Saturday, 26 December 2020

A Tier 4 Coronavirus Regulation Christmas

 


Saoirse in her Christmas jumper
Christmas in lockdown, or Tier 4 as it’s called, wasn’t too bad.

We should have been in Soham – Sam and Lucy’s first Christmas in their new house – and we were a little disappointed to miss out. My sister was expecting to have Alex up for five days or so, but he was also caught up in the late lockdown, so we said she would be our bubble and she could come round for Christmas dinner.

Plenty of people are breaking or seriously bending the Tier 4 rules and you can hardly blame them. There’s no proper strategy from the Government, they just react late to every new development and the rules have changed so much, it’s hard to know what you can and can’t do. Some people don’t even know which area they’re in!

In the morning, we set up a Zoom online meeting for Sam and also for Max and Inna to join us [you can see it here: https://youtu.be/Occ97KGJHBA]. It actually worked pretty well and it was good for Sam to be able to have a chat with Max and to see baby Alice, who had slept through most of the night. Arthur was keen to show off some of his presents. He’d got some toy soldiers and had set them up in a defensive line across the kitchen door. Lucy and Sam could step over them, but they took a few casualties when Saoirse needed to get by.

I think Christmas was a little overwhelming for her. She hid her face and burst into tears when we started the video link, but soon settled down. She had a pair of swimming goggles on her head (and over her eyes) for much of the time.

Max and Inna seem to be managing well. Alice had been sleeping very little during the night and has been either feeding or crying. She was awake and happy enough to be jigged in Max’s arms while we were all talking. It’s a shame that we’re not able to see and hold her.

First taste of Christmas pudding. It
seem to be going down well.

They are getting some support from Marina, Inna’s mum, who has formed a child support bubble with them and had been bringing food, shopping and helping with the dog. Ollie stayed with her while Inna was in hospital and now considers Wigston his second home. Max says he gets so excited when he sees Marina that he does backward somersaults.

Later in the day, we linked up with Tom on Zoom [link: https://youtu.be/pFfCGraF3w8]. He was in Ambato and we were able to see Julia and Aureliano open presents we’d got for them. Quacker had a book and Julia a loom, which seemed to offer no instant pleasure, just frustration, as it needed to be assembled and would require some supervision.

She cheered herself up by scooting very fast around the deserted hospital corridors. Lucy and Florencia were in the house, so we didn’t see them. I did get a look at Pink and Hatchi, however.

There was no white Christmas, but it did freeze overnight and there was a bitter north wind when I took Holly for her walk. I bumped into Thornton Holmes in the park, who was walking his two spaniels. They were very pleased to see us (well pleased to see Holly, and then me when they realised I had a biscuit in my pocket). He’d been told off by a couple with two pugs because his dogs were “not under control” and he was a bit grumpy about it. “They’re just being friendly,” he insisted. I didn’t need to be convinced; I have considerable experience of owning “friendly” dogs!

There were other dogs in the park, and I was mobbed by a terrier and a small lurcher. Margaret has been walking Holly most days and is ingratiating herself with the local dogs by feeding them biscuits. They saw Holly and thought “treats!” but hadn’t accounted for mean Eric being in charge today.

We also bumped into Pauline and Chris at the traffic lights. They had probably walked Jasper around Toneham. He was very excited to see Holly and she to see him. Like us, they’d been talking to children and grandchildren via video links and were set to have a WhatsApp meeting with Rebecca in California that evening.

It has been a strange day, not like any previous Christmas, but then 2020 has been a year like no other.

Sunday, 20 December 2020

Christmas is cancelled!

What a shower we have running this country. I can forgive stupid statements such as “it will all be over by Christmas” as they were made back in spring and there was little information to go on.

However, this past week, the government has threatened to take legal action against councils for closing schools early and, at Prime Minster’s Questions on Wednesday, Bojo the Clown lambasted the opposition for “wanting to cancel Christmas”.

Guess what? Everyone else could see what was coming, except those in charge.

Now, Kent, London, big chunks of the home counties (and Peterborough) have been placed into a new, stricter Tier 4, while the rest of the country have had new restrictions applied over Christmas. Instead of a five-day holiday from lock-downs, we have one day to see family (Christmas Day).

For us, in Tier 4, Christmas is cancelled. We are not allowed to travel into a lower tier area, which means we can’t go to Sam’s for Christmas Day (Soham is in Tier 2) and we can’t go to Max’s to see baby Alice – not even through the window (Syston is in Tier 3).

It’s quite depressing. I’m sure the measures are required, but the government is always behind the game. They are a complete shower!

Margaret said last night (the restrictions were announced just after 4pm yesterday) that this would be the first Christmas in over 40 years that we have spent on our own. I’m not even sure that’s true. I can’t remember a Christmas all alone – it always seemed that before we had children of our own, we spent the holiday at my dad’s and visited Margaret’s parents and my aunts.

Anyway, there is nothing we can do. We should be grateful, at least, that we’re healthy, warm and safe and have no money worries. Peterborough does have a high rate of Covid-19 infection, although Thorney has very little. We can’t go to Whittlesey (four miles south), Crowland (five miles north) or Thorney Toll (five miles east).

These certainly are strange times. The one bit of good news is that vaccinations are being rolled out slowly. The over-80s are the first group to get them and several people we know have been vaccinated – Bert and Irene (both in their 90s – went to Peterborough City Hospital to have theirs. They need a second jab in the new year to be fully covered. We hope new vaccines will get approval soon and we will all be offered one in the coming year.

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

Welcome grandchild No 6


I was woken up in the early hours by Margaret, who has been monitoring her WhatsApp messages all night waiting for news …

Max and Inna’s baby was born at 3.50am. We don’t know any more than that at this stage. No weight and I’m not absolutely sure of the name, although I’m running with Anya.

She has been keeping everyone waiting for just over a week and Inna had to go into hospital to try to kick-start labour on Monday (it’s Wednesday today). It’s been quite a marathon!

So, Anya becomes my sixth grandchild and Max and Inna’s first child. I’ve had one grandchild every year since 2015. Funnily enough, I’ve become more and more anxious about each one. Julia, Arthur and Aureliano presented no particular worries to me (although plenty for their parents, I'm sure).

