21st June: Ten Things of Thankful

Things for which I give thanks this week…

1. – We managed a day out to Hebden Bridge where we stopped at our regular coffee shop and managed to fill in all the obvious words in the Daily Mail Saturday mega crossword whic h required ongoing coaxing and focus to achieve. the Daily Mail is an obnoxious tabloid rag but we buy it only for the crossword – the rest goes straight to the outside lavatory for toilet paper ) or would if we had one…)
I didn’t take any pictures except this one to illustrate how steep the town is at its fringes – follow that road up – it must reach 1:3…

2.- I have been preparing for two new hobbies bookbinding – I have some volumes that are precious but in need of some repairs – and cyanotrope print making – as always, as soon a s you watch one video of something on Facebook, your feed is flooded with them! I sent for a book on bookbinding and as my friend Akua is running a Mini-book exchange of Speculative Poetry books, my first attempt is a concertina fold miniature book containing a single poem…

Everything is miniature except for the bow since I can’t tie one smaller than this!
One down – two to go…

3.- Cyanotropes prints are made by coating paper or fabric with special chemicals (which I have now ordered) – placing plants, feathers, stencils or negatives onto the prepared sheet and exposing it to sunlight (ultra-violet) and once washed, the exposed areas turn dark blue. As a young teen, our neighbour’s son, who was doing a PhD in chemistry, made up a chemistry set although he didn’t follow through with any experiments to do! I managed to spill on e clear liquid on my bedroom carpet and to my horror, it turned into an ever darkening stain – I have reason to believe that this was one and the same chemical…
I used to have a large flower press when we lived in Ireland but abandonded the wooden bits when we moved back, but kept the threaded rods and so to furnish materials for the cyanotrope prints, I have cut some new pieces of wood and on the way back from Hebden Bridge, picked some bits and pieces to press – watch this space…

4.- In one of the living room (upstairs) windows, is a Yucca plant which has grown evermore contorted as it fills the available space and last year, I had to remove a branch which was growing into the room, spindily from lack of light. I cut it up and planted the lengths in pots from which I got two successful takes.

The two babies are shown below, however, growing in the foreground pot, is a vigorous “weed” called Creeping Wood Sorrel. I showed you some of my windowsill gardens before and in one of them, which my late sister planted, was this self same plant. It has trefoil leaves like clover and whilst the plants in the office are spindly from lack of water (the rest of the garden are drought tolerant succulents) nevertheless, it not only returns each year but displays an astonishing trick. Once the minute seed pods are ready. the fling out their seeds – explosively – and we find them not only coating the windowsill but stuck to the paintwork 2 and a half feet above.

The wonders of Nature know no bounds…

5.- Evidence of our English eccentricity, below is a scooter belonging to a neighbour just around the corner. If you are English, you will recognise this pimped up scooter as as the preferred mode of transport of the “Mods” – “celebrated” in the film Quadrophenia which features the music of The Who…

Apparently the Mods are still alive and well and at least one lives round the corner…

6.- Our run of rainy weather has been replaced with another heatwave – it will reach 30°C on Wednesday…

7. My beloved New Jersey based writing group is taking its Summer break after tomorrow but that will let me type up some of the pieces before the Autumn as well as have time to do the Poetry Postcard Festival in August – if you are interested in sending 31 spontaneous postcard poems to strangers (and receiving 31 back) you can sign up here.

8.- Glad to see the numbers at this here TToT are rising and enjoying the new contributors of gratitude…

9.- Glad for my health…

10.- Glad to feel, as my friend Akua says by way of a signature expression “Joy in the Making”…

Have a wonderful week y’all…

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Utility saints

If only I had been born Catholic
a Saint for every occasion
Saint Anthony would have been on speed-dial
since I was always losing things
I was well known for it—that and
forgetting what I was going to the shop for
but now I have acquired the habit
of carrying a little black notebook sadly
not for the phone numbers of paramours
but that I might return from the shops
with what I went for, amongst other things
and when, as a vicarious observer
of the sainted folks, I heard of
Saint Jude, Patron Saint of Lost Causes
I had a sneaking affection for him
I bet he would know how
to help a serial forgetter of shopping.

