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From Screen Burn to Super-Speeds: My 50-Year Digital Odyssey

They say nostalgia isn't what it used to be, but looking back at my technological timeline, it’s a miracle we ever got anything done at all. If you’d told me in 1973 that I’d eventually be chatting to an AI while waiting for a half-gigabit internet pipe to be installed in my home, I’d have probably asked which episode of *Doctor Who* you’d just stepped out of.

The Era of "Don't Break the Telly"

It started in the early 70s when my dad brought home a classic table tennis console. It was basically two white rectangles and a square "ball" bouncing in a void. We were allowed about five minutes of play before my parents panicked. They were convinced that if the ball stayed on the screen too long, it would permanently etch itself into the glass of the TV tube. We spent more time worrying about screen burn than actually playing the game.

The BASIC Struggle: VIC-20 and the C64

By 1980, I’d graduated to the Commodore VIC-20, eventually moving onto the C64. This was the age of the "magazine type-in." You’d spend six hours painstakingly entering thousands of lines of BASIC code from a printed magazine, only to hit 'RUN' and get a "Syntax Error on Line 432."

Then there was the Datasette. You’d press play on a cassette tape, go and make a three-course dinner, and come back twenty minutes later only to find the loading screen had crashed at 99%. It built character - or at least a very specific kind of patience.

The "Beige Box" and the Walled Garden

In 1991, fresh from moving house, my wife and I headed to the Metro Centre in Newcastle to buy our first desktop from Time Computers. It was a massive, beige monolith that probably had less processing power than a modern kettle, but it was our gateway to the "Information Superhighway."

I started with dial-in bulletin boards before the AOL era hit. Honestly? AOL was rubbish. It felt like being stuck in a digital creche. It was a "closed community" - a walled garden where they curated everything for you, but you couldn't really see the actual internet. It was cyber-purgatory.

I ditched it, but a year later, I was lured back and discovered the true Wild West: Newsgroups. Specifically uk.local.cumbria. It was brilliant - proper local chat, raw and unpolished, long before social media became a corporate machine.

Then came CompuServe and Freeserve, and suddenly, we were truly "online" (as long as nobody picked up the landline and cut the connection).

Tomorrow: The 500Mbps Leap

Tomorrow is the big one. I’m switching to 500Mbps Fibre Optic from EE.

I feel like a kid on Christmas Eve. Going from the screeching, 16k handshake of a modem to half a gigabit is like swapping a tricycle for a starship. It’s astounding to think that the distance between "typing code from a magazine" and "generating ideas with AI" is only a few decades.

The Future: Tears and Thought-Transfer?

If 50 years took us from a bouncing square on a cathode-ray tube to this, where are we heading? I suspect that in 20 years, the smartphone will be a museum piece, right next to the Commodore 64.

We’ll likely be wearing augmented reality contact lenses powered by the salinity of our own tears. We might not have full "thought transfer" just yet, but we’ll certainly be interacting with the world in ways that make our current tech look like stone tools.

For now, though, I’m just looking forward to that installer arriving tomorrow. I’ve spent forty years waiting for things to load - I think I’ve earned a bit of speed.

Children playing pong in the 1970s

The Knight in the Wax Parcel: The 600-Year-Old Secret of St. Bees

In 1981, archaeologists working at St. Bees Priory in Cumbria made a discovery that would stun the world of forensic science. Within a ruined chancel, they unearthed a lead-lined wooden coffin. Inside was a figure wrapped so tightly in two linen shrouds, bound with cord, that it looked like a parcel ready for shipment.

  • TRIGGER WARNINGThis post contains a graphic image at the bottom of the page that some readers may find distressing. Please scroll with caution.

When they carefully cut away the layers, they didn't find a skeleton. They found a man who appeared to have died only days before. His skin was pink and flexible, his joints moved, and his internal organs were perfectly intact. This was Sir Anthony de Lucy, the 3rd Baron Lucy, and he had been waiting 613 years to tell his story.

Reconstructing the Face of a Warrior

To truly understand the identity of the St. Bees Man, I asked AI to perform a professional facial reconstruction.

  • The Process: By analysing the soft tissue thickness still present on the preserved remains, we were able to map his cranial structure. We accounted for the weathered skin of a man who spent his life on the Scottish Marches and the Baltic frontier.
  • The Result: The reconstruction moves away from the "mummified" look of the remains, showing the real Anthony de Lucy: a determined, battle-hardened 36-year-old Baron with the features of a Norman-descended aristocrat.

Facial reconstruction of Sir Anthony de Lucy
Sir Anthony de Lucy (St Bees Man)

The Forensic Autopsy: A Death in Exile

The "mummy" of St. Bees is a medical miracle. Because he was encased in an airtight environment, a substance called adipocere (grave wax) formed, preserving his features. The 1981 autopsy revealed:

  • The Lethal Blow: Anthony suffered three broken ribs on his left side. One of these ribs had punctured his lung, causing a haemothorax (a buildup of blood in the chest cavity).
  • The Final Days: He didn't die instantly. He survived for several days, likely struggling for breath as his lungs filled with fluid.
  • A "Fresh" Discovery: When his lungs were examined, researchers found traces of liquid blood – a feat of preservation almost unheard of in medieval archaeology.

Why the "Wax Parcel"?

The most striking feature was the burial method: two shrouds soaked in cerecloth (a mixture of beeswax and pine resin), tied tightly with cords.

  • The Long Journey Home: History reveals that Anthony died in 1368 during a crusade in Kaunas, Lithuania.
  • Medieval Logistics: To transport a body 1,000 miles across the Baltic and North Seas without it rotting, his squires had to "field-mummify" him. The wax and resin acted as an antibacterial seal, while the lead coffin prevented leakage and excluded oxygen. He was packaged as a "parcel" because he was literally cargo on a ship heading home.
Sir Anthony de Lucy Crusades reconstruction
Sir Anthony de Lucy reconstruction

The Financial Intrigue: Alice Perrers

To fund this grand, fatal adventure, Anthony needed cash. He turned to a controversial figure: Alice Perrers, the notorious mistress of King Edward III.

  • The Loan: Alice, a distant cousin of the de Lucy family, lent Anthony £500 – a massive sum used to equip his retinue of fifteen horsemen.
  • The Connection: While rumours of affairs often haunt powerful women in history, evidence suggests this was a strategic family business transaction. Alice was the "banker" who financed the crusade that ultimately led to his death.

The Sister’s Devotion: Maud de Lucy

Anthony was the last male of his line. Upon his death, his sister Maud became one of the wealthiest women in England.

  • The Reunion: Maud waited 30 years to join her brother. She spent those decades ensuring the de Lucy legacy survived, eventually marrying Henry Percy (the 1st Earl of Northumberland) on the condition that the Percy coat of arms always include the three luces (pike fish) of her family crest.
  • The Vault: In 1398, she was buried beside Anthony. While she was found as a skeleton, she lay next to the perfectly preserved brother she had spent her life honouring.
Sir Anthony de Lucy burial procession
Sir Anthony de Lucy burial procession 

A "Tourist" in the Baltic Killing Fields

Sir Anthony wasn’t fighting for his king when he died in 1368. He was on a Reise - a seasonal crusade. During the 14th century, bored English knights would head to the Baltic to join the Teutonic Knights in their brutal campaign to convert the last pagans of Europe.

He traveled over 1,000 miles from the rainy hills of Cumbria to the frozen swamps of Lithuania. Specifically, he was at the Siege of Kaunas, a strategic gateway where the crusaders were trying to beat back the pagan Grand Duchy.

He didn't die in a glorious, open-field battle. The "crusade" in 1368 largely consisted of Reisen (raids). These were seasonal guerrilla attacks. Knights would wait for winter so the swamps would freeze, allowing them to ride in, burn villages, kill pagans, and retreat.

​It appears Anthony de Lucy was killed during a skirmish or siege at the "New Kaunas" fortification.