With Saoirse there was a concern that there was some kind of foetal abnormality on a scan and they wanted to do some more tests. Sam and Lucy said no and, of course, Saoirse is absolutely fine. Florencia caused some concern with early contractions after a bumpy trip to Santo Domingo and with later scans, too. Lucy had to get a second opinion and (of course) we had the added problem of a flight from Quito to Mexico City and then a long plane journey to London. We upgraded Lucy to first class so she had a bed and, again, Florencia was fine. I was so worried that she'd arrive at 35,000ft over the north Atlantic.

Max and Inna were worried that Anya, who had been a real wriggler, had stopped moving. I think this caused also some concern for us with one or more of ours and might be that the baby is just settling down for the “big push” as it were. Anya seemed very happy where she was and in no hurry to make her entrance; the hospital was able to monitor her heartbeat but said they’d induce contractions if there was nothing by Monday, so that’s what happened.

We had some concern when there was meconium in the “waters” but she’s been checked and there’s no sign of her having ingested any into her lungs, so we can relax a little. Max is heading home for some sleep and Inna and Anya will be transferred to a smaller post-natal centre in Melton Mowbray.

I don’t know when we will be able to see or hold Anya. Leicester is in the strictest Tier 3 Covid-19 restrictions and Peterborough may move from Tier 2 to 3 tomorrow. Apart from all the hazards of birth, there’s still Covid to consider. Infection rates are high (20,000 new cases and 500 deaths per day) so we have to be careful. Oddly, some people still don’t believe Covid exists. They say it’s just a regular cold, but a bit worse, and that the government is in the hands of evil scientists trying to control us. I suppose Brexit should have made it clear that there are a lot of gullible people out there but, honestly, the crass stupidity of some folk doesn’t bear thinking about.

Footnote: So I'd almost written all my Christmas cards telling friends and family about Anya, when we got a WhatsApp message from Max to say they had decided to call the baby Alice Marina (Marina after Inna's mum). Alice is a very nice name and it's good to have Marina continuing into another generation.

Monday, 30 November 2020

Arthur and Saoirse are over for the weekend

Saoirse in the buggy singing
Jingle Bells

This time last year, Margaret’s biggest worry about Christmas was whether to get a turkey or a goose. This year, we weren’t sure there would be a Christmas.

With typical incompetence, this shower of a government had promised Covid-19 would all be over by Christmas. Well they were wrong! Perhaps if they’d had proper tracking measures in place, decent testing and some kind of sensible policy, it could have been under control, but they didn’t and it isn’t.

Science advisors had suggested a two-week lockdown in September as infection rates climbed with schools and universities back, but they said that wasn’t necessary. By the time they realised they were wrong, we needed a four-week lockdown, which comes to an end this week, but it doesn’t seem to have done a lot of good. Peterborough went into lockdown in tier 1 (the least severe) and we’re coming out of lockdown in tier 2 (worse than when we went in!). I have no idea how the hell that is possible.

This morning, the main news is a survey which says rates are dropping fast and the R-rate (re-infection rate) is down to 0.8, so someone has got their figures wrong or the decimal point in the wrong place.

What we do know is that we’re still under strict restrictions about who can come into the house (no-one basically), but schools are open, you can go to the pub as long as you are having a meal and all shops are open. Oh! You can also go to the gym and there can be up to 2,000 people at a football match.

Restrictions are being lifted over Christmas across the UK, so up to three households can meet together for Christmas. We have all been invited to Sam’s and it now seems clear that we’ll be able to go. Max and Inna were invited too, but their baby will be born any day now and they have decided (quite sensibly) that they’ll have a quiet Christmas at home.

I did go for a walk with Max last week, but it was the first time I’d seen him for a while. We had a cold (perhaps Covid) and then he had to self-isolate because he’s had contact with someone who later tested positive. Anyway, we had a nice walk around Watermead, near Syston, and then a picnic in the rain in the car, breaking another lockdown rule.

There are so many rules that I can’t keep up so, like many people, I’m just doing what seems sensible.

This weekend, we had Arthur and Saoirse staying with us. Apparently, we’re allowed to be designated as a carer and as long as we don’t mix with Sam or Lucy, we can look after the kids. It’s another rule that doesn’t make any sense, but hey-ho! It was nice to see them and I’ve enjoyed spending some time together with Arthur doing a few things. There has been a marked change in him since he started school (he’s grown up a lot). I think it’s been very good for him.

He has a reading book and is doing pretty well with learning his letters. He’s also very keen to learn, so that’s really good news. We did some sawing wood and nailing bits together and also watched Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which he really enjoyed. On the way back to Soham last night, we had a very philosophical conversation about numbers.

Arthur is an angel in the school
nativity play. His costume is
one of my old shirts adapted
by Auntie. He also has a halo
but no wings (wings are
too distruptive).

He’d been counting cars (I’d heard random numbers being mouthed in the back) and, at March, he declared he’d reached 100. Were there enough numbers to count all the cars in the country? I said there were. Well, Arthur wasn’t sure about that. He’d had a conversation with his mum about the number of stars and she’d told him there weren’t enough numbers to count all the stars.

I said there were certainly a lot of stars, but we did have a number (or at least an estimate for how many there were). He said: how many? I said I couldn’t recall, but I’m sure there was a number available (I can’t drive and Google at the same time). He wasn’t happy with that answer. I then introduced the concept of infinity (which is when numbers run out) and he was very interested in that especially when we talked about infinity +1, but then it’s not infinity, is it? He fell asleep at Witcham Toll contemplating infinity, which is when Saoirse, who I thought was fast asleep because she was so quiet, chipped in with a number of profound statements, which I couldn't hear very well. She wasn’t too bothered about a proper answer, fortunately, and was happy to make her proclamations without hearing a sensible response.

The funniest thing Arthur does is mix up his personal and possessive pronouns. Instead of saying "she always does that" he says "her always does that". It's very cute. I don't think it's right to correct him, but I will say "she does, doesn't she" to which he answers "her does".

Saoirse is now at nursery three days a week and that’s also, clearly, been good for her. She copies Arthur reading and will sit with a book, pointing at letters and making random sounds. She’s also got a desire to learn.