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub,  Björn Rudberg (brudberg) in Uncategorized, invites us to submit a poem of our choice for Open Link Night which will also be live on Saturday 20th 10 AM on New York time…

14th June: Ten Things of Thankful

Things for which I give thanks this week…

Grateful to keep my hand in with surveying and drawing up buildings. My boss met a fellow Pakistani entrepreneur whilst on a recent business trip to China (Its a small world) and we went to Bolton for me to draw it up with a view to creating a self-storage warehouse…

I had to take Barbara for a blood-test in Skipton and thefar bank of the stream which runs past the surgery, was lined with Angelica. I love the sweet, herbal taste of Angelica. I once infused some stem and some Fennel heads in gin – a great success… Angelica, whilst not rare, is rarely seen in such profusion hereabouts…

And also at the peak of its blossom this week, is Elderflower. I remember my parents attempting to make Elderflower Champagne but every bottle exploded…

I have not shared a texture photo for a while but I happened upon a sleeping dragon and quietly photographed its scales!

Truthfully, it was a car front grille that caught my eye in the supermarket car park and an amuse buoche, as I crouched to take the phote, a woman leaped out of the driver’s door asking what was wrong – I hadn’t noticed the two women sitting chatting inside lol…

After the blood test, Barbara and I drove to our son’s house in Leeds to deliver an important medical letter (he is still registered at our surgery so his post comes here) – it was raining as it has all month and so harly suitable for an outdoor coffee (outside for smoking unfortunately) but unwilling to drive staight home, we made ourselves post-men. It was a two-hour round trip so I put mt Spotify on to entertain us, and more than once, i found myself tearing up at the tracks that shuffled on. The first time I found myself unable to sing a song (accompanied by my ukulele), was Elvis Presley’s In the Ghetto – both the sincerity of Elvis’ delivery and the nature of the song made it impossible for me to sing it. On our trip to Leeds, on e tearing up was The Walking Song – paean to friendship by the late Kate McGarrigle and her sister Anna. The other was Strange Fruit – the Nina Simone cover, although Billie Holiday’s original is equally if not more powerful.

It occurred to me, that this tearing up is a form of gratitude – for the life and musical contribution of a singer no longer with us, or for a deep sentiment painfully articulated…

A pen-pal of mine wrote a poem for her acquaintance, the late, great Sonny Rollins which you can find here

On which note I wish you all a safe and happy week…

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Elevenses

At the eleventh hour we stop for tea
biscuits – bourbons, custard creams and digestives
birthday cakes for birthday boys and girls we see
abstemious or decadent their choice lives
or dies, pointer to their personality
but cake is cake, no judgement do we give
anything that elevates the office day
is most welcome so we always like to say
a merry office band forged in this routine
so that whatever friction there has been
dissolves in tea, lasting discord seldom seen…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVesre Poets Pub, Laura Bloomsbury in Meeting the Bar: Critique and Craft is the mistress of poetic form and today invites us too write either a Hendecastich , a form by Michael Fantina, or the one I have chosen to write to (first rhyming scheme) – The Eleventh Power by Christina Jussaume:

  • 11 line poem
  • 1 stanza
  • 11 syllables per line
  • rhyme scheme of abababccddd or ababababccc,
  • an uplifting theme

An Inquisition of Punctuation

Is poetry a written form
or is it meant to be read
aloud      if only by
the voice in your head
Concrete poems would convey
nothing of their shape by recitation
whilst Limericks demand
reading aloud their ribald rhymes
no hesitation
and if as poet you hope for
someone else to do the honours
consider giving a little guidance
in the matter of delivery
a comma gives the slightest pause
especially midline for line breaks
require not the little tadpole
or even a period’s emphatic end
I like a space hyphen space
to indicate a slightly Longer pause or
see line three for a positive gap
a dramatic pause
a pause for effect

