First, a statement from HRH The Ostrich.
The bird would like it known that despite having travelling to Woking many times in recent years to see Woking FC, Westfield FC and Sheerwater FC, he has never visited the Pizza Express there, refutes all suggestions he has ever purchased a Porchetta or a Quatro Formaggi, or been photographed in the company of dubious ladies. Not only that, it’s in the opposite direction from the road to the Laithwaite Community Stadium (I’ve checked!) and I’m not that keen on Italian anyway ….
Tuesday, and an early departure with Mrs O on the 09:18 to Wimbledon, to meet Master O, DiL and G/S. With looming rail strikes all through December
, we thought we had better get a visit in. The 09:18 actually starts at Gillingham so we readily got a seat, and with the necessary change at Woking (yes, that place again!
) onto the local stopper, we were exiting Wimbledon station at just after 11:30 to greet the younger generation, repairing over the road to Elys Restaurant; Elys is a large department store along the lines of Debenhams / House of Frazer, with lots of brand franchises (all the usual suspects like Lacoste, Elizabeth Arden and Hugo Boss) and I’m sure you’d all love it, with the possible exception of Crommers who, like me, would probably be worried about t’amount o' brass you could get through in a very short time there.
https://www.elyswimbledon.co.uk/about-elys/https://www.elyswimbledon.co.uk/restaurant/Seeing as how we were in London, the first thing we did was purchase a very sharp knife!
Nothing to do with personal protection; everything to do with chopping sweet potatoes and carrots for the Ostrich’s Famous Soup, as our existing ones are getting a bit blunt. Mindful of Stop and Search, however, I sneaked it into Mrs O’s handbag
so I could adopt an innocent expression if the worst came to the worst.
It was a Sabatier knife and cost £24.50 - that was with 50% off! Anyway, a happy day out, a good browse around the Christmas displays with Mrs O generously buying toys for the G/S, and the trains ran smoothly for once.
So to this week’s sporting extravaganza, and with the nights drawing in, dreary wet weather now abounding, and a new series of The Brokenwood Mysteries * airing at 6:00 on Saturdays on the Drama Channel
, I’m going to remain fairly local at least until Christmas, setting out to knock off a few nearby grounds I haven’t previously visited.
First up, then, a short trip to Blandford rugby club, which is in a housing estate a quarter-mile or so off the by-pass on the north-east side of town. There are two roads to get between Shaftesbury and Blandford - the “Top Road” and the “Bottom Road”. The top road, once you’ve negotiated the 20 mph stretch through the Village of the Jammed (Melbury Abbas), is a straight run across the top of Cranborne Chase, but on days like this, prone to extremely low cloud. The bottom road (the main A350) in contrast is extremely winding, and on days like this is prone to flooding! I opted for the former, and had to deploy the fog lights in the murk …..
Blandford’s ground is owned by the local council and called the Larksmead Recreation Ground. It’s dedicated to rugby; there’s two pitches with the training pitch floodlit, and a small nondescript brick clubhouse featuring a number of identical white wooden doors, none of which were marked. So I found myself in the home changing room whilst trying to find the bar, and a cleaning cupboard with a Henry hoover whilst trying to track down the loo.
The bar was laid out with simple formica trestle tables and some sort of sit-down Club Meal was being served to members; nothing elaborate, mind, it looked like chicken curry and peas.
The clubhouse is elevated from the pitch, and I perched on the small veranda so I could get a good view of proceedings. All was calm until two minutes before kick-off when, with a mighty roar, the opposition Weymouth & Portland team suddenly burst out of a wooden door directly behind me!
The Ostrich panicked and flew shrieking into the rafters!
An impeccable one minute’s silence was observed before the start - I have no idea why as nothing was announced, and can only assume it was a very late running Armistice Day commemoration?
https://www.facebook.com/weymouthportla ... 38/?type=3Both sides have made a strong start to the season, although unbeaten Dorchester are currently running away with the league. I was expecting a competitive, low-scoring game, and in the first half, that’s exactly what we got. Plenty of skill on display, some nice running moves, and the home team were deservedly just edging it 11-7 at half-time. But talk about a game of two halves – the Seahorses (Weymouth & Portland) snatched two quick tries just after the break, the first a nifty rolling maul that flummoxed the home defenders, and the second an unstoppable rampage down the middle by their gargantuan lock forward Tim “Yogi” Comben! Matt Savage was immaculate in his place-kicking and with the score an emphatic 11-24 after 58 minutes, the Seahorses were able to open up and play some very attractive running rugby, eventually clinching a 16-37 victory. They move up to 3rd in the table, and well deserved their bonus-point win.
23/11/19 – Wadworth 6X Dorset & Wilts 1 South (Level 8): Blandford 16 Weymouth & Portland 37
Admission: free, no programme
Refreshments: no hot food on offer to spectators today, so a mugga tea and a packet of Jaffa Cakes £1.60. We shall draw a veil over the Best Before date on the latter ….
Attendance: 82
* New Zealand’s answer to Midsomer Murders, and as mad as a box of frogs.