Monday, 30 December 2013
Sunday, 29 December 2013
What a week (and a half for photos)
I always say that we get good luck and bad luck in equal measure and sometimes things go wrong with my photography which is not all down to me.
And sometimes I get lucky too. How on earth did we get two fantastic days for photos on Christmas Day and Boxing Day when the weather was so awful either side? But there were so many opportunities to put my stack of cameras into action from the warmth of a house or bar.
It started at the Cave Reunion Christmas Party night at the Villa Marina when we met a few friends on the Friday before Christmas.
I had, literally, been running late and within an hour I had collected Robbie and we went for a walk around the quay and the promenade before picking up Marie's mother (not literally this time) from the Ellan Vannin Home, into which she had moved the week before.
Our Christmas lunch photo turned into a definitive family image - except that I am not in it! We were so pleased that Mollie was able to join us in her 90th year and Robbie had bis best Christmas for some time. Jenny and Ben had a couple of days off from their work as junior doctors at Nobles Hospital and stayed in the apartment. Even Marie's dog, Alfie, gets into the photo.
We left Mollie and Alfie behind as we headed for South Barrule and gate-crashed Noel Cringle's annual Christmas walk. I even got Scottish Under 21 international rugby player, Phil Cringle, to take the photo.
I was really nervous about the photos at Manx Harriers' SCS Boxing Day Relay at Stewart Clague's Ballannette Park - the photo opportunities were beyond belief. This one is of international cyclist, and also a former Northern 10 mile winner, Christian Varley. Some of the family "hand me downs" changed hands when he was little when Marie worked with Christian's mother Mary, from an office in our old house, for a time.
And here another photo from Ballannette with someone who has visited our current house plenty of times, Ben's long term friend Adam Killip, now an advocate, with the Laxey and Maughold backdrop.
It was virtually a stay indoors day the following day but we did have a visit from Andy Garrett, home from his role as Doctor of Sports Science at Hull University.
I've been promising Robbie a walk up Greeba Mountain on Saturday for a while but although the winds had dropped a little this Saturday was not the day for that. So we headed for Langness.
Having done a 12 mile run a 7 am and a walk with Robbie before lunch I was suitably handicapped by the time Marie had completed all her tasks and was also keen to get out in the open air. A fantastic walk from Port Erin around the coast to Fleshwick and back, mainly on the roads but including a track on which I had never been before, followed.
This afternoon we had the Eairy Beg Plantation at Glen Helen to ourselves, apart from Alfie, but we didn't quite make the summit of Beary Mountain, which I had rehearsed twice recently with Robbie, as Marie's foot was too sore.
I've sorted out loads of miscellaneous photos from my cameras, charged the video camera batteries ready for the New Years Day Fell Race at St Johns, produced a video from Boxing Day and, camera wise, I'm ready for New Year's Eve, New Year's Day and my first trip off Island for more than six months from Thursday to Sunday.
And sometimes I get lucky too. How on earth did we get two fantastic days for photos on Christmas Day and Boxing Day when the weather was so awful either side? But there were so many opportunities to put my stack of cameras into action from the warmth of a house or bar.
It started at the Cave Reunion Christmas Party night at the Villa Marina when we met a few friends on the Friday before Christmas.
And continued the next evening at Mike Byrne's 70s disco at the Woodbourne Hotel. Marian and Graham Young had gained a lot of hair since I had last seen them!
We went to a private party on Christmas Eve and I got nearly as many good photos of friends as I had glasses of red wine - and that was quite a few. Although I promised not to share the photos in public, I don't see why the same rules should apply to the one taken of us.
I didn't feel like pushing it on Christmas morning but I took my compact camera with me for a run along the promenade and around Douglas Head.
I had, literally, been running late and within an hour I had collected Robbie and we went for a walk around the quay and the promenade before picking up Marie's mother (not literally this time) from the Ellan Vannin Home, into which she had moved the week before.