Forensic scans showed Anthony had three broken ribs on his left side. The cause of his death is believed to have been punctured his lung, causing a haemothorax.

He didn't die instantly; he likely spent several agonising days drowning in his own blood while his squires desperately tried to figure out how to get him home.

Why was he buried at St Bees? 

To understand why Sir Anthony de Lucy was found in St. Bees, we have to look at the powerful "Marcher" dynasty he belonged to.

He wasn't just a random knight; he was a key player in the defense of the English north.

His Origins: A Norman Powerhouse

The de Lucy family (also spelled de Luci) were of Anglo-Norman descent. Their roots trace back to the village of Lucé in Normandy, France. 

Following the Norman Conquest of 1066, the family became one of the great baronial houses of England, serving as judges, sheriffs, and warriors for the Crown.

Anthony was the 3rd Baron Lucy. He was born around 1332, the second son of Thomas de Lucy. His grandfather, also named Anthony, had been a legendary figure in the region - the Warden of Carlisle and the man who famously arrested the "traitor" Earl of Carlisle in 1323.

Why He Lived in Cumbria

The de Lucys didn't just live in Cumbria; they practically ran the western border. Anthony’s life was defined by the Scottish Marches (the borderlands).
  • Baronial Seats: His family held massive estates, including the Honor of Cockermouth, Papcastle, and Egremont. These weren't just homes; they were military fortifications designed to keep the Scots out.
  • The Family Priory: St. Bees Priory was the spiritual heart for the local nobility. The Lucys had "tenurial ties" here - meaning they were patrons of the monastery. It was the natural place for a high-status family to build their private burial vaults.

The "Bad Boy" of the Borders

Research suggests Anthony was a bit of a handful. In 1367, he was caught raiding Annandale (on the Scottish side) during a time of supposed truce.
  • The "Punishment": To get him out of the government’s hair, the Earl of Warwick - who oversaw the border wardens - likely "encouraged" or ordered Anthony to go on crusade.
  • The Crusade: This is why he left his comfortable Cumbrian estates for the brutal forests of Lithuania. It was a way for a high-born, aggressive knight to "redeem" himself through holy war while staying away from the delicate politics of the English-Scottish border.
The Last of His Line Anthony’s death in 1368 was a major blow to the family. He was the last male heir of the de Lucy line.

The Long Journey Home

Medieval logistics were a nightmare. If a high-status knight died 1,000 miles from home in the summer heat, he would usually be boiled down to the bones for transport. But Anthony’s family wanted him whole. To achieve this, his attendants performed a feat of "field mummification":
  • The Cerecloth: They wrapped him in two layers of fine linen soaked in a hot mixture of beeswax and pine resin.
  • The Cord: They bound him tightly with cords to ensure no air remained between the cloth and his skin.
  • The Lead Seal: He was placed in a wooden coffin, which was then encased in a sheet of lead and soldered shut. This airtight seal, combined with the antibacterial properties of the pine resin, stopped the clock.
He traveled across Europe, likely by ship through the Baltic and North Seas, arriving in Cumbria looking exactly as he did when he took his last breath.

A Forgotten Legacy

Beside him in the vault lay the skeleton of a woman - likely his sister, Maud de Lucy. She had outlived him, inherited the family estates, and ensured that when she died, she was buried next to the brother who had gone to the edge of the known world and come back in a shroud of wax.

A Legacy in Lead

Today, Sir Anthony de Lucy remains one of the most important archaeological finds in British history. He is a reminder that the people of the 1300s weren't just names in dusty ledgers – they were individuals with complex lives, financed by royal mistresses, and brought home across oceans by families who refused to let them go.

St Bees Man © Dr Ian McAndrew
© Ian McAndrew, Doug Sim & St Bees Parish Council

The Path to May 18: Navigating the February Washout

The first week of February 2026 has served as a stark reminder that market cycles are rarely a linear progression. Following a period of intense volatility that saw Ethereum test a structural floor at £1,300, the technical landscape is shifting from immediate panic into a calculated accumulation phase. This "Washout" serves as a necessary precursor to the broader cycle rise that I predicted back in September. With the market currently showing signs of stabilisation, I have decided to dip my toe back in, moving from observation to active participation as the technical data begins to align.

Geopolitics, Investigations, and the Muscat Signal

The macro backdrop is currently defined by a duality of sentiment. On one hand, the successful conclusion of the 17th IFSB Summit in Muscat, Oman, has provided a diplomatic relief valve, with signals of regional de–escalation acting as a catalyst for a 5% relief bounce. On the other hand, the domestic landscape in the United States remains fraught with uncertainty. The congressional investigation into World Liberty Financial – and the reported £400 million investment from Emirati interests just prior to the inauguration – has created a significant "noise" factor in the crypto markets.

This investigation, led by the House Select Committee, focuses on potential conflicts of interest and "pay–to–play" allegations. While such headlines often trigger short–term sell–offs, they also serve to flush out "weak hand" speculators. For those looking at the long–term structural health of the network, this turbulence is providing the necessary liquidity for a robust secondary test of the £1,300 support zone.

Wyckoff Accumulation: The Secondary Test

From a structural standpoint, the market is currently executing a classic Secondary Test (ST) within a larger Wyckoff Accumulation schematic. Having moved through the Selling Climax (SC) and the Automatic Rally (AR), the price is now returning to the £1,300 – £1,400 range. This retest is essential to verify that supply has been exhausted. This phase is typically characterised by choppy, sideways movement, which is the mechanical requirement for building the "Cause" for a sustained price markup.

Technical Confluence: MACD and the Ichimoku Cloud

The Monthly MACD recently registered a bearish momentum flip, a signal that historically requires an 8–12 week "reset" period. This lag suggests that while the floor is solidifying, the true momentum shift will not be fully realised until the second quarter. On the daily timeframe, the Ichimoku Cloud remains a dominant overhead resistance. Ethereum is currently trading below the Kumo, with the Kijun-sen (Base Line) sitting near £1,650. Reclaiming this level on a daily close would signal the definitive end of the current corrective phase.

The Weekly Libra and the May 18 Target

The most compelling feature on the weekly chart is the Libra formation (a Quasimodo reversal structure). This pattern, which used the recent volatility to trap bearish positions at the "Head," is now forming its "Right Tray." The target for this recovery is the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level at £2,930.

By projecting the intersection of this Fibonacci level with the weekly Ichimoku Cloud breakout, the technical data converges on May 18, 2026. This date represents a confluence of the 12–week MACD reset, the completion of the Libra symmetry, and a shift in global liquidity following the resolution of current legislative inquiries. For those re–entering the market now, the current £1,300 structural floor serves as the foundational anchor for this mid–year target.

Ethereum: This May Be The Starting Shot

The standard 12, 26, 9 MACD is the most widely used indicator in technical analysis, but on the monthly timeframe, it can be deceptively counter-intuitive. A close examination of the Ethereum / British Pound chart reveals a recurring pattern: "red dots" – which typically signal a bearish crossover – appearing right before some of the most explosive price gains in the asset's history.

The Acceleration Trap

The MACD measures the relationship between two moving averages. When the price of Ethereum moves up at a parabolic rate, the distance between the 12 and 26-period averages stretches to the extreme. A red dot is triggered not necessarily because the price is falling, but because the rate of growth has slightly decelerated. On the monthly chart, even a "slower" month of growth can trigger a bearish cross, even while the macro trend remains firmly upward.

Historical Context: The late 2024 Signal

A prime example occurred in late 2024. As Ethereum pushed toward £2,000, the MACD printed a red dot. To a novice trader, this looked like a signal to exit. In reality, the price consolidated briefly before embarking on a massive rally that saw Ethereum nearly double in value to a peak above £3,400. The red dot acted as a momentum reset, clearing out over-leveraged "weak hands" before the final parabolic push.

