Monday, 3 September 2012

Thank You 'A' Flight Squadron 22: 6000 Missions and Counting.

Three cheers and many heartfelt thanks go out to the Search and Rescue helicopter crews at RAF Chivenor on flying their 6000 mission. It turns out that they have been particularly busy this year and from my Twitter feed I see that the other day they were called out on three jobs. Surely this is a further justification,  if any were needed which unfortunately it may be if policy makers have their way,  of the essential role that this outfit plays in our community. To my mind their role should be safeguarded, ring-fenced I believe is the term politicians like to use, at all costs and any attempts to meddle with it in the terms of unfathomable management gobbledygook should be ardently resisted.
One of the old crates.
The canary yellow whirly gigs of 22 Squadron stand for so much more than just a diversion in the skies while you are enjoying an afternoon on the beach or having a tramp out to Baggy. If they were to be outsourced, privatised or redeployed elsewhere I would miss them immensely and I think the people of North Devon would be to put it mildly, bleddy sorry to see them go. I say this even as a neighbour whose sleep has been disturbed on many occasions by their rather alarming mechanical racket, like a barrel of spanners thrown down some steps, as they hover overhead at all times of the day and night. Over the years I have got to know many of the crew personally and just this morning I got a great big wave from the winch person, lovely maid she is, as she flew low up the river and back to base.
These days as I'm getting on a bit I find it a great comfort to know that should I get into any scrapes out on the estuary, be whisked out by freakish tides over the bar never to be seen again, get dazed and confused on Braunton burrows or have all fall off of the rocks while prawning down at Rockham they will always be at hand to literally pull me out of trouble. I stress that I am not a reckless person but as any local can tell you these things do happen from time to time and I do realise especially in these straightened times that their services are costly and resources are scarce. And I don't like to cause a fuss.
To be honest and surprising as it may seem I have only had cause to avail myself of their services just the once. It was a few years ago now when I was sailing back from Cork in an old tug boat that the Old Boy's mate Dicky Diamond had bought and was intending to restore at a berth in Appledore. Due to my experience on the dredgers and having worked both in Cork Bay and Barnstaple Bay I was signed on for the trip as first mate and pilot. Dicky was the skipper and his boy Nathan was the engineer seeing as he worked down at Central Garages. We were just getting into the Lundy roads when Nathan was seized by agonizing stomach pains. So, suspecting appendicitis and with the tide against us and realsing that it would be several hours before we would be able to make it over the bar and upriver to safe harbour on the Torridge we set off a flare which I gather was seen by the Lundy boat the Polar Bear who radioed for assistance. Within the hour the chopper boys had hove into view and we were able to get Nathan winched off up, up and away to the NDI where the vestigial appendage was whipped out in the nick of time. Saved his life they did.
Kamikaze mission?
       In this markedly significant year for the Squadron a couple of cases have been highlighted in the local press where the deployment of the whirlygig has been questioned. The most infamous episode to date concerned a model aircraft enthusiast who had to be winched out of a gorse bush after tumbling into it while flying his model plane off Morte Point. This poor blokes plight was rather simplified n the local press and subsequently a right old hullabaloo kicked off people were outraged that the SAR crew had been called out to what they were led to believe was a relatively minor incident. There were calls for him to pay the money back and the unfortunate chap received some rather forthright comments on the web forums calling him in no uncertain terms a silly sod. However, my Step-nephew Denzil who you may recall is himself a model plane enthusiast was able to expand upon the matter and there was a bit more to the story than folk were originally led to believe. It turns out that the remote aviator had indeed fallen down the cliff into a gorse bush but he tumbled headfirst some fifteen foot into the furse and was discovered hanging upside down, trapped. It was a particularly warm day and even though his mates had tried in vain to retrieve him eventually and in desperation, fearing dehydration was setting they called out the helicopter. To be fair initially the chap had shown some social responsibility as he had been trying to salvage his plane which was a £300 1/32 scale Mitsubishi Zero (maybe it took on a life of it's own and went on a kamikaze mission. Who knows?) with an apparently inflammable battery and with the aviation fuel thrown into the mix fearing a potential gorse fire he had acted somewhat impulsively and ended up in such a hazardous predicament. Besides, what else were they supposed to do? Leave him there like hanging prone like one of those deceased sheep, just fleece and bones, you come across whose remains lie entangled in the branches to become dessicated by the windy salty sea air. He would have caused a bit of a stink after a while. Good job too we don't have vultures in this country as they'd have had him. Not forgetting the fact that the bush could burst into flames at any moment immolating him and turning the whole of Morte Point into an inferno. That would caused a lot more fuss.
I admit that this rescue was not one of the most heroic thrilling and historic ever performed by the Squadron as there was no burning oil tanker, lone yachtsman or celebrity chef in distress involved
Still I suspect it was good practice and a potential danger was averted. However, to my mind this incident, as benign as it seems reminds us of the emblematic and essential service that RAF Chivenor provides for our community and for the Nation as a whole. However from time to time we all need to remind ourselves that although our coastline is indeed an area of outstanding natural beauty it can also be deadly. So for everyone's sake be aware and try not to be too daft when you are out on about.