Our Christmas lunch photo turned into a definitive family image - except that I am not in it! We were so pleased that Mollie was able to join us in her 90th year and Robbie had bis best Christmas for some time. Jenny and Ben had a couple of days off from their work as junior doctors at Nobles Hospital and stayed in the apartment. Even Marie's dog, Alfie, gets into the photo.
We left Mollie and Alfie behind as we headed for South Barrule and gate-crashed Noel Cringle's annual Christmas walk. I even got Scottish Under 21 international rugby player, Phil Cringle, to take the photo.
I was really nervous about the photos at Manx Harriers' SCS Boxing Day Relay at Stewart Clague's Ballannette Park - the photo opportunities were beyond belief. This one is of international cyclist, and also a former Northern 10 mile winner, Christian Varley. Some of the family "hand me downs" changed hands when he was little when Marie worked with Christian's mother Mary, from an office in our old house, for a time.
And here another photo from Ballannette with someone who has visited our current house plenty of times, Ben's long term friend Adam Killip, now an advocate, with the Laxey and Maughold backdrop.
It was virtually a stay indoors day the following day but we did have a visit from Andy Garrett, home from his role as Doctor of Sports Science at Hull University.
Having done a 12 mile run a 7 am and a walk with Robbie before lunch I was suitably handicapped by the time Marie had completed all her tasks and was also keen to get out in the open air. A fantastic walk from Port Erin around the coast to Fleshwick and back, mainly on the roads but including a track on which I had never been before, followed.
This afternoon we had the Eairy Beg Plantation at Glen Helen to ourselves, apart from Alfie, but we didn't quite make the summit of Beary Mountain, which I had rehearsed twice recently with Robbie, as Marie's foot was too sore.
I've sorted out loads of miscellaneous photos from my cameras, charged the video camera batteries ready for the New Years Day Fell Race at St Johns, produced a video from Boxing Day and, camera wise, I'm ready for New Year's Eve, New Year's Day and my first trip off Island for more than six months from Thursday to Sunday.
Thursday, 19 December 2013
You can't count friends
I've been out to post some more Christmas cards this evening . Only another 50 or so of the 180 that we send each year to go.
The people we send them to is a certainly not a chart of our best friends. Its often governed by tradition over the years. Some of the people we hardly ever see but we don't want to lose touch; some of them we see nearly every day but it is part of the relationship. But there are so many people we are close to that we don't send Christmas cards to. There are a few that we send each year regardless of whether we ever get one back.
I've made many friends through the website during the past 13 years but I don't send them all Christmas cards. A few of the people who contact me only do so to moan about some trivia or perceived hardship; others contact me to say that they appreciate the service or to share something really interesting and/or important. Others stay in the background but when I meet them it amazes me how much they have taken in from the website. "Who told you that?" I say."You wrote it on your blog" is the reply.
We entertained around 400 people in October but there were loads of people on our Christmas card list that we couldn't find room for. And since starting to use Facebook a couple of months ago I've made or revived loads of friendships with people who were neither at our party nor on our Christmas card list.
I went out with Marie to celebrate her birthday last night and whilst in 14 North we chatted to the dentists from the practice we spend too much time at. There is always a friendly face on the Isle of Man. But unlike Facebook you don't have to count them. You just know they are there.
From children's parties as in the 1999 photo to last weekend when Marie's mother moved into a residential home You don't count them, you count on them.
We are so lucky.
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
That car park
It's a quirk of the Manx athletics fixture list that we have three events in less than four that use the car park on the site of the old railway station for car parking. The winter league walk on Sunday is followed by the hill race this Saturday and then the New Year's Day Fell Race.
Here is a shot from our family photo collection from the early 60s. I think it must have been taken my my father, rather than my brother Mike who was into photography at a very early age, because I think it is him crouching my the level crossing gate. The train is arriving from Ramsey whilst there is another on the Peel line.
I think the building on the left must be one of the disused mart (market) buildings which I happened to photograph last Sunday (below) thinking that it will soon be gone.
