Wednesday 23 January 2008

Last weeks news today..

One of the small snippets of information that came out of last week’s Heathrow crash was an interview with one of the passengers of BA038 from Beijing. After complimenting the pilots and cabin crew, he then put the boot in to ground staff while waiting to get checked out by medical staff.

"I asked if tea and coffee could be arranged and this fell on deaf ears"

What?! The plane only missed crashing in Hounslow by a matter of seconds and he’s going on about the tea?? I’d be straight off to the bar to clear out the champagne before hugging everyone in T4 for getting out alive. Perspectives man! You have just become a member of a select band of people to say you walked away from a plane crash. Enjoy it!

Book review: Charlie Connolly, Attention All Shipping


If you suffer like me from interminable bouts of Insomnia (usually when there’s an early start the next morning), the lilting melody of “sailing by” and the shipping forecast that follows it on Radio 4 denotes the fact that it’s almost 1 o’clock in the morning. If you’re still awake at such hour you may have given half a thought to what those obtuse place names that are called out to weary fisherman actually mean. Where exactly is Lundy? What are you supposed to do with a Dogger Bank?.

Charlie Connolly has thought these same thoughts and more. He’s actually done a whole trip around the shipping areas of the uk, to find out what’s the deal with this broadcasting institution.

Starting out from his home in Greenwich, Charlie trawls his way clockwise around the country and also popping over to such glamorous locales as North Utsire, (a bleak windswept isle), the independent and paranoid state of Sealand “we’ve had attacks on our sovereignty!” claims the prince. Which is more surprising, as the state is an old WW2 barrage 10 miles off the coast of Southend.

Through the course of his travels, the highlights are the small stories of how the sea has influenced the lives of those living at it’s edge or who’s living depended on it. Lovely tales abound of outstanding bravery from lifeboat men, eccentric lighthouse keepers and piracy on the high seas.