Ted after his cliff fall
Curiously,  a few weeks later Ted a twelve stone dog fell off the cliff down at Hartland and although he was rescued without requiring the services of 22 squadron but instead by several cliff rescue teams, some from as far away as Port Isaac, the story passed with no comment.  There were no claims of a waste of resources or calls for Ben or his owners to repay the money nor any suggestion that they had been foolish to allow the hound to stray near to the cliff edge. It was all portrayed in rather heroic terms. To my mind at the very least someone should have at least asked what the hell was the dog, especially one that size, doing off the lead on the Coast-path in the first place. Funny old world

Monday, 20 August 2012

Black Swan Causes a Flap

One morning last week I decided to take advantage of the fine weather and get the old dugout out and row up to Lidl on Seven Bretheren bank to do some shopping. I'd heard that it was Spanish week up there so I thought I'd take a look and see if they had any Basque cheese, some authentic chorizo, not the looky likey German stuff they normally sell and maybe a tin or two of canned seafood. I also needed to get some rubber adhesive from Jewson to repair my wetsuit.
I was carrying the canoe down to the Strand shoreline when my attention was drawn to several small craft bobbing about in the water slightly downriver from the Taw Bridge. I thought this a bit odd as it wasn't quite the tide for setting out night-lines, neither the right time of year for trawling up some mullet or netting a couple of salmon. Plus, it was broad daylight. Intrigued, I launched myself into the Ashford Channel and paddled my way upstream. As I approached the craft I became aware of quite a crowd of people gathered on the Pottington bank and judging by the amount of ocular equipment that they had set up alongside the path and were aiming in my general direction and beyond I was able to deduce that they were an advance party of twitchers obviously reccying the river before putting out a call to their fellow ornithological enthusiasts who would soon be flocking down here in their scores to glimpse and record a unique avian visitation. I had no idea what that could be but you do get them from time to time in these parts just popping up like one of those flash mobs. First off, there'll be one or two of them shlepping about in the muddy mire of the wetland beneath Anchorwood bank about and then before you know it dozens of them will turn up laden with bins and cameras and notebooks before disappearing as the evening light begins to fade.
I eased alongside the closest of the craft which turned out to be a lovely old clinker built wooden skiff with an expensive looking camera and impressively long lens rigged up astern on some kind of tripod contraption. I greeted the boatman. a bloke bedecked head to toe in camouflage garb, he even had his face daubed in green and black warpaint. Choosing to ignore this strange visage I asked him what was what? He told me, in hushed tones, keeping low in the boat and beckoning me to do the same,  that there had been a rare sighting of a black swan and he had taken these extraordinary measures in order to get some prized snaps of this alien specimen. He explained that the bird was Australian and so was some way away from his usual habitat. I told him I hadn't seen one and to be honest, taking a look about with my inherent nautical eye I couldn't see a single swan, black or white. Lacking the patience of these birdy folk I decided to take my leave and wished him good luck in his endeavours  before paddling on upstream eager to get on as it's true time and tide wait for no man and I had some Iberian provisions and Evo Stik to buy and I also hoped to squeeze in a couple of pints in the Marshals before floating back home on the ebb tide.
Glad to say that the trip to Lidl proved to bountiful as I manged to purhase several tins of octopus and some mussels in salsa picante, smashing. I had to get the glue at B&Q as Jewsons were out off rubber adhesive.
In the pub I found old Charlie Street at the bar wetting his whistle after spending a tiring morning pushing his mother Ada around the shops. Apparently, her mobility scooter has conked out and they can't get the parts for it so in the meantime Charlie has to push it if mother want's to go to the shops. He looked rather forlorn  and bleddy knackered. So to jolly him up I bought him another pint and told him about the goings on downriver with regards to the black swan. However, this did not seem to do the trick, as he turned to me with rather alarming look on his face. "Black swan" he says, "Don't talk to me about bleddy black swans. I've had my fill of those buggers" Obviously Charlie wasn't much of a twitcher by this dismissive show of disdain. Evidently, we seemed to have got our wires crossed here as after his continued muttering and spluttering  I was able to ascertain that Charlie was referring to some film about ballet, not a blck swan of the feathered variety. It turns out that Ada, Charlie's mother had got this film called Black Swan on DVD out of the library thinking that her great granddaughter Dolly who is eight and very keen on dancing would like to see it. However,  she hadn't taken the time to take a close look at the cover as upon viewing the film it was less about sugar plum fairies and more about sex and violence and not really the kind of thing you should let artistically natured eight year olds watch. So annoyed was Ada that she summoned Charlie to push her fuming back down to the library where she made a forthright complaint about the inadequate labelling of their DVD stock. The Librarian gave her a customer complaint form to fill in but Ada wasn't happy with this and on Saturday she's determined to get Charlie to push her down to the Castle Centre to take up the matter with Nick Harvey in person. "If he's back from his holidays that is", I added cynically. She wants some answers. Why does Devon County Council Library Services feel the need to stock such mucky and violent stuff? In these hard times they should be spending what little money they've got adding more improving materials to their catalogue. It's a library not bleddy Blockbusters. To my mind you cant fail her on that one.
Black Swan - the ballet thriller