I've been cleaning at our holiday cottage again tonight - we have one more family staying this year and they arrive next Thursday for a week. With some hard rock playing on the internet radio I reflected back on the great concert at the Gaiety Theatre last night when Manxman Davy Knowles and his band entertained a full house with guest guitarist Bernie Marsden formerly of Whitesnake.
In dawned on me that I am probably the only person to have used the car park at St Johns, to which I keep referring to, to attend a concert at which Davy Knowles performed.
In 2008 his band at the time, Back Door Slam, supported the Who at the Peel Bay Festival. Although we had already paid our £5 parking fee, so sure was I that traffic would be queuing half the night that I decided we should walk from St Johns.
Marie, Ben and I walked along the old Manx Northern Railway trackbed as far as Poortown Station and then walked to Peel along the Poortown Road. I think we walked back on the main road and by half distance all the traffic had disappeared.
The back route was slammed by my family!
Wednesday, 4 December 2013
Using past for future
How much should we dwell in the past? That's a question I often ask myself. Especially last night when I indulged with others of my vintage on Facebook recalling all the concerts we attended, and the under age drinking we did, in our youth around Douglas.
The easiest thing to have done this year with the www.parishwalk.com website would have been to have just done everything like it had been done before. But we can't just live in the past. If we just repeat everything we did the year before they will eventually become less interesting and not as good. As athletes, it would be soul destroying to do everything exactly as the year before. If we attended the same pub or went to the same concert every night after a while they would cease to stimulate.
So I looked critically at every page of the Parish Walk site and didn't reproduce it if I thought there was a chance to improve it. In some cases I did settle for what was there before but I put myself under a lot of pressure to make improvements, again just as an athlete does when trying to improve.
Getting the Manx Telecom Parish Walk, or any other event, talked about is a good part of making it successful. I believe we are doing it this year as evidenced by the high number of early entrants - 94 in the first three days.
The pressure to complete the www.parishwalk.com website left little time for this blog but hopefully I played my part in using the past to make things better in the future.
I have a critic on Facebook who thinks we should spend our future wealth on living in the past. Its got to be the other way. Enjoy the past but look forward to the future.
Easier said than done of course. When running this morning my back gave me a reminder of what I had done to it in the past and suggested there is not much future!
The easiest thing to have done this year with the www.parishwalk.com website would have been to have just done everything like it had been done before. But we can't just live in the past. If we just repeat everything we did the year before they will eventually become less interesting and not as good. As athletes, it would be soul destroying to do everything exactly as the year before. If we attended the same pub or went to the same concert every night after a while they would cease to stimulate.
So I looked critically at every page of the Parish Walk site and didn't reproduce it if I thought there was a chance to improve it. In some cases I did settle for what was there before but I put myself under a lot of pressure to make improvements, again just as an athlete does when trying to improve.
Getting the Manx Telecom Parish Walk, or any other event, talked about is a good part of making it successful. I believe we are doing it this year as evidenced by the high number of early entrants - 94 in the first three days.
The pressure to complete the www.parishwalk.com website left little time for this blog but hopefully I played my part in using the past to make things better in the future.
I have a critic on Facebook who thinks we should spend our future wealth on living in the past. Its got to be the other way. Enjoy the past but look forward to the future.
Easier said than done of course. When running this morning my back gave me a reminder of what I had done to it in the past and suggested there is not much future!
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
My first, my last, my everything
I really enjoyed competing in the Haldane Fisher Syd Quirk Half Marathon on Sunday. I had been running without a purpose throughout the summer but during the past couple of months, my knee and hip that caused me to call time on my marathon running last year, were benefiting from the lower mileage and I decided to return to the place I ran my first half marathon 34 years ago.
I moved back to the Island after four years studying in Stoke-on-Trent, albeit with two six month work spells, one on the island and one in Manchester, and started my first serious block of training, as a walker, in July 1979. After a little success that summer, but less so in a labouring job at Kirk Michael, I started my first permanent employment in the office at Ronaldsway Aircraft Company (RAC) in October 1979.