The Current Outlook

As we see a new red dot appear in early 2026, it is vital to distinguish between a trend reversal and a momentum pause. While the price has retreated to the £1,500 level, the historical precedent suggests that on high-timeframe charts, these signals often mark the "mid-point" or a period of significant distribution rather than an immediate end to the cycle.


Conclusion

The monthly MACD is a powerful tool, but it requires a nuanced interpretation. In a high-volatility environment, a bearish crossover during a price rise is often a sign of a "Bear Trap." Understanding that the indicator tracks acceleration – not just price – is the key to identifying these false signals.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.

Bullies: When People Punch Back...

The geopolitical landscape of 2026 has been defined by an escalation of rhetoric that many hoped was a thing of the past. Once again, Donald Trump has turned his sights toward Greenland, but this time, the "offer" has shed its thin veil of diplomacy to reveal something much uglier: a blatant attempt at international bullying.

From the threats of sweeping tariffs to the arrogant suggestion that a sovereign territory can be "purchased" against the will of its people, the current administration in Washington is testing the resolve of its oldest allies. But there is a fundamental truth that bullies often fail to realise until it is too late: power built on intimidation only works as long as people are afraid to stand up.

The Tactics of a Bully

The recent announcement of 10% to 25% tariffs on "any and all goods" from the UK, Denmark, France, and other European nations is not the behaviour of a partner or a friend. It is the tactic of a schoolyard bully trying to shake down his peers for lunch money - except the stakes here are territorial integrity and the right to self-determination for the 57,000 people of Greenland.

Arrogance is a disgusting trait in any individual, but when it becomes the foundation of a superpower’s foreign policy, it becomes a global danger. To suggest that a constitutionally protected part of the Kingdom of Denmark is a mere "real estate deal" is an insult to the history, culture, and sovereignty of the Greenlandic and Danish people.

Europe Will Not Be Underestimated

There is a dangerous misconception currently circulating in the White House that Europe is a passive observer, incapable of defending its interests.

While the United States undoubtedly possesses a formidable military, it would be a grave error to underestimate the collective strength and resolve of European nations. We have seen this resolve hardening over the past few weeks. In a rare and powerful display of unity, leaders from London to Paris and Berlin have made it clear: we will not be blackmailed.

The deployment of a multinational force to the Arctic to support Danish sovereignty is a clear signal that the era of quiet appeasement is over. Europe has a long history of standing its ground, and its combined military and economic weight is a force that demands respect, not ultimatums.

The Turning Point

Friends of the United States - nations that have stood side-by-side with America through the darkest days of the last century - have finally had enough. The bond between allies must be based on mutual respect and shared values, not coercion and "deals" struck at the end of a barrel or a trade war.

Bullies rarely do well when their targets decide they have had enough. By choosing arrogance over cooperation, the Trump administration is not making America great; it is making it isolated. The message from Europe and the people of Greenland is loud and clear: our sovereignty is not a commodity, and our friendship cannot be bought with threats.

Update: After a unified Europe stood firm against Trump, he has dropped his tarrif threat. All bullies are the same when confronted. Full of shit. 

Family Research: From Kings to Miners

When I was growing up, my Dad used to give snippets of information about his family. It was information that must've been handed down to him too. 

There was stories of the paternal side of family arriving in Cleator Moor, from Avoca in Ireland. They chose Cleator Moor, as the countryside reminded them so much of home. There was also the mention of the family having some sort of farm, and that I was descended from a Royal Irish line. The latter used to make me chuckle.

The Maternal side of his family originated on the Isle Of Man. I didn't have much information to go on this, apart from my Grandmother, Elizabeth Reid, was known as a Tyson in Ramsey, and her family came from Lezayre. 

Now, my Dad did start his family tree a number of years ago, but hit stumbling blocks with access to information.

And here we are today. I don't have the patience of my Dad, and so I fed all the snippets of information into ChatGPT - do bear in mind that it does make mistakes. 

I had it search the lines of both my Mam and Dad. I'm not sure if I will expand this research. It is interesting, and I can see why it can also be addictive. But as I mentioned previously, I'm not a patient person 😁 

About that Royal link...

THE UÍ MÁIL: THE FORGOTTEN KINGS OF THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS

The history of the Uí Máil (pronounced Ee-Maal) takes us back to the landscape of early medieval Ireland. Long before the Anglo-Normans arrived, the kingship of Leinster was a brutal, rotating prize contested by several powerful dynasties. For a few centuries, the Uí Máil were the undisputed masters of this prize.

Who were the Uí Máil?

The Uí Máil were a branch of the Laigin - the ancient people from whom the name 'Leinster' is derived. They claimed descent from Maine Máil, the brother of the legendary High King Cathair Mór. While other dynasties eventually rose to dominate the lowlands, the Uí Máil established their power base in the mountain strongholds of the Wicklow Mountains. Their heartland was the Glen of Imaal (Gleann Uí Mháil), which still bears their name today.

The Era of Kingship (600 AD – 700 AD)

At the height of their power, the Uí Máil provided several Kings of Leinster. Notable rulers included:

  • Áed Dibchine: A King of Leinster in the late 6th century.
  • Rónán Mac Colmáin: A legendary king whose reign was so significant it became the subject of famous Old Irish sagas.
  • Cellach Cualann (died 715 AD): One of the last great Uí Máil kings. He fought off the encroaching Northern Uí Néill and solidified the family's grip on the territory of Cualu (modern-day South Dublin and Wicklow).

The Dispersal

By the middle of the 8th century, the Uí Máil were militarily pushed out of the "over-kingship" of Leinster by rival clans. However, they transformed from a dynasty of regional kings into a hardy group of noble septs (clans) who guarded the mountain passes. The Ó Dubhthaigh (Duffy) emerged as one of these primary septs. While they were no longer sitting on the throne at Tara, they remained the "Lords of the Soil" in Wicklow, holding the valleys, such as Avoca, as warrior-nobility for another thousand years.

The "Thousand-Fold" Bloodline

Due to the passage of time, there are likely thousands of people across the Irish diaspora today who carry a drop of this royal blood. However, the Duffy lineage is unique due to its continuity. While many share the DNA, very few can point to a direct male line that stayed anchored to those same Wicklow mountains, following the same trade of the earth (farming and mining), until the migration to West Cumbria.

It is the difference between having a distant biological link and carrying the royal name and lineage back to the very glen where it all began.

FROM KINGS TO MINERS: THE ROYAL DUFFY LINEAGE

My father, Thomas Duffy (1937–2023), was a man who lived and breathed history. As the author of "Cleator Moor Revealed," he spent years meticulously documenting the lives, the struggles, and the "Little Ireland" spirit of West Cumbria. He was the keeper of the town's memory, but he also held a smaller, more personal piece of history: the belief that our Duffy line was descended from Irish Royalty.

Dad spent his life revealing the truth about Cleator Moor. Today, here is the truth about the line that produced him.

The Avoca Connection

The Duffy lineage traces back to the townland of Ballygahan Lower in Avoca, County Wicklow. In the mid-19th century, Avoca was a mining heartland. When the copper industry there faltered, the miners - carrying centuries of expertise - migrated to the haematite mines of West Cumberland. Our ancestor, Patrick Duffy, was part of that great migration. He brought with him a name that, in the Wicklow mountains, was synonymous with ancient nobility.

The Royal Bloodline

The "Royal" claim is anchored in the Uí Máil dynasty. Before the 11th century, this family provided the Kings of Leinster. The Duffys (Ó Dubhthaigh) were a noble sept of this house, serving as warrior-nobility and hereditary guardians of the land. Even when the English Crown seized the legal titles to Wicklow, our ancestors remained on their farm in Ballygahan as "Strong Farmers," preserving their lineage and names through the darkest years of the Penal Laws.