In getting all this off his chest Charlie appeared to cheer up and grudgingly he admitted that there was a smidgen of a funny side to the tale. Little Dolly however remains traumatised and has not put on her tutu since.
With the tide turning I bade Charlie farewell assuring him that Dolly would get over it sooner rather than later. Poor mite. Once, I got the canoe back in the river I was glad to be able to make it back down to the twitcher in the skiff in no time. Walking back over to Seven Brethren I had a thought concerning little Molly's plight and was keen to have a word with him. There had still been no sighting of the bird I suggested he take a row up to the Yeo at least there he may be able to get a sighting of some ducks or a shag or two. He thanked me for this but continued scanning the delta. I waited for a moment before asking him a little question. If he did get any footage of the Black Swan did he reckon he could make me a copy as I knew someone who may like to see it if he could drop it into my place next time he is out on the river bird spotting.
That very evening, beautiful it was,  as I was appreciating a glass of Thatchers and doing a bit of cyclist spotting I heard the tell-tale beating of swans' wings and out over Spider Island there came into view a wedge of swans. Low and behold, there before my own eyes, following up the rear was a black swan, cygnus atratus as this antipodian native of the species is known. It was a truly magnificent sight and as I followed their flight up river I hoped that the twitcher mariner would be able to get some fabulous footage that I intended to share with Ada and Dolly so that they could marvel at the grace and beauty of the real thing and so inspire the youngster to take to  tie up her ballet shoes and take to the boards once more. Clever eh? 
Cygnus atratus




Thursday, 28 June 2012

Where's Captain Kirk?

At some point he must have been beamed down to Ilfracombe as he seems to be rather well acquainted with the North Devon's premier holiday resort's seedy seething underbelly of malignant vice and rampant moral lubricity.

I don't know why William Shatner felt the need to apologise to the people of Ilfracombe as he may not have been too far away from the truth all along!

http://www.thisisdevon.co.uk/Saucy-scenes-welcome-seaside-holidaymakers/story-16238373-detail/story.html

http://www.thisisdevon.co.uk/naughty-bunch-Playboy-TV-tells-North-Devon/story-16301575-detail/story.html

Monday, 25 June 2012

There's Something in the BTAA Community Shed.