There were 650 people employed at RAC at that time but the Syd Quirk didn't start or finish at its social club in those days although we passed the factory three times not twice. The run was held on Sunday afternoon (it was only in the 90s that it switched to the morning) and started at Janet's Corner in Castletown.
After reaching Ballasalla village, we ran two complete laps of the six mile course. I finished third behind Steve Kelly and Dave Newton in 1:14:09 during my winter break from the serious walks.
I didn't do the 1980 event, I think it was the weekend I was in North Wales at my niece's Christening, but I had another bash in 1981. I took a break at the end of a long season of walking, broken my injury, from my evening training but did three or four runs around the Syd Qurk course during my lunch breaks at Ronaldsway. They had to be swift as the break was timed by a factory hooter and so I had to change, run, change again and eat within the hour.
I remember being hopelessly lost for pace as Steve Kelly and Dave Lockley covered the first mile in a little over 5 minutes but I passed Dave on the climb out of Balasalla on the second lap and he retired injured soon after. I kept Steve within my sights to record what would be my best half marathon time of 1:10:59. But boy was I stiff the next day.
I didn't return for 15 years but 5 years before that my brother Martin ran his one and only half marathon in the event - a respectable 1:21:44 which placed him 12th a time which would have placed him 10th in the perfect conditions of Sunday.
I had trained for a half marathon in the autumn of 1996 but it was the Robin Hood in Nottingham where Paul Curphey and I finished 20th and 21st and it was an afterthought that we did the Syd Quirk I recall lots of windy Syd Quirks but 1996 was one of the worst. Paul reversed our Nottingham positions in the smallest ever number of finishers but with some decent runners such as Peter Costley and Kevin Albinson among them.
Since then I have run it most years and even won it in 2004 - at 48 the oldest person to do so on another windy day. 2009 saw son Robbie run the best of his four half marathons, but the only one on that course, in 1:42:48.
On Sunday I recorded a personal worst but only by two seconds. Once again I had failed fully to take medical advice. Last year my GP recommended, rather than quitting running, keep going for up to an hour. Quite where a half marathon fitted into that plan I don't know but 1:25:14 was much better than the hour and a half I expected.
Here are all the Lambden performances in the event:
I moved back to the Island after four years studying in Stoke-on-Trent, albeit with two six month work spells, one on the island and one in Manchester, and started my first serious block of training, as a walker, in July 1979. After a little success that summer, but less so in a labouring job at Kirk Michael, I started my first permanent employment in the office at Ronaldsway Aircraft Company (RAC) in October 1979.
There were 650 people employed at RAC at that time but the Syd Quirk didn't start or finish at its social club in those days although we passed the factory three times not twice. The run was held on Sunday afternoon (it was only in the 90s that it switched to the morning) and started at Janet's Corner in Castletown.
After reaching Ballasalla village, we ran two complete laps of the six mile course. I finished third behind Steve Kelly and Dave Newton in 1:14:09 during my winter break from the serious walks.
I didn't do the 1980 event, I think it was the weekend I was in North Wales at my niece's Christening, but I had another bash in 1981. I took a break at the end of a long season of walking, broken my injury, from my evening training but did three or four runs around the Syd Qurk course during my lunch breaks at Ronaldsway. They had to be swift as the break was timed by a factory hooter and so I had to change, run, change again and eat within the hour.
I remember being hopelessly lost for pace as Steve Kelly and Dave Lockley covered the first mile in a little over 5 minutes but I passed Dave on the climb out of Balasalla on the second lap and he retired injured soon after. I kept Steve within my sights to record what would be my best half marathon time of 1:10:59. But boy was I stiff the next day.
I didn't return for 15 years but 5 years before that my brother Martin ran his one and only half marathon in the event - a respectable 1:21:44 which placed him 12th a time which would have placed him 10th in the perfect conditions of Sunday.
