For
once we were not woken up by the wreckers from next-door executing their usual
early morning rendition of Concerto Number Umpteen-and-One for drill, hammer
and cement mixer. I set off on my bike
ride in relative silence and with thin sunshine.
I now no longer even make the attempt to
cycle all the way along the sea front to the Marina at Port Ginesta, even if
the police are not there to enforce the unobtrusive border between
Castelldefels and that part of the jurisdiction of Sitges that arches over the
hills to take possession of the end of the bay.
At the other end of Castelldefels the
border with Gavà is blocked off with police tape and, while walkers and joggers
duck beneath it and ignore it, I deign to flaunt authority in such a blatant
manner and I dutifully turn around and come back home. I have to admit that it really is not much of
a burden to obey our locality restrictions, as I am able to cycle the entire
length of Castelldefels and so complete a jaunt of 10k. Which is quite enough for me. Though I do miss my swim.
As I
am an avid devotee of crowd funding sites and am ever beguiled by new
technology, I am happy to report that I am now the proud possessor of a
‘cleansebot’. As opposed to many of my
purchases from Indigogo and the like, this particular innovation might actually
be regarded as somewhat timely.
The ‘cleansebot’ is a small side plate
sized circular thick Frisbee-like object that incorporates UV light and wheels
and is designed to crawl about one’s bed destroying bacteria and other wildlife
haunting the savannah of the mattress and the cover sheet. It can also be used as a hand-held destroyer
and can then be utilized to ravage pillow cases, TV remotes, laptop keyboards, kitchen
surfaces, light switches, etc. Given the
present concern about cleanliness this little machine could not have arrived at
a better time and, more importantly, this is the only purchase of mine from crowd
funding about which Toni has expressed approval – rather than throwing his eyes
to heaven in exasperation at my ‘waste of money’!
I have now retrieved the cleansebot from
the bed after its sub-blanketian traverse of our sleeping quarters. I believe that it has made a difference,
because there is no way of actually seeing what it has or has not done! But the real point is that I have another
robot to complicate life just a little more, but cleaner, hopefully cleaner.
As
the rain held off (and continues to do so) I was able to go on my evening bike
ride. There is a distinct air of
determination to the way that people are walking, running and cycling during
our period of allowed activity from 8pm.
Given the fact that it was a Friday (thinking of the past days when that
actually meant something) there were more people on the Paseo than usual,
especially when the weather was as dull as it was. There were four or five illegal Plague Kids
out of their time, but the most illustrative aspect that I note were the
growing numbers of young teenage kids in bike gangs which, if you think about
it, is as a good way of meeting your friends as any. And, as long as you don’t get off your bikes,
it’s a good way of keeping the necessary physical distancing that we have been
advised to maintain.
Although I joke about the concept of
Plague Kids, I really do feel that every young person is a potential viral
assassin! And that attitude is going to
take a long time or a quick vaccine to get rid of.
When we talk about the New Normal,
distancing must become the attitude of choice and of necessity. I wonder how long the attitudes will last
though?
In
the UK the government is trying to rewrite the narrative of neglect that
characterised the situation of Care Homes, it is doing this via nauseating expressions of present concern
and a determination to change the approach of government, conveniently
forgetting which government has been in power for the last decade!
On a
lighter note, our next Catalan lesson is on Monday. With any reasonable luck there will be more
people in our virtual classroom than my good lone self. We have had to do some homework and
presumably that will be the basis of conversation (!) in our next class –
assuming that it works.
I love technology, as I have mentioned above, but when it is linked to teaching it has an almost inevitable fail factor built in to the whole enterprise.
But, as always, I live in hope and positive expectations!
I love technology, as I have mentioned above, but when it is linked to teaching it has an almost inevitable fail factor built in to the whole enterprise.
But, as always, I live in hope and positive expectations!
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