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December 07, 2006

bedside junk

This evening I started measuring up the bathroom floor so I could order some marine ply to cover the banjaxed floorboards before the tiler arrives. My tape measure decided to explode into little pieces. It was a good tape measure it lasted me well. When I bought this ramshackle house 4.5 years ago Dad arrived with a new toolbox and some essentials, the tape measure was from that time.
Anyway I started to look for another that I knew was in a box somewhere. I have a lot of boxes, in a lot of places so I haven't found it yet.
I have always hoarded junk, this collection of stuff was from two boxes on a shelf by the bed. I have many other such boxes, I might just make this a series, if you are lucky. ;-)

December 06, 2006

Townlands & size

I have recently been researching my paternal family tree, luckily we are the first generation to live outside Scotland so the Scottish Ancestry website has been invaluable. Most of the post 1800 records are digitised and indexed and allow partial and soundex searching. This has been useful as my family name changed from Jaffray to Jaffrey.
With a little information from my father I'm now back to the late 1700's. I am building a skinny tree, digging down the paternal line each time.
My family were all farmers, until my Great Grandfather who was a police sergeant in Aberdeen. The interesting thing was that his father and his grandfather both worked the land in the Lonham area of Aberdeenshire and lived in to their 90's. George my great grandfather was the first family member to seek work in the city and died of hypertension in his 60s. There's a pretty simple lesson there I think.
Anyway back to the title, as a sideline to this research I often come across the term townland. This will be familiar to anyone living in Northern Ireland. It's a small geographical unit of land used in Ireland and Scotland , and believed to be of Gaelic or Goidelic origin.
Townlands are always different sizes, and the reason they are is because they were originally based on the area that could support a fixed number of cattle, thus they vary in size depending on the land quality.
From the wikipedia entry for townland; A complicating factor was that in Gaelic times, land was measured in terms of its economic potential rather than in fixed units of measurement: by the number of cattle that an area of pasture land could support, or by the time taken to plough an area of arable land. Therefore the size of an "acre" in this system could vary enormously depending on the quality of the land.

December 05, 2006

It's direct I suppose

I saw this sign in a garden, I had to snap quick in case the owner saw me. Unfortunately I had been messing around with exposure and ISO settings the night before and so the picture is a tad duff. It says If I catch the dog that keeps sh***ing here, I will shove this sign up the owner's arse.


stagnation

The blog has been stagnating, I have just opened the authoring page and decided to try to make it part of my routine again.
This website is a useful tool for those interested in excessive postal surcharges to Northern Ireland. http://www.hisdancingleg.com/ni.
Not much to report, life is a lot more stable than this time last year when I was changing jobs. Is that good? I'm not sure; job stability is good for my personality and peace of mind. There's another part of me that craves change.
Just returned from a weekend visiting relatives in Weedon-Bec in Northamptonshire, a jolly nice village. Plenty of opportunity to partake of Real Ale.
Here's a snap from a dander through the country lanes on Sunday.