Knickerbocker Glory 5 with prunes.

It’s Monday morning…….who invented that?  What a rubbish way to begin the week.  I much prefer Thursday afternoon at 4 o’ clock with a cup of tea and a bit of cake.  We will have to wait till the week wends its way onwards so let’s console ourselves with a bit of Knickerbocker Glory.  For the new readers who have found us I’ll just mention that these are extracts from a radio series I submitted to steam radio long ago when the world was young, which limped back home with a slight sprinkle of genuine BBC corridor dust.  So far we’ve had a couple of helpings of Uncle Reg’s niece, who is trying to run a phone service from a pig farm and a couple of dollops of a radio archaeology programme.  You can access the archive via the Knickerbocker Glory button to the right of this column.

How are you on the voices?  You’ll need three for Archaeology Now: a rural one for Very Devon, something neutral for Derek Here, who we suspect, does all the digging, and the most annoying voice you can get for the coracle man, who would like to be included and star in a radio programme.  He’s the equivalent of the grinning kid whose head you see sideways behind the reporter in TV breaking news broadcasts.  Except with radio there’s no way you can narrow the angle, if it’s on mike, it’s in.

If you’ve gargled and gone ‘me, me, me’ you’re on.

*******************************************************

                                       Archaeology Now
                                               Scrolls.

A quick burst of theme music, tambours and shawms.

Very Devon      ’Ello and welcome to Archaeology Now. I’m Very
                   Devon and this is my assistant, Derek Here. Today
                   we’re at a well known archaeological site.  It’s a temple
                   to Mithras first documented in the late Thirties but
                   covered up again during the war.  As you may have
                   read in the papers the site is going to be right 
                   underneath the new M700 extension, so it’s being
                   uncovered and photographed now before it’s entombed
                   in a concrete shell to preserve it for future generations.
                   What do we know about the temple, Derek?

Derek Here      Well Dev, the temple, which is down these steps, was
                    actually built as an under ground structure because
                    it was secret.

Very Devon       So ’oo would go in it then, Derek?

Derek Here       Probably just the priests, Dev.  They would go in and
                    do their rituals and then come out and prophesy.

Very Devon       And we know this because of the scrolls, don’t we
                    Derek?

Derek Here       Yes we do.  The first and second excavations were 
                    through the roof and they found the holes were full
                    of scrolls.

Very Devon        Rolls of scrolls down the ’oles.  My word.  But we’re 
                     luckier today because we can go though the door.

Derek Here       Indeed we can and here we are in the chamber, Dev.
                    The niches to our right and left were full of scrolls. On
                     either side are the stone benches you’d expect in this
                     type of temple and down at the end is what looks like
                     the shell of a giant tortoise, or the bottom of a round
                     boat.  I don’t remember seeing that at rehearsals.

Very Devon        Neither do I.  Perhaps if we was to turn it round…….

Coracle Man       Hello, it’s me!  I’m the oracle with the coracle.

Very Devon         ’Oo let you in?

Coracle Man       Nobody.  I just popped down a hole.  I’m the oracle
                     with a coracle.  I know all about it, I’ve been to the
                     library and asked.  I can prophesy.

Very Devon        I can prophesy you’re going to be in trouble.  You’re
                     not authentic.

Coracle Man       Yes I am.  I can read the prunes.

Very Devon        Read the prunes?

Coracle Man       Yes, I just put my hand in this bag of prunes and feel
                     the wrinkles, then I tell you all about it.

Very Devon        Reading prunes isn’t Roman.

Coracle Man       How about casting entrails?  Look?

Derek Here        Casting entrails is Roman, Dev.

Very Devon        Yes but not plaster casts.

Coracle Man       Do you want to pull a wishbone? Go on, close your
                     eyes and make a wish.

Very Devon        I wish you’d go away and take all this rubbish with
                     you.

Coracle Man       I could throw the dice.

Derek Here        We could throw you out.

Coracle Man       I could feel your bumps.

Very Devon        Get your ’ands off me, you little pervert in a punt and
                     get out before we give you some bumps of your own
                     to feel.

Derek Here        Yes, go away.

Coracle Man       I can feel the red mist.  I can see the future.  I could
                     read you next week’s horoscopes.  I’m not leaving
                     till I’ve told you tomorrow’s shipping forecast.

Derek Here        I think he’s gone completely barmy, Dev.

Very Devon        It’s being down this gloomy temple, Derek.  It gets
                    to you after a bit.

Derek Here       What shall we do?

Very Devon        Oh, pop a tarpaulin over him and go off to the pub.

Theme tune

*******************************************************

JaneLaverick.com – where we predict that starting the week with a laugh will make it a little less awful.  For three minutes.  After that you’re on your own.  Do you open the post and read the bills before you read this, or the other way on?  Or do you read this, read the bad news quickly and then read this again sloooowly?

