Yes, strawberries. And all grown with my own fair hands too.
There's not all that many because the local wildlife seems to have been helping itself to them but nevertheless 5 together with some soya cream is a sure sign that summer is here.
Or is it? It was raining again this morning and although it stopped for several hours, at about 18:00 it started up again in earnest and it's still chucking it down now.
Liz came round this morning with my beans and vegan cheese and that's good news. There are also some tins of curry and so it's back to my Saturday night ritual again. We had quite a chat and it was a shame that she had to go.
And after that I carried on with the tidying up outside. Now that I have a hardstanding (or a wetstanding, or a notwithstanding) I'm moving over there everything that was propped up against the side of the barn. In a couple of weeks we'll be putting up a scaffolding against the barn in order to do the barn roof, and I've been waiting years to do this. For many reasons actually - not the least being that I can finally move the solar panels off the roof of the Luton transit and onto the wall of the barn.
I'm tidying up a few other things too so I'm clearly not well. And when it clouded over at about 17:50 I called it a day and came up here. In fact I crashed out for half an hour.
In other news, I see that the new Conservative Government is planning to remodel University education. The Minister has considered several University models, including major part-time suppliers, ans has decided to try to remodel things on the lines of that well-known supplier of distance education, the ... errrr ... University of London.
As I said a few years ago when they set up a committee to consider part-time degree education and it consisted of staff from that other well-known supplier of distance education the ... errrr ... North Staffordshire University, the days of the Open University having any kind of significance and playing any kind of major role in shaping Government policy, these are long-gone. The OU has lost its relevance and has received yet another kick in the teeth.
Increasing prices and tuition fees brought an angry response from the National Union of Students. But of course they are a small-minded militant body made up of kids still wet behind the ears. So where was the response from the Open University Students' Association - that body of 180,000 grown-up and mature students? The answer is of course "nowhere". Either no-one considered the OUSA to have any relevance (which is a damning indictment of OUSA) or else whatever OUSA did say was considered to be not worth reporting (which is a damning indictment of OUSA).
It seems that OUSA has outlived its relevance too. But we all knew that, and a long time ago. A couple of years ago when the Labour government considered the idea of increasing costs and reducing subsidies, the response of that grown-up and august body of mature students was to ... errr ... sign a petition! I mean! We did things like that in Primary School when we were 10 and 11. Was that really the best that OUSA could come up with?
I once worked in a multinational multi-government organisation and we used to receive petitions from all kinds of people in all walks of life, on a regular basis. And do you know what we did with the petitions that we received? Well, we never bought any toilet paper, that's for sure. That's how petitions are treated in organisations such as that.
And the strawberries were delicious!
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