    A few Sundays back I took a trip out with my step nephew Denzil up to Codden Hill He happened to be passing by Ashord Strand and popped in to ask if I wanted to come along. He was on his way up there to fly his new prototype model plane. It's a Stealth Bomber whose stability he wanted to test in the thermals up there. I had to take his word for it as aerodynamics is not exactly my specialty. So with the tempting offer of a pint in the Three Pidgeons thrown in I decided to tag along.  It was beautiful up there, the skies were clear blue and the view was at it's best. North Devon in all it's glory on a fine May day stretched out before me. Dartmoor loomed on the South Westerly horizon and in a westerly direction Brown Willy could be seen majestically poking up over the valleys of the Tamar. In the East, Exmoor, strewn with blossoming heather, rose up like a great purple bruise and out to sea Lundy basked in a salty haze. Ah Devon. The only thing that spoilt this was the drone of Denzil's bleddy plane. I told him I thought Stealth Bombers were supposed to be silent and rather irritated he explained that such technology had not trickled down as yet to the model enthusiasts level.
Fortunately, it wasn't long before his fuel ran out and as a squall could be spied out over Hartland we decided to get back down to the pub.
I always have fond memories of the Three Pidgeons as back int the days of the CB club we held a few charity functions out there. We'd all drash out there in convoy, I remember I had a lovely Ford Zephyr Zodiac at the time, eyeball in the car park and then head on inside for skittles and a chip supper. The place has been spruced up a bit in recent years but it was good to see that they were doing a fair old trade. Usual Sunday roast crowd and desultory hungry locals propped up at the bar gawping at the passing plates of meat and two veg. I was glad to see that Davey Kelly was one of these and I tapped him on the back as he was about to snaffle a few teddies and a piece of meat of one of the plates that the waitree was  removing from a vacated table. Bleddy gannet that bloke. Davey as always seemed gald to see a friendly face and he was even happier to see us after Denzil got him in a Guinesss and black. Davey's from a familly of Irish Travellers from way back way back when, way before the term even existed. Back then they were plain old diddcoys or diddies in a more familiar term of address for those that weren't strictly gypsy gypsies. In Daveys case his clan never travelled too far away from Pearcy's scrap metal yard on Seven Brethren Bank. I don't think Daveys been any further abroad than Minehaed. Still he's a bleddy case that's for certain. Back in the seventies he used trade on his dark looks and long curly black hair by walking around town dressed as a cavalier from the English Civil War he wasn't part of the Torrington sealed knot lot, he just liked the look, thigh lenghh boots, fancy buttoned jerkin, ruff and wide brimmed hat all topped off with a bright pink plume. Later due to an accident when someone had his eye out with a pool queue in the Gaydons he became a pirate, same old garb but now with added eye patch  and he lost the plume but gained a parrot. He then moved to Combe Martin where he posed for visitors on the front for a few seasons that is until the pop singer Adam Ant popularised the look and then no one wanted to have their photo take with a seedy looking Ant Person with a mite riddled parrot. Still it was good to see him, he still has the parrot and the eye patch but the has lost some hair but with the remaining locks tied back in a bony tail covered by a headscarf and the leather waders  you could say he still had a piratical air about him.
We had a natter for a bit catching up on things.He told me how he'd moved to Bishops Tawton a few hers back and he filled me in with a few goings on in the village and he was eager to tell me about his new allotment. I pressed him on this as I have had me name down for one for years now and I wanted to know how he'd managed to get one so quick. Turns out that the newly reformed Bishop Tawton Allotment Association (BTAA)  had taken on the task of reclaiming the old alotment field between the river and the church which had been left to rack and ruin after the demand for allotments had tailed off sometime around the end of the last series of the Good Life. However, as we all know allotments have once again come into great demand. It's a fashion statement so I've heard. A bit like it was back in the 70's a lifestyle choice but no bugger's ever in it for the long term save a few old boys. Still in order to meet burgeoning local demand the BTAA decided to get to grips with the old field and put it into some sort of order. Davey always one to sniff out an opportunity lent a hand clearing it out. I akled him if he used his Pirate's cutlass and it turns out he did. No joke. As they hacked into the overgrowth they came across the old allotment shed which everyone forgot was there. It turned out to be remarkably intact inspite having been abandoned for thirty years. Inside everything had been left just as it had been when it was last in use. It must have been like finding Scott's hut in Antartica, old tins of slug repellant, a bag of compost, some seeds in original packets, there was even a tin of Huntley and Plamers biscuits and a thermos flask next to an original glass milk bottle and a Daily Mirror from 1981 with Sam Fox on the front. Along with this treasure trove there was a fine collection of old tools which must have dated all from that era and rather odly an artificial leg. Of course some of the members of the BTAA were rather excited by this discovery which provided a link to the history of the village all of thity years ago. Which, as Davey pointed out was something for these folk as they were all blow ins and had a warped sense of history and felt the need to stamp some sort of mark in the annals of village life. Anyway, bys the by, live and let live, they gathered up the tools and other artefacts and transferred them to the new community shed,  where they exhibited them on the wall so people would be able to see how people in the village lived thirty years ago.
