Friday, December 25, 2015

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

It was a good week on my favourite jazz programme last week.  Each of the five Open Jazz broadcasts was entirely given over to recordings that Duke Ellington made for Columbia Records between 1951 and 1961. I particularly enjoyed the hour in which his Shakespeare inspired compositions featured.

The music played was from the umpteen LPs Ellington produced which are now available on two CD box sets.  The obvious tunes are there, some in various versions, as well as lesser known pieces.

All these programmes as well as many more are available on the Open Jazz website.  In contrast to the BBC which gives you 30 days to listen to a broadcast after it has gone out Radio France gives you nearly three years so there's no rush.

Saturday, December 19, 2015

As well as presenting a well attended and well appreciated Christmas concert this year the Dunedin Wind Band had another and arguably more exciting gig.

We were invited to be part of the general frenzy accompanying the opening of the new Star Wars movie.  Six bands around the UK turned up at their local Vue cinema and played while audiences poured in to see the film.  Naturally we played Stars Wars music and I assume the other bands did the same but we played other film music as well to fill out our hour.  Nonetheless the Star Wars stuff was repeated several times and I'm pleased to report that my fingers got progressively more nimble while never quite mastering it all.

Apparently all the bands were being videoed and a composite video is to be produced, to what end I'm not terribly sure.  To appear on screens throughout the country?  Perhaps national fame awaits but my immediate reward was a free cinema ticket and a bucket of popcorn.

I bought an Evening News the following day to see if our fame had at least reached Holyrood Road but there was no mention.  However the Daily Record and the Scottish Sun had a better nose for such an important news story and this picture is nicked from one of them.  My tiny head is positioned just where the tips of the conductor's baton and the cinema manager's pointy thing meet.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

The absence of posts to this blog over the last few weeks is not due to my having been floating around in space but I just happened to catch the arrival of three new astronauts at the international space station this evening and here they are gathered together in the Russian kitchen for a welcoming photo session with the three others who were already on board.

It is unfortunately a little bit out of focus ( I've got one that's even worse) but they were goodness knows how many thousands of miles away and I took the picture from Earth thanks to an excellent event organised by the Edinburgh Science Festival at the museum.

Here's the crowd in the big hall watching the big screen.  We were treated to a video of this morning's launch and amazing shots from inside the Soyuz and then some of the tricky docking procedure, made trickier on this occasion because the automatic system didn't work so they had to guide it into place manually.  An astronaut who had already spent time in the station, Samantha Cristoforetti, was on hand in the museum for an interview and two ladies from the European Space Agency answered lots of  questions as we watched the live broadcast from the station waiting for all the multitude of techie things that needed to be sorted out before the hatch separating the Soyuz from the station was opened and the three new crew members swam weightlessly into view.  It was brilliant.

Much of the audience left at this point but those who stayed on, of whom I was one, then saw a film called The Martian about an astronaut being marooned on Mars, his struggle for survival and eventual rescue.  It wasn't a bad film but I'd have enjoyed it more if the acoustics in the grand hall had not distorted most of the dialogue.

At least it was not as grim a story as Sunset Song which I saw in the afternoon.   It's decades since I read the book but I don't remember the story being as relentlessly dreich as this was.  The book is still on my shelves so maybe I should revisit it to check.

So if I haven't been out in space or spaced out what explains the lack of posts.  Lack of dedication.  I resolve to do better. 


Thursday, November 26, 2015

Is this taking protection from sports injuries too far?

Saturday, November 21, 2015

When I went to see King Charles III the other day there were small screens on either side of the stage informing me that this would be a captioned performance and explaining that "Captioning makes the performance accessible to people who are deaf, deafened or hard of hearing."

Well I've no quarrel with that provision but the inclusion of the word "deafened" rather puzzled me.  Were they drawing a distinction between those born deaf and those who had become or been made deaf later in life?  Or did it mean that there would be loud bangs during the show that would deafen us momentarily?  There were no such noises so it wasn't that.

I remain to be enlightened.  Don't all shout at once, just in case. 

Friday, November 20, 2015

There was an item on the radio this morning about the success that the play King Charles III is currently having on Broadway.  This was attributed not only to the Americans' interest in (or even fascination about) our Royals but to the resonance the play has with the American foundation story.

According to the radio some factions would have not have fought against Britain had the King overruled the parliament's taxation of the colonies as they requested and the veto powers of the US president are a reflection of that.  That's what the play is about.  The King and Parliament at odds and I just happened to see it last night.

