Archive for the ‘Liverpool’ Category

The church organist and the domino players

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

He had a cadaverous, blue veined face with a long pointed, sniffy nose and rheumy eyes, he was not a man you could warm to, but he was extremely polite, and always neatly dressed, collar and tie summer or winter. The nails on his long bony fingers were scrupulously clean, meticulously manicured; he played the organ in the local church. He had been widowed for twenty three years lived alone and seemed to have no family or friends and seldom had much to say.

Most weekday lunchtimes he came to the pub, more often in the winter when we always had a big fire. On a good weekday lunch time there would be three or four domino schools with a constant drone of banter and gossip, punctuated with triumphant exclamation as someone knocked or went out. Man and boy they were all locals all of a similar age to him, but somehow they all looked younger more hearty, robust and lively. To me it seemed that they just tolerated him to make up the numbers. Two or three of them were also active members of the church and from time to time the vicar would drop in and join them for a drink. It was he that told me that he and the organist had come to the village at the same year 1953.

When I took over this village pub I inherited the domino players, three dart teams, the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffalos and the 1914 -18 hot pot dinner. This dinner for veterans of the Great War was held every year on or near the eleventh and paid for by the brewery. In 1970 we served twenty seven, some of them domino players four years on we were down to fifteen. The organist never attended.

In those four years I had hardly exchanged more than a few words with him, other than polite platitudes. Then one day, at the end of October when it was lashing down outside and there was a customary lull at the tables for a pee break, he came to the bar as he always on his own. The others bought their drinks in rounds but he always bought his own and would painstakingly count out his change from a small purse. That lunchtime there were two young guys at the bar talking about a documentary they had watched on 20th century warfare the previous night. Aware that he must have heard some of the conversation, I looked up as I pulled his pint of mild.

‘What do you make of all this talk of war?’ I said. It was banal remark; I was just passing the time of day and not really expecting much of a response.

‘Oh,’ he said slowly, ‘I don’t much like to think about that sort of thing,’ and then paused, ‘I‘ve been living on borrowed time this last fifty years.’

He paid and went back to his dominos. I was busy with other customers but something about the pause, fifty years, it intrigued me.  He didn’t sup fast so it was probably the best part of forty minutes before he came back for another pint.

‘Fifty odd years is a long time,’ I said as he counted out his change, ‘you’d be a lot younger then.’

As he handed me his money he paused as if deciding whether this required an answer and then he said, ‘ I were, nineteen when I were at the Marne,’ another pause, ‘with Kings Liverpool, it were the first time I saw men killed, it weren’t good.’   He returned to his game

This conversation such as it was took place on a Friday and I was busy but the words stayed with me all weekend. I thought I knew quiet a lot about WW1 but I was surprised when I looked it up, to see the Marne was September 1914.

Monday lunch time he was back in and when he came to the bar I had to ask, ‘How come you were there at the beginning?’

‘Oh’, he spoke slowly, ‘I were with territorials so we were first to go, we went over with General Haig’.

That Monday I learned more, as part of BEF he did not get his first UK leave until the end of 1915 by when he had been involved some serious action, and then he told me…..

‘When I came home, first thing was to go pub to see my mates. I felt a bit daft going down in uniform so I got changed and I were in civvies when two young lasses stopped me’, he paused, and said simply, ‘they both gave me a white feather.’

‘What did you say to them?’ I said outraged and also beginning to feel a little ashamed, books and covers came to mind.

‘Oh’, he sighed, ‘I weren’t going to bandy words with them’, he said, ‘I’ve still got ‘em, silly business.’

Over the next few months I learned that he served four years in the trenches, the Somme the lot, right through to the 11th hour of the 11th day and that his best mate was killed on the 10th. That’s why never came to the memorial supper, he said he just did not want to remember.

One Sunday on his way home from church he came in with his bible, there, between the pages were two white feathers. It was as much as I could do to choke back the tears. I made an excuse went down the cellar and cried.

He died a year later, there were five people at his funeral and no mention of WW1 in the short obituary in the local paper.

Whoops! Email etiquette.

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Ever sent an email and suddenly realised you have made a ridiculous howler. God it’s embarrassing, and what to do? Follow it up with an immediate apology thereby drawing attention to your stupidity or the fact that you are losing the plot. Hope that it will not be noticed? Pretend it never happened?