The Direct Male Lineage

Gen Individual Era Location / Context
G1 Cathair Mór 2nd Century High King of Ireland
G2-15 Ó Dubhthaigh Chieftains 500–1550 Kings of Leinster / Noble Sept
G16 Patrick Ó Dubhthaigh c. 1580 Wicklow Gentleman (Tudor Fiants)
G17 Donnchadh Ó Dubhthaigh c. 1610 Clan Elder, Avoca Valley
G18 Shane (John) Duffy c. 1650 Ballygahan (Dispossessed during Cromwell)
G19 Thomas Duffy c. 1690 Ballygahan (Jacobite generation)
G20 Patrick Duffy c. 1730 Strong Farmer, Ballygahan
G21 Thomas Duffy c. 1765 Tenant Farmer, Ballygahan Lower
G22 Patrick Duffy (Sr) c. 1795 Farmer/Miner, 1826 Tithe Applotments
G23 Patrick Duffy (Jr) c. 1832 Migrated to Cleator Moor c. 1860
G24 Thomas Duffy c. 1860 Iron Ore Miner, High Street
G25 Patrick Duffy 1898–1972 Iron Ore Miner, Cleator Moor
G26 Thomas Duffy 1937–2023 Historian, Author of Cleator Moor Revealed

THE REID AND DUFFY LINEAGE: FROM LEZAYRE TO RAMSEY

This history focuses on the Manx heritage of the family, specifically the paternal Reid line and its connection to the households of Ramsey.

It is a story that begins in the rural northern parishes of the Isle of Man and moves into the industrial heart of the port.

The Gaelic Origins: The Reids of Lezayre

The Reid paternal line is rooted in the parish of Lezayre, the "Garden of the North." Long before the family moved to the town, they were part of the ancient Gaelic fabric of the island. In the 1500s and 1600s, the name appeared as MacReadie or MacRery.

These ancestors were traditional Manx farmers and labourers who worked the land under the Lords of Mann for centuries.

The shift from the name MacReadie to Reid reflects the gradual anglicisation of the island's culture.

Alexander Reid and the Move to Ramsey

By the mid-19th century, the family was led by Alexander Reid. Born in the early 1820s, Alexander was a labourer who bridged the gap between the rural glens of Lezayre and the growing port of Ramsey.

His children, including Margaret, John, and William Reid, were the generation that fully transitioned into the urban life of South Ramsey.

They traded the fields of the north for the quaysides and narrow yards of the town.

The Collins Court Connection

The family's life in Ramsey centered on Collins Court, a dense housing area near the harbour. It was here that the Reid and Tyson families intertwined. Margaret Reid married William Tyson, and together they maintained a household that served as the anchor for the extended family.

Elizabeth Reid was raised in this court as a "niece" within the Tyson home.

While her birth name remained Reid, her identity was forged in this environment of maritime labourers and miners.

This "niece" status was a hallmark of the tight-knit Reid-Tyson bond, ensuring that family members were cared for regardless of their circumstances.

The Duffy Link and the Mainland

The connection to the Duffy name represents the next phase of the family’s journey. As the industrial pull of the mainland grew, the descendants of the Lezayre Reids began to look across the Irish Sea. The resilience developed in the courts of Ramsey and the glens of Lezayre provided the foundation for the family as they established themselves in the new industrial landscapes of the north.

 
Era Name / Line Location Historical Context
1500s - 1700s MacReadie / Reid Lezayre Parish Ancient Gaelic-Manx landholders and labourers.
c. 1845 Alexander Reid Lezayre / Ramsey The patriarch who moved the line toward the port.
c. 1880 - 1911 The Reid Siblings Collins Court, Ramsey Margaret and her brothers establishing the family in the courts.
1911 Elizabeth Reid Collins Court, Ramsey Recorded as a 'Niece' in the Tyson/Reid household.
Post-1911 Duffy / Reid Link Isle of Man to UK The migration and union of the Manx and mainland lines.

THE UPPER FARM: THE ANCIENT CORNISH ROOTS OF THE ANDREWARTHAS

While my father chronicled the Irish heart of Cleator Moor, my mother’s side - the Andrewarthas - represents the other great pillar of West Cumbrian history: the Cornish migration to Egremont. If the Duffys were the "dispossessed royalty" of Ireland, the Andrewarthas were the "Stannary Nobility" of Cornwall.

THE STANNARY NOBILITY: THE SOVEREIGNS OF THE SOIL

To understand the Andrewartha heritage, one must understand that the "Free Tinners" of Cornwall were not mere labourers. They were part of a Stannary Nobility - a unique social and legal class that existed outside the normal feudal system of England.

The Royal Prerogative

The term "Stannary" refers to the mining districts of Cornwall. While the rest of England was governed by common law, the Cornish tinners were governed by their own ancient charters, most notably the Stannary Charter of 1305. In exchange for the vital "Royal Metal" (tin), the Crown granted them extraordinary rights:

  • Legal Independence: Tinners had their own Parliament and were only subject to Stannary Courts, never common local courts.
  • Tax Exemptions: They were exempt from many of the taxes and tithes that burdened the rest of the English population.
  • The Right to Bound: A Free Tinner had the legal power to claim and mine minerals on any wasteland, regardless of who owned the surface land.

A Legacy of Independence

This status created a specific temperament in the Cornish miner: fiercely independent and technically superior. When William Andrewartha migrated to Egremont, he brought more than just tools; he brought the status of a "Cousin Jack" - a member of the aristocracy of labour. In the haematite pits of Cumbria, this heritage ensured the Andrewarthas were seen as specialists and leaders in the deep-shaft mines.

The Meaning of the Name

The surname is a linguistic fossil of the Old Cornish language. Derived from An-dref-wartha, it translates to "The Higher Farmstead." It is a "locative" name, telling us exactly where the family stood for over 700 years: on the high ground overlooking the Hayle Estuary in the parishes of Gwithian and Lelant.

The Free Tinners

In Cornwall, the Andrewarthas were "Free Tinners." Under royal charters, they held unique legal rights that set them apart. They answered only to the Duke of Cornwall, had their own Parliament, and possessed the royal right to mine for tin. By the mid-19th century, William Andrewartha brought that ancient expertise to Egremont. He was part of the "Cousin Jack" wave recruited for their skill in deep-shaft timbering, settling in Egremont and raising a family that included my grandfather, Philip.

The Andrewartha Lineage

Gen Individual Era Location / Context
G1 John de Dreu-wartha c. 1327 Free Tenant, Gwithian, Cornwall
G2-5 Medieval Andrewarthas 1330–1530 Stannary Men & Landholders
G6 Nicholas Andrewartha c. 1540 Muster Roll Billman, Gwithian
G7 John Andrewartha c. 1575 Manor of Connerton, Cornwall
G8 James Andrewartha c. 1610 Stannary Man, Lelant
G9 Thomas Andrewartha c. 1650 Hearth Tax record, Phillack
G10 John Andrewartha c. 1690 Gwithian Parish record
G11 John Andrewartha c. 1740 Industrial era Miner, Gwithian
G12 John Andrewartha c. 1810 Tin/Copper Miner, Lelant
G13 William Andrewartha c. 1845 Migrated to Egremont c. 1870
G14 John Andrewartha c. 1875 Iron Ore Miner, Egremont
G15 Philip Andrewartha c. 1910 Miner, Egremont (Elizabeth's husband)
G16 Margaret Andrewartha 1939 My Mother

THE ANDREWARTHA "COUSIN JACK": TALES FROM THE VELDT

The Andrewartha name carries the legend of the "Cousin Jack"—the elite Cornish miner who treated the world as his backyard. My Mam’s stories of Zulus and "boiling heads" are the echoes of a real journey taken by John Andrewartha, who travelled from the haematite pits of West Cumbria to the gold reefs of South Africa.

The Zulu Encounter

Whether as a soldier in the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry or as an elite miner supervising Zulu teams in the Transvaal, John Andrewartha witnessed the height of the British Empire's struggle in Africa. The "boiling pots" story was a staple of the era, a dark piece of folklore born from the culture shock of encountering Zulu warrior rituals and traditional muthi medicine.

