire département has a population of just over 110,000.  This in itself makes cycling challenging – there are almost no cars (good) but there are almost no villages or places to stop for a drink or a meal (bad).  The occasional giant lorry is almost certain to be hauling vast tree trunks, which makes one think of those desirable French oak wine barrels.

The countryside is beautiful, but is most attractive when the roads run alongside the rivers.  The tourist office have created the Tour de La Creuse, a cycle circuit of over 200 miles, to showcase the variety of the area.  Cultural highlights are largely unexpected.  For example, La Souterraine, as mentioned above, is a gathering town (due to its magnificent cathedral) for the Santiago de Compostela.  On another day we reach a small hamlet atop a substantial ridge at 750m, Toulx-Saint-Croix (the highest point on our cycling route).  A very old Romanesque church stands opposite La Tour Martial – which houses Merovingian sarcophagi.  A landscape depicting the church and tower is prominently displayed in the miniscule, deserted, square – the poster financed by Crédit Agricole.  It is reminiscent of a Corot, and a nearby plaque tells us that it was painted by a little known member, perhaps almost the final member, of the Barbizon School – Emile Guiblain-Coquery (1883-1963), who lived in this tiny village.

The poster of the old church, Toulx-Saint-Croix

Was he the last of the Barbizon school?


Another work by Guiblain-Coquery.  The village hasn't changed much.  We sat beneath that tree.



The Creuse river runs from the northwestern part of the central massif of France, eventually joining the Vienne, which itself joins the Loire.  It has many smaller rivers enlarging it as it runs to the northwest.  All of these, of course, have their own valleys, and require cycling down into and then up from a bridge, which may vary from tiny to substantial, sometimes of Roman origin.  For example, the beautiful town of Chambon-sur-Voueize, pictured here.

Roman bridge, Chambon-sur-Voueize.


George Sand, who for a number of years lived not far north of here, said of Chambon-sur-Voueize;

“Enfin nous y voilà et c’est un paradis terrestre!  Le pays est adorable…des rivières de vrai cristal… un continuel berceau de verdure (cradle of lush vegetation).”

The rivers of true crystal are responsible for the chief cultural highlight of the département, the tapestry weaving towns of Felletin and Aubusson.  In the 15th century (though some say well before this), the influx of Flemish weavers and the availability of clean slightly acidic water to cleanse wool and to fix dyes resulted in tapestries being woven, both for decorative purposes and for the practical value of providing domestic insulation.  Ultimately the quality of Aubusson tapestry was recognised by the King as rivalling those of Beauvais and Gobelins.  He decreed that the monogram MR (Manufacture Royale) should be appended, and as a further guarantee of its source and quality, a genuine Aubusson weave should be surrounded by a thin deep blue border (see below).

 

A classic Aubusson tapestry dating from about 1750.  Note the Royal imprimatur and the thin dark blue border.  The oldest tapestry in the collection dates from 1480.

 

A huge modern tapestry taken from Tolkien's illustration for The Hobbit

Theseus and the Minotaur

This tapestry is behind glass, but has an extraordinary three-dimensional effect

Many of the modern tapestries are woven by Japanese artists, and based on computer or video games, but the tapestries are always hand woven.



Back in the UK we are assailed by the news which we had escaped for a few days.  Trump triumphant, the Government in disarray over benefits cuts, and some friendlier things such as a wonderful first Test Match against India (cricket again).  Ascot was a warm weather triumph, Glastonbury is over (best set Nile Rogers & Chic – but I am biased) and today (June 30th), Wimbledon fortnight has started.  Watch out for ‘a good day to bury bad news’ from the politicos.

 

Finally, on return home, I make a journey to Brighton to attend the funeral of Professor Douglas Chamberlain.  At first a senior during his weekly visits to King’s College Hospital from Brighton; later a teacher and a collaborative researcher; and finally a supporter, a mentor and a friend.  It is largely due to Douglas that we have trained ambulance staff (paramedics) in the UK.  During the eulogies, the most striking recurrent comment of all the speakers was the word ‘hero’.  He was a hero to me too.  Here is the link to the Daily Telegraph obituary, to which I am proud to have contributed:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituaries/2025/06/23/douglas-chamberlain-paramedics-defibrillators-obituary/

 

 

Time to call a halt to these meanderings.  What will the later part of summer and the autumn bring?