Friday, January 24, 2014

Nancy Night

Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the North, 
The birth-place of Valour, the country of Worth; 
Wherever I wander, wherever I rove, 
The hills of the Highlands for ever I love. 

My heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here, 
My heart's in the Highlands, a-chasing the deer; 
Chasing the wild-deer, and following the roe, 
My heart's in the Highlands, wherever I go. 

Farewell to the mountains, high-cover'd with snow, 
Farewell to the straths and green vallies below; 
Farewell to the forests and wild-hanging woods, 
Farewell to the torrents and loud-pouring floods. 

My heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here, 
My heart's in the Highlands, a-chasing the deer; 
Chasing the wild-deer, and following the roe, 
My heart's in the Highlands, wherever I go.

Robert Burns (1759-1796)


Tomorrow is Burns Night. Sarah and I lived in Scotland for a year and in 2009 we had a great Burns Supper in Crail with haggis, tatties and neeps and live folk music from local folk who just got up to sing when the mood took them. Ever since then we have had our own Burns Supper back here in England. We’ll be having one tomorrow. We didn’t have one last year though... it passed us by. My Dear Mum passed away on 24th January last year so I had other things on my mind. But I’m thinking of Mum tonight as we will be tomorrow... as we celebrate Burns Night and raise a glass to Mum and to Dad.


Dad in a kilt, either at Thurstaston Common or somewhere in India?!

Four sisters - Doris, Tilly, Noreen and Nancy

Port Sunlight Roses

O my Luve's like a red, red rose,
That's newly sprung in June:
O my Luve's like the melodie,
That's sweetly play'd in tune.

Robert Burns (1759-1796)



The rose photographs are from my visit last summer. The village is certainly missing a special rose these days! Maybe I should persuade David Austin Roses to name a rose after Mum.... ‘completely bonkers’ or ‘mad as a hatter’ or maybe just simply ‘Nancy’.




Nancy Mum McCormack
11th June 1922 - 24th January 2013











Petrol money

Mum & Dad, Harry & Nancy 1998?

I’m not sure when this photo of Mum & Dad was taken? They're standing outside The Ginnel.... maybe mid to late 1990s?

I feel that it was me standing behind the camera but it could have been Rob or Sue or one of their children. It’s unlikely to be Anne or family because I’m sure Mum & Dad have come outside to say goodbye to their visitors as they set off on a long journey back home... probably to Yorkshire. Rob & Sue are still in Yorkshire and I lived there from 1995 until 2008. Anne and her family have always lived nearby to Mum & Dad and probably visited them daily. Rob and family also visited them regularly. When Keith left the Wirral he never really came back..... maybe once or twice in 30 years? Me, having left the Wirral in 1986, I would visit a couple of times a year, but reflecting on it now it feels like I should have gone more often.

Whoever is standing behind the camera will be given the contents of Mum’s apron pocket once Dad has gone back inside the house! I don’t think I can remember seeing Mum without her apron.... I’m sure she used to sleep in it!

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Post Office

If you arrive in Port Sunlight by train today, the first building you’ll probably notice as you walk out of the station, is the Tudor Rose Tea Rooms.

But for those of us lucky enough to grow up in the village, then the building you would have seen on the corner of Greendale Road & Park Road was the old Post Office.

I think I have been in the Tea Rooms just the once but I would have stood in the Post Office countless times either buying a bag of cinder toffee or waiting to cash my dole cheque!

To see how the Post Office looked in 1953 take a look at the Then & Now Tab.

“The Village Post Office fits in well with the general architecture. Port Sunlight Railway Station is in the background.”
from the Story of Port Sunlight


The old Post Office, August 2013


Monday, August 19, 2013

A visit to the village

Me & Sarah jumped on the train yesterday and spent a couple of hours in Port Sunlight. I’ve been wanting to go back for some time now to take a series of ‘then & now’ photos to show how the village has or hasn’t changed in the last sixty years.

I’m comparing the photos I took yesterday to the ones taken in 1953 for the book published by Lever Brothers The Story of Port Sunlight. I’ll post those photos soon and they’ll also go in the Then and Now 1953 - 2013 Tab.

But for now, tell me exactly where this photo was taken?


“We stand in a row and see you plodding off to work and running off to play, but to us you look your happiest when you find the time to stare at our slender girlish beauty, a shimmer in the breeze.”

Taken from The Story of Port Sunlight with reference to the poplar trees in Church Drive/The Causeway (which is obviously not where this photo was taken!).