In Ulysses
James Joyce
gives us a manifesto
for stream of consciousness
but Virginia Woolf in Mrs Dalloway
reads so much easier
the stream guided with a
modicum of punctuation

Unlike composers of music
we poets are not tyrants
issuing cryptic instructions
in superscript
for volume and speed
forte and piano
andante and lente
leaving limited room for
conductors’ interpretation
we poets trust our readers
to read and rehearse
to infuse the best intonation

The semicolon has no place
in poetry or fiction
that tadpole crowned with a dot
and do all questions
require a question mark
I’ll let you be the judge

And so to round off poems
stories and comments
my addiction is to the ellipsis
whose merits I have debated with
tonight’s muse and I think
she is persuaded that
it means so much more than
duh duh duh
for me the ellipsis
leaves a little open
forgoes finality
invites contemplation
if not response
and so I give you
an imaginary ellipsis

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, Melissa Lemay in Uncategorized (Poetics), invites us to write without punctuation…

7th June: Ten Things of Thankful

Things for which I give thanks this week…

  1. Misky’s series of poems The Old Woman With No Cat which always makes me smile if not laugh out loud – the entire series is available to read here: The Old Woman With No Cat.
  2. I have come to the top of the waiting list for a partial lower denture courtesy of the student dentists at Leeds Dental Hospital. I have been a volunteer patient for the students on and off since 2015 and have passed through the hands of about 5 or 6 generations of studnts. Treatment is free bar your dedication to turning up every other week for a whole morning or afternoon. I enjoy the contact with this age group, the free treatment up to and including, crowns, bridges, and now a denture. I also enjoy popping into the Leeds Art Gallery and taking a look at som favourite paintings.
  3. I hope I haven’t shown you this before, but it is a large painting (c 9′ x 5′) of a Norwegian fiord and both the painting and the subject are stupendous…

4. I am grateful that before the age of photography, painters recorded scenes of historical significance – even if they had to employ considerable imagination. The painting below tells a sad tale form the days of the infamous British Empire and yet another ill-fated attempt to control Afghanistan. You can read the story below…

5. Summer is the time for nature in all ots fecundity and I offer a selection of “weeds” which have caught my eye this week…

I don’t know what these purple “weeds” are but one man’s weeds are another man’s flowers…
Albrecht Durer painted a littlr watercolour of a “foot of grass” and in this tribute, you can see how many plants have colonised what began as planted grass – clover, dandelions, buttercups, and I can see at least two species of grass and i don’t know what else…
This is no weed except by virtue of its growing in the wrong place – it is, I think, Wheat!
Some people take no care of their front urban “gardens” except to clear all vegetation from them periodically, but here, Blackberry runners are eagerly racing out in all directions from a tiny diamond of bare earth…

6. My weather app says expect Saturday to be the first rain-free day – AND ITS SUNDAY!!! Still, gratefull not to have to be watering the garden.

7. Grateful that biting the bullet and paying for a continuous blood monitoring device has brought my diabetes under better control…

8. Ten Things of Thankful…

9. The sun has just come out…

10. Something that is on the tip of my tongue…

Have a great week, everybody – stay safe and healthy!

