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.6: Thorns in Ice

2018: whiteout in the garden

THIS WEEK

Morning Thoughts From A Devon Sitting Room

  • No. 77, Friday, 20th. February 2026

    After a day of doing almost nothing I suspect I am likely to achieve little today. I am recuperated and could get on with finishing a task that has occupied me for much of the week but, even if I get started on that, I shall be interrupted by having to leave home at a quarter past one to get a bus into town. I have an appointment. Furthermore, this break in my day, which need be no longer than two hours, will be extended by at least another two because I rashly suggested to my son that I could meet him in town for a drink afterwards.

    I have learned this lesson so many times in the past: do not make commitments unless you know you are definitely going to be able to keep them. The reason? I do not like to let people down. I pick my words carefully, so ‘I will see you at 2 on Wednesday’ is definite, whereas ‘I may be able to make it on Wednesday’ is a possibility – no promises.

    However, for some people the words ‘possibly’ ‘perhaps’ and ‘maybe’ are heard and recorded as definite set-in-stone covenants. My mother is one of them, and as a result I have learned to rarely make plans at all, if only to save upset when a tentative plan is perceived as ‘broken’.

    As a result of my rash suggestion it is highly unlikely that I shall be cooking my Scottish smoked haddock for dinner tonight, and I shall be no further forward with my current task. But on the bright side I will have a brand spanking new haircut and enjoy good conversation. I think this might be called Living in the Moment, and it would appear that it can be quite recuperative.

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 â€˜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!
















































    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.
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    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

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