I had trained for a half marathon in the autumn of 1996 but it was the Robin Hood in Nottingham where Paul Curphey and I finished 20th and 21st and it was an afterthought that we did the Syd Quirk I recall lots of windy Syd Quirks but 1996 was one of the worst. Paul reversed our Nottingham positions in the smallest ever number of finishers but with some decent runners such as Peter Costley and Kevin Albinson among them.
Since then I have run it most years and even won it in 2004 - at 48 the oldest person to do so on another windy day. 2009 saw son Robbie run the best of his four half marathons, but the only one on that course, in 1:42:48.
On Sunday I recorded a personal worst but only by two seconds. Once again I had failed fully to take medical advice. Last year my GP recommended, rather than quitting running, keep going for up to an hour. Quite where a half marathon fitted into that plan I don't know but 1:25:14 was much better than the hour and a half I expected.
Here are all the Lambden performances in the event:
Position
|
Name
|
Time
|
Year
|
3
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:14:09
|
1979
|
2
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:10:59
|
1981
|
12
|
Martin Lambden
|
01:21:44
|
1991
|
2
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:15:51
|
1996
|
2
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:20:05
|
1997
|
3
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:18:43
|
1998
|
3
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:16:55
|
2000
|
5
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:23:14
|
2001
|
6
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:21:31
|
2002
|
3
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:21:35
|
2003
|
1
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:17:09
|
2004
|
3
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:17:48
|
2005
|
7
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:18:39
|
2006
|
5
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:21:53
|
2007
|
5
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:25:12
|
2009
|
30
|
Robbie Lambden
|
01:42:48
|
2009
|
6
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:22:51
|
2011
|
17
|
Murray Lambden
|
01:25:14
|
2013
|
Friday, 22 November 2013
Love at first run
This time yesterday I met an old work colleague who more or less said that she couldn't wait to move away from the Isle of Man. Most things were bad about the island and everything was going downhill.
I re-stated my belief that it is the best place to live and last night I thought about why I hold that view.
Firstly, although my sister and one of my two brothers, and their families, live off the island, the vast majority of my and my wife's relations live here. Its becoming rare to have such a concentration of relatives.
Secondly, the natural beauty of the Isle of Man is as good as it gets. I enjoy the nostalgic photos of the island, and some places have been spoiled by development, but there is still enough open space and so much variety of scenery.
Thirdly, economically the Isle of Man is in such good shape. I know that will sound like an empty statement to those loosing their jobs at Flybe or Mount Murray, but the vast majority of people enjoy a better standard of living here despite their protestations to the contrary.
And the fourth and final point as that we have so many friends here. I love travelling, sometimes to less than exciting places, but it always make me realise how lucky I am to live here.
My most regular travel for the past 20 years has been to the London Marathon. In the early years it was largely just with Paul Curphey but with occasional guest companions such as Richard Randle and Chris Quine. Our regular group grew half way through this period to include Mike Garrett and Nigel Armstrong.
Here we are being collected at my house by Mike in 2007 with Nigel's smile showing his already plotting some practical joke or other.
2008 was the only year Nigel and I started in the AAA section of the London Marathon. It was the London Marathon I enjoyed least as it was year I was learning to cope with exercise induced asthma but I am left with the memory of Nigel actually running in the opposite direction to the race to help me before I persuaded him to go on his own, or at least to run with Mark Clague.
Nigel is seen here with Paul and Mike at the Tower DLR station on one of our London visits.
Here they are in London 2010. Last weekend I booked their hotel room for London 2014 without the knowledge that they had been married.
I am so pleased for them.
(Sorry that this was left with more errors than usual but I took an important phone call whilst writing it at lunchtime.)
I re-stated my belief that it is the best place to live and last night I thought about why I hold that view.
Firstly, although my sister and one of my two brothers, and their families, live off the island, the vast majority of my and my wife's relations live here. Its becoming rare to have such a concentration of relatives.
Secondly, the natural beauty of the Isle of Man is as good as it gets. I enjoy the nostalgic photos of the island, and some places have been spoiled by development, but there is still enough open space and so much variety of scenery.