She has new words and phrases, too. She says “OK” quite often. I was reading them a bedtime story and she got out of bed to stand on the landing. Margaret, who was in her bed waiting to put them down when I’d finished the stories, told her to get back into bed. “OK”, said Saoirse, still standing there. She also says “please” and “thank you” and the other thing she says is “help me, please”. Her great joy remains to jump – she’s more than happy to stand and jump, but if she can find something to jump off, she’s especially happy.

Maybe they have been learning Jingle Bells at nursery, because she’s singing extracts from it “jingle, way, bells, jingle” to herself. Margaret took her for a walk in the purple buggy on Saturday (that generally gets her off to sleep) but they walked all around the village for about an hour and a half with Saoirse singing her cover version of “jingle, way, bells”.

Thursday, 26 November 2020

My dad would have been 100 today

On this day, one hundred years ago, on November 26th, 1920, Eric Rayner, my dad, was born. If he were still alive, he would be 100 years old today.

He was the first child of Thomas Leonard Rayner and Ada Mitchell. When he was born, Thomas was 30 and Ada was 24, they had been married for nine months and two weeks. Perhaps my father was a honeymoon baby, although I don’t think they could afford a honeymoon.

Thomas had avoided the First World War by failing a medical when he went to enlist in Kitchener’s army. He was turned down due to hypertension and was pretty dismayed by the diagnosis. I think he expected to drop dead at any time. As it happened, he lived to be 85 and, had he passed the medical, he may well have been killed in the trenches.

He was a boilermaker by trade and during the First World War, he worked at Cammell Laird shipbuilders in Birkenhead. My grandmother lived in Liverpool in Doon Street, Kirkdale. The story is that they met on the Mersey ferry (no tunnel in those days). She was being bothered by a couple of ruffians and Thomas stepped in and shifted them. My grandfather was only a shade above five feet and a very mild-mannered man, but I’ve no idea how big (or how rough) the ruffians were. I’ve no reason to doubt the story because my grandmother told it to me. My grandmother was as hard as nails and I was always surprised she hadn’t been able to sort them out herself.

The completed family in the garden at Robert Street. Pam is
the baby and that will be Vi standing behind Ada.



The First World War would have been a boom time for Cammell Laird, but work soon dried up after the armistice and I believe Thomas came back to Cheshire with his pregnant wife in the hope of finding work and they rented a cottage on School Lane in Hartford, Northwich.

They must have been quite worried about their future, but Thomas managed to get work at Brunner Mond, later ICI. My dad was born at 341 Manchester Road, Lostock, a house built by his grandfather and he was named Eric, possibly after my grandmother’s grandfather who was called Henrick Lemmer, and had come to Liverpool from Germany. Later, the family was able to move into an ICI rented house at 9 Robert Street, Castle on the other side of Northwich to Lostock, but perhaps only two or three miles away.

I reckon they thought they had landed on their feet. They had a nice house and a secure job. ICI offered a pension and the housing would have been subsidised, also very modern for its time.

I remember the house very well. Thomas and Ada still lived there when I was a boy and my mother and I would visit regularly. As you walked through the back door, there was a toilet and a coalhouse, there was a kitchen with storage, a pantry, gas cooker and sink. The bathroom was alongside the kitchen. The living room had an open coal fire and a cast iron range, with an oven alongside the open fire. It always amazed me how grandma could wedge the kettle on top of the coals and iron grate. It always stood by the grate or half on, so the water was almost boiling for a cup of tea. There was a short garden which backed onto the embankment carrying the Chester to Manchester railway across the Weaver valley, first on an embankment and then a series of sandstone arches.

For a child, the surrounding area would have offered a playground and dangers. Just below them were the locks on the river and a wide flood plain. Across the valley was Sir John Dean’s Grammar School (where I went many years later). The west bank of the River Weaver was rolling farmland grazed by cattle and cut by a couple of deep gulleys and a flood plain along the canalised river. There was a small boatyard (Pimlott’s, I think) but it was mainly a rural landscape. My dad’s memories were of playing with a gang of other children, making camps on Twig Island (wherever that was) and, when they had some cash, buying nettle beer from an old lady who lived in one of the houses at the edge of the estate.

He also spent a lot of time in Lostock, where he had a grandmother, great aunt and great uncles, aunts, uncles and cousins in 339 and 341 Manchester Road. Those houses had long gardens (over 150 metres) leading down to Wincham Brook, where there was fishing, also greenhouses and livestock (chickens, geese and a pig). The two gardens were like a little farm. At 339, there was an orchid house and maybe 15 damson trees, plus apples and pears.

Tom and Ada had started a family pretty quickly, but it was another seven years before a second child came along, a girl who was named Joan. When Eric was 12, another sister, Pamela, was born and that completed his family.

Eric went to Castle Boys School. I was told he was smart and had won a place at grammar school, but his parents could not afford to send him. He was musical, playing the violin, also the clarinet and saxophone.

In his teens, he suffered a serious road accident which they feared may have killed him. He was cycling back to Castle after visiting Lostock. It was foggy and when he came to the crossroads at Northwich Station, he was cycling across when a bus went through a red light and hit him. He was carried, unconscious and bleeding, into the Lion and Railway Hotel where an ambulance was called to take him to Northwich infirmary. He recovered, of course, but his jaw had been smashed and he wore false teeth for the rest of his life. My grandma told me the bus company had paid compensation, but it had all gone to replace the carpet in the Lion & Railway, which had been ruined by the blood. I have no idea whether that is true!

Eric (front left) with the Bert Jarvis band


Eric got a job first at the terracotta works off Leicester Street. He said it was hard work and hot. At lunchtimes, the men would sink five pints of beer. My dad said they needed it to replace all the fluids they sweated out during the morning. Oddly, some folk I worked with used to polish off a similar quantity, but they weren’t sweating in a terracotta works. Later, he became an apprentice plumber with Fred Whitehead, a Northwich builder. I think he liked the work and liked his employer. He always spoke fondly of his time there. He talked of having to push a handcart full of tools and materials up Castle Hill, a steep road up from the river. In his leisure time, he played in a dance band – clarinet and violin. It was called the Bert Jarvis dance band.