 

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Up Olympus.

Three loud knocks.  Sound of a heavy door opening.

Top god    Greetings mortal.  Who comes to Olympus to seek the 
                 aid of the gods?  Step forward and identify yourself.

Mortal      Erm hello, I’m Marcus, son of Heracles.

Top god    You look rather puny.

Mortal      I work out.  A bit.

Top god    Is he the only candidate?

2nd god    Sorry, oh great one.  You can’t get the help these days.

Top god    I suppose he’ll do but I’m not impressed.  Very well,
                 mortal, we, the gods, will gift you with…..what are we
                 going to gift him with?

2nd god    Gifts.

Top god    I know we’re going to gift him with gifts.  Obviously
                 we’re going to gift him with gifts.  What sort of gifts?

2nd god    Oh, you know, gifts, special offers, leftovers.

Top god   Well you might show a bit more enthusiasm.  Give me
                 the first thing.  Thank you.  Oh mortal, we, the gods,
                 gift you with this, this…..what is this?

2nd god    It’s the helmet of invisible hold.

Top god    Looks like hairspray to me.  We gift you with this helmet
                 of invisible hold to give you all day sleekness in the
                 strongest wind.  It is hairspray.  Well, there you are.

Mortal     Thank you.  I hope it’s unperfumed or I’ll get a rash.

2nd god    No, you’re all right, it’s hypo-allergenic.

Top god   We gift you with the hypo-allergenic helmet of invisible
                 hold and these sandals of, well, trainers of – are these
                 flying sandals?

2nd god    They’re for walking on air.

Top god     Ah, that’s more like it.  Sandals for walking in the air.

2nd god     No, walking on air.  There are millions of little bubbles
                  in the soles.  Look, where the trim is coming off the
                  sides, you can see, it’s all foamy.

Top god    Foamy trainers, we gift you foamy trainers to go with
                 the hairspray.  These gifts are rubbish, haven’t we got
                 any of the old fashioned things?  What about a shield?

2nd god     All day confidence and personal freshness?

Top god     No, no, no, not deodorant.  Personal armaments to 
                  make him look big and muscular.

Mortal       Have you any neoprene racing shorts?

Top god     Silence mortal, you’ll get what you’re given.  What else
                  have you got in the box?

2nd god     The mobile phone of distant communication?

Top god    You know we can’t get a signal up here.  Pass the box
                  to me.  What are these?

2nd god     The socks of progress.  99% cotton, 1% heat expanding
                  rubber granules. They never shrink, even in a boil wash.

Top god     Do you want them?

Mortal       I’m not sure.  What else have you got?

Top god     The key ring of noise.  You shout and it goes beep. The
                  stick of moles.  You stick it in your lawn and it frightens
                  moles away. The anti-slip bathmat. The miracle can-
                  opener.  The miracle mildew remover.  And a miracle
                  plastic seed hopper that sticks miraculously to your 
                  window to encourage birds to fly miraculously into it.
                  Just what is this load of rubbish?  Has someone been
                  phoning a catalogue hotline using my credit card again?

2nd god     They looked good in the photographs.

Mortal       Actually I wouldn’t mind the beeping key ring.

Top god     How will a pair of trainers, a key ring and hairspray…..

2nd god     Hypo-allergenic hairspray.

Top god     Any kind of hairspray!  How will they help you fight
                  The Ogre of Throps, or defeat the Ten Legged Monster
                  of the Ocean Deeps, or the Niborg of Zarp?

Mortal       Oh I haven’t go to do any of them.  They’re not on
                  the list.  Especially that last one.  That sounds nasty.

Top god     What then, puny mortal, is your quest?

Mortal       I’ve been sent to rid the village of double glazing 
                  salesmen.

Top god     Is that all?

Mortal       Well, no, afterwards there’s going to be a wet T-shirt
                  contest and I get to pick the winner.

2nd god     You’ll be wanting the deodorant then, and the mobile.

Mortal       Great.  Thanks.

2nd god     You’re welcome.  Bye.

A door slams.  Tentative knocking.  A door opens.

Mortal       Would it be all right if I had the socks?  If no one
                  wants them?  These trainers are a bit loose, if I wear
                  them without socks, I’ll get a blister.  Okay. Great 
                  thanks.  Thanks now.  Bye.

                ***********************************

JaneLaverick.com – bringing the classics right up to date.

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Swine flu 4, The pyjama years.

P1010019

Well I’m thrilled to say that three days of antibiotics are beginning to kick in.  I wouldn’t say I was eating yet, or getting dressed much; every posting for a week has been written on the computer in my pyjamas, which is a very strange place to keep a computer.  My best time of day is still the one where I get into bed, at last.  Intelligence on the street is that there’s still a week to go and, whilst I try to live in the moment; having had the dire rear for a week and the rubbish lungs for five days I am looking forward to the absence of such problems.  I can do breathing again, mostly, with fewer crackling noises.

