Thoughts from a Devon Sitting Room

Recording my life in diaries and photographs, from heady days as a student in London in the 1970’s to being a pensioner on a low income today. My writing is a mixture of insight – from knowledge & experience – and history. I explore my professional and personal interests – energy & climate change, history, politics, music, film, food & drink… the list goes on!

50 YEARS OF PHOTOS

No.10: Dark Clouds over Westminster

Rather apt for current events! A photo taken on iPhone 6s in 2016.

  • Washing Woollens!

    Substack diary no.133: Friday 24th. April 2026

    Winter is well and truly over so it’s jumper-washing time! I have finally got around to washing my woollens this morning – two cardigans and two jumpers. Sadly, that is all I have, and one of those cardigans is over 25 years old and a cherished item of clothing. It is a dark grey snug-fitting warm zip-through cardigan in the M&S Italian range, a range which has long since gone out of existence. I wear it when I am out in town and when I want to feel good. I can remember when clothing for ordinary people was made to last – and it was much easier to avoid plastic fabrics. Not so easy now.

    I occasionally look for something similar to that cherished cardigan, and have done so for many years, but have singularly failed. It would appear that something of that quality and style is simply no longer available, at least in my part of the world. That, it seems to me, is a rather sad reflection on the clothing industry. Note I do not refer to the ‘fashion’ industry, which seems to think it is okay to wear something for a year then throw it away or give it to a charity shop. Please don’t wear what we made last year because people in town will laugh at you. And besides, we want to make lots of money and guilt-trip you into buying this year’s jumper. It’s a bloody jumper! I have one word for the fashion industry: bollocks. And, when so many items of clothing contain plastics – nylon, polyester, polyamide and so on – they are effectively non-recyclable.

    I do not like ‘man-made’ materials – never have done. Apart from anything else (plastic draws out sweat!) I get too much static when I take plastic clothes off, which can be unpleasant. Pure cotton; pure wool. What’s wrong with that?

  • Swansea field trip: the final days fading away into beer and a failed attempt to get home

    27th-29th March 1976

    After all the usual excitement of a geography field trip – touring the Gower Peninsula, measuring plant and soil types on a Valleys hillside, visiting Merthyr Tydfil and Port Talbot/Neath and a very strange remote pub – the final few days of the geography field trip just sort of fizzled out, but not without a cocktail of disappointment, amusement and beer.

    Saturday 27th. March

    The weekend started with a member of our group – Derek – wandering off on his own first thing. I am sorry to say that I do not remember Derek, but in my defence I certainly knew him then – and it was 50 years ago after all!.

    Most of us decided to head for the University and town libraries, which seemed eminently sensible – but not me. In the end I did a Derek and went for a walk around the city and nearby villages looking for tourist attractions. I have always been a bit of an explorer – a feature of my character that has never left me. Yes, on a visit to California I would of course visit Hollywood, but I would also drive up Route 1 towards Santa Barbara and take a random dirt road east, just to see what was there.

    (more…)

Recent posts

So who is Colin Anderson?

A Devonian with stories to tell and a love of history, science, philosophy, environment, & entertainment.

An increasing number of people I know are either down the rabbit hole or caught in its event horizon, which I find distressing. I prefer the real world and, like a frantic sponge, I cannot help but soak up knowledge, insight & quality.

Which I like to share…

USA 2016 travelogue

Scotland 2022 travelogue