They say things always go wrong in threes, but with us, it seems more like seventy-threes.
The latest appliance to go pop is the Belling fan oven - this is especially annoying as it’s only three and a half years old. Why is that when you take out “extended warranties”, things work perfectly, and when you don’t (because warranties are expensive and things always seem to work perfectly), they don’t!
Anyway, the man from the electrical store will come on Tuesday to look at it. I suspect a £200+ bill may be in the offing .....
I think what it is is that the bottom heating element has gone in the main oven bit - when we were at the end of cooking Sunday lunch a week ago, something triggered the fuse box to suddenly cut the circuit, so I’m surmising it was a fuse blowing in the cooker as nothing else seems to have been affected. The fan still rotates, but the oven simply won’t get up to temperature. Tepid mushy peas!
Still, the top oven still works, so we're using that for now.
Anyway - a bonus Friday night local rugby game fot the Ostrich this week.
No discernible changes up at North Dorset’s Slaughtergate campus since last season, although they have installed a contactless Lavazza (?) coffee machine in the clubhouse; a rather lowering, squat black affair, the instructions for which are far too complicated for my feeble brain.
I’ll stick to ordering from the hatch!
The “Dorset & Wilts Matrix” is a competition for clubs’ teams that were not placed in the Rugby Football Union pyramid under their Grand Reorganisation during the close season. This competition has existed previously - back in 2019/20 it comprised two regional Groups of four teams playing before the Christmas break with a separate “Super Group” playing in the New Year. For 2022/23, it’s a season-long league with 9 clubs taking part, but already some games have been cancelled because one side or another has not been able to field a team
. North Dorset have resurrected their 3rds this season, the infamous “Buffaloes”, and in the Matrix they be. Basically, it’s social rugby with a slightly competitive edge.
We got underway at 19:38 for a 19:30 advertised start which here in Dorset is quite an achievement!
Weymouth & Portland started the game with two penalty attempts in the first 4 minutes and converted the easier second one from around 20 yards out. After that it was downhill all the way
! The Buffaloes took the lead on 8m with a lengthy mazy run by their very young, very speedy no.13, and this set the scene for the remainder of the game. North Dorset’s Facebook page had listed a squad of 23 players for tonight’s game and I suspect more than a few of them were last year’s Colts moving up - they have had a thriving junior section within the club for a number of years, and it looks like some really talented youngsters are now coming through to the Adult Men’s teams.
24-3 at the interval, the Buffaloes hit a purple patch on 60m with three tries in 5 minutes, one of which was a straight return from the kick-off. It’s not that Weymouth were bad, it’s just they were simply unable to get a sniff of the ball at times; North Dorset’s handling and their ability to find the gaps were superb. Eight home tries were scored in the second half and at least two more stopped on the line. 77-3 was a pretty accurate reflection of North Dorset’s domination of a game in which some very entertaining rugby was on display.
Friday 07/10/22: Dorset & Wilts Matrix - Group 1 (there is no Group 2!
)
North Dorset III RFC 77 Weymouth & Portland II RFC 3Free admission
Refreshments: Bacon and beefburger bap £3.50, ½ pint of Coke £2.25
(but served in a NDRFC logoed plastic cup which now resides in my display cabinet
). The catering here, sometimes a bit iffy in the past, has definitely improved. You can build your own burgers and the rabbit food has seemingly been consigned to the bin!
Attendance: a good turnout of 101
“Why are you wearing that silly white wig, Ossie?”
“’Cos we’re off to the surgery and I have a strong legal case that it’s positively unsafe to have both jabs in the same arm!”
Yes, the Ostrich has been scouring the internet and marshalling his arguments that the flu and the Covid jab should be in different arms. Quite a good article in “The Atlantic” magazine about this. Basically, the jury’s not yet back in on the subject, but the pointers are that it is best practice is to separate the jabs.
The surgery held their first immunisation clinic the previous Saturday, and by all accounts it was chaos
. They’d invited 700 folk on the day - people were having to stand in a queue outside the entrance which in turn affected the car park; that then meant all the local estate roads were clogged up, and there were reports of a half-mile tailback on the main road. We suspect that the surgery then started giving people both jabs in the same arm to speed things up, judging by some of the comments we subsequently heard, but that is just conjecture.
Anyway, thankfully this Saturday’s clinic went far better. They had done a deal with the Neal’s Yard premises next door, and the latter allowed folk to use their carpark. They’d also appealed for people to walk up to the surgery if they could. We fell into that category, and had a pleasant 25 minute stroll up the riverside path and across to the surgery, where we sat on a bench outside the pharmacy until our appointed “time”. There were no queues and we were straight in and out within 5 minutes. And jabs in separate arms - “Right is for PfizeR” - so no need for the bird to start pontificating on ‘Uman Rights.
Or should that be Avian Rights.
“Careful, Ossie. Don’t stick your head in the sand or they’ll be tempted to jab you in both buttocks!”
Then a quick turn-around for a short trip across the Somerset border.
No noticeable changes at the Castle Cary Cricket Club ground, also home for the local football club, since my last visit back in March. The free public car park in Catherines Close was full today, so I parked up on the Rec itself, following everyone else’s lead on the grass just below the clubhouse building. The Rec’s parking facilities are adequate, but you need to watch how you drive in and out of the narrow entrance; visibility is poor, the track bumpy, there’s a sharp curve, and I nearly winged a bollard. I then walked down into the town using the cut-through just beyond the public car park; you come out on Market Place by the Museum and close to the famous Bailey Hill Bookshop (£40 quickly spent!
) and visited the Coop for food.
Castle Cary were promoted at the end of last season and are currently hovering around the bottom of the Somerset County League Division 1, with their visitors Uphill Castle, from Weston-Super-Mare mid-table. Cary’s pitch (simply roped on all four sides, and on the far side of the cricket oval from the clubhouse) is flat between the halfway line and the Town end, but there’s a noticeable slope down from the halfway line to the other goal
. In fact, any ball leaving the field of play by the lower left-hand corner flag is in great danger of rolling right down the steep public pathway into Ansford
! The only pitchside furniture is a sturdy concrete dugout; most punters watch the game from the afore-mentioned path which runs behind it. A drawback is that there’s nowhere convenient to park weary bones if you’re reaching my age; I am going to have to start bringing along my own seat!
As for the game, it was one of those matches that get entered into the Master Spreadsheet and then promptly forgotten. All a bit incoherent at times with both sides happily cancelled each other out. Yes, a fair bit of goalmouth activity at both ends, but little to set the pulse racing. The short long story is that Uphill took the lead on 41m when their no.11 stooped to firmly head a cross just inside the goalpost; the home keeper stood no chance, and the equaliser came on 87m from Cary’s no.8 with an almost identical header from a corner.
The final score of 1-1 was a fair result, and was coincidentally the same as my visit last March. That game (versus Ashton & Backwell United Reserves in a top-of-the-table clash) was also a dour affair, but somewhat more memorable as it descended into multiple handbags with a sending off just before the end
. I ended my report last March saying “Let’s just say not the best of games today …..” and I think that adequately sums up today’s epic as well!
Saturday 08/10/22: Uhlsport Somerset County League Division 1
Castle Cary 1 Uphill Castle 1Free admission
Refreshments: didn’t investigate the clubhouse this visit. Cheese and red onion sarnie from the Coop (£2) and a large Aero bar (£1)
Attendance: 30