The Missing Ancestor: Evidence in the Records

The proof of John Andrewartha’s South African journey lies in the "gaps" of the official British records. Between 1891 and 1901, John effectively vanishes from the Egremont census, while shipping manifests place him on the voyage from Southampton to Cape Town. This 'missing' decade confirms his time on the South African mining frontier before his return to the Cumbrian pits.

Year Record Type Location / Status Historical Context
1881 UK Census Egremont, Cumbria John present in household as a young miner.
c.1892 Shipping Manifest Southampton to Cape Town Departed for the Transvaal Gold Fields.
1891-1901 UK Census Absent from UK Wife listed as 'Head'; John working in South Africa.
c.1899 Shipping Manifest Cape Town to Southampton Returned to UK prior to Boer War hostilities.
1911 UK Census Egremont, Cumbria Reappears in records; occupation: Iron Ore Miner.

The story of our family is written in the red dust of the West Cumbrian iron mines and the deep history of the Ennerdale fells.

It is a tale of two halves: the ancient Cumbrian "Statesmen" and the seafaring "Cousin Jacks" of Cornwall.

The Benson Line

Long before the industrial chimneys of Frizington dominated the horizon, the Benson family were part of the landscape itself.

Tracing back through the 1700s and 1600s, the Bensons were 'Yeoman Statesmen' - independent Norse-Cumbrian farmers who held their land in Arlecdon and Lamplugh by 'Tenant Right'.

They were the defenders of the West March, surviving the Border Reiver raids and the harsh winters of the fells.

The Benson-Wilkinson Union

In the mid-19th century, the world changed. The discovery of high-grade haematite iron ore transformed Frizington into a booming industrial frontier. The Bensons moved from the farmstead to the pit-head. In 1893, Joseph Benson married Mary Jane Wilkinson, uniting two powerhouse Cumbrian mining families. 

Their daughter, Elizabeth Benson, grew up in this heart of the iron district. The Andrewartha "Cousin Jacks" and the South African Gold Rush 

While the Bensons were the local bedrock, the Andrewarthas were the global pioneers. Elite miners from Cornwall, they treated the world as their backyard.

The Windscale Fire

The ultimate test of the family’s bravery came in October 1957. By this time, the iron mines were in decline, and my grandad, Philip Andrewartha, had transitioned to the nuclear site at Windscale. When the fire broke out in Pile 1, Philip was right in the middle of the crisis.

​The heat coming off the reactor core was extreme as the teams fought to tame the blaze. Philip paid a heavy price for his bravery; he spent significant time in hospital after the incident with his face and hands bandaged due to working the discharge face. He earned the British Empire Medal for his actions - although I'd prefer the accident hadn't happened in the first place. 

This final chapter cements the family legacy: Philip carried the grit of the old Cumbrian miners into the heart of the nuclear age, standing his ground even when the stakes were life and death.
 
Era Lineage Location Significance
1000 - 1750 Benson Arlecdon / Lamplugh Ancient Norse-Cumbrian 'Statesman' farmers.
1850 - 1890 Benson / Wilkinson Frizington Transition from the fells to the Iron Ore pits.
1891 - 1901 John Andrewartha South Africa Working the Transvaal Gold Rush.
1922 Philip & Elizabeth Whitehaven District Marriage of Philip Andrewartha and Elizabeth Benson.
1957 Philip Andrewartha Windscale / Sellafield Working the face of the reactor fire.

Looking back across these centuries, the story of my family is not defined by a single location, but by a shared spirit of endurance.

Whether it was the Uí Máil kings holding the mountain passes of Wicklow, the Reid family navigating the transition from the glens of Lezayre to the quays of Ramsey, or the Andrewartha 'Cousin Jacks' carrying their Stannary independence from Cornwall to the gold fields of the Transvaal, a common thread emerges.

They were all people of the earth - whether as 'Lords of the Soil' or masters of the deep-shaft mines.

When these lines finally converged in the red iron dust of West Cumbria, they brought with them a combined heritage of ancient nobility and industrial grit. From the royal glens of Ireland to the nuclear frontline at Windscale, the Duffy and Andrewartha names remain a testament to a family that has always stood its ground, regardless of the landscape.
 


My New Logo: AI Did the Donkey Work, But I Wiped Its Backside

Have a look at my new logo (above). Not too shabby, is it? Now, before you think I’ve shelled out a small fortune to some fancy design agency, you'd be miles off the mark.

As a bit of a tight arse - and I’m not ashamed to admit it, especially when I can get a decent result for free - I decided to put the artificial intelligence tools to the test.

I asked the AI to whip up a logo for me. And honestly? It didn't do a bad job at all.

The basic concept and design structure were there, which is definitely the hardest part of any design process. It did the heavy lifting, the donkey work, if you will.

But here’s the rub, and a bit of a reality check for anyone thinking AI is a complete, hands-off solution. The first result? Blue. Which was absolutely not what I asked for.

I ran it again. And again. And again. Every follow-up design, while inching closer to the right style, still had elements of that stubborn blue lurking about.

It quickly became clear that the AI was a cracking starting point, but it wasn't going to cross the finish line all by itself. So, I had to crack on and finish the job myself.

I pulled the best design into Photoshop, rolled up my sleeves, and manually altered the colour to exactly what I needed. The moral of the story? AI is an unbelievably powerful tool, and it saved me time and a good chunk of money.

It gave me a foundation that would have taken me hours to sketch out or would have cost a designer’s fee.

However, it wasn't perfect. I still had to step in, put my own graft in, and refine the output. Or, as I like to put it: AI did the donkey work, but I still had to wipe its backside.

It's a free logo that I like. A lot.

I got the core design for nothing, learned a bit more about AI limitations, and got to flex my Photoshop muscles. If you're looking for a new design, give AI a try - just be ready to bring your own elbow grease to the party!

And. Well. This might be embarrassing. 

But. 

Am I the only one who effs and blinds at AI?



An Ode to Silence (and Side Projects)

Hello, you magnificent lot!

Yes, I know. The silence around here has been so profound you could practically hear a mince pie hit the floor.

If you've been refreshing the page expecting my usual sparkling commentary, you were probably met with the digital equivalent of tumbleweed and a faint smell of burnt sugar.

My profound apologies for the radio silence!

It’s not that I’ve been kidnapped by overly enthusiastic carol singers, or that my dog has finally mastered the art of unplugging the router (though both are plausible).

No, I’ve been locked away in the digital equivalent of a shed, furiously hammering away at a “Side Project.”

Ah, the "Side Project."

It sounds so glamorous, doesn't it? Like I’m inventing a sustainable source of tea, or perhaps designing a self-folding washing line. 

The reality is usually closer to me staring intensely at a screen, occasionally muttering to myself, and consuming questionable quantities of instant coffee. But fear not, the beast is nearly tamed!

Once I’ve dragged this project across the finish line - potentially looking like a wild-eyed Victorian inventor who hasn't seen daylight in a fortnight - normal service will resume.

A Very Merry Mince Pie Time!

In the meantime, while I’m still navigating the labyrinth of coding/knitting/world-domination (delete as applicable), I wanted to pop my head out of the digital trenches to wish you all the happiest, merriest, and most gloriously silly Christmas!

You all deserve a proper break. So please, take a moment, put your feet up, and try not to get into a heated debate about the correct order of the Quality Street tin before December 25th (it’s clearly the purple one first, don’t @ me).

And a quick note on the festive intake... Don't over indulge...

...Honestly, I immediately regretted typing that. Who am I kidding? This is Christmas!

The one time of year when eating your body weight in cheese, chocolate, and dry-roasted peanuts is not only socially acceptable but actively encouraged.

My advice, therefore, is revised: Do have a merry time, and if you can still button your trousers on Boxing Day, you haven't tried hard enough. Seriously though, enjoy the precious time with friends, family, and a dangerously large glass of something fizzy. See you on the other side, looking slightly pasty but hopefully full of brilliant new content! Cheers!



