morenish wrote:
as for the network cafe, i hear it's been taken over by incomers again as usual.
so i for one wont be frequenting it, unless of course the soup turns out tae be good. ..
Och yer there Morenish. The smoke signals have just reached the far flung corners of Bochandom. I thought that you'd beggared off up to Brackley and forgot to come back. But now that you have 'come out' of hiding and seeing as it's Easter, I thought I should remind you of the old biblical quote regarding Judas. Remember the one, where the cockrel crowed three times and yet he never confessed to his sins. Anyway.....
morenish wrote:
i could maybe hire them a tractor for a week or two and show off some real heritage to the towrists, aye damn me!
theres an old horse ploo roon the back that might be hired at a reasonable rate as well.
could i maybe get a wee arts cooncil grant if i sprayed it dayglo pink?
Did I mention that you'd come out earlier? Well I was just thinking that the dayglo pink plough would be a perfect match for thon pink dressing gown that you were pulling the curtains in the other night. Don't bother to try to tell us that it was Mrs Morenish's, becasuse it was about 10 sizes too big! I dread to think what your slippers are like.
I asked old Pongal one day what it was about tractors that whipped some fermers up into such a fervour. He said that he remembers the teuchtar comedian Norman MacLean describing how the old crofters would make a point of telling the wifes that they were away to gather up the peats, then straddle the throbbing gearbox of an 80 hp Massey Ferguson with their 'Classical Tractor' magazine in one hand and the throttle regulator in the other.
Aye, it was a great thing for manys a generation on the islands. Then one fearful day an old calliach discovered how to start up the throbbing monster at the back of the croft and that was the end of the table being laid, the washings on the lines, properly milked coos. Even the homemade crowdie and marag disappeared from the larder cupboards for ever, much to the relief of the grandchildren. When I think of the blood, onion and meal being forced into the entrails and tied in a knot, it still brings my diaphram up to meet my epiglotis. With running water being a luxury in these days, there wasn't a lot of hand washing going on, just hand shaking. Is it any wonder that raw ring was an accepted part of life??
Aye, it may seem hard to believe that the old calliach finding the notch on the gearbox marked with a capital 'S' would be such a pivotal moment in cultural history. The rise of the Co-Op and Spar shops around the islands, of Charlie Barley's butchers in Stornoway, Claymore Creamery and Burnetts Bakery in Inverness were all as a result of the auld yin hitting the 'S' spot.
What was just as puzzling however, was why the Calliach started taking the tin of 'Bradex Easy Start' back into the house. That stuff always resulted in the downfall of a good engine, so heaven knows what it would do to a good wummin, but that's another story!