28th February 2021
Dear All,
This week has been dominated by Zoom, Ivy stripping, walking and the
garden gradually drying out a little.
The extra Zooms this week were a Garden Club talk for Chesterton GC and
a couple of U3A lectures one on Antimicrobial resistance and one on China. Giving
talks on Zoom is not too bad but you are screened from any audience reaction as
they are all muted so you have no idea how it is going down until question time
at the end. The Antimicrobial talk was by Dame Sally Davies ex chief medical
officer for England. She is very worried about over use of antibiotics due to
over prescription, use in animal feeds and fish farms and less development of
new actives by pharmaceutical companies as they have lower profit margins
compared to medicines which are prescribed for life.
The China talk was
delivered by Prof. Alan Macfarlane an
anthropologist and historian, and a Professor Emeritus of King's College,
Cambridge. He is the author or editor of 20 books and numerous articles on the
anthropology and history of England, Nepal, Japan and China. He is extremely pro-China and stressed all the good points in modern
China and tended to gloss over any negatives. He claimed there are now more Buddhists
and Christians in China than Communists. Also, China has lifted more people out
of poverty in the last 30 years than any civilisation in history.
Kate and I have spent three sessions stripping ivy off of gateposts and
gravestones in the cemetery. It was much more difficult than we imagined as it
was a mass of thick stems and packed roots. We had a large bonfire yesterday
and happily it burnt very well.
Gateposts
Gravestone before
Gravestone after
We haven’t planted anything outside yet but it has been dry enough to
hoe and dig and planting has continued in pots in the greenhouse.
On Thursday we walked the Willingham Fen, Gravel works, Earith,
Rothschild Way, River Ouse, RSPB loop. It was much drier than of late and
sunshine all the way. There was again plenty of bird life especially geese
everywhere.
Early (grubby) lambs
12 furrow reversible articulated plough
Gravel works
A still damp field!
Yet another new Badger Sett
Geese at the RSPB
“Biographies” topic this week was “Frank Ramsey” 1903 to 1930, born and
raised in Cambridge, son of a mathematician who was extremely bright and contemporary
of Wittgenstein, John Maynard Keynes and Bertrand Russell and brother of
Michael Ramsey who became Archbishop of Canterbury (he himself was a militant
atheist). He excelled in mathematics himself as well as philosophy and economics.
He died aged 27 having contacted a liver problem swimming in the Cam.
Frank
Ramsey
With love
Mike & Kate