My new Book is published called "Hidden in View Photography 2011".
For a preview or to order a copy go to:
Sunday, 30 January 2011
Thursday, 8 July 2010
Want to learn Chinese??
My wife is getting more and more work now teaching Mandarin and Cantonese at schools, businesses and many private students on a one to one basis. She enjoys it very much and gets great results too. All her GCSE students did well. You can find her website at www.chinese-tuition.co.uk and on various index sites for local resources e.g.
Bristol Chinese Tutor
and Gumtree
The students take lessons for leisure, business or academic purposes and seem to really enjoy her friendly and interesting teaching style.
Bristol Chinese Tutor
and Gumtree
The students take lessons for leisure, business or academic purposes and seem to really enjoy her friendly and interesting teaching style.
Tuesday, 25 May 2010
Back to China
The Icelandic Volcano delayed our visit to China by a few days and having already booked a return flight to Beijing, I was less than pleased at having to buy extra flights to Hong Kong! Also had then to fly up to Nanjing for myy first meeting. Then to Chengdu, then Changsa and next by high speed train(200mph+) to Guangzhou.
The symposiums went well and were well attended with up to 200 attendees and I enjoyed the way in which my presentations were received and translated so well by Luo Huizhen.
We visited the hometown of Mao Tze Dong and had some great meals and rice wine which I am very fond of!
Great team of people to work with in each City and got to know the regional managers this time in addition to renewing aquaintenances with the President who is extremely good.
After a weekend in Guangdong we went back to Beijing for the final meetings with Lucy Zhou and Mr Ciao the President of the Beijing company. They took us to another superb restaurant and tea house and to the Temple of Heaven.
Monday, 13 April 2009
Birth Day Boy
Easter Sunday and a very auspicious day for the birth of our first grandson, as yet name undeclared, although Charles, Theo and Archie have been mentioned recently. Anyway baby brooks tumbled into the world at 3.13am 12th April weighing 8 lbs and 3 ozs but looks much older as he was a while overdue and came with a good head of hair!! So as our Lord is risen the baby was born which has to be a good start in life.
Our friends Marcus and Yue arrived back from Cuba minus the promised bottle of Cuban Rum!! Sadly for them their flight was routed back through Paris rather than direct to Heathrow or Gatwick and the French customs took the precious bottle of Legendario 7 year old rum, the bastards!!
While in Cuba they looked up our old friends Gasper and Hugo which was a great occasion for all as the Cuban colleagues have fond memories of other British visitors.
It was also the 50th birthday party of another friend on Sunday, so Melvin invited us to join him and his family for the celebrations which were blessed with lovely sunshine giving everybody the chance to enjoy the outdoor party. Thankfully his bottle of Jamaican Rum arrived ok!!
Saturday, 4 April 2009
This Country??
The picture has nothing to do with the content of this blog but I thought it was an interesting one to grab your attention!!
After a busy week at a conference in York, Weymouth and Bournemouth and a visit to Tesco, I scanned the Radio Times for the week just to check what might be presented to us for Holy Week, in particular on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.
At first my hopes were raised when I noticed that on the page that listed Good Fridays offerings, the margin of that page was decorated with images from the crucifixion in an artistic and tasteful manner. Imagine my disappointment and even disgust when I found NO religeous content at all on within the programmes listed!! I now discover that Great Britain, according to the BBC, is no longer a Christian Country!!!!!
There is NO reference to the Last Supper and no reference to the Crucifixion apart from Fridays tenuous link at 11.45am to "The Greatest Story Ever Told", rather an ancient american depiction of the story of Christ.
What harm would it do to have some religeous material on these days, tucked away on BBC3 or BBC4, by means of a televised service from Westminster Cathedral (not the Abbey, the lowest of low services) or any church that gives a worthwhile service with some reverence, good music, good silences and meaningful spirituality within it?
No wonder the country is falling apart at the seams and completely lost its way! We are more likely to hear or see references to a non-christian service on television nowadays. The government and the Beeb have gone far too far with its PC policies giving in to all other races, beliefs and non-British culture at the cost of sacrificing most of Britain's culture and history.
Moreover there is a very strange anomoly presented by HM Government! My wife, who is an immigrant, has to take a citizenship test shortly and has been avidly studying the course available on a CD/DVD. One of the questions was what perecentage of the UK is Christian? The answer apparently is 71.6%! Well, you could have fooled me on that one. If this is so why doesn't the BBC represent this within their programming over the most important religeous week of the Christian calendar? Just in passing, my wife has converted to Christianity during her 2 years in this country including baptism and confirmation.
