You may recall that last Saturday, I attended the local surgery for my annual influenza vaccination. Well, as sure as eggs is eggs, on Wednesday Ossie went down with the bird flu.
Story of my life! And this is also where a casual post on VV by Jan nearly got me into BIG trouble.
Discussing evening fayre on one of the “What’s for Dinner” threads at the start of last week, after I’d made my usual repetitive post about Ossie’s soup diet, Jan had posted:
No chocolate digestives then Ossie?
I laughed it off – but the following morning, up at the Co-op, and feeling very much under the weather, I came face to face with the Special Offer stand:
“Twin-pack McVitie’s Chocolate Digestive Biscuits £1.50” Arrghhh …. Comfort food; the seed had been sown.
Choccy bikkits have been banned from the house by Mrs O for some time now
- all to do with the bird’s weight and blood/sugar levels. So smuggling the illicit goods in through the front door, and thankfully finding Mrs O otherwise engaged elsewhere, Ossie was able to sneak them into a drawer of his bedside cabinet, which he proceeded to “visit” at odd times during the day.
But it was a risky place to hide them; an alternative had to be found. And what better place than the old, redundant biscuit barrel in the kitchen, something that has not been used for many a long year. It’s what’s called “hiding in plain sight”.
And all went well until the hapless bird, on one of his nocturnal visits, accidentally dropped the metal lid on the newly panelled kitchen floor.
We must draw a veil over what happened next …… Let us just say: “More in sorrow than in anger”.
By Friday, the Ostrich was coming out of his 48-hour bug, and set out down the town to complete the usual shopping chores. He also had a letter to post, and stopping at the local post-box, he found something wasn’t quite right.
Now down here in rural Dorset, we do have one or two peculiar pastimes, and one of these is half-inching post-boxes.
Yes, now you see them, and now you don’t. In big cities, they do ATM terminals. Here, it’s post-boxes. Usually the ones that get nicked (mainly from remote rural laybys) are the VR or G VI R ones that do have a bit of a collector's market value. However, the one near us was decidedly a modern, nondescript E II R one, and of no intrinsic value - and now there was just a hole in the ground ….
So, as I was going past there anyway, I popped into the Royal Mail depot just off the High Street.
“Um, you know that post box just by the country park ….”
“Yerrrssss …”
“Well, it’s not there any more!”
<sigh> “You’re about the 50th person that’s come in this morning and told me that!”
“So it’s definitely been nicked then?”
“No, it’s Health and Safety”
“Pardon”
“The pole had corroded, we’ve had to take it down before it fell on somebody”
So nothing for Crimewatch UK, then, and the errant box should be back in around 6 weeks’ time after refurbishment!
Saturday, like the previous couple of days, dawned wet and murky, with that incessant drizzle that the BBC Weather App likes to call “Light Rain”.
I had intended to travel to Downton, just outside Salisbury, for an FA Vase cup tie, but still slightly under the weather myself, and not entirely back in Mrs O’s good books after Biccygate,
I very nearly cancelled all sporting activities this weekend as I could see games locally being called off due to waterlogged pitches - but just after 2:00, I decided to drive over to Sturminster Newton on the off-chance to see if their reserves game was going ahead. It’s not that far, so no great loss if I arrived and found the fixture postponed. The roads were pretty awful; wet, muddy, and at least two stretches where water draining off the fields lay entirely across the road. But on arrival at Barnets Field, I found the game on and the teams warming up.
The opposition were Handley Sports FC, from Sixpenny Handley, just over the other side of the Cranborne Chase.
In the first two minutes, we had two glorious chances; Handley’s keeper pulled off a great finger-tip save at one end before a home forward missed a complete sitter in front of goal at the other. After that, bit of excitement, things settled down. You’ve probably heard that unfit blokes of a certain age are being encouraged to take up Walking Football (i.e. no running!) for health’s sake – well, this game developed into a sort of Ambling Football. Everything was done at little more than a jog. Even the sliding tackles on the extremely wet surface were more like a slow-motion car crash than a desperate lunge. Additionally, to paraphrase a well known quote: “Never had so many passes been misplaced by so few.”
Still, plenty of chances were being created, and the home team eventually notched a couple of goals before the interval, the first a right wing cross stabbed in at the far post, and the second a rather neat move through the middle.
In the second half, Handley didn’t help themselves with a bout of ‘effin which led to their no.11 being sin-binned
, but on 79m, they were awarded a direct free kick on the edge of the penalty area which their no.16 launched over the wall and into the net with the home keeper completely rooted to the spot. Sturminster nearly shot themselves in the foot when their no.8 was also sin-binned for dissent, but the 10 men managed to hang on for a 2-1 victory. Overall, an entertaining match, given the soggy conditions.
12/10/19 – Dorset League Division 3 (Step 11): Sturminster Newton United Reserves 2 Handley Sports 1
Admission: free, but a donation box was brought round in the first half – I gave £4; someone’s got to fund the referee's expenses after all …..
Refreshments: half-time cuppa tea £1 and free bikkits!
The Ostrich was (reasonably) restrained.
Attendance: 26