Friday, August 16, 2013

Gone fishing.....

Mum has gone dancing and Dad has gone fishing and they’re not coming back.... but that’s ok..... we’ve all danced with Mum and we’ve all been been fishing with Dad.

Sorry Mum, but dancing ain’t really my thing... but being in Mum’s company whether dancing or not, usually meant having a right laugh! But when it came to fishing, me & Dad had some good times together. For hours on end every Sunday (during the coarse fishing season), we would sit quietly and fish.

Those times with Dad were a true father & son bonding experience on some deep level... there were plenty of times when I didn’t get on with Dad but fishing always brought us together. Very few words, if any, were ever spoken between us. Arriving at the ponds in Willaston at 5 o’clock in the morning was always so exciting.... watching the morning mist clear from the water and hearing the first gentle splash as a carp would break the surface. It is only in recent years that I’ve attributed my love for the outdoors & wildlife to those times with Dad... sitting outside in all weathers just watching & wishing for that orange float to lie flat and then disappear! Sit in one place for hours, be still & quiet, and wildlife will come to you.

Dad would wake me up at about 4am and make me coffee. Our packed butties would be ready in the fridge. Hardly a word spoken over breakfast, during the drive, the walk over the fields, sat opposite each other at the pond, the walk back to the car and the drive home.... the silence only broken with the occasional mutter of a perch, roach or that elusive tench. Few words but many memories.

Back home Mum would ask how we got on, but to be honest I think she was as much interested in our catch as we were in who showed up in The Rovers Return!

Once home I would go off cycling and then go out with me mates, Dad back to the shop and doing his accounts in his chair in the front room. “When are you going to find a job and what have you done today?” If he was in I would try to be out. But come Sunday the rest of the week didn’t matter. Maybe a new float (sometimes homemade from bird feathers), a quick read through Mr Crabtree, a fresh tub of maggots bought the day before from Johnny Parkes in New Ferry, alarm clock set and the promise of instant coffee before it got light and we were there, ready to strike at that vanishing float.... members of the Port Sunlight Angling Club, happy to be together.

I can’t remember at what age I started fishing with Dad (very young) but I must have been about 23 yrs old (1985) when we last fished together. I had begun to question why I was catching fish towards the end of my fishing career and so started to fish without any bait on my hook. I would sit out of sight from Dad and just watch & listen to the wildlife. Many years later I told him what I used to do, he had a puzzled look on his face.... I wish I had never mentioned it to him.

But those days together, endlessly staring at our floats (with the odd snooze now and then!) and the occasional fish worth getting the weighing scales out for, are days that belonged to just me and my Dad. I’m so pleased to have found a couple of photos from those happy days.


Dave on holiday with Dad
River Swale, North Yorkshire (1976?)

Dave on holiday with Dad
River Swale, North Yorkshire (1976?)

Anne with Rob & Keith (date & place please)

Dave, I think Ellesmere (1976?)

A keep net full of perch!
Thirlmere, Lake District (1973?)









Mr Crabtree Goes Fishing


Leisure

What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep or cows.

No time to see, when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.

No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.

No time to turn at Beauty's glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.

No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.

A poor life this is if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

W. H. Davies (1871 - 1940)


Why not take five finutes from your day and feed the fish on this blog!

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

I like being an Austin!

My middle name is Austin. Rob’s is Michael and Keith’s is Joseph. Anne doesn’t have one. I once asked Mum why Anne doesn’t have a middle name... “she didn’t want one”!!!! That was so Mum! Or maybe Anne could talk when she was a baby??

I share the name Austin with my Grandad (Sidney Austin Ince) and my Great Grandad (David Austin Ince). Me and Sarah once bought Mum a David Austin Rose for the small garden in the backyard at The Ginnel, but Mum was more interested in the label and showed it to everyone who came to visit!

My cousin Chris Norton (Tilly’s second son, Tilly being Mum’s younger sister who lives in Australia) sent me two photographs that I’ve not seen before of Grandad & Great Grandad and I’ve included them in this post. Tricia (my cousin) also sent me a nice photo of Grandma (Mum’s Mum) which I will get round to scanning soon and can then post on the blog.

Chris’s sister Judy has been reading the blog and has left a couple of comments on Anne outside The Ginnel & A day in Ooty Park. Chris sent me the photos after he had also looked at the blog.... so it is doing what I had always intended..... finding a place to share photos and memories of Mum & Dad’s family.... for all the family to read.... great.


Great Grandad, David Austin Ince????

Grandad, Sidney Austin Ince