Kaz wrote:Little Puddle anyone, or Lower Slaughter?
Not to be confused, of course, with Upper Slaughter …
Another slow week for the Ostrich, spent writing out Christmas cards and gently commencing the Christmas food shopping. Mrs O has demanded that one of Ossie’s Brexit Survival Food Boxes be emptied so she can stash away her shortbreads and iced fruit cakes, leaving the bird with the dilemma of what to do with 16 cans of Heinz Baked Beans.
“I guess I’ll just have to eat them, then,” mused Ossie.
“Not all at once!” commented Mrs O
So the Ostrich’s loss was the local food bank’s gain, and a Merry Christmas to One and All.
Saturday dawned sunny and bright, and it seemed a pleasant enough day on which to get arrested for espionage!
I had fancied a Yeovil and District League game featuring a team called AFC Huish, but research showed they played at Vixen Close, Ilchester, Somerset which turned out to be firmly inside the Fleet Air Arm’s RNAS Yeovilton air base. Google Street View shows a main security entrance with signs saying “Park Here” and “Report to the Guard Room There”, which rather left me wondering if I turned up on spec at the barrier demanding entrance to see a Step 12 junior soccer match, they might just consign me to the Tower of London, or at the very least dangle me upside down from a Wessex helicopter.
The Yeovil and District League does not have its own website, neither does AFC Huish. Social media twitterings are years out of date. The FA FullTime website, which is a very useful tool for non-league fixtures and results, does run a page on the League, and that indicated there was a 2019/20 League Handbook, which was supposedly on-line. But there was no link, and could I find it? No.
It’s probably lurking somewhere on the dark web or over the rainbow. The bottom line is I suspect casual spectators at RNAS Yeovilton are discouraged pitch-side, so I duly knocked that one off my list.
Anyway, RNAS Yeovilton have been very naughty boys this last week.
You may or may not be aware of “Operation London Bridge”, which has nothing to do with terrorism, but is a codename that refers to the plan for what will happen in the days immediately following the death of Queen Elizabeth as far as the civil and military authorities are concerned. The code phrase “London Bridge is down” will be communicated by the Palace to the Prime Minister and other key figures, once the death has been confirmed. to set the plan in motion.
Well, from time to time, they carry out rehearsals to make sure everyone knows what they supposed to be doing.
And a London Bridge practice “recall notice” for military personnel at Yeovilton was sent out last weekend. All fine and dandy, except someone there with the social media handle “Gibbo” thought it was for real and tweeted about it on his WhatsApp Group.
From where, of course, someone else took a screenshot of his remarks and the whole thing went viral! Apparently, within, 24 hours it had been shared by thousands worldwide and was trending on Twitter.
Buckingham Palace were forced to issue a denial of the Monarch’s demise, and the Royal Navy to regret “any misunderstanding which may have been caused”.
I suspect if they still have keel-hauling in the Senior Service, “Gibbo” may be in for it. Or dangling from the same helicopter as the Ostrich!
Report from the local Portsmouth newspaper here:
https://www.portsmouth.co.uk/news/defen ... -1-9165820So anyway, for today’s match, I decided not to brave Yeovilton but to journey just up the road from there to Castle Cary for a rugby fixture. I know Cary well; Mrs O’s parents spent many happy retirement years there, and we’d often visit the town back in the 1980’s and 1990’s. It hasn’t changed much in recent years, although fast trains to Paddington from the nearby station have ensured it’s become commuter-belt London and therefore a bit up-market. One interesting feature near the market place is the town’s 18th century roundhouse prison:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Ca ... 472113.jpgThe rugby ground is out beyond the station just off the Shepton Mallet road, and the clubhouse itself is quite an impressive structure, with a large entrance lobby in which is displayed the Honours Board, dating back to the club’s founding in 1888, and old photographs of Past Presidents, including the very first, a Mr. J. S. Dorre, sporting a very vintage bowler hat.
On a table nearby were copies of the “Mendip Times” magazine, and idly flicking through the sports section, I found a long report of the Witham Friary Conker Committee’s annual tournament in which one George Hyde had been crowned King Conker after seeing off all rivals, apparently including his teenage son!
Entering the main function room, I found it was splendidly decorated with a fair few Christmas trees, and tables were laid out for the Club Christmas Lunch. Guests were arriving and as outside caterers had taken over the kitchen meaning no hot food on offer to casual visitors, I took myself back into Castle Cary itself to visit the Bailey Hill Bookshop (£30 easily spent) and to garner a couple of cold Ginster’s slices on offer at £1 each, which reminds me, one is still in the fridge, so there will now be a short intermission as Ossie is a tad feeling peckish!
Before the match started, I noticed most of the club patrons, having concluded their meal, were congregated in a circle at the top end of the ground, so being inveterately nosey, the Ostrich wandered over to find a tree-planting ceremony in progress. This was in memory of “Neville”, presumably a club stalwart, and the chosen sapling was a genuine Somerset cider apple tree. After a short address from, I assume, the current Club President, the already 10 foot tall sapling was manoeuvred into its hole, and the first spadeful of soil spread by the (widow?) (daughter?). Other guests then added their spadefuls and to applause, the ceremony was completed by the pouring of a jugful of cider over the tree for good health and fertility. An event both joyful and moving.
The match pitted Castle Cary, who had been relegated last year but are having a reasonable season this year, against Minehead Barbarians second team. And it was quite an absorbing game – plenty of skilful running rugby with just a little niggle between the teams that never boiled over, but saw one Cary player sin-binned for handbags at dawn and their coach lectured at some length by the referee for some dissention or other.
Minehead opened the scoring, but Cary hit back with a peach of a try, their no.10 fielding a long kick downfield before running it back wide round the Minehead flanks and then chipping it forward over their defence. The ball sat up beautifully for the Cary player as he followed it through, and he was able to gather it and run in under the posts.
14-5 at the interval, I suspected Cary, going downhill in the second half, would probably overwhelm Minehead, but the visitors actually kept them pegged back in their own half for long periods. Cary eventually managed to collect 4 tries and a bonus point, but the final scoreline was a bit harsh on the Barbarians; it certainly wasn’t a one-sided match.
07/12/19 –Tribute Somerset 2 South (Level 10): Castle Cary RFC 26 Minehead Barbarians II RFC 5
Admission: free, no programme
Refreshments: A rather large lemon and poppy seed muffin from the bar for £1.20.
Attendance: 74