I always read my emails carefully before sending them, or so I think,  but no matter how I hard I try to get it right from time to time after I have pressed send and there is a sudden flash in my  WHOOPS, done it again. Or a day later on rereading, I will see the thing that I have overlooked staring out at me in ten foot high neon letters.

Am I losing the plot or is it just always trying to do things too quickly, everything seems to be moving too quickly. I am irritated by feeling the need to answer emails immediately, but I still do it. Why am I unable to slow down.

Is it me? That sounds like some old fart saying ‘I don’t believe it’.

Looking back I could cringe at the idiotic mistakes I have made, the most recent was writing  to a client about Tesco Nectar Card, association of ideas or getting my wires crossed. In the context of my email not good.

On the plus side with everything moving at such a pace in this increasingly mad world, I suppose these things are soon forgotten. I hope!

I can never say or write ‘Whoops’ without thinking of Le Chiffre to Bond at the card table  in Casino Royale, or docking in Genoa when the pilot hit another ship and with an almighty crunch and the Scouse quarter master at the wheel just casually murmured it.

Chester Business Club and Chester Rotary Charity Walk Challenge

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010



Just 2 weeks to go

Just 6.5 miles to walk

Just 3 hours of your time

Just once a year

Just something you can do to help others

Just raising money for little, local charities

Just think how good you will feel

Just join us

Chester Business Club and Chester Rotary

Charity Walk Challenge

Sunday Morning April 25th

Registration from 10am The Band Stand on the river

Just to make it easier we have stops for:

Chocolate – Fruit Juice – Bacon Buttys – G&T

Just call Kirsty Craig 01244 350700 now

Just when the caterpillar thought the world was over,
it became a butterfly.

Charity Walk Chester Business Club and Chester Rotary

Friday, April 9th, 2010

30,000 people commit to running 26 miles in the London Marathon

Can you commit to walking 6.5 miles?

Sunday Morning 25th April

Charity Walk

Chester Business Club and Chester Rotary

Registration from 10am The Bandstand

Chester Groves on the River

Help us to raise money for small local charities that receive no funding

A social event for family and friends

The kids, mum and dad, the dog and who you will

Stops on the way around for:

Chocolate, Fruit Juice, Bacon Buttys, G&T

Good by March hello ‘Bacon Buttys’

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

I can hear just fine!’
Three retirees, each with a hearing loss, were playing golf one fine March day. One remarked to the other, ‘Windy, isn’t it?’ ‘No,’ the second man replied, ‘it’s Thursday.’ And the third man chimed in, ‘So am I. Let’s have a beer.’
Don’t forget Chester Business Club & Chester Rotary Charity Walk
Sunday morning 25th April registration at the Chester Groves Bandstand from 10am
Walk with friends and colleagues to help support the little charities in and around Chester who do not get funding. Kids dogs and your best friends all welcome

Chocolate top – Stop – Fruit Juice stop – Bacon Butty stop – Gin Stop*
*Recommended at the end of walk not the beginning.
Venue for lunch, for those that want it, will be at The Hickory Smoke House, The Groves Chester. Contact: Duncan Falconer (who is providing Bacon Buttys)

Liverpool where to stay to impress

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Liverpool – looking for a great place to stay long or short term or got clients you want to impress look up Posh Pads Luxury Service Apartments www.posh-pads.co.uk

Where were you when ……. died?

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

There was and still is a lot  comment  on the death of Michael Jackson, and where you were when you heard about it. Well truth is I don’t know and can’t remember when it was. But I can tell you exactly where I was when  John Lennon died. I was in Cambridge with young lady who has been my wife for 20 odd years. Then in the music world – deaths there’s been a few to many to mention,  there was Hendrix, Janis J and even Buddy Holly, but John’s death was more personal. Not only did he and the Beatles music define our generation but I come from Liverpool went to Quarry Bank, saw them at the Cavern and other venues and him at the Art School and local pubs. I was also in Hamburg when they were there and shared a few drinks while they were on their break at the Star Club. My friend Tony Tyler ex NME wrote about that time. A year later I was in New york when they arrived and recall Murray the K  lauding their music and getting laid on the tenuous connection

To me when John Lennon died, something of the music really did die. Guess that just shows my age