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.9: Golden afternoon in Le Castellet

1982: relaxing in Le Castellet in the Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur region in south-east France. I love this area – not too far from Toulon.

Photographed with Canon 450D. Negative scanned using Silverfast 9SE & Silverfast HDR. Processed using Lightroom.

  • Crashing Curtains!

    No.117, Monday, 6th. April 2026

    I was feeling low yesterday and I hope that today I will be better. It no longer comes as a surprise to me that the smallest things can get you down, but the real intuition comes from the realisation that when things go wrong and you feel miserable as a result, it is the overpowering sense of helplessness that can lead to despair. Yesterday it was something as apparently silly and seemingly inconsequential as curtains and a curtain pole crashing to the ground, and it marked the end of a process that I hoped would improve my life ever so slightly. I went from being pleased with myself to tearful in seconds. The underlying cause of some of the misery I feel from time to time is simple: I am a private tenant and inherently feel insecure.

    I love films and I am lucky to have a collection of discs and a good cinema system paid for before I retired. My dual-aspect living room – let’s call it a cinema room – has windows of unusual size. I have nets up at the windows on both walls, but no curtains. Consequently, all I can see on the TV screen, whether it is on or off, is a crystal clear reflection of my garden through French windows. The obvious answer would be to hang good quality daylight-blocking curtains, but because I am a tenant the cost is prohibitive: if the rent goes up and I have to move at short notice, what are the chances of them fitting in my next home?

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  • Who decides what is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty?

    Wednesday & Thursday, 24th/25th. March 1976

    Swansea field trip day 3

    Day 3 and our intrepid geographers make the short trip from Swansea University to the Gower Peninsula. We were here to gain a ‘feel’ for the place in a combination of coach tour and very windy hill walking.

    I am fairly sure that the objective for the day was to ensure we were told as little about the objective as possible, in order to ensure we would develop as objective a view of the landscape as possible. Does that make sense?

    Possibly not, but all became clear as we headed back, sooner than anticipated, to university. An early dinner followed by “…a bloody great long lecture on landscape evaluation…” according to my ever-so succinct diary entry.

    I was not expecting this, and I suspect most of us were now thinking that perhaps we should have paid more attention on our little tour. For some reason I found that many of my classmates seemed to be focussing a greater than usual degree of attention on me. Very nice, but why?

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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