Thirdly, economically the Isle of Man is in such good shape. I know that will sound like an empty statement to those loosing their jobs at Flybe or Mount Murray, but the vast majority of people enjoy a better standard of living here despite their protestations to the contrary.
And the fourth and final point as that we have so many friends here. I love travelling, sometimes to less than exciting places, but it always make me realise how lucky I am to live here.
My most regular travel for the past 20 years has been to the London Marathon. In the early years it was largely just with Paul Curphey but with occasional guest companions such as Richard Randle and Chris Quine. Our regular group grew half way through this period to include Mike Garrett and Nigel Armstrong.
Here we are being collected at my house by Mike in 2007 with Nigel's smile showing his already plotting some practical joke or other.
2008 was the only year Nigel and I started in the AAA section of the London Marathon. It was the London Marathon I enjoyed least as it was year I was learning to cope with exercise induced asthma but I am left with the memory of Nigel actually running in the opposite direction to the race to help me before I persuaded him to go on his own, or at least to run with Mark Clague.
Nigel is seen here with Paul and Mike at the Tower DLR station on one of our London visits.
He has always been supportive and understanding with Robbie even though, as a Liverpool supporter, this cup of tea left a bitter taste.
Like all friendships, there are some differences. Nigel has yet to recruit any of us on his trips to the art galleries and other cultural activities. But he did used to take us to the Savoy Hotel for a post marathon drink and for the past three years to Jamie's Italian in Canary Wharf.
In 2008 he found someone with whom he appears to share all of his interests. He met Emma at the Comrades Marathon and the following week she was on the Isle of Man. Last month they married quietly in the states,
Here they are in London 2010. Last weekend I booked their hotel room for London 2014 without the knowledge that they had been married.
I am so pleased for them.
(Sorry that this was left with more errors than usual but I took an important phone call whilst writing it at lunchtime.)
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
Bridging the gap
I've punished myself tonight - for spending too much time on Facebook. I made myself do one of the website tasks that I have been putting off for months.
All the links for featured pages from the past thee months have been added to the archive page instead of sitting loosely on the home page.
But I need to be much more productive in the next 11 days if I am going to get the website for the Manx Telecom Parish Walk published on time.
Trouble is I that my social life has been a bit too active recently.
I may have retired early from Saturday night's pub crawl with Andy Fox and friends (above).
And I might not have travelled to Andreas for the Up & Running Winter League Walk on Sunday. But I did make Bride last night for the third time in less than two months and Marie's boss continues to entertainment visitors.
And the kitchen was bare at the end of the evening. As bare as the trees at Glen Helen which I visited twice within a few hours on Sunday. Firstly I went for a walk with Robbie (see top photo) and then returned to take photos and video of the Isle of Man Bank Hill Running League.
My biggest out of work challenge tomorrow is not my early morning training run after which I normally collapse. Its my quarterly night out with my former Cayman National colleagues. The last couple have seen me walking about two miles on a one mile course back from the pub. The staggering might have looked interesting had I warn a Garmin.
Thursday, 14 November 2013
This storm is nothing
I'm glad I'm not of the people on the ferry today (diverted to Birkenhead) because it is very windy around the Isle of Man. But the storm is nothing compared to what has been experienced in other parts of the world.
There were very mixed opinions yesterday about the Isle of Man government's decision to donate £100,000 to the emergency relief fund for the Philippines. My colours are well and truly nailed to the mast. I'm proud that the Isle of Man can give more per head of population than the UK. Its certainly nothing to complain about. I got quite worked up last night about the subject which was why I did a special design for the www.manxathletics.com website to make people consider whether they could spare a little cash for the helpless victims of the hurricane.
I'm told by my bother that I would also have got worked up had I attended the presentation about the Manx railways in Bromsgrove last night such were the inaccuracies in the facts presented.
https://www.facebook.com/mike.lambden.9?fref=ts
I think that steam railway enthusiasts (I know its unfair to bracket them all together) sometimes live in a fantasy world. "Fly to the Isle of Man - the only airport in the world where you can catch a steam train." They are visiting an island where more than one million sheep were killed during the snow last winter and where public transport is run at a profit (choke!).