My dad was a sociable animal. He loved gossip, loved stories and he enjoyed music. I’m guessing as a plumber with workmates, going into different houses and playing in the band at the weekends, his life would have been pretty good.

Then along came the Second World War.

He and a friend from Whitehead’s immediately went to enlist in the RAF. It must have seemed like the glamorous option. Eric’s friend was a painter and they took him, but told my dad there was no call for plumbers … sorry. He joined the Local Defence Volunteers, the Home Guard, and they exercised with broom handles because they had no rifles. By the time we were a year into the war, they had rifles and, after the fall of France, they were on invasion alert. They manned a sandbagged redoubt overnight at the junction of Moss Road and Castle Street. They had a Boys anti-tank rifle which was pointed up Chester Road (because that’s the way they expected the Germans to come) and my dad said they were very confident that they’d stop anything.

The Boys rifle fired a large steel bullet which could pierce 22mm of steel plate. It had a long barrel (36in) and had a magazine with five bullets and a bolt-action firing mechanism. Its kick was fearsome and I guess it was a pretty effective weapon against lightly armoured vehicles.

Eric was called up when he hit 21. It’s one of the things on my list to properly research his wartime experiences. I know that he spent some time in Northern Ireland and that, at some stage, he volunteered to be a glider pilot. “Why the hell did you do that?” I asked him. He said because everyone volunteered. Luckily, he wasn’t selected.

Military service and warfare was the reason most men travelled anywhere. Until then, Eric would have gone as far as his bike or a bus would take him. He had family in Manchester and Liverpool, but foreign travel was unheard of and, anyway, foreigners were not to be trusted. So Northern Ireland must have seemed quite exotic to my dad. To him, the fight for Irish independence would be seen through the imperialist lenses he was offered. Like many of his generation, he considered the Irish to be troublemakers.

He was infantry (not a good place to be) but at 5ft 3in at least he’d find it easier to keep his head down. Normandy was his first taste of action. He was in the Northumberland Fusiliers and I believe he landed on Gold Beach (Arromanches) on D+3 (June 9, 1944). I know that he drove a bren gun carrier and was armed with mortar and Vickers machine gun. At some stage, he was transferred (I may be wrong) to the 2nd Battalion, Middlesex Regiment. He fought in the bitter battle for Normandy and then through a freezing winter in Belgium, was pulled in to reinforce during the Ardennes battle and then crossed the Rhine in a Buffalo. He ended the war in Hamburg, a city in ruins. He was shocked by the devastation and staggered to see a Woolworth’s sign still intact on the front of a ruined store. After VE Day, he was sent to Palestine as a peacekeeper and added Jews and Arabs to the list of foreigners not to be trusted. I’d call him a xenophobe these days, but the only foreigners he’d ever met were trying to kill him, so I guess we need to cut him some slack. He did get leave in Cairo and got to see the Pyramids.

After the war and Palestine, he returned to Cheshire and never set foot abroad again. I would have liked to have taken him to France one summer, I should have made the time to do so.

Eric returned to his job with Whitehead’s and to his weekend band. It was on a plumbing job that he met his wife, my mother, Nellie Little. She had been in the WRNS during the war and had managed to get work as a cook at Dutton hospital, an old TB isolation hospital, after being demobbed. My dad was called to do some work and I guess he made straight for the kitchen and a cup of tea. They were married at Adwick le Street, just north of Doncaster (the village where my mother had lived before going to the orphanage) on April 16, 1948 and honeymooned in Scarborough. Eric was 27 years old.

They rented a house on Manchester Road and, on November 7 1949, his daughter and first child Margaret was born. Around this time, Eric decided to go it alone. He left Whitehead’s and started out as a self-employed plumber. It must have been a bit of a gamble, but my dad was a good networker and was able to get enough work. There was something of a building boom going on with council houses being built in Weaverham, Lostock Gralam, Leftwich and Rudheath.

I was born on July 18, 1953, named Eric Thomas after my father and grandfather, and the same year, they had moved from rented housing to 339 Manchester Road, the former home of his great uncle Tom Rayner. I was born in the back bedroom of the house, that was where I took my first breath.

As I grew up, my memories were of breakfast at the kitchen table, making toast through the grille of the Rayburn range, family Sunday lunches and my dad’s overalls hanging behind the door. They always smelled of putty.

I know now that my parents’ marriage wasn’t perfect. My dad had a string of girlfriends and my mother certainly knew of at least one widow that he kept comforted. He played in his band (called the Meltones) on Saturday nights and, on Sundays, had a regular gig at Lostock Club playing with a pianist and drummer for dancing and backing to club singers.

He had a number of cars, which would have been essential for his work. There was a Hillman convertible, which I can remember only for it boiling over between Macclesfield and Buxton when we were going to visit his cousin (my Aunt Eileen). There was also an Austin pick-up, a Morris 1000 van (with the floor falling out), a Ford Anglia van (36 TU) which was bought new, a Ford Anglia Estate, a Minivan and a Morris 1100 estate. They were all, always filled with tools and bits of pipe.

We had a telephone early (a line shared with another house a little way down the road). The number was Northwich 3352 and I often had to answer the phone and take messages. Where was he? He’d promised to come that day but hadn’t turned up – that was a typical inquiry. There were always burst pipes, especially in winter.

In 1963, a particularly hard winter, almost all the pipes in all the houses of the street were frozen. When they thawed, he was rushed off his feet fixing bursts. Another winter, when I was about 14, there was a heavy snowfall and a quick thaw which brought down almost all the cast iron spouts in the road. I was able to help replacing them with grey plastic ones.

That was one occasion where I was quite useful, but other times when I went out on jobs with him, I was less helpful. There was the time I was tasked with sawing through floorboards to lay some pipes and I sawed through the floorboards and the plaster lathes of the ceiling. That was embarrassing! Another time, I was given the job of digging a trench on Bates’ Caravan Park at Goostrey to lay mains sewage to a static caravan. I was digging alongside a hedge and thought I’d come to a thick root. I gave it a couple of good chops, only to create a geyser of water. I’d cut through the mains water pipe to one side of the site. I was like a Texan oil driller (only it was water, not oil). It was a quick job the join the two bits of pipe, but we had to turn off the water for the whole site and everyone was moaning.