Davey then went onto tell a rather peculiar tale. He was in the pub a while ago when the chairman of the BTAA came tearing in, blathering inchoherently about someone singing  down at the shed. After settling him down wtih a brandy he was able to tell them how on approaching the shed that evening he'd heard a man singing from inside. Initially,  he'd got in a huff as he thought some homeless people had moved up from their tents by the railway line and moved into the shed. Indignant at this trespass he flung open the door to find no one there. A little beside himself and flummoxed he locked up the shed and thought he'd come back later just to take a look and keep an eye on things. Later that evening in the twilight as he approached the shed he could here a maniac cackling sound, some loud crashing followed by a belicose rendition of the Song of the Western Men. "And shall Trelawney live and shall Trelawney die. There's twenty thousand Cornishmen will know the reason why." This time fearing for his own safety he turned tail and skeddadled back to the pub, running mazed all the way along the main road. He was still a trembling and his eyes wild with fear and as he recounted his tale. Davey his interest getting the better of him swallowed down a large brandy for Dutch courage and full of bravado swaggered off down there to have look for himself. He found the community shed all locked up as usual, he took a look around and could find nothing untoward but just as he was about to leave he heard a voice coming from the old shed. "Get on you bugger. Bleddy thing. Get on" He catiously approached it all was quiet but as the eery silence shattered by a train rattling passed Davey threw caution to the wind and entered the old shed and was astonished by what he discovered. All the old tools, the artefacts were all put back just as they had been found a fewdays before. Everything was in exactly the same place just as they had been left all those years before. However, even more oddly there was one thing missing, the artificial leg. The shed was cursed, evidently someone not of this life had become very upset about having their things moved.
Davey later reported his findings back to an extraordinary meeting of the BTAA He said that he didn't think the ghost was particularly malevolent just a bit pissed off. However being better safe than sorry he thought it best to leave the old shed as it was and stay clear of it for the time being. He then told them that he'd gladly take on the allotment with the shed on it as he was now a familiar of the spirit. At this point he gave me a rather exaggerated wink. So intrigued was I that at the time I thought nothing of it.
  As it happens I did recall some rather tragic occurrence some thirty years ago at Bishops Tawton allotmnets which had led to the  discovery of a decapitated bod. It was the date and more specifically the singing and the false leg that had triggered something but try as I may I couldn't quite recall  the full facts of the matter. Fortunately, I knew someone who would be bound to shed a bit more light on things, Anne Cawood. So I called her up and managed to get hold of her before she took the dog out. I gave her the incidental facts that I had to hand and quick as a flash she was able to draw upon the encyclopaedic knowledge that she has of strange and mysterious happenings, solved and unsolved in the North Devon area. "That'll be Ernest Lovering" she said. "You remember Mr Lovering from school, the music master". That was when it all fell into place. Funny thing the mind. I only need a few pointers and I turn into Mr Memory. I'd got it. So I interrupted Davey and Denzils conversation on the next weeks Demolition Derby up at Mullacott Cross and asserted my belief that the spectral goings on down in the shed was bound to be the restless spirit of Mr Lovering, the music master. Davey remembered him and all. Adding enthusiastically how he'd tell us lads the tale of how he managed to loose his leg while fighting with the Chindits in Malaysia. At the end of this tale he'd always allow for a few minutes reflection and he appeared he got lost in the mists of time before, snapping out of it, walking over to the piano and thumping out The British Grenadiers or perhaps more pertinently in this case, The Song of the Western Men. Stirring stuff no doubt,but also the ghostly chorus which had been heard coming from the allotment shed.
Upon his retirement Mr Lovering, a confirmed bachelor, had devoted most of his time to his allotment which had become his pride and joy. He'd spend all his spare time down there and consequently his produce was of the highest quality and won prizes year in year out at shows as far a field as West Down and Woolfardisworthy. As I now recall, it seemed there was hardly  a week that went by when there wasn't a photo of old Ernest in the Journal smiling proudly festooned in his prize winning veg. Such was the fame that he brought Bishops Tawton Allotment Association they decided to cede him a vacant plot next his original one and to mark this unprecedented and magnaminous step Ernest decided to build himself a bigger and better shed. However, it wasn't long before tragedy struck, when one day not long after the Royal Wedding, as it happens, the decapitated and monoped corpse of Ernest Lovering was discovered lying prone, you couldn't exactly say face down at least, amid