Still I believe there are lots of steam railway enthusiasts visiting the Isle of Man this year and next. The other night I was talking to someone as rare on the Isle of Man as a farmer who is happy with the weather - a hotelier who is happy with his bookings.
Dave Mackey a the Ascot Hotel has a large contingent of railway enthusiasts visiting next summer and its great to hear that the outlook is so good. I just hope they don't plan to take the underground train along the promenade.
There were very mixed opinions yesterday about the Isle of Man government's decision to donate £100,000 to the emergency relief fund for the Philippines. My colours are well and truly nailed to the mast. I'm proud that the Isle of Man can give more per head of population than the UK. Its certainly nothing to complain about. I got quite worked up last night about the subject which was why I did a special design for the www.manxathletics.com website to make people consider whether they could spare a little cash for the helpless victims of the hurricane.
I'm told by my bother that I would also have got worked up had I attended the presentation about the Manx railways in Bromsgrove last night such were the inaccuracies in the facts presented.
https://www.facebook.com/mike.lambden.9?fref=ts
I think that steam railway enthusiasts (I know its unfair to bracket them all together) sometimes live in a fantasy world. "Fly to the Isle of Man - the only airport in the world where you can catch a steam train." They are visiting an island where more than one million sheep were killed during the snow last winter and where public transport is run at a profit (choke!).
Still I believe there are lots of steam railway enthusiasts visiting the Isle of Man this year and next. The other night I was talking to someone as rare on the Isle of Man as a farmer who is happy with the weather - a hotelier who is happy with his bookings.
Dave Mackey a the Ascot Hotel has a large contingent of railway enthusiasts visiting next summer and its great to hear that the outlook is so good. I just hope they don't plan to take the underground train along the promenade.
Saturday, 9 November 2013
An old friend
We went to see Midge Ure at the Centenary Centre in Peel. He has played several times before on the island but it was the first time that we had seen him.
I was back in familiar territory overnight with sleep loss due to my sore shoulders (too much time slumped over my computer) and more skin irritation. So I was later hitting the road today.
After a short run I took Robbie for a fairly long walk from Laxey.
We met the Kewley family emerging from the Salmon Centre cafe.
Us usual, I took loads of photos. These are just a few. using my old friend, my 2004 HP 945 camera.
Thursday, 7 November 2013
All fired up
Its not every day that you see a hotel room where you slept a month ago go up in smoke.
The last time I saw pictures of a fire on the Isle of Man quite like the one at the Mount Murray Hotel it was the terrible day at Summerland 40 years ago. Thank goodness that nobody was badly hurt today.
Thoughts quickly turned to spending the weekend at the hotel less than five weeks ago.
One of the guests at our party on the second night was my old class teacher, Alan Postlethwaite, pictured above with his wife Linda and myself by Mike Lambden.
It said something about the profile of the guests that we included three athletes in the guest list from Northern AC and the average age was 62!
I've just published another photo of Alan on the www.manxathletics.com website - running so well as a 66 year old is a motivation for me as I am 9 years younger.
I've always written flattering reports about Possie. If only he reciprocated:
Look what somebody said about me in 1974:
I've been all fired up tonight building up a head of steam with my exchanges of views with Allan Thomson on Facebook about the steam railway line to Ramsey.
Monday, 4 November 2013
Timing is eveything
I got my timing wrong this morning. I was 30 seconds into a run when a horrible wintry shower commenced.
It was slippy as I ran through Summerhill Glen and I'm sure the cross country this weekend will be a lot muddier than round one of the Microgaming Cross Country League.
I only fell over once on that occasion but if you are going to do it why not time it to slip right in front of press photographer Mike Wade?
Hopefully I'll be a bit fitter for round two because if you are going to finish well done the field timing is everything. My time against my rivals will count. So will yours.
Watch this space for race times. http://www.iomaa.info/crosscountry.htm
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