The Social (Media) Whirligig: From AltaVista to the Apocalypse

I’ve been around the internet block a few time — literally (think early '90s). I was there when dial-up sounded like a robot choking on my 16K modem, and when your biggest concern was whether someone needed the phone line. I’m a veteran of the digital trenches, and frankly, I'm exhausted.

My journey started innocently enough, back in the nascent days of bulletin boards, and newsgroups. And then along came Facebook. It was a brief dalliance — a quick 'hello, nice to meet you, I'll be off now.' It just didn’t stick. It felt like a digital village fête where everyone was awkwardly trying to make small talk.

But a few years later, peer pressure is a powerful thing. Suddenly, all the crucial updates — the births, the marriages, the truly catastrophic haircut photos — were happening exclusively on The Big Blue. So, I capitulated. I rejoined, mainly as a utility for ‘keeping in touch,’ which is what we all tell ourselves, isn't it? It’s the digital equivalent of buying a gym membership you know you'll use three times. 

Campaign Trail & Clone Wars

Then came 2014, and I plunged headfirst into the murky waters of political campaigning. It was a necessary evil, a cause I believed in, despite the general ick factor of online politics. I needed reach, and in the digital jungle, controversy is the loudest monkey. Did I enjoy it? Hell, no. It was like wrestling with a greased-up opinions badger. But it worked.

A few years later, however, the digital fatigue was a palpable thing. I’d had enough. I stepped away from social media and, in doing so, realised a truly disheartening truth: they are all clones.

I’ve tried the lot: the birdie one, the one that makes you look 17, even MySpace — bless its glittery, auto-playing heart. And much more!

What you post on one, inevitably pops up on another. They're all the same sausage, just served in a slightly different bun. 

It’s like watching an endless loop of a soap opera where the characters just keep changing costumes.

The Ghosts of Giants Past

But here’s where my inner cynic — or perhaps, realist — rears its weary head.

We've been here before. I have seen the empires crumble. Remember CompuServe? It sounded so important, so… computery. And AOL? For a while, they were the internet. They sent you so many CDs, you could have built a small, reflective shed. Yahoo! AltaVista! These were the kings, the behemoths, the things we thought would last forever. They are now, mostly, historical footnotes.

And the giants of today are no different. They are reaching saturation. The growth curve is flattening, and when that happens, the desperation sets in.

The Inevitable Downfall

We’ve already seen the signs: the increasing friction, the creeping sense of time wasted — the endless doom-scrolling. Soon, enough people will look up from their screens, blink in the harsh sunlight, and realise they’ve just spent three hours reading comments from a person called 'BananaramaFan42' about the structural integrity of a garden gnome. They will leave. Just like I did.

And as for the current crop of tech titans? Their strategy is depressingly predictable: Greed.

Charging for an ad-free experience is the clearest possible signal that the user base has peaked and it's now time to shake the change out of the piggy bank. They’re attempting to extract maximum profit from the addicted scrollers. They've gone from selling a service to selling back your attention span. It's a transparent, cash-grabbing endgame.

History doesn't just repeat itself; on the internet, it runs a loop. The giants of today will fail. Their greed will be their undoing. And I, a seasoned veteran of the digital churn, will be here to pour a nice cup of tea, shake my head, and say, with a wry smile, "I told you so."

Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go check my emails... on my Hotmail account. Some things never change.

Old Computer


Drones and Balloons: A Masterclass in Overreacting

Well, I say! The chaps at The Atlantic have clearly been having a bit of a wobble, haven't they? One rather dramatic headline later, and it seems the sky is falling because a few Russian drones went for a wander over Poland. 

Apparently, this "small incursion" is proof that NATO has "flunked" and is, in O'Brien's estimation, just a bunch of bumbling fools waiting for America to save them. It's all terribly serious, you see. So serious, in fact, that it's practically a training exercise.

Let's just pause for a moment to consider the sheer, terrifying scale of this supposed "flunking."

A handful of drones—nineteen, to be precise—crossed a border and... well, that's it. Some were shot down, others weren't. One or two even managed to get "deep into Poland," which sounds a lot like they got lost and ended up in a bloke's back garden somewhere near Wyryki. But no, according to the piece, this is a sign of a "constant failure" and a weakness that has "emboldened Putin."

Frankly, it's all a bit rich coming from a country that, not so long ago, spent an entire fortnight in a collective panic over what turned out to be a few errant hot air balloons. Remember that? 

The skies above North America were a scene of utter chaos as the mightiest military force on Earth scrambled its top-of-the-line fighter jets, with their multi-million-pound price tags, to intercept... meteorological balloons. The public, naturally, convinced itself it was an armada of UFOs, and the military response was, shall we say, less than surgical. One F-22 Raptor even had to use a Sidewinder missile to down a particularly aggressive party balloon.

The Incursion of the Inconsequential

So, while Poland deals with a genuine, if laughably modest, military trespass, let's compare the responses. The Poles and their NATO allies calmly activate their systems, perhaps a bit rusty on the whole "drone-bashing" front, and take what seems to be a measured approach. It’s an exercise, not a collapse. It’s learning, not losing.

Meanwhile, back in the States, the response to a piece of fabric and a basket was a full-blown existential crisis. Jets were scrambled, airspace was closed, and politicians made grave declarations about threats to national security. One wonders what they'd do if Putin sent over a proper drone, let alone nineteen. Perhaps they’d call in the Avengers.

O'Brien's argument that NATO is "constantly failing to accurately assess their security concerns" is pure, unadulterated claptrap. The Poles know perfectly well what they’re up against. They're a grown-up nation, not a child on training wheels, and they don't need to be told how to deal with a few whirring toys that accidentally crossed the border. This wasn’t a dress rehearsal for the end of the world; it was just a Tuesday.

What we’re really witnessing here is not NATO's failure, but an American pundit's desperate need to paint a picture of continental incompetence to justify their own political narrative. It’s the usual story: America is the only adult in the room, and without its unwavering leadership, Europe will simply fold.

The Real Strategic Peril

Let's be clear: the "strategic peril" O’Brien bangs on about isn't that a few drones went rogue. It’s the constant, patronising assumption from across the pond that Europe is incapable of defending itself. It’s the idea that a continent with multiple advanced militaries, immense economic power, and its own diplomatic networks is just a helpless damsel in distress, waiting for a knight in a star-spangled banner to ride to its rescue. This isn’t about drones; it’s about a blinkered worldview. While The Atlantic wrings its hands over a non-event in Poland, Europe is quietly, methodically, and perhaps a bit slowly, adapting to a new kind of warfare. They are learning to deal with the threats of the 21st century, even if it's on a smaller scale than the full-blown war next door.

Perhaps they should send the Pentagon a memo. "Dear chaps," it could say, "If you see a small, unidentified flying object, before you scramble a squadron of F-35s and declare a national emergency, just check to see if it's got a big helium balloon attached to it."

Because if that's the benchmark for military readiness, then maybe it's America that needs a few training wheels.

Weather Balloon Over The White House


My Crypto Adventure: I've Sold My Ethereum

Well, I did it. After a week of humming and hawing, I finally pressed the big red "sell" button on my Ethereum (yesterday). For a while there, I was convinced I'd wait until September, but you know how it is. You start to feel the temperature rise, and not because you've left the hob on. The vibes... they just felt off.

I’ve been watching the crypto market like a hawk, and what I saw was a familiar sight: the classic signs of pure, unadulterated euphoria. 

Social media feeds, which for months were a sea of quiet technical analysis and sensible market commentary, suddenly became a bonfire of "to the moon" memes and fantastical price predictions. It’s the digital equivalent of a conga line starting at a wedding—fun for a bit, but you know it’s a sign that things are about to get messy.

And the charts? Don’t even get me started.

A quick look at the weekly chart for Ethereum revealed the Relative Strength Index (RSI) was sitting at around 73. For the uninitiated, the RSI is a momentum indicator that essentially tells you if a market is overbought or oversold. A reading over 70 is generally considered "overbought," a polite way of saying the market's been running so hot it's in danger of spontaneously combusting. While it can stay there for a while, it’s a big, flashing warning sign. A bit like getting a text from your mum with an excessive number of emojis—you just know something is up.