I have done no Miniatura work at all, though I have occasionally lain on the table and looked at it.  I’m too ill to worry about how far behind I am.  If you were waiting for the promised sale on this site there is a strong possibility that the January sale will be late in February.

If you’re reading this anywhere where the virus has been and you thought it was over and have relaxed your hygiene precautions in public places, resume them sooner than immediately.  If you were offered the jab and declined, please change your mind and accept.  I  have had a lot of interesting diseases but this one is very bad news when the complications set in.  If you have any underlying conditions and you get it, go for the Tamiflu immediately.  Tamiflu is not effective once the disease is established. I’m sorry to be serious on a mainly fun site and I know I’ve been posting light heartedly but I’ve really been ill, I rang my olds and made sure they’d had the jab, you should do the same for your N&D with any problems.  Don’t have nightmares or stop going out, just don’t mess around with this one.  Check symptoms online if you think you have it, main signpost is the sky high temperature for about three days.  I’ll be fine because I really do work out every day but I’d stopped washing my hands every time I came back from the shops and I’d stopped carrying the little bottle of hand antiseptic I’d carried throughout the summer.  Don’t be like me, keep up the precautions and don’t get the flu, this one really is a swine.

JaneLaverick.com – trying our best to keep you reading.

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Welcome new readers!

My favourite cartoon of the Bash Street Kids depicted the children waiting to greet their relief teacher, Eliza Take. On the playground they had spelled out a message in pebbles:

           Welcome MissTake.

So whether you found me through Sandra’s blogspot or the latest info on the Miniatura website, or any other way, welcome new reader, I hope you will find that time spent here isn’t a mistake at all.

The site, launched at autumn Miniatura ‘09 has been growing organically in response to reader requests. If you find something you want to share, the icons at the end of each article allow you to do so.  The entire content is written by me and all the pictures are made by me.  There is nothing second generation from anywhere else on the web.  Over in the shop, accessed by the shop button on the right, are my own original porcelain dolls and oil paintings each an individual that can be bought directly and securely from this site.  On the shop page you will find more buttons with permanent content about the art and how I perpetrate it.

On this page the blog has been posted at least three times a week since I began but more often, more often.  So if you only check back twice a week do scroll down, there’s heaps.  I’m a writer, writing is what I do. The articles are also categorised, clicking on the categories on the right will get you to the bits you’re most interested in.  It’s worth checking ‘uncategorised’ because sometimes some idiot forgets to set the category.  You can’t get the staff, you know. 

I aim to use the World Wide Web to promote friendship, art and fun.  I hope you like all those things too.  If you do, welcome new reader, you’re in the right place and not a MisTake at all. Unless you actually are called Miss Take, in which case bad luck in English, it probably means something else in another language.

Years ago, when I was a teacher of seven year olds, I got married in the summer holiday and changed my name (to Laverick). I approached my new class, which was lined up by the classroom door, from the back of the line.  A famous teacher saying is: there is always one and he was at the front of the queue, facing away from me shouting ‘Mrs Lavatory!  Mrs Lavatory!  Haha!  Mrs Lavatory!’ so loudly that he didn’t hear the rest of the queue fall silent as I passed.  It was an extreme joy to stand behind him for another minute before saying ‘Yes?’

Golden moments – I hope you’ll find many here.

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Midweek Miniatura 3

Sindy

Here’s new exhibitor, Sindy Stanley, far too busy working for Miniatura to have time to tell me what she was doing.  You get that with Miniatura artists in the run up to the show.  Heads down working is typical of us all, though it looks like Sindy looked up long enough to turn her dolls into earrings and then carry on working.  Honestly, what are we like?  (Artists!)

Meanwhile news from the show organisers is that the listings are up, hooray!  So please take yourself off to www.miniatura.co.uk to find out exactly who is exhibiting this time.

Before you dash off there, if you missed a proper Monday posting I posted on Tuesday too, so do scroll down.  There’s a new doll maker in the links, as I caught up with Sandra Morris of Tower House Dolls who I interviewed long ago for Dolls House World magazine when I did the Dream of A Doll series, that ran for years.  If you are a Miniatura artist who would like to be featured here, please get in touch (assuming you have time to look up long enough to email).  In less than 6 months online JaneLaverick.com is read regularly several times a week in 25 countries and 12 languages.  It’s your global window on the world of collectable miniature art (and also a jolly good laugh).

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Swine flu rides out.

So I was sitting up in bed at about six o’ clock and every time I breathed it sounded like I had swallowed a drawerful of plastic bags, all scrattling together. Not good.