I knew nothing about it before I went apart from what the five stars puffs on the publicity told me and those I always regard as undoubtedly partial.  It's a fine production in many ways.  I particularly enjoyed the very theatrical opening when the cast come on dressed in black, carrying candles and start singing the Agnus Dei in Latin.  We are at the obsequies for the late Queen.

When they started to speak English I was a bit puzzled until I realised it was blank verse.  So it's mock Shakespeare then?  Well no, I'm sure the writer had no intention of mocking the Bard.  Like mock Tudor it's admiration and of course Shakespeare's history plays are all about Kingship and the relationships within royal ranks and power and whatnot.  This play is billed as a future history and it's very much done in a Shakespearean style and staging.

The language didn't always sit easily in my ear.  The Kate Middleton character for instance frequently addresses William as "husband".  To me that just sounded foolishly archaic.  Nor would I call any of 
the soliloquies poetic but it's an interesting listen.

The stalls were half empty, perhaps reflecting a lack of much interest in the monarchy amongst younger theatregoers because the audience had a greyish tinge. Whatever the reason it didn't help the atmosphere and a few guffaws broke out at one or two more melodramatic moments that do well in Macbeth or Hamlet but here required more suspension of disbelief than this audience was willing or able to summon up.

The final scene is a coronation and like the opening it's very theatrical and brings a sense of power and majesty to the climax of the play.

Seats in the Festival theatre are not very comfortable. That doesn't bother me when I'm fully engaged with a show but last night I had more than a touch of numb bum.

But the critics' bums are not in tune with mine as you'll see from this review and many others. Maybe the original cast would have done it for me but they're wowing audiences on Broadway.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

It always seems to rain when I go to Glasgow but since it was raining here on Saturday I was no worse off.  I went over to attend the concert celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra and an afternoon concert by the Tommy Smith Youth Jazz Orchestra.

Here they are in the beautifully appointed but somewhat unimaginatively named New Auditorium of the Royal Concert Hall.
It was an excellent hour and a bit.  These people are amazing players showing, as Tommy said, that the future is bright.

I had rather too many hours to spare before going to the City Halls and since wandering around in the rain didn't sound like fun I lingered in a music shop for a while, visited three branches of WH Smith, bought a book and used it to space out a very tasty meal of tiger prawns in a yummy sauce followed by sea-bass on spicy lentils.

That still left a little time on my hands but as crossed town I came across this disintegrating queue of disconsolate punters who had been too late to profit from the free food distribution that had emptied the white lorry.
Now the food being given away was boxes of doughnuts so I suspect this was a publicity stunt rather than famine relief or a food bank.  It could have been modern art I suppose given what I've recently seen at Tramway and what I came across next as I passed the Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art, known as GOMA to its friends (of whom I count myself one).

These neon signs are part of Real Life Scotland which is extensively and persuasively explained here.  Someone could usefully write up the Turner entries in the same comprehensible manner.    

The concert when I got to it was brilliant, one of the best SNJO gigs I've been to.  It was wholly dedicated to the Glenn Miller catalogue.  The band all looked as though they had been dressed by the same tailor as Miller, handkerchiefs peeking out of breast pockets and sleeked down hair.  They didn't throw their instruments in the air as you can see the originals do in this Youtube clip but they did pop up and down and perform synchronised moves in the manner of the time. They had also recruited some young singers from the Conservatoire to play the part of the Modernaires which they did with aplomb.

The music and the playing was wonderful.

I have to say the same about the SCO concert I went to this afternoon.  It was totally different music of course and a totally different set up.  This was chamber music; a string sextet and some clarinet and piano trios.  All music that was new to me and which I really enjoyed.  Here's one of the beautiful trios courtesy of Youtube. 

Saturday, November 14, 2015

A well deserved four star review for the Grads production of Wildest Dreams by the prolific and perceptive Alan Ayckbourn which I saw last night and enjoyed very much.

Friday, November 13, 2015

The four short-listed contenders for the Turner prize are to be seen at Tramway in Glasgow. Andrew and I were there yesterday and after fortifying ourselves with some so-called Scottish tapas and half a litre of red cantered round. This is the corner of a room containing several similar groups of fur-coated chairs.  
We didn't immediately grasp the meaning of this work. Indeed Andrew dismissed it as "all fur coat and no knickers" so we sought enlightenment in the descriptive poster. 
Going with the spirit of its wobbly word order I suspect that many vintage women, and vintage men too, will consider this to be vintage art-speak that sheds little light. Perhaps it is as clear as day to the non-vintage social media generation.