I might have gotten out a little early. The price could, and probably will, go up a bit more. But I’m more than happy with my profit, which was substantial enough to make me feel a little bit smug, but not so big that I'm now shopping for a yacht. I cashed out, took my winnings, and now I can go back to thinking about less stressful things, like whether I’ve remembered to take the bins out.

Ethereum Crash




Speaking of winnings, a quick word for my fellow UK-based investors, because it's an easy one to forget in the excitement. Remember your responsibilities regarding Capital Gains Tax (CGT). For the 2025/26 tax year, the annual exempt amount is £3,000.

My own profit was comfortably within that limit, so HMRC won't be sending me a strongly-worded letter about my Ethereum gains. If your profits are higher, however, you'll need to declare them and pay tax on the amount over the allowance.

So, for now, I'm sitting on the sidelines, watching the fireworks from a safe distance. It’s nice to have a front-row seat to the show without the lingering dread of a spectacular crash. The crypto world is a rollercoaster, and while I love a good thrill, I also appreciate the simple pleasure of a nice, calm, flat stretch of pavement. For now, I'm off to enjoy a cup of tea. It's a bit less volatile.
  • May 2026 should be very interesting...
Ethereum Chart


Free Speech Crisis: Brought to You by JD Vance

Crikey, you have to hand it to JD Vance. The man has a cheek of solid brass. He's sauntered over to our little island, the land of tepid tea and queueing, and declared with a straight face that our free speech is on the blink.

Now, let's unpack that, shall we? This is the same JD Vance who, not so very long ago, was a self-confessed "Never Trumper," worried about the man's divisive rhetoric and all-round un-statesmanlike behaviour.

He even privately compared him to a certain 20th-century authoritarian. But then, poof! Just like that, he had an epiphany. The scales fell from his eyes, and he realised that actually, the man he'd once condemned was the very saviour of America. A magical about-turn, a total conversion, or perhaps just a very savvy career move? You decide.

This is the man who published a bestselling book, Hillbilly Elegy, that was lauded by liberals as a thoughtful, insightful look at the white working class. Now he’s the poster boy for the very politics he seemed to be critiquing. He’s gone from a venture capitalist hobnobbing with Silicon Valley types to a right-wing populist, railing against "elites" and "woke" ideology. He voted against his own bill because it was wrapped up in a larger aid package for Ukraine, a move that baffled even some of his own constituents.

And now he's here, telling us off about our free speech. This is the man who has praised Viktor Orbán, the Hungarian prime minister who has been widely criticised for eroding democratic norms and, you guessed it, free speech. He's here to warn us about a "dark path," which is rich coming from a man whose political journey has been one long, winding road of convenient U-turns and newfound allegiances.

In my opinion, he's a lizard reincarnated as a snake—a creature of pure opportunism, shedding its old skin whenever a more advantageous one presents itself.

So, JD, before you start clucking about our freedoms, maybe have a look in your own backyard. Or better yet, a look in the mirror. It’s all a bit rich, isn't it?



Don't Leave Home Without a Map and Compass!

This evening, I had a chat with a walker on the Wainwright Coast to Coast route. The route, from St Bees to Robin Hood's Bay, passes right through my village. He was a friendly chap with a Yorkshire accent, but was completely lost. He was walking in circles, looking for a shop that he thought was a marker on the route, and he was convinced that once he found it, he'd be able to walk to Dent Fell.

The problem was, he was in the wrong village. He'd been so convinced of his location that he hadn't thought to check a map or use a compass. I was happy to point him in the right direction, but it was a stark reminder of the importance of carrying a map and compass.

It's a common misconception that navigating the fells and other wild spaces with a compass is difficult. In reality, with a little practice, it's easy to learn the basics and stay safe. A map and compass are essential tools for any walker, and they can be a lifesaver in an emergency.

How to use a compass
A compass is a simple tool, but it's vital for finding your way. Here's a basic guide to get you started:
  • Orientate the map: Lay your map out flat. Place your compass on the map and rotate the map and compass together until the red magnetic needle aligns with the north-south gridlines on the map. The red end of the needle should point to the top of the map (Grid North). Your map is now "orientated" and reflects the features around you.
  • Take a bearing: If you know where you are and want to find a specific landmark, place the compass on the map so that the edge of the baseplate forms a straight line between your current position and your destination. Ensure the direction-of-travel arrow points towards your destination.
  • Read the bearing: Rotate the compass housing until the orienting lines are parallel with the north-south grid lines on the map and the orienting arrow points to Grid North. The figure on the rim of the compass dial at the index line is your heading.
  • Follow the bearing: Hold the compass in front of you, turn yourself and the compass until the red end of the magnetic needle lines up with the orienting arrow. The direction-of-travel arrow will now point towards your destination.
Triangulation
Triangulation is a brilliant technique to pinpoint your exact location when you're unsure of where you are.
  • Identify landmarks: Look around and identify at least two, but ideally three, prominent landmarks that you can also see on your map. These could be hills, buildings, or other distinct features.
  • Take bearings: Take a bearing from your location to each of the landmarks.
  • Draw lines on the map: Place your compass on the map with the edge of the baseplate touching the landmark you took a bearing to. Rotate the compass and map until the orienting lines are parallel with the north-south grid lines and the orienting arrow points north. Draw a line from the landmark, back towards your position.
  • Find your location: Repeat this for at least one more landmark. Where the lines intersect is your approximate location. If you used three landmarks, the lines will create a small triangle; you are somewhere inside that triangle.
Remember, technology can fail, batteries can die, but a map and compass are always reliable. Don't leave home without them!

Silva Compass


Crypto: The Case for Ethereum's Long-Term Potential

It's easy to get swept up in the frenzy of the cryptocurrency market. My own journey began with a curious dabble in Bitcoin, a small £20 investment in Litecoin, and a modest £6 profit that was hardly going to change my life. I've always been more of an observer than a gambler, and the promise of astronomical, overnight gains hasn't been enough to sway me. After all, a 10% gain on a tiny sum is a world away from the same percentage on a significant investment.

My head was turned not by hype, but by technology. Around 2021, I made my first investment in Ethereum. I had delved into the workings of various blockchains and came to a firm conclusion: Ethereum, with its vision of becoming a "world computer," had far more potential than its older, more established sibling, Bitcoin. Its roadmap to reduce energy consumption also resonated with me.

I began buying small amounts on a weekly basis, a strategy aimed at cost averaging. The crypto market, as it's known to do, soon entered a downturn. Yet I held firm, continuing to buy even as the charts began to resemble a scary fairground big dipper.

Eventually, I stopped buying and have been sat on my Ether for a while, a passive observer in this volatile landscape.

My plan has always been to cash out this September, following a cyclical 5-year liquidity chart. However, the temptation to stay invested for longer is strong. The reason? It’s a compelling technical analysis that points to a future where Ethereum's value isn't just tied to market cycles, but to a fundamental shift in the global financial system: tokenisation.

Maybe I'll cash out in the next few days, and then re-buy when the inevitable crash occurs. 

Update (14 Aug) - I sold my Ether

Shave Smarter: DIY Shaving Oil

I've had a shaving epiphany, and it's not involving a fancy new razor or some space-age foam. No, this revelation comes in a bottle, smells like a dream, and has left my face feeling smoother than a baby's, well, you know.

A few years back, I dabbled in the dark arts of shaving oil, forsaking my trusty shaving cream for something a bit more… liquid. And let me tell you, it was a game-changer. My skin felt amazing, the shave was incredibly close, and I genuinely wondered why I'd been battling mountains of foam my whole life. Then I remembered the price tag. Twelve quid for a paltry 15ml? My wallet screamed in protest. I mean, I love a good shave, but I'm not made of money.