Well I have had enough of this nonsense and would say that if immigrants don't like British culture, beliefs,laws, religeon and politics then they can go back to where they came from!
If any Brit tried to reject another countries culture,law and beliefs in say a Muslim country, then the Brit would end up in prison, or at best deported.
We are happy to tolerate freedom of belief and cultural differences but NOT AT THE EXPENSE OF OURS.
SO BBC, PLEASE GIVE US OUR CULTURE AND BELIEFS BACK?
Interestingly enough, just to prove how far the rot has set in, a colleague of mine recently told me of someone he knows who is getting married on Good Friday"! So just as they nail Christ to the Cross the unfortunate couple will be at their marriage, what about bad taste and bad luck? I am amazed beyond belief at their ingnorance or their lack of taste and equally amazed that none of their family or friends told them what they are doing. Also I am surprised that the Registrar agreed to marry them that day, or am I? After all the Registrar IS a CIVIL SERVANT and A) would not know any better and B) the Government would not know any better either. They are too busy working out how they can further enhance their earnings or expenses like charging pornography to the public purse!
Saturday, 28 March 2009
Hold on please!!
This week I visited a remote farm and barn in Herefordshire and was confronted by an amusing sight. The picture illustrates the temporary support measures that the local builder provided to the wall of the barn..............
As you can see there is a canvas strap through the window / door reveal opening and then it is ties around the nearby TREE!!!!
I also went to Cardigan and spotted this sight outside the Town Hall.
Last night I attended a Faculty dinner where the guest speaker was Ann Widdicombe, who , to my surpise, was quite entertaining. The star of the evening though was Terry Langdon of Gleeds, the incoming President, who had me in stitches. He described the professional members of the Building Team as follows:
The Architects as knowing a little about quite a lot but as they progress through their careers end up knowing very little about nearly everything; the Structural Engineers as knowing a great deal about very little and who end up knowing everything about nothing; the Quantity Surveyors he described as those, who after the battle, go around bayonetting the wounded; and finally the Lawyers who follow them by skinning the dead!
My apologies for anyy errors in my memory of these descriptions. But I firmly believe that the Faculty will have a good year under Terry's guidance.
Have a good weekend.
As you can see there is a canvas strap through the window / door reveal opening and then it is ties around the nearby TREE!!!!
I also went to Cardigan and spotted this sight outside the Town Hall.
Last night I attended a Faculty dinner where the guest speaker was Ann Widdicombe, who , to my surpise, was quite entertaining. The star of the evening though was Terry Langdon of Gleeds, the incoming President, who had me in stitches. He described the professional members of the Building Team as follows:
The Architects as knowing a little about quite a lot but as they progress through their careers end up knowing very little about nearly everything; the Structural Engineers as knowing a great deal about very little and who end up knowing everything about nothing; the Quantity Surveyors he described as those, who after the battle, go around bayonetting the wounded; and finally the Lawyers who follow them by skinning the dead!
My apologies for anyy errors in my memory of these descriptions. But I firmly believe that the Faculty will have a good year under Terry's guidance.
Have a good weekend.
Wednesday, 18 February 2009
Praze-an-Beeble
The title of this blog, Praze-an-Beeble, is the name of a the village which I drove through to get to Godolphin House, a superb grade 1 listed granite built building dating from Tudor and Stuart times where once lived the Godolphin family until the 18th century. It is now owned by the National Trust but currently closed for some urgently needed restoration work. The collonade has some structural problems which the architects, conservation specialists "Architecton", aked me to look at.
Anyway, back to Praze-an-Beeble, which I hazarded a guess at the origin of this peculiar sounding appellation. I enquired of the National Trust buildings man, Malcolm who is a local person and extremely amiable, and confirmed my guess. The inhabitants of the eponomous village were strong Methodists and the adjoining villages referred to them as "all praise and bible people" hence the Cornish vernacular corruption into praze-an-beeble!
The other property which I visited was a fairly remote farm over the moor from the famous Daphne Du Maurier Jamaica Inn. It was a medieval hall house which was greatly changed over the centuries but retains its original "crossing" twixt animal house and human house. There are a number of ancient original features around the building too including granite gate posts, animal water troughs and steps.
The property can only be accessed by a track, which crosses a stream, and is totally unsuitable for any vehicle apart from a 4WD, so on this occasion I excuse the owners for possessing one!!! It is truly a beautiful collection of buildings encompassing a lot of history and set in a wonderful location. Once again I am lucky to see and work on such places.
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