Eric’s wife, my mother, died on February 6, 1965 from breast cancer. She’d had a mastectomy a couple of years before and, like the child I was, I’d thought “that’s it, sorted.” I hadn’t known she was going to die until a couple of weeks beforehand. It was so devastating for me that I didn’t really observe my dad and its effect on him.

The usual people were helping out. The great aunts next door, the same aunts that had looked after my dad as a child, were still helping out, sisters, mother, his brother-in-law Dick, many friends … They rallied around at the time and they did so for years afterwards. His sisters Joan and Pam did washing and cleaning, his mother came with Joan while she was still fit enough. My sister and I also had jobs (I was firelighter and keeper).

Our reduced family - me, my dad and
sister at the wedding of dad's
cousin Rae at Lostock Gralam.
Dad carried on with his work, of course, he had to; also continued to play in his band (now called The Chordials). What was a shock to me was the number of women who started showing up. Some of them were around pretty quickly, others nosed in more carefully. There were awkward moments when they encountered another. I remember being told not to say anything about Auntie Rita to Auntie Sybil. I did not consider these women to be my aunts. I was sometimes angry at the time but, later, I was sorry for them. They all wanted to be married, but my dad was not really the marrying kind, even when one of them (Sybil Haskins) had a child, Stephen, my half-brother, in September 1969 when Eric was 48.

Rita Lamb, who came for baths a couple of times a week, was willing to cook as well as bathe and clearly saw me as a door to gain access. She asked what my favourite dinner was. I’d always enjoyed liver when my mum cooked it, but Rita Lamb’s liver was nothing like my mum’s. She shocked me by saying I’d have to move my bedroom when she and my dad were married because they’d have that room. I asked my dad if he was getting married. He said he wasn’t (I don’t think it has crossed his mind) and I didn’t see Rita in the house after that … perhaps she’d been told marriage was out of the question. A few years later, she married Harry Hulse, another widower, who lived next-door-but-one to us and I often stopped for a chat with her.

We saw a lot of Sybil and there were a couple of Margarets and an Audrey as well. These were the ones we knew about and there were others. It came to a head at his funeral when Sybil and the two Margarets were all in the same room. There were no fireworks, just smouldering resentment. Margaret Ditchburn was quite cross with me a few days later. She wanted to know why I hadn’t told her about the others and I said it wasn’t my job to sort out my dad’s complicated love life. For all I knew, they were aware of the others and happy with the shared arrangement. She clearly wasn’t and wasn’t, but I gave her a heavy chest of drawers and some crystal door knobs that were in the wash-house and she went away never to be seen again.

Sybil and Stephen were more trouble. They wanted to be involved in sorting things out, but didn’t want to be cleaning and clearing – that fell largely to Margaret (my wife). Eric’s will, witnessed by Rita Lamb a few days before he died, provided enough cash to pay Sybil’s mortgage so her house was hers and the rest was divided between my sister and I. Sybil and Stephen started a legal challenge to the will, thinking he should have a third share. I could see my dad’s thinking. He thought that Stephen would have to wait until Sybil died when her house would be his. As executor, I said it was my job to carry out the clear instructions in the will and I stood firm. I insisted the legal challenge be heard in Peterborough to make it harder for them to travel from Macclesfield and they didn’t bother to show up. Their case was weak, but it was a nuisance and did allow me to draw a line under Sybil and Stephen. I’ve not seen or heard of them since.

Before my mother died, dad didn’t come on holiday with us. There were a couple of holidays at Middleton Towers, but I was too young to remember much about them. It was mam who took us on holiday (to relatives in Yorkshire, or to Blackpool or to the Isle of Man) and it was her who took us on days out – Manchester, Chester, Liverpool, Sunday School trips to Rhyl, Llandudno or Southport. After she died, I did have holidays in London (with dad, Aunt Joan and Uncle Don) and also Blackpool (with Sybil). We had always been told dad was too busy to come …

Three generations of Rayners - me, my dad and my children
- Sam, Max and Tom - at 339 Manchester Road.


When I started work, when I married and started a business, when we had children, dad was clearly proud and very interested. He was massively supportive in helping with things like some cash for a car, buying me a typewriter. I was pleased that he could come down to Peterborough to spend a couple of holidays with us and I was pleased that he could come to see our offices in London when I was managing director of Central Press Features.

Eric died of a heart attack on April 15, 1992. He was 71. He died in his bed, hopefully without too much pain and discomfort. When my Aunt Joan didn’t see him that day and got no response from the phone, they called the police. They broke in through the back door and found him in bed. I had a call that day in London and my sister and I headed up that evening. I was out on a sales call and got a message to call Margaret urgently. I feared something had happened to one of my children and my first thought upon hearing that dad was dead was one of relief – it’s strange how life can play tricks on you like that.

I still miss my dad and I wish he was around today to wish happy birthday and see how things worked out. People do live to be 100 don’t they?

Eric at around two or three years old

With his first grandchild, Becky

At 339 Manchester Road probably around
1974 - my sister Margaret, wife Margaret
and my dad.


Tuesday, 17 November 2020

One crisis after another, but we do have edible celeriac!

At least we have celeriac!
Lockdown 2.0 is in its second week, the Prime Minister of this rotten government is having to self-isolate, his chief advisor and his press secretary have been fired, there is still no post-Brexit deal with the EU but, on the bright side, I have grown a very good celeriac.

Covid-19 continues to dominate the news and we’ve now passed the milestone of 50,000 deaths due to the pandemic. That’s the highest in Europe. Boris Johnson is in self-isolation having had a meeting in Downing Street with a Conservative MP who later tested positive. He was told via his NHS app on his phone, which tracks who you have been in close contact with and notifies you to isolate if any of your contacts tests positive for Covid. Max has to do the same when someone at the AA meeting he chairs tested positive. The good news on Covid is that there are two vaccines which have shown to be very effective in testing. We’re now waiting for them to be approved and for a vaccination programme to be rolled out. It will be given to health workers and care home residents first, then to different tiers (oldest first). They may run out before they get to the 60-70 group because they only have limited supplies of the first vaccine.

