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June 2022

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“Summer is a promissory note signed in June, its long days spent and gone before you know it, and due to be repaid next January”.

Hal Borland

As gleefully explained in my last post – some form of summer appears at long last to have arrived on the west coast of Canada. It may not last long, but it is most welcome whilst it is here.

That aforementioned post also referred to the Summer Solstice – the longest day and, of course, the shortest night! At the southern end of Vancouver Island that looks like this:

10:00 in the evening. Not fully dark yet:
Photo by Andy Dawson Reid

4:00 in the morning (us older folk often have to get up in the middle of the night):Photo by Andy Dawson ReidPhoto by Andy Dawson ReidOf course – if it is summer then it must be time to entertain folk in our garden. We duly did so over the weekend – with an impromptu invitation to dearest friends to come over an to cook their dinner on our BBQ. ‘Twas really most pleasant to be able again to sit out of an evening enjoying the balmy BC climate with good friends – even if it meant something of a canter down the home straight of making the garden look presentable – the which it finally very nearly does.

On the Sunday we bobbed across the Saanich inlet on the Mill Bay ferry and once again headed up island to have lunch with The Girl’s mum and another long-standing friend. These summer pursuits are most pleasant, though there is a slight feeling of squeezing things in over this next short period, before we set off on our travels.

I took these shots as we bobbed our way back over to Brentwood Bay at the end of the day:

Photo by Andy Dawson ReidPhoto by Andy Dawson Reid

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Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images (pixabay.com)Whoo-hoo!

Today – the very day after the summer solstice – the weather in Victoria BC has finally turned summery! What is more – rumour has it that the hot spell may stretch through the weekend and into next week…

Who knows – we might even get to try out our new air-conditioning unit sooner than expected!

The only downside to this most pleasant development is that it will probably simply encourage those annoying souls who will insist that the solstice is the first day of summer, in much the same way that they insist that the March equinox is the first day of spring.

Er – no! The summer solstice is mid-summers day. From now on the days are getting shorter…

Sorry – I don’t mean to depress anyone.

It is true of course that all the seasons at these latitudes tend to lag behind the movements of the sun. That does mean that September is very often seen as part of the summer, instead of marking the middle of autumn (fall). Nature very obligingly goes along with such errant notions – and it is in our nature (for most folk, anyway) to want to extend the summer months for as long as possible before winter sets in.

So… enjoy the sunshine (those who are blessed with it). I know we are going to!

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I gather that the UK is currently experiencing something of a heatwave. Lucky you, say I to those that reside there. Of course, excessive heat – brought about by climate change – is not a good thing at all, but then neither is an extended, unfulfilled wait for summer.

Long-time followers of these postings may recall a missive that I uploaded at about this time last year (entitled ‘Head for the Hills‘) the which contained a description of the unprecedented ‘heat dome’ under which the west of Canada was then suffering. The Girl and I retreated into the basement of our residence for a week or so to avoid the worst of it, but it was not a pleasant experience.

In a second post, a month later, I reported that we had decided to have an air-conditioning unit added to our forced-air heating system – to protect ourselves against future such weather events. In these strange times all such projects seem to take an inordinate amount of time to be effected. We finally ordered the system at the very start of this year, but the first installation date that we were offered was not until June.

Well – I can now report that we have enjoyed the required visitation, the work has been most efficiently carried out and we are now the proud possessors of equipment necessary to enable us to keep our cool in any future such events. The installation was rendered much easier by our having considered this as a possible option when the furnace was installed back in 2017 – the necessary spacing and services having been left intact should we decide to go this route.

Inside the house there is nothing new to see – unless one looks really closely at our furnace room. Outside there is a small and elegant compressor, tucked away in a part of the estate that we normally only see when cutting the grass.

Now – of course – we are eagerly awaiting an opportunity to try it out! Here we are in the middle of June and the weather has still not caught up with the season. There are few cloudless days, temperatures are still struggling to get up to seasonal norms and – though I have fired up and checked out our garden irrigation system – it is still not running to its normal schedule because there has been no shortage of rain!

I have no doubt that this will all change abruptly in a couple of weeks, when we have set out on our travels and are no longer in residence.

Sigh!