It was nice to get back over the rainswept M8 to some recognisably worthwhile art, albeit musical art, with the SCO's joyous romp through Sibelius's Third Symphony.   

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

I've been too idle to keep things up to date and don't have the time or energy to write reviews in extenso but I like to keep a record so here's a list with mini comments.

Hidden was the Young Lyceum's party piece and although I didn't always know what they were on about it provided a fascinating tour of the theatre building from under the stage to the gods.

Pictures at an Exhibition is one of my favourite pieces of music but I don't reckon much to the pictures that inspired it.

An afternoon spent helping to sort out the Grads costume store was as exciting as it sounds.  Only marginally more exciting has been persuading audiences leaving the Lyceum and the Traverse to take a flyer advertising our production of Ayckbourn's Wildest Dreams that opened tonight.

I was caught out by the clock change and arrived at the Assembly Rooms an hour too early to hear Mary Beard promoting SPQR, her history of the Roman Republic.  I whiled away the time with a glass and a snack so it wasn't too much of a pain and Ms Beard was worth the wait though I didn't buy the book.

The last A Play, a pie and a pint offering was an excellent little comedy in which we saw how Dr Johnson despite his avowed aversion to Scotland needed five Scottish assistants to put his dictionary together.

Red Army is an absolutely brilliant documentary about a soviet ice hockey team.  Don't miss it. It's about much more than the game.

Sicario is typical Hollywood action movie fare.  There's lot of blood and explosions and shoot outs and I really don't think anyone should bother to see it.  What was I thinking of?

Tipping the Velvet at the Lyceum has been showered with five star reviews and it's very well done although the story didn't float my boat very high.  It was nice to see the theatre set up for music hall, quite reminded me of Kitwe.


You'd think that advertising a world premiere would draw the crowds but concert audiences tend to like what they know so The Queen's Hall was half empty for an SCO evening that featured not only 12 minutes of brand new Finnish stuff but a 38 minute UK premiere of some obscure Sibelius.  Maybe they knew and disliked the third work which was a violin concerto by Nielson but they missed a notably interesting evening.

The poster for Scottish Opera's Carmen featured her in a blood red outfit but that was nowhere to be seen on stage.  Not much could be seen because they played the whole thing in semi darkness. I was disappointed.

I'm not sure what drew me to the launch of Alice Thompon's latest novel but I got a glass of wine out of it and a wee chat with my German teacher and her husband who happened to be there.  I've never read any of her stuff and had only a vague memory of what I'd read about her work so I asked which book she'd recommend for starters and have since bought The Existential Detective.  It's set in Portobello so I'm almost bound to enjoy it.

There's a French film festival in town and I saw three films at the weekend. SK1 is a not very wonderful police procedural based on real life events redeemed for me by an excellent performance by Adama Niane as the baddie.  The Silence of the Sea probably deserves respect as a precursor of the Nouvelle Vague and for its various technical innovations but it wasn't very entertaining.  The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun on the other hand was super entertainment.  The lady in question borrows her boss's car without permission and sets off to spend the weekend on the Riviera.  We follow her progress into a weird chain of events that gets quite creepy at times.  I loved it and was delighted to learn that the leading lady is not only an Edinburgh girl but James Bridie's great granddaughter.

In between films I enjoyed a non bonfire night party featuring food, drink and chat. 

Sunday, October 25, 2015

The first of the current  A Play, a Pie and a Pint shows that I saw was the story of a young African trainee teacher in Glasgow preparing a display about Mary's Meals.  It seemed to me more of a straight plug for the charity than a story.  The second character was a school handyman whose part in the action was to feed her lines that enabled her to lay forth about some wonderful aspect of  the charity.  There was a tiny sub-plot about her going in for some DJ competition but it was all a bit didactic.  I expected a plea for funds or a leaving collection but strangely there was no such thing although the Traverse was plastered with posters and leaflets about Mary's Meals. It does seem to be a very worthwhile charity and of course has a connection with blogging given the wee stooshie about the school dinners blog so I have to at the very least contribute by directing you to its website.

This week's offering was I suppose didactic in its way, in that we were taught something.  But the teaching was more skilfully embedded in a work of art. We saw a man develop dementia, its effect on him and on his wife and daughter.  We learnt something about the disease and about the human spirit. Descent by Linda Duncan McLaughlin was an excellent piece, very well performed and very moving.

I found Martyr, in which a young man spouts fundamentalist religious views by quoting from a holy book, rather irritating.  But who would not be irritated by a constant stream of biblical quotations, for it's that holy book not the other one.