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Breakup 101

I sometimes wonder if the internet
was made for people to share
their 101’s with others
first came porn, stimulating the medium
just as it had with home cine film
then the cat lovers started sharing
cats doing the strangest things
long before AI allowed you
to craft such behaviours to order

Companies got in on the act
and no firm was complete
without its website
schilling its wares in
better or worse fashion
after all, you get what you pay for
with advertising and websites

Steadily, though, in the background
the democracy of individuals
shared their passions in ever more
sophisticated 101’s. How to make
kombucha, kimchi, and sauerkraut
How to do Tunisian Crochet and Why You Should
4 Ingredient Low-Carb Bread
seedy crackers, cottage-cheese cheesecake
recipes from every culinary tradition and country
liberally seasoned with adverts
As 101’ers try to monetize their craft

But where is Break-up 101:
50 Ways To Tell If Your Relationship
Is On the Point of Collapse
– is this too negative for jaunty bloggers
will it fail to garner followers
and accrue comments
old-timey newspapers and women’s mags
had Agony Aunts who responded
to readers’ letters
“Dear Joyce how will I know
If he loves me so…?”
And songs dispense wisdom
“There must be 50 ways to leave your lover”
“Should I stay or should I go now
If I go there will be trouble
And if I stay it will be double”

Did the meme of inevitable collapse
fail to make the grade
on the World Wide Web
or am I just stuck
in the wrong silos…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, paeansunplugged in OpenLinkNightUncategorized, invites us to submit a poem of our choice…
I wrote this in my writing group in the shadow of “My Mother’s Love” by James Allen Hall to the prompt, “Write about a time when collapse was inevitable…”

Something Blue

Something old, something new
Something borrowed, something blue
And a sixpence in her shoe.

Something blue
blue notes?
Blue Moon
full twice in a month
Singing the Blues
but not today
– getting married
in the morning!
this morning
no more Harvest Moon
fear and fumbling
stripping off
something borrowed
for the hope of
fertility
Making Whoopee
though we know
how that ended up
will you still love me
When I’m Sixty-four?
– there may be trouble ahead
Stormy Weather
Life is an ocean
Love is a boat
put a sixpence
in my shoe
here goes nothing…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, Dora in Poetics, invites us to riff on one or more phrases from the Victorian rhyme:-

Something old, something new
Something borrowed, something blue
And a sixpence in her shoe.

Weddings, love and the blues are the subjects of so many songs and who knows what streams through the consciousness of a bride to be…

A to Z Challenge 2026 – Reflections Post

I started writing and preparing for my chosen subject of “Fabrics and Fibres We Wear” months in advance of the Theme Reveal, so by the time of the launch, i had done a lot of work and I also knew that I had bitten off more than I had ever done before for the A to Z!

The choice of subject came from my own curiosity about fabrics – especially those with strange names you only come across in historical novels and as well, I dabble in fibre crafts such as knitting and Tunisian crochet. In this respect, I more than satisfied my itch, uncovering all sorts of nuggets of knowledge that gratified me, but the question is, as always, will it hold the interest of readers of the A to Z? Well the pages received 300 views over the course of April, a good few regulars came, read and commented and showed as much delight as I did at the various topics – which is all that one can hope for! I expect that the posts may gather an organic growth of readers in the future as I feel it is quite the resource in the end – anyway, i shall keep an eye on the stats…

I didn’t finish all the posts ahead of time so there was a good week of pantsing it at the end and once that starts, there is no time to anything other than answer comments, so I did not achieve as much visiting as I would have liked but heigh ho – the posts are still there to be visited! Blogs I did manage to read and enjoy up to the point of pantsing, include The Multicoloured Diary, with her wonderful collection of Hungarian Folktales, Uniquely maladjusted but fun, where Jamie ran a scavenger/crossword hunt, Li gave us Artwork and Poetry Forms at The Versesmith, whilst Tamara of Part-time Working Hockey Mom transported us back to the 80’s! The A to Z would not be the same without Anne M Bray’s Pattern Recognition in which she celebrates the shoe designs of the Canadian firm Fluevog by first sketching one of the shoes and then turning it into a fabric repeat print. Another printmaker is Anne E.G. Nydam – a lino/rubber print maker who this year gave us extracts of her new self-illustrated book of reworked fairytales over at Black and White (Words and Pictures) and lastly Josna Rege of Tell Me Another.

