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!

No.7: Smart Ice

2018: There was no way I was getting into my Smart car – totally frozen over!

THIS WEEK

Morning Thoughts From A Devon Sitting Room

  • No.85, Saturday, 28th. February 2026

    I am not really having many thoughts this morning, or at least any thoughts that I could make sense of in a linear narrative form. I find myself sitting on the sofa facing the hi-fi, which is very unusual for me at this time of day. I am usually on the leather sofa facing the bookcases with a view out of the window to the cul-de-sac beyond. As a consequence I can usually also see the sky, clouds, trees, shrubs and birds, an ever-changing scene that from time to time I momentarily find myself lost in. But that is all behind me – literally. My hi-fi is motionless and unchanging.

    If I want to look out of the window I would need to make a special effort to twist around to an uncomfortable position that I could hold for only a second or two. I would get a brief and only partial  glimpse of an ever-changing world, as if my eyes were taking a photograph of a moment; a moment that may not be representative of the view and its events in this parcel of time.

    To use an analogy from music, in my present position I am ‘seeing’ a monotonous tone, essentially unchanging in the human eye and brain. In my normal position I have ambient vision; the monotonous tone is still there, but often deep in the mix, with layers of gentle modulation sweeping, at various subtly changing speeds and tones, over the top. It almost feels as if I am inside Brian Eno’s wonderful Ambient 4: On Land. The live version that will never be recorded.

50 Years Ago…

  • Friday, 20th. February 1976

    One of the best guitarists around – then and now – is Gordon Giltrap. Seeing him for free – to promote the new album ‘Visionary’ – was a a real treat. The new album was something of a departure from the complex folk tunes he was known for up to that point. He was drifting into rock, and even prog-rock.


    Earlier in his career he was managed by Miles Copeland, who also managed Wishbone Ash, one of my favourite bands in the early 1970’s. Later in 1976 I was to see him again – supporting Wishbone Ash on their tour.

    Gordon Giltrap Visionary – the album we were to hear previewed for free!

    This was a day of interesting and enjoyable lectures, some of which are prescient 50 years later. For example, before Giltrap I was in a Geomorphology lecture on sea-level change, which would prove useful when I came to my M.Sc. course in 2002 on Climate Change. The following Soil Science lecture was also interesting and, once again useful for my 2002 studies – soil being one of nature’s critical ‘free’ services that we are, sadly, eroding right now – at the risk of future food security.

    This evening was the GeogAss dance. GeogAss was the Geography Association, and we had a reputation to live up to! Of all the clubs and societies at the LSE GeogAss threw the best parties, with good music and wall-to-wall real ale. They were also the best attended, but my diary records a ‘disappointing’ turnout of only ‘100 or so people’. Sounds okay to me. The 50p ticket included a disco and a band – tonight the unpromising-sounding Country Vince. I have no memory of the band but my diary records them as being ‘not bad’.

    Apart from the 50p GeogAss ticket I spent £1.20 on beer, which would have been quite a few pints, and 17p on lunch. Interestingly I paid £8 in rent, which I suspect may have been for the month. At the time I shared a flat with two others, so that sounds about right!

RECENT stories

My home town in Devon since 1956! Many of these blog posts will be featuring Newton Abbot through the years but some will also be from around Devon.

A sample of 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…

Scotland 2022 travelogue

HOW I GOT HERE
and what I did along the way