But it's a modern play from Germany and we don't see many of them so I tried hard to appreciate it.  Unfortunately, and unlike the majority of critics I didn't.

It's about an hour's walk from my flat to the Modern Art Gallery via the Water of Leith but it's a pleasant way of stretching your legs provided it's not raining so that's the route I took to the Roy Lichtenstein exhibition the other day.

As I usually do when passing through Stockbridge I checked that my bell pull of fifty years ago had not been interfered with.

It's still resisting the winds of change as are those of the neighbours but a little tarnished looking. I'll have to take a tin of Brasso with me next time.

That would surprise the current occupiers.

There were a number of Lichtenstein works that were not the comic book images that I associate with him.  They were stylistically similar though and I liked them.  So much so that I lashed out three quid on some postcards which I have framed and added to my own little corridor gallery.
On the comic book image front there was something very interesting.  The gallery owns a piece called “In the Car” that they paid £100,000 for in 1980.  In a case in the room in which it was being displayed they had a copy of the image he used as a source. In the case there was also a quote from Lichtenstein – “ My work is actually different from the comic strips in that every mark is really in a different place, however slight the difference seems to some.  The difference is often not great, but it is crucial.”

I’m one of those to whom the differences seem slight and don’t seem to add £99,999.50 to what was probably the price of the comic. But there you are, that’s the mystery of art.
 
This Wikipedia article has pictures of both the comic and the painting so judge for yourself.  It also has the interesting information that another copy of the painting (a smaller one) was sold for $16.2 million ten years ago so it looks like our hundred grand was a good investment.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Septimo was the third of the Spanish film festival offerings that I saw.  A father sets off to take his children to school.  He takes the lift down from the seventh floor of their apartment building.  The kids run down the stairs.  Who will be first to the bottom?  It's their regular game but this time when daddy arrives at street level no children are to be seen.  The film is a kidnapping drama with its fair share of blind alleys and hopeful leads.  There's a little twist but it's a pretty conventional piece, entertaining enough and with nice shots of Buenos Aires.

Irrational Man was unconventional in as much as it was a Woody Allen movie in which he didn't appear as an anguished out of luck pursuer of the fair sex.  But he had a proxy.  I largely shared the critics' verdict of underwhelming but it was a decent journeyman product and the baddie got his comeuppance.

The wrongdoing of the protagonist in 99 Homes is overturned by the end of the film although in his case it's more a question of his innate goodness rising from the depths to which he has sunk.  This was an excellent, gripping tale of how a young man, evicted from his home thanks to nasty bankers wanting their money aided and abetted by a hardboiled estate agent/property speculator and desperate to get his home back, becomes an evictor himself.  Natch he loses the love and respect of his family in the process, suffers inner turmoil etc.  Eventually he sees the light and makes a heroic return to save a fellow suburbanite from homelessness.  Sounds banal, but a very good film.

And then a very good play performed well nigh to perfection by Bill Paterson and Brian Cox celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Lyceum Company with Becket's Waiting for Godot.  I saw several productions in the first couple of years after Tom Fleming took on the Lyceum in 1965 but can't say any have sprung to mind so far but I've ordered a copy of the book they've produced about those fifty years and look forward to having my memory prompted.

I've seen Waiting for Godot several times, not least a Kitwe production, though the one that sticks in my memory as being excellent was a previous Lyceum production.  This one seemed to bring out more comedy at the expense of its pessimism about existence.

There was nothing pessimistic about a wine and munchies get-together at the weekend where as well as being drunk the wines were scored by the participants and the person whose wine got the highest marks was rewarded with the accumulated differences between the price paid for each wine and the upper price limit of ten quid.  I didn't win but my wine was the best all the same.

Monday, October 05, 2015

The RSNO started off their new season with a big powerful work, Mahler's 2nd Symphony, known as the Resurrection.  When in the finale orchestra, chorus and soloists are all giving it laldy it raises the rafters and the spirits.

There are no rafters in the Usher Hall but there do seem to be new seats in the stalls.  They are pretty much carbon copies of the previous seats with one user friendly difference.  You used to see punters trying to find their seats bending down and peering at the underside seat numbers though even from that attitude they were almost unreadable.  The cognoscenti meanwhile would stroll along the row and place their ticket in front of the little golden plate and by some miracle of physics the number could be read effortlessly from a standing position.  Now bold black digits can be picked out instantly by anyone.

