“The ‘oover’s not picking up the fluff again” muttered the Ostrich.
You may recall last year’s debacle when we discovered we’d gone over three years without changing the dust bag ….
“Have we got any spare?” I enquired of Mrs O. Errrr yes was the reply, with a single one duly produced from the remote depths of the cleaning cupboard. This appeared to be the last bag of the batch, so Ossie made a note of the make and serial number with a view to procuring replacements from the local hardware store. A visit there on Tuesday and a ferret through the serried racks of hoover bags produced plenty of Henry’s but only two packs of Panasonic (our particular make), and those with a slightly different serial number.
But I was assured that with Panasonic, one size fits all, so I bought both 5-packs for a tenner and returned triumphant back to the Nest.
“I’ve got 10 new hoover bags; that’ll see us good for the next 10 years at the rate of one bag a year!”
“Why did you buy those?” quizzed Mrs O.
“Cos we’ve run out, of course!”
“No we haven’t, silly bird” – producing a large box from the back of the cleaning cupboard.
“You never told me we’d got some more”
“You never asked!”
Mrs O pulled a full pack out of the box.
“Oh well, look on the bright side, we can change the hoover bag six monthly then”
Mrs O pulled a second full pack out of the box.
“Alright, well every three months then”
Mrs O then pulled two more full pack out of the box!
“..... and these are the ones you bought last time you panicked and thought we’d run out …..”
“<sigh> OK, so we’ve now got 40 unused bags, then ….”
Anyone out there got a Panasonic upright hoover? Need bags?
After an unprecedented recent run of rugby matches, largely due to the abysmal weather conditions, I was due to return to the round ball game today – but on Thursday, an Interesting Thing caught my eye
. Both the local soccer and rugby clubs have strategic advertising boards out around town, and I idly noted that the rugby club was advertising a game against “Christchurch”. It took a moment to register – but, to the best of my knowledge, Christchurch doesn’t have a rugby club! (Well, Christchurch, New Zealand, does, but their team is packed full of All Blacks and it’s perhaps a bit of a stretch for them to be turning up at North Dorset RFC.)
So, Ossie put on his Sherlock Holmes cape and magnifying glass in hand
, hit the internet to try to find out what was going on. The first thing discovered on social media was that indeed, Christchurch, Dorset does have a brand new rugby club, launched this year, and it has a reasonably active Facebook page. They seemed to be playing friendlies against local clubs, and that fitted the general pattern in rugby union circles – play a season of friendlies, and for your second year, you get placed in a league proper.
Next, a visit to North Dorset’s club website, which was duly displaying an upcoming Second Team fixture against “Christchurch RFC First XV” – so far so good – and as that website is automatically linked to the RFU’s main portal, it suggested that the RFU’s own website might be of help in obtaining some further background on the new club. Which was where I entered the murky world of the Merit League tables
– social rugby outside the formal pyramid system!
The RFU site listed various fixtures and results for Christchurch RFC, and these were described as “Group 2”. Group 2 of what, precisely?
Entering “Group 2” into the weird and wonderful RFU search facility brought up some Under-16’s competition in Devon.
Well, reasoning if there’s a Group 2, there must be a Group 1, I searched that next, and finished up staring at a league based in Cumbria!
So then I just searched “Group”. Big mistake – by the time I’d reached the bottom of a ginormous list of Search Results which included the “Surrey Vets 4 Emerging Phase 2 Chairman’s Group” amongst other strange peculiarities
, I was still nowhere near identifying what “Group 2” actually was.
I then noticed that the “Group 2” reference to Christchurch’s results was itself a link, and clicking that brought me to something called the “Dorset & Wilts Matrix”, a competition I’d not previously heard of! And Christchurch appeared to be playing in that. OK, Ossie’s master spreadsheet duly updated for this new-found league, it seemed entirely appropriate to go see them play at Slaughtergate today. So I duly rolled up at 1:54 for a 2:30 kick off – and, after all that, found the game had been cancelled!!!
Which left me just six minutes to get across town for a 2:00 kick off at the soccer ground, a feat unachievable even at the best of times given all the usual local traffic snarl-ups.
I eventually made it at 2:07, and needn’t have worried because as I parked up, I could see there was only one team out on the pitch. Eventually Wool United made a begrudging appearance and we got under way.
The home team were Gill Dons, who up to last year played out at Donhead St. Mary but now seem to be ground-sharing with Gillingham Town, although it’s all a bit of a murgle because Town only have one pitch, and they also run a Reserves side called Gillingham Town Phoenix. The solution seems to be that Town’s old ground at Hardings Lane has been brought back into use this year – it’s about ¼ mile from the new Woodwater Lane campus. The old ground is in a sorry state now.
It’s easy to get into and has been the victim of petty vandalism in recent years, culminating in one side of the wooden grandstand being burnt down by local yobs using it as a drinking den last winter. The vast majority of the seats have been removed, but I was still able to get inside it and sit on bare concrete; at least it got me out of today’s very strong, chill breeze. Empty cans and smashed glass littered the floor, many advertising hoardings had been ripped down, and I was a bit perturbed by the sight of one of the floodlight pylon cables flapping loose in the wind.
The game itself was moderately entertaining, but with too many misplaced passes and poor play to be anywhere near being described as a classic.
That said, Wool’s portly goalkeeper played a blinder in the first half to keep his team in it, and Wool took the lead just after the interval when their No.6 launched a wind-assisted 35 yard lob which dropped just under the crossbar, defying the home keeper’s efforts to keep it out. Dons tried their best to come back from that, but Wool clinched it with a neat play on 74m, switching the direction of their attack superbly and unexpectedly from right to left, and when the home goalie could only block the incoming cross, Wool’s No.6 was on hand again to knock the ball in. A well-deserved if somewhat unexpected victory for the away side.
11/01/20 –Dorset League Division 1 (Step 9): Gill Dons 0 Wool United 2
Admission: free, no programme
Refreshments: A Mars bar for 90p from the nearby social club, (they fell out with the football club quite a while back
- I’ve never found them in practice to be that particularly social anyway
)
Attendance: 16