So when I dragged myself out of bed at eight thirty, I rang the doctor. Well first I held for the usual fifteen minutes while they played me music and occasionally told me to ring 999 if I was dying and then played me more music and told me how far up the queue I was, then when I got to ‘You are number one in the queue’ it suddenly started to play me the ‘If you think you may have swine flu’ jolly fun tape, so I hung up as instructed and dialled the National Flu helpline.

Well what a joy.  A solid ten minutes of how they would prosecute your socks off if you were joking, followed by five minutes of how you should know the patient’s name and have it handy when necessary.  All this while I coughed incessantly, as us plastic bag lungs aficionados do, and wet myself copiously and intermittently lay my head on the dining table and wished I were sitting on the toilet, especially when the dire rear kicked in again every time I sneezed. Anyhoo………. finally a human being spoke to me, oh good, and she was broad Irish.  She couldn’t understand me either, because I was coughing. So it went like this:

Ees der peychent greey at all, atall?

UHu, hack UChu ugh ugh Uchu.

Whaat’s dat?

Uhu huhu hacku uch.  NO.

EEs der peychent lyeen on der floor, as far as yu can see?

Uhu aha hack hack, on the table.

Yer hev to answer yes or no to dat one, or I have to begin again.

Huch huch huch no.

Does der peychent have der lumps onder the skin. At all?

Huch huch huch huch whooshoo, ohshit, huch huch.

Roihgt, Oi’ll begin again.  Is der peychent greey, at all?  At all?

Happily I’d already lost the will to live so after another twenty minutes of this insanity I was prescribed Tamiflu, about five days too late, and given a 12 digit unique code to pick it up from a pharmacy I’ve never heard of before. 

Better than that, I’m married to a former MLSO, who told me to ring the doctor, which I did and had a sane conversation followed by a prescription for antibiotics.  Which my husband, who had the jab in the autumn and is healthy, will collect on his way back from the gym.

It’s a good job I work out.  You could be ill with this.

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Swine flu 2

I have coughed all night and the tops of my lungs feel like pan scrubbers. Good job I’m fit, or I’d be ill.  I’m going back to bed.

P1010012

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Swine Flu.

I thought I felt ill.

Night before last you could have fried an egg on me.  Until I threw all the blankets off.  Then you could have made ice cream just by giving me a glass of milk to hold.  The toilet is never far from my thoughts and doing the hacking cough is dangerous to say the least.

It’s much worse for the poor web manager who also has it because he’s got swine flu, ten days previously with nothing to eat and seven bloody tooth sockets.

On the plus side it could be slimming.  I have no desire to eat anything but I’d quite like to lick salt.  I’d also like to roll on the carpet, groaning.  No I couldn’t be bothered.  You know a few posts ago when I wrote that when lying in the gutter you should look at the stars?  Well you can forget that.  Everything was going in and out of focus.

There may not be Knickerbocker glory tomorrow.  I’m too ill to cook.  Last night I had a moment of lucidity and dragged myself out of bed to put Sunday lunch for the other half (who was out, at a party) in the oven ready to turn on.  Before I succumbed to this I went shopping and laid in provisions to avoid the bit where your man turns up at your bedside and repeatedly says your name until you gain consciousness and then poses the cross and whiny question ‘What am I supposed to eat?’

Oh eating, yes, I remember that.  Not with any great fondness.

Meanwhile could you please entertain yourself by reading the archive?  Most of the funny bits are filed under the Parrot.  I would read it myself but I am sweating so much my fingers are sliding on the keyboard and I keep hitting all the wring lotters.  I may bee two il too rite.

Er, swine flu.  Poor Jane, poor, poor little web manager… poor pigs!

P1010012

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Friday fun.

Sorry about the absence of Friday fun.  I’ve got a chesty ‘flu thing, back soon, new and improved.  Or back soon old and boring.  Or back soon having thought of extra jokes while lying in bed.  Only time will tell.  Tune in, find out (avoid anyone coughing or groaning experimentally).

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New feature.

If you like to leave comments on posts and join in generally, you will now notice a new feature when you click on ‘comments’ at the end of an article.  There are spaces to leave your details and a box in which to write your comment.  At the bottom left hand corner of the comment box is a little letterbox to copy the code before you submit your comment.  Sight impaired surfers will note a loudspeaker icon at the top right of this box which will read the code aloud for you. Anyone who got it a bit wrong the first time can generate a new code.

The purpose of all this is not to be mysterious.  A lot of time has been spent recently dealing with automatically generated spam.  Here at JaneLaverick.com we have better things to do than wade through adverts embedded in text.  This site is for real people by real people and never anything you couldn’t show your granny.  We welcome comments by real people including all adults and cats if they can type.  Your cool comments are hot stuff.

JaneLaverick.com – having no truck with rubbish ’bots.

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