Meanwhile, we are wondering whether we’ll be able to see anyone at Christmas. Lockdown should end on December 2, but the numbers are still showing 30,000 new cases a day and a death rate of 400.

There’s been a huge bust-up in the Prime Minister’s advisory team resulting in the firing of Dominic Cummings, his chief advisor; and Lee Cain, his head of communications. Both are prominent Brexiteers and played leading roles in the dishonest, dirty Vote Leave campaign. I’m glad to see them go, but I won’t be happy until the whole, useless government is voted out.

Negotiations to try to secure a trade deal with the EU continue, with a deadline looming this week. No deal will be disastrous for the UK economy. I guess we’ll see who is bluffing by the end of the week.

So, the good news is that I have grown a very tasty, fairly large celeriac at the allotment. I grew about 20 plants from seed and bought a dozen more as seedlings from the garden centre. Both seem to have thrived. Margaret baked the first one whole in the oven and we sliced it into four and ate it like a jacked potato (skin and all). It was quite tasty and I used the left-overs up in a fry-up for dinner last night. With our low-carb diet looking long-term, I’ll grow more next year – perhaps two packets, so I can share with Sam.


Tom is back in Ecuador. I ran him to Heathrow last Tuesday and he was able to attend his citizenship ceremony (left). We were in the middle of this process last year, so it was good to see it concluded. He’ll now be able to get an Ecuadorean passport and will have the right to live and work in the country.

I’m seeing Max for a walk later this week. He says that Inna had her latest pre-natal appointment and was told the baby (Ling) is in position, bigger than expected for her age and could come any time. Due date was early December, so we’re not far away.

Sunday, 1 November 2020

We're heading for a new lockdown

 

Covid-19 is still with us and it seems to be winning its battle to infect the whole country. As I write, we are about to go into a second full lockdown (on November 5) in four days’ time.

Back in March, we locked down too late and made a complete mess of handling the pandemic, which cost many more lives. Then, the government was desperate to get back to normal – people were told to go to work, go on holiday and were even paid to dine out (the ill-fated Eat-out to Help-out) government scheme which cost £60 million.

Well, it turns out this extra social interaction was keeping the virus simmering nicely, holidaymakers from Spain brought a mutated version back home with them and when schools and universities went back in September, it spread like wildfire.

We now have 20,000 new positive tests per day and 300 deaths per day, and if we don’t get the numbers down, our hospitals will be overwhelmed by the end of the month.

The government plan was to control local outbreaks, through its Test, Trace and Isolate system but this has been a complete disaster, with the privatised service failing to trace a huge number of contacts. No-one has any confidence in it. Basically, it’s a waste of £12 billion (unless you’re a shareholder in Serco, the firm contracted to run it).

Next, the government tried regional lockdowns, with tougher sanctions on areas with higher infections (basically the north of England). The scientific advisors said it wouldn’t work and wanted a two-week lockdown to halt the rise in infections. What did the government do? It continued with a tiered system of regional lockdowns (we’ve been in tier 1, the lowest) and it supressed the scientific advice. Of course, the report was leaked, so we’ve known for some weeks what was needed and the opposition has been calling for a lockdown.

Now it’s happened (late again) and now it has to be for four weeks, not two. Who knows if that will be enough?

Frankly, our handling of this emergency has been a shambles and, on top of all this, it now seems there’s a good chance of us leaving the EU without a trade deal with our major trading partner.

Can it get any worse?

Poor old Tom had stayed behind in England when Lucy and the children flew back to Ecuador. He had been building up his work quite steadily and was getting a decent income stream building up. That now looks as if it’s wrecked. Will he be able to work in lockdown? Will anyone want to set up stories? I’m not sure what he’ll do but, probably, he’ll head for Ecuador and try again in the new year. It’s very frustrating.

Friday, 10 July 2020

Learning to live with Covid-19

The number of people who have died from the coronavirus Covid-19 is now 44,000. Those are the official figures, but any figures from this government are not to be trusted. The number of deaths above the five-year mean is running at over 60,000 and that’s certainly a better guide. The truth is that testing has been so bad that many people have died of Covid-19 without that being put on the death certificate.

The death rate has also been worryingly high. You’d have around 1 in 20 chance of death, if you catch it, although that figure is distorted by the fact that this is a disease which strikes the elderly. If you’re under 30, you’re basically fine (there’s more risk of being killed in a road accident) but the risk increases steadily the older you are, or if you have an “underlying medical condition” such as diabetes, bad heart or respiratory disease. Obesity is also a major risk-factor

More than 20,000 of the official deaths (so around half) have been in care homes. When news of the virus first emerged, we were told by government that there was nothing to worry about; when it was clear that it was coming to the UK, the government wanted to adopt a herd-immunity policy, allow it to spread through the population and then die out. It was only when scientists modelled the effects – half a million dead and the NHS in meltdown – that they acted.

A full lock-down was implemented, people were not allowed out of home, except for an hour’s exercise each day and for essential food shopping. The government, fearing hospitals would be hit by a wave of seriously ill people, ordered that everyone who could be should be discharged and all routine work was put on hold. With no testing in place, thousands of old people were discharged into care homes, some of them carrying Covid-19, hence the dreadful toll on the most vulnerable section of society.

The NHS has survived. Massive emergency hospitals bult in exhibition centres were never needed and the number of intensive-care beds was sufficient. Basically, anyone over 70 wasn’t put into intensive care and the UK developed a system of treating the disease using a mask feeding pressurised oxygen, rather than full intubation.

Supermarket shelves were emptied by panic buying – toilet rolls, hand wash, baked beans, pasta, flour and rice could not be found. The roads were empty, there were no planes visible in the sky and people avoided each other in the street. Only this week, a couple of old people (clearly very frightened) shouted at me to get away. I was 30 yards away, but they didn’t want me any nearer!

When cases were first reported in Europe (in Italy), we were due to go skiing in France, where there were very few cases, seemingly nothing to worry about and the government advice remained to wash your hands frequently and carry on as normal. We arrived at La Plagne on Saturday night at 7pm and at 9pm, we heard the resort had been closed. We decided to sit tight and see what happened. On Monday, all of France was locked down. You were not to leave your house without good reason.