In answer to the team’s questions

  • 1. I am in favour of the Theme Reveal – it gets the ball rolling…
  • 2. Its good to focus on the experience for a moment and review the other people who have contributed to your experience
  • 3. The graphics this year have been great as always!
  • 4. I did largely meet my goals but I am definitely going to choose something a little more modest next year so I can spend more time bloghopping…
  • 5. See above for favourites…
  • 6. I did have comments from co-hosts thank you
  • 7. Favourite comment:- “So much great information! It makes me want to return to sewing – Ronel at Ronel the Mythmaker” (My job is done!)
  • 8. Cai crossed over from my Ten Things of Thankful postings and visited regularly and obviously enjoyed the whole challenge even though she was not participating.
  • 9. I participate in Ten Things of Thankful
  • 10. I loved Zalka’s Hungarian folk tales and Anne E.G. Nydam’s reworked fairy tales.
  • 11. I will take part in A to Z 2027 but I will pick a less challenging subject (quantitatively!)
  • 12. I suggested my R for Recycling post as it has the greatest message in need of more publicity…
  • 13. I will be visiting a lot of posts I missed over the next year and perhaps the A to Z blog itself…

Good Luck and Good Blogging y’all, for another year!

27th May: Ten Things of Thankful

Things for which I give thanks this week…

We managed to get out on two of my non-working days this last week! Barbara’s COPD caused us to buy a “boot-scooter” before our holiday in Holland as without it, she would be too breathless to go anywhere and we were determined to keep up the momentum of days out. So on Friday, we went to Knaresborough, about 45 minutes’ drive and I duly unloaded the scooter (it separates into a number of components without which it would take two people to lift it out) and we set off for the round of favourite spots. After the Crystal shop, we went to the square for a coffee (see below). all was well until we were ready to move on whereupon we simply could not find the ignition key to the scooter – searched high and low – gone – complete mystery! I had to push the scooter back to the car… Where’s the grat in that you may ask? Well, it turns out that for this make of scooter, all units have the same key, so I was able to purchase a new one the next day, from the local supplier. I said to Gavin – “Doesn’t that mean that anyone could take it easily?”, “Well,” he said, “the incidence of crime amongst the disability scooter community is very low -in the 20 years I have been dealing with them, I have known of only two thefts – one of our forecourt and one in which the purchaser of the stolen scooter came in to buy a charger and we were able to reunite the scooter with the owner!”

In Knaresborough with the scooter…

On my way to purchase the spare key, I drove the scenic route over the top as it was a lovely day and stopped to take this picture of our village, Silsden, more or less in its entirety… As you can see, we are in Buttercup season!

Then on Sunday, we went to Hebden Bridge, which I have shown you something of before, but there is always something new to notice there…

These bands bearing spheres slowly rotate on a vertical axis, rather like electrons in an atom so that the clock never looks quite the same…
These Alliums are a favourite in municipal gardens and they look so good in a massed display at this time of year…

This lady is always in the square in Hebden Bridge – all weekend! She has advocated for the Palestinian cause for many years prior to the current genocide and given the current Labour government’s disgusting attempt to repress support for Palestinians in favour of the zionist occupiers, this lady risks arrest for waving the flag. Mind you, if the police tried to arrest her, they would instigate a flash-protest-mob and so probably know to leave well alone…

Hebden Bridge is nestled into a valley so steep that it is fit only for trees and you wouldn’t want to live there if you couldn’t master the steep streets…

Before the industrial revolution and the advent of large mills, weaving was a cottage industry and weavers’ workshops were on the first floors with long rows of windows to give the maximum light to work by. This one is now a café but you can see the rough-hewn stone work of the windows…

A magnificent climbing rose on the Hebden Bridge Arts Centre…

Lastly, we are having a heatwave and I took the redundant heating controller outside to record this temperature in the shade! The grat is that we don’t have a hosepipe ban as yet, this year…

I hope you are all having whatever weather it is that you need or desire and that you are all having your most gratifying week possible…

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