Apparently they do. Parody mugs featuring variations on their logo are pretty common. Here's one we picked up at the Hexham Car Boot Sale:
And there are others...
Wandering unsupervised in various real and imaginary places. Detritus reflects my interests in robotics, travel, history and the odder aspects of the world around me.
Apparently they do. Parody mugs featuring variations on their logo are pretty common. Here's one we picked up at the Hexham Car Boot Sale:
And there are others...
In the UK I stay at The Bowes in Bardon Mill. Great pub, and a brisk but relaxing walk up to the excavation site every morning. The first leg of the journey takes me right through a pottery yard, specifically that of Errington Reay and Company.
They make most of the stuff, specializing in salt glaze pottery. Other items come from elsewhere. And every year I have to survey the goods - in some cases as they survey me - and ponder....
The garden gnomes are rather cheery. I really like the pottery "Wellies" back behind them.
At opposite ends of the yard there were two objects d' art that have to have come from the same place. Although the herd of elephants is studiously looking down at their feet, this young lady seems to be shedding her jeans and her heavy sweater with abandon. I did not turn her around, although decency might suggest doing so. Did she have a tramp stamp/slag tag stamped into the glaze of her lower back?
Maybe the artist was going for something here. Rising above adversity? Growth and maturing? The goddess Aphrodite emerging from the swirling seas?
Or maybe she's just trying to get out of a really big sweater....
Something cobbled together for the team's annual banquet. Appropriately, for Team 5826, this was held on 5/8/26. I missed it, being in flight for England where in any case it would have been 8/5/26 which would not have done at all. 8526 by the way is the number of a defunct team down in Texas that only managed one season of competition.
When I retired at 60 it was with the notion that I'd do any darn thing I wanted for a decade, then slow down a bit. It was a solid plan, and has mostly worked out. Of course Covid swiped roughly two of those years, so I'm considering extending the "no limits" phase of my retirement years by a bit. Of course, you need to do the occasional reality check.
I don't drive in the UK. And when I go excavate at Vindolanda the local accommodations are finite. My preferred home base is The Bowes at Bardon Mill. It is down in the valley. The fort of Vindolanda was, logically for a defended place, built on a hill.
The linear distance is 1.5 miles for my morning walk, 2 miles for the evening return. I am in no rush in the afternoon, and prefer to avoid the up and down trek that my shorter, morning walk requires. The total end point elevation difference between start and finish is about 450 feet, but for the AM commute, its up and down a series of hills. I figure it is closer to twice that once you factor in giving back elevation with those down hill stretches. But is is a pleasant walk, and I do arrive on site warmed up and ready to haul barrows for the day. Here's a few highlights of the forty minute trek.
So every morning and every evening I dash across it.
The mornings are the tricky crossings. I'm on a time table, and there can be mist and such. So I've added a blaze orange hat to my travel bag. I wear it only for the Commute, once on site I switch to the hat bearing the image of my Spirit Animal, Bucky Badger.
With careful observation I'm always able to make the crossing without drama, but a year or two back an American volunteer on site made the mistake of looking the wrong way and did get injured. He's back on site this season I was pleased to learn....
The next segment of the walk features these guys. Despite the ominous clouds, their dark faces and curly horns, this is no big deal. A simple "scram" gets them out of my way. On the return circuit I walk through a pasture with cows, they can be a bit more difficult.
Old dogs on tea and biscuit break.
Here's the delayed Last Day report from my excavating at Vindolanda. The final day is always very busy. There are areas to be tidied up for the end of session drone photos, and the last 45 minutes or so are a highly informative "trench talk" where you go from one end of the dig to another and see what each small team has been accomplishing. Compliments are handed out liberally. The lead archaeologist would make a superb blarney dispensing small town politician.
Here's the site from the drone's eye view at the beginning of my hitch:
Here's the Period Four crew in end of dig pose. I really should remember to strike a more impressive stance for these, my belly is more prominent than it was when I started excavating at Vindolanda 18 years ago....
Sun and good spirits across the site on the last day of the session. Report on Day 10 and on various ancillary matters will have to wait a few days.
Shower-Curry-Pints-Sleep-Auto-Plane-Plane-Shuttle-Car that hopefully starts-Bed......
Oh, and I'll try to explain this guy.