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Not so many posts ago I was grumbling about the weather here in BC and mourning the loss of a number of shrubs and other erstwhile growing things in our garden. I have a feeling – in fact – that I visited the theme in more than one post, the which only goes to show just how poorly the climate has treated us thus far this year (now that I put it like that, of course, there is a rapid light-bulb moment as the realisation strikes that this maltreatment is undoubtedly mutual and indeed causal. What goes around etc, etc…).

Anyway, the weather has perked up just a tad (with the exception of today – bah!) and I have spent considerable amounts of time (and not a little cash on new rhododendrons, hydrangeas, viburnums and a plethora of hostas) trying to cajole what was left of the garden into some sort of shape; to make it look at least a little bit cared for. As it turns out I can still only make a plea for a small percentage of the credit for the turnaround that has occurred – nature herself seeming to rebound from the hard winter with considerable vigour regardless of my efforts.

Either way, I thought you might like to see some pictures of the improvements.

Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Many thanks are due to two good souls who have contributed in no small degree to this renaissance. A long-time and most dear friend furnished us with three gorgeous stone Bhuddas, the which needed a good home as a result of an impending move:

Photo by Andy Dawson Reid …and our good Glaswegian (but also long-time Canadian) horticulturalist friend not only provided much good advice but also graciously allowed us to make use of his wholesale discount at Island View Nursery.

Photo by Andy Dawson Reid Our most grateful thanks to both…

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It would be remiss of me not to take this opportunity to congratulate Her Majesty, the Queen, on the occasion of her Platinum Jubilee. Whatever one’s opinions on the merits (or otherwise) of the monarchy itself – or of ways that it could and should evolve – I think only the most churlish would fail to acknowledge the nature and extent of Her Majesty’s service to the United Kingdom. I doubt that we will see her like again.

I was born almost two years after Elizabeth succeeded to the throne but only a little more than six months after her coronation. My first memories of the Queen – and indeed of royalty in general – came from watching black and white Pathe News footage with my mother and siblings in the British News Theatre cinema that once graced one end of the concourse at Waterloo station in London. I have what is clearly a false memory of watching footage of the coronation – though what we probably saw were references to it in the coverage of Princess Margaret’s wedding to Anthony Armstrong-Jones seven years later in 1960. This was the first royal wedding to be televised but, as we did not acquire a TV set for getting on for another decade, mother made occasional use of the Waterloo cinema when in town to keep abreast of such events.

The Silver Jubilee in 1977 largely passed us by. We knew that there were street parties (though not in the ‘Grove’ in which my parents lived) but us young folk were too wrapped up in music, theatre and each other to pay much mind to the celebrations. It was also the time of the Sex Pistols and ‘Anarchy in the UK’ – which may have had something to do with it.

In 2002 – the year of the Golden Jubilee – I did actually engage with events, spending a day in London and joining the crowds on The Mall for the big concert that was held in the grounds of Buckingham Palace. The whole of The Mall and much of St James’ Park had been equipped with huge video screens and a sound system that was surprisingly good for such a large event. Though not in the concert grounds themselves it still felt like being part of the whole occasion, particularly when Brian May of Queen played the National Anthem from the palace rooftops and when the Queen joined us all in The Mall for the fireworks.

The following day saw a big procession from the Guildhall back to the palace after which we all watched a spectacular flypast of Spitfires, Hurricanes and a Lancaster – followed by the stunning sight of a Concorde surrounded by a flight of the Red Arrows. I was watching this part of the proceedings at home on TV and got to see the flypast twice, because my apartment in Buckinghamshire was in a direct line with The Mall twenty miles away. We were, as a result, directly under the flightpath for the parade of aircraft as they dispersed.

As for the Diamond Jubilee in 2012 I have two impressions – the first is of that wet and windy water pageant that took place largely on the Thames and was something of a damp squib all ways round. The second is that the event was totally overshadowed a little later in the year by the London Olympics. Bad planning, guys!

As for the Platinum Jubilee…? Well – it is hard not to see in it elements of the coming transition. The Queen will not see another Jubilee even should she live to be 100 and more. Here in Canada it is difficult not to feel rather remote from it all.

Many in Canada respect and love The Queen, though I’m not sure that many think that she or her successors should be heads of state for this young nation. Though something of a royalist myself I would agree with those who feel this way, but even earnest Canadian republicans are too damned polite to do anything serious about it.