Fast forward to today. The memory of that glorious, albeit expensive, shave lingered. So, being the resourceful, penny-pinching individual I am, I decided to take matters into my own hands.

DIY Shaving Oil

First, the carrier oil. This is the workhorse, the unsung hero that gets all the good stuff where it needs to be. After a bit of research (and let's be honest, a quick Google), I landed on Sweet Almond Oil. Not only does this stuff apparently penetrate deep into your skin, delivering all sorts of lovely benefits, but it's also a whiz at softening whiskers. Take that, stubborn stubble!

Next up: the fragrance. This is where things got really exciting. I wanted something masculine, sophisticated, and frankly, something that would make me smell less like I'd just rolled out of bed. My chosen concoction? Sandalwood, Bergamot, and Frankincense. If that doesn't sound like a Sultan's secret weapon, I don't know what does! 

So, I ordered the goods: a whopping 1 litre of Sweet Almond Oil and 30ml of each fragrant elixir. They arrived, I mixed 'em all up (with the precision of a mad scientist, naturally), and gave it a good sniff.

Oh. My. Goodness.

It smells absolutely fantastic. Seriously, I'm not just saying that. I'm considering decanting some into a dispenser to wear as a subtle fragrance during the day!

Serene Citrus & Wood Elixir
Sweet almond oil provides a luxurious foundation for the comforting depth of sandalwood, beautifully complemented by the zesty, cheerful essence of bergamot, and finished with the ancient, calming whisper of frankincense. It's a 10/10 from me. 

And the shave itself? It did not disappoint. My face felt incredibly smooth, no nicks, no irritation. And dare I say it, I've been left with a rather youthful glow.

Now, for the grand reveal, the moment you've all been waiting for: the cost. For all these luxurious ingredients, for just over a litre of this golden elixir, I paid a grand total of £22.

Let that sink in for a moment. Twenty-two quid. For a litre. When "King of Shaves" (bless their hearts) charges £12 for a measly 15ml. Do the maths, people. That's a saving so monumental, it almost feels like I'm robbing them blind.

So, do yourself a massive favour. Stop faffing about with overpriced foams, soaps, and creams. Get yourself some Sweet Almond Oil and a few essential oils, mix 'em up, and prepare for the best shave of your life. You can thank me later – preferably with a subtle nod of appreciation from your freshly glowing, youthful face.

Sandalwood, Bergamot & Frankincense Essential Oil


Morning Run: A Triumph

This morning, something truly monumental occurred. Something that involved sweat, a bit of puffing, and an awful lot of internal negotiation. I'm talking about the mile. Yes, that humble, yet deceptively long, measure of distance.

And reader, I conquered it!

Clocking in at a respectable 12 minutes and 38 seconds, I gallantly (and perhaps a little gingerly) covered 1.0 mile. There was even a modest elevation gain of 10 feet, which, for those of us who consider getting off the sofa a vertical challenge, is practically Everest. I've named this triumph "Morning Run," a title as descriptive as it is subtly humble, hinting at the dawn chorus, the dewy grass, and the faint, panicked squeal of my hamstrings.

Now, you might be thinking, "Twelve minutes, eh? That's not exactly setting the world alight." And you'd be right! But here's where the genius, the sheer brilliance, the 4D chess of my fitness journey comes in: the run/walk technique.

Oh, how I adore this method! For every five glorious, lung-busting minutes of "running" (which, let's be honest, often felt more like a brisk shuffle with intent), I gracefully transitioned into a one-minute walk break.

Think of it less as "giving up" and more as "strategically regrouping." It's like a tiny, self-imposed half-time show for your internal organs. A moment to ponder the meaning of life, decide what to have for breakfast, or simply just, you know, breathe.

This isn't just for us mere mortals, either. This run/walk wizardry is the secret sauce for building endurance without immediately collapsing into a heap and questioning all your life choices. It's accessible, it's enjoyable, and it means you don't feel like you've just wrestled a particularly grumpy badger after your run. Instead, you feel... accomplished! And maybe a little peckish.

So, if you've been eyeing up that running dream with a healthy dose of trepidation, I say embrace the walk! It's not cheating, it's smart. And who knows, before you know it, you too could be penning your own slightly breathless, immensely proud blog post about conquering the humble, yet mighty, mile.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I believe a celebratory cuppa and a biscuit (or two) are calling my name. After all that strategic exertion, I've earned it!

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Running: A Journey to Rediscover Fitness

It's funny how life comes full circle, isn't it? Back in 2020, I embarked on a journey that, frankly, I never thought I'd enjoy: running. The Couch to 5K programme was my gateway, and to my surprise, I absolutely loved it. From someone who never saw the point of running, apart from in my youth, in play; I transformed into a keen runner, eventually conquering an impressive 8 miles.

My old blog, Couch To 5K, chronicles those early, exhilarating days, showing how a structured approach, like the C25K app, can truly change your perspective on fitness, step by step, from those initial 60-second jogs to continuous runs.

Then, as often happens, life threw a curveball. A torn meniscus, a simple mishap while walking the dog, put a sudden halt to my running adventures. I tried to get back into it about a year ago, but my knee just wasn't ready. The discomfort was a clear sign to not push it, and so, running remained on the back burner.

But last week, a moment of clarity struck. I noticed how much my fitness had dwindled, how I'd gained weight, and a strong sense of nostalgia washed over me for the sheer enjoyment running used to bring. It's time to get that back.

I know Father Time is catching up, and I don't expect to hit my previous personal bests straight away – a 5K in 29:57 and a 10K in 1:08:27. Those were fantastic achievements, and while they serve as great motivation, my immediate goal is simpler: to run a mile in a few weeks without needing to stop for a breather.

I'll be drawing on the invaluable techniques I learned from the Couch to 5K programme. That systematic, gradual progression is exactly what my body needs right now. It's about rebuilding, listening to my body, and enjoying the process once more. This isn't just about shedding a few pounds; it's about reclaiming that feeling of accomplishment, the mental clarity, and the pure joy of putting one foot in front of the other.

Wish me luck on this new chapter of my fitness journey! I'll be taking it one step at a time, just like I did back in 2020. Here's to getting fitter, stronger, and rediscovering the runner within.

Bald Man Running Alongside A Tortoise
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Back on Track: A Sloth's First Steps Towards Fitness

Well, well, well, look who finally decided to peel themselves off the sofa and attempt some exercise this morning! After a two-year enforced "rest" (thanks, torn meniscus!), I bravely ventured out for a short jog. And by "jog," I mean a slow, laboured shuffle that probably looked more like an injured penguin trying to escape a particularly determined seagull.

My trusty smart watch, bless its honest little heart, clocked me at half a mile at an average speed of 5.6 mph. I know, I know, try to contain your excitement. Usain Bolt's record is definitely safe for now.

The truly miraculous news? My knee felt absolutely fantastic – a massive relief after all that time feeling like a creaky old hinge. The not-so-good news? My lungs clearly haven't been getting the memo about aerobic activity. They were staging a full-blown protest, huffing and puffing like a rusty steam train trying to climb Mount Everest. I'm pretty sure a small child on a scooter would have left me in their dust.

My average heart rate settled at a rather enthusiastic 133 bpm, peaking at a dizzying 158 bpm. I'm fairly certain that last bit was just my heart trying to escape my chest cavity and flag down a passing ambulance.

While it was a short burst of activity – roughly the equivalent of chasing a particularly stubborn biscuit across the kitchen floor – I'm told even this will have provided some much-needed aerobic benefit. My inner sloth is still unconvinced, but we'll get there.

The plan now is to repeat this same half-mile adventure a few more times, letting my body remember what it's like to move without complaining quite so much.

As the old saying goes, the tortoise wins the race. And frankly, these days, I'm more of a sloth with aspirations of becoming a slightly less breathless, marginally faster sloth. Wish me luck (and maybe send a small, portable oxygen tank my way).

Sloth running. Wearing blue Adidas trainers
AI Generated Image (obviously)


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