We decided to cut and run. Sam and Lucy, who were holidaying with us, could not get back to Jersey and so came to Thorney. The run of an almost deserted autoroute back to Calais was quite stressful. Would we be turned back? Were we allowed to travel home? Margaret was very anxious, but it wouldn’t be logical to prevent us from getting back to England. Surely, they’d be glad to see the back of us. “Unprecedented” became a common word in almost every news report.

Sam had to get back to Jersey to finish his notice (they were in the final stages of moving back to the UK) but with the house to be sold in a few weeks, nurseries closed and a compulsory quarantine in force, it was decided it was best for Lucy, Arthur and Saoirse to stay with us. Sam booked an easyJet flight from Luton, but when we got there, no aircraft were flying. I ran him to the station and he managed to get a train to Gatwick, book and hotel and a BA flight the next day! easyJet later claimed that no flights had been cancelled and wouldn’t offer a refund, so Sam was one of many people who have been unable to get money/deposits back from holiday companies.

The house sale was stressful. Getting all the paperwork together was a problem. Lucy couldn’t be there to sign documents and the UK government ordered a full lockdown the night before she was to go to a solicitor in Peterborough to have a document notarised. Would she have to go to Jersey? Could she get to Jersey? Even if we could get the documents signed, would the Jersey courts be open to allow the sale to be finalised?

Eventually, it all worked out. We managed to find a retired JP in Thorney, who was able to sign the documents as a witness and we maintained social-distancing rules by handing them through his lounge window for signature. The courts stayed open and the sale went through.

Sam managed to get a flight out of Jersey (to Southampton) and a taxi back to Thorney and a locked-down UK.

Selling the house was done, the next challenge was buying a house in locked-down Britain. They had agreed to buy a house in Soham and had agreed a date at the end of April to complete. This was almost as stressful as selling in Jersey. Eventually, the sale was renegotiated and went through at the end of May and they were able to move in a week later in June.

Deaths in the UK have been far higher than other European countries. Our government has made a complete hash of it. We locked down two weeks too late. Despite knowing what was happening in other European countries (especially Italy and Spain), we stayed open and major events such as Cheltenham Festival, an England Six-Nations game and a Liverpool-Madrid European Cup match were all allowed to go ahead. We ignored our early warning and didn’t act until the disease was rife throughout the country.

This is what happens when you have government based on an old-boys’ network, when who you know or who has done you favours matters more than being the best person for the job.

Sometimes, life has seemed like a bad dream; although it has (in truth) affected us little. Apart from some minor irritations such as queuing to get into shops, no pubs, no cafes, no football, no bike racing, we have been perfectly happy. I don’t know if that will last. There are going to be massive job losses and the economy shrank by more than 20 per cent in March, when we were only partially locked down.

For the past two weeks, we have been staying in Joyce Jones’ second home in Norfolk (Upper Sheringham) while Tom, Lucy, Julia, Aureliano and Florencia live in our house. They’ve just finished a two-week quarantine having managed to get a flight home from Quito.

Ecuador has been hard hit by the pandemic, with airports closed, a curfew in place and strict, stay-at-home policies applied. Lucy’s dad, Carlos, has been hard at work in the hospital in Ambato and has also lost his elder sister to Covid-19. We’re used to flu epidemics and the threat of something worse, but this wasn’t on our radar at all. It isn’t unprecedented, of course, despite what the politicians say. Spanish Flu killed millions 100 years ago and we’ve suffered pandemics of the Black Death (bubonic plague) and something called ‘The Sweat’ in Tudor Times.

Will there be a vaccine developed later in the year? Will we have to establish herd immunity? Will we be able to catch Covid-19 more than once? At the moment, we don’t know the answer to any of those questions and in an age where we expect our science and knowledge to be greater than the power of nature, it’s not a comfortable position.


Thursday, 2 July 2020

Grandchild No 6 is on the way

Very happy news amid the doom and gloom of Covid-19 – Max and Inna are going to be parents. The baby, we don’t know if it’s a boy or girl at this stage, is due the first week in December.

This means that, after waiting years for our first grandchild, we will have welcomed one every year for the past six years.

I have two grandsons and three granddaughters, so a third grandson would be nice to keep the numbers up, but I really don’t mind. Anyway, I’ll find out in a couple of weeks when Inna has a 20-week scan.

Many people predicted a baby boom following Covid-19 lock-down, but so far (with the exception of Max and Inna) that hasn’t materialised. I think many people are too worried about losing their jobs or their homes and figure that this is not the time to be adding to their expenses.

Inna’s job with Dunelm seems quite secure and she has been working from home during Covid-19 lock-down. Max has another year or so to finish his PhD and so he will probably look after the baby once Inna returns to work following maternity leave.

Postscript: We have now heard it's a girl - four granddaughters and two grandsons. Frankly, it doesn't matter to me what I get, they're all a joy.

Sunday, 26 April 2020

20,0000 dead and counting


More than 20,000 people have now died from Covid-19 in the UK (probably another 40-50% that when home and care home deaths are taken into consideration), We only get figures from those who have died in hospital and the health service will not admit some people to hospital. What’s the point in putting and 85-year-old on a ventilator?

There’s obviously lot more deaths caused by Covid-19 – people whose cancer treatment has been delayed and important operations postponed due to lack of capacity in hospitals.

This isn’t a good time to be old or ill.

The news on radio, TV and newspapers is universally depressing, so much so that I have turned the radio off this morning and I’m playing my “Driving Music” playlist on iTunes - Hetty and the Jazzato Band are cheering me up a little.

We have been in lockdown for a month, allowed out of the house only for an hour’s exercise each day or to buy essentials (such as food). It could be a lot tougher – I’m allowed to go to the allotment to work, we have a large garden and the weather has been pretty good. However, I can’t shake off a weird feeling about everything and a low-level anxiety which is always in the background.

Lucy, Arthur and Saoirse are staying with us at present. When France went into lockdown and we had to abandon our ski holiday in mid-March, they couldn’t get a ferry back to Jersey until later in the week, so they came back to Thorney. Sam flew to Jersey later in the week and then had to self-isolate at home while seeing patients by video or telephone consultation.

We don’t really know what is happening about anything in our lives from one day to another and it’s been even worse for Sam and Lucy. They were supposed to move back to the UK in the middle of April and have had to negotiate the stress that the crisis would prevent them selling their house, buying a new one or even getting off the island.
The sale was completed to schedule, but Lucy and Sam had to sign power-of-attorney documents for it to go ahead. Sam drove to the solicitor and they watch him sign through the window of his car. Lucy had arranged to go to Greenwood’s in Peterborough to get her document notarised, but then the government closed everything down with three hours’ notice from midnight the day before.

It seemed there was no alternative but for Lucy to fly back to Jersey, sign the documents and then fly back. We arranged an early-morning flight from Gatwick and a flight back on Friday evening. We’d look after the children. Then Sam discovered that if she flew back, she’d have to stay in Jersey for two weeks. What now? It looked as if she might have to go back with the children because she wouldn’t want to leave them with us for two weeks, but then a lawyer friend of Sam’s suggested that the document could be witnessed by a range of other people – a judge, a solicitor, JP, magistrate …

I called Ken Sheraton, a judge I know who lives in the village, but he was stranded in Wales at their holiday cottage. He did suggest a JP who lived in the village, so we managed to get it signed by handing it through the top window of his front room – very strange, but very welcome. It was sent to the solicitor yesterday and the courts in Jersey remained open for business and for the sale to go through.

We then heard that Condor had ceased all passenger services on its ferries, so Sam was not be able to leave Jersey with his car, which had been the plan. He flew back to Southampton (the only route left to get between Jersey and the UK) and the NHS paid for a taxi back to Thorney.

Their house purchase in Soham has been delayed by the lockdown and some feet dragging by the vendors. It’s a tough call, they would like somewhere settled to live, but it might be better to rent for a year and see what happens to house prices. If we get a 20 per cent hit to the economy (which some are predicting is the best we can hope for) then house prices are bound to fall … probably … maybe.

Anyway, they now have a completion date for the end of May, which will be something of an achievement considering the circumstances. Sam is due to start work the following Monday, so it will be a pretty frantic few days for them.

Saturday, 25 April 2020

Living with Saoirse


With Sam, Lucy, Arthur and Saoirse living with us, we have quite a busy house.

It has been nice to be able to spend time with Saoirse at such a special age. She’s 16 months old but, because she’s a second child, she’s so much more competitive and so much more advanced.

She’s been walking since she was one and is now desperate to jump, run, go up and down stairs and to climb.

She escaped surveillance at Nirvana in Jersey before our no-ski ski holiday, climbed up the stairs and fell down them; then, while she was here (thankfully not on my watch) she climbed out of her high chair and fell onto the floor. We had to take her to a locked-down casualty department at Peterborough hospital, where she had a CT scan – no bleeding on the brain, but she did have concussion, which explained the vomiting and sudden crying.

That was a few weeks ago and she’s fine now.

She would love to climb our stairs, the high-chair has been taken out of service and used as a block to prevent her getting into the glasses cupboard.

Cupboards are a big attraction, especially the snacks cupboard, the one where the biscuit barrel is and the blocked off glasses. Holly’s water bowl had to be moved outside on the first day she arrived because it was great fun to splash in it.

One of her joys is going up and down steps. There are steps from the patio up to the lawn level and from the lawn up to the decking by the summerhouse. All of these are wonderful things and she will hold your hand and pad round and round her little circuit going up one lot of steps and then down another, saying “step” every time she comes to one. I’d reached the stage where I’m happy for her to go up on her own but, a couple of days ago, she made a dash to go down the steps from the lawn to the patio and (thankfully) managed to stay on her feet. She was so happy that she did it again, and again, and again.

She has been trying to jump for some time now. She will squat down and straighten herself up, convinced that she’s jumping. I remember Julia being desperate to learn to jump and Saoirse is the same. She’s now at the stage when she straightens up quickly, she also lifts one foot off the ground. So much effort goes in, it’s really funny to watch.

Her toddle speed has increased at an alarming rate. If you take your eyes off her for a minute, she can be at the other end of the garden about to do something hazardous. Sometimes, when you shout “no” she stops; at other times, she takes no notice.

Her two favourite games (apart from the steps) are to run round and round things. It could be your chair, the patio table, the playhouse, the slide – as long as she can toddle around something and have a little chuckle every time she passes you. The other favourite is to play with stones, Often, these are dropped into the watering can or Holly’s outside water bowl; or she just likes to pick them up and throw them. She isn’t very accurate or consistent with her throws, but she often gets one just right and chuckles with satisfaction.

When she’s particularly pleased with herself, she does her “happy dance” which is hard to describe. It involves head movements, arm movements and bouncing up and down. Her other happy signal is to put her arms behind her and lean forwards.

Saoirse will copy any sound and now has enough words for a conversation. She can let you know what she wants, and you can ask her questions. Being a toddler, she’s also more than happy to have the screaming abdabs if she gets porridge and she wanted an oaty bar. She attended baby signing classes in Jersey and she has a few sign-language messages. She can do “poo” and “dog”, although she prefers to talk rather than sign. Here are some of her words:

Uff-uff – that’s a dog. Often she’ll sign that as well.
Ess – yes
No – couldn’t be clearer.
Shnack – snack (also very clear).
Jump
Shtep – step (up or down, but generally down)
Shtone – generally when she’s found a good one for throwing.
Nana
Mama
Pretty – she’s quite self-aware and loves to be admired when she has a dress on.
Boo – another way to pass a few minutes. Boo from behind the curtain or through the windows of the playhouse.
1, 2, 3 – she counts to three, generally when going up the steps of the slide.
Wha dat – can mean “what’s that?” or “want that”. It’s normally pretty obvious in context.
Up – I want picking up
Wack wack – a duck or goose (she especially likes to see the wack-wacks at the goose paddock.

She loves books and her favourites are Chuffa, Chuffa, Choo-Choo or any lift-the-flap book. Where’s Spot? is a good one and anything in the “That’s No My …” series. 

That’s a quick report on Saoirse. It will be out of date in days, she’ll have new tricks and new words. Yesterday, she watched Arthur walk backwards and that’s been added to her list of things to do.