I'm not a great fan of the organ but amongst the works that I do like is Poulenc's Organ Concerto which I first heard at Snape Maltings while I was working in Norwich over twenty-five years ago.  I've seldom heard it live since so when I saw it was being played at Greyfriars I went along and enjoyed it very much.  I also enjoyed another piece that I've added to the small group of organ works that thrill me.  This was a very powerful and intense concerto by Kenneth Leighton

The beautiful organ of Greyfriars church
There's a Spanish film festival on in Edinburgh at the moment.  There are about a dozen films of which I have now seen two and will unfortunately see only one more. 

Everyone has heard of Federico Lorca, Salvador Dali, Luis Buñuel and a number of other men known collectively as the generation of '27 but that generation also contained a number of female intellectuals whose names are hardly known to the Spanish never mind the rest of us.  Las Sinsombrero is a documentary designed to open our eyes to eight of those women writers and artists.  It was an extremely interesting and enlightening film and is part of a larger project to bring those women and others back into the place they properly should occupy in Spanish cultural history.

Magical Girl could hardly be a greater contrast.  This feature film is the story of how the father of a young girl who is dying of leukemia sets out to satisfy his daughter's fascination with a Japanese manga character by buying her a dress and wand like the one illustrated below.
You sit back and relax thinking this will be a warm-hearted, moving little film that will bring a lump to your throat and may even require recourse to a tissue or two.  No such thing.  It turns out to be a much darker movie altogether involving blackmail, sadism and other nasty stuff.  I thought it was a great film but don't want to give too much away so keep a look out for it.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil took Scotland by storm in 1973 and played all over the country.  I didn't see it.  There was a TV version.  There was a radio version.  I didn't see them.  The show was revived to great acclaim in a tent on the Meadows in the 90s.  I didn't see that.  Nor did I see any of the occasional amateur productions that have taken place.  Well, I didn't know about them.

So when I opened the i in the train on my way to Oban and read that Dundee Rep were about to put it on I was delighted.  Here at last was a opportunity that I was not going to let pass to see what had become a legend of Scottish theatre.  I checked seat availability from the Mull ferry and was so busy emailing potential companions for a trip to Dundee that I didn't notice we had docked at Craignure and had to fight my way at speed through a swarm of boarding passengers for fear of missing the bus to Tobermory.

Emailing disappointingly resulted in a party of only three to attend the final matinee and indeed we were three but not the original three.  The play is performed within the setting of a ceilidh and to heighten that illusion a number of tables were set up on the stage and occupied by audience members who also had the opportunity to buy a wee dram from an on-stage bar.  Now this was very jolly and atmospheric and what not and I deliberately chose to sit there but really I'd have had a much better view from the auditorium.

It began with singing and dancing as a ceilidh would and then in a mixture of pantomime, satirical cabaret and morality tale it worked its agitprop way through the clearances (nasty landowners), the sporting estates (those nasty landowners again) and the oil boom (nasty foreign capitalists and local speculators).  Jeremy would have loved it.  The PM and his pig was too good a joke not to find a place as one of the few updatings and I suppose it fitted in with the general idea of the moneyed classes enjoying high jinks, though in that case no teuchters appear to have suffered.

While the show is extremely entertaining its hard message is that over centuries the land and its resources have been alienated from the people. By coincidence I had just finished reading The Poor had no Lawyers which is an excellent book about land ownership in Scotland from the Middle Ages to the present day.  The author, Andy Wightman, puts forward a number of legal and social changes that he argues are needed to reduce the concentration of land ownership in a small number of hands that continues to prevail in Scotland despite some transfers to community trusts and the like.

I imagine that when John MacGrath wrote The Cheviot he wanted to change things in favour of the common man rather than just illustrate his plight.  I fear that despite its succès d'estime it has failed in that respect. No matter, I enjoyed it.

I enjoyed also an open air meal after the show at the DCA in these unusually balmy Autumn days.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour was one of the big hits on the Fringe that I missed.  It's now on tour and I caught up with it in Kirkcaldy.

It's a simple tale of a group of convent schoolgirls down from Oban to the big smoke of Auld Reekie to take part in a choir competition.  In the time they have free before the gig they cast off such inhibitions as they may have had (though it doesn't seem they had many) along with their school uniforms and go on a bender.

I recently read an article about the teenage brain that says amongst other things "What is clear, however, is that it is absolutely essential to al1ow adolescents to make mistakes, and to allow them to do so in a safe environment which enables them to get things wrong and learn.

Drink, drugs and dangerous liaisons; these girls make mistakes all right.  Nobody dies so I suppose the environment of bars, nightclubs and dodgy flats in which the action takes place might just qualify as safe.  But have they learnt anything by the end?  I'm not sure, but it didn't seem to me that they were now set on a life of hard work and ladylike speech.  (The language is astonishingly filthy throughout.)

It's a high octane production whose cast of six perform with great energy and commitment.  They are superb in their ability to switch character in a trice with a change of voice, of posture or manner.  We are never in any doubt as to who they are at any point and there are many switches.  It's not a cast of thousands but the six actors do have to play quite a few parts.  And they have to sing.  They are a choir after all.  They sing a capella in serious choir mode but there is an excellent little band of three for the letting down of hair moments and the pop music soundtrack.

I admired every aspect of the production: staging, lighting, music, performance and pyrotechnics but I think I'm too old or too insensitive to find an adolescent coming of age story quite as thrilling as the critics did.

Monday, September 21, 2015

As well as being the first British man to win Wimbledon for however many decades, Andy Murray has now secured GB a place in the Davis Cup final in which we have not featured since 1978 and haven't won since 1936.  He had help from his brother in the doubles against Australia but it's essentially a one man team. 

This has made tennis fans here very happy but Belgian fans are surely delirious.  Their team won the other semi-final getting them their first final place since 1904 when they were beaten by GB.  The match will take place in Belgium and if the ticket prices are similar to the semi (most expensive 38 euros, about 30 quid) then a Ryanair flight plus a tennis ticket will probably come in at not much more than the £65 I paid in Glasgow for the cheapest seat.

I missed seeing the doubles either in the flesh or on the tele because I was at Pitlochry Festival Theatre with a group of chums to see A Little Night Music by Stephen Sondheim.  I'm not much of a Sondheim fan and was there primarily to be sociable but I liked the production if not the product.

Sunday night saw me back in Glasgow for a SNJO gig featuring saxophonist and composer Benny Golson.  At 85 he's still a powerful player and the orchestra did full and immaculate justice to his compositions.  He's also a great story teller and every tune was introduced with an entertaining anecdote.  He talked so much in fact that I caught the 11pm train home when I'd anticipated catching the 10 o'clock.  But it was an excellent evening well worth the late finish.

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

The weather forecasts suggested that the relatively pleasant and dry conditions would vanish after the music course finished but in fact Sunday dawned in a most acceptable manner and improved as the day went on.  I had booked to go whale watching but they hadn't got enough customers to make it worthwhile so I had to do something else.

I chose another boat trip and set off in a minibus for Ulva Ferry from where the boat to Staffa and the Treshnish Islands sails.  It's not a very long journey but was sufficiently choppy to make you feel you'd ventured quite far into the Atlantic.

Staffa with Fingal's Cave on the right

On top of the island - very flat
After a wander around we moved off to head for the Treshnish Islands to look for Atlantic Grey Seals and more particularly seal pups who should be appearing at this time of year.

Boat coming to collect us from Staffa for next stage
En route we saw lots of shags like the group below.

Bird Rock
There are a lot of little rocky lumps making up the Treshnish Islands and we pottered in and out of them in search of the elusive pups until the boatman declared that here was one.  As is usual with my wildlife pics the creature is not much more than a dot.

In this case it's the light brown slug to the right of the gull at the left hand side of the picture.  According to the boatman it was only a few hours old given its size and the fact that the gull and one of its chums were pecking at a bloody snack that he reckoned was the afterbirth.

Treshnish Seals
Tasty snack
The following day I went on a landbased wildlife hunt and the first thing we saw was more seals, but these were a different sort - common seals. The way to tell the difference between Atlantic and Common is said to be that one has the face of a dog and the other of a cat. Which is which? Search me
More seals
 Apart from those seals I saw otters, red deer, dolphins, golden eagles, two other sorts of eagle and lots of different birds but I have no pictures because mostly I was looking through binoculars or telescopes.  Just as well because otherwise I'd have seen nothing.

But I did see lots of scenery with the naked eye and took some pictures of it.







Wednesday, September 09, 2015

I'm just back from having a nightcap or three after an excellent dinner in the Mishnish restaurant in the company of the sax players assembled in Tobermory for a few days of making music and having fun.

I'm doing a bit of wildlife tourism at the end of the week, of which more later but in the meantime here's a shot of beautiful Tobermory from where I walked this morning.

Monday, September 07, 2015

I've managed to find a photo of the fireman dressed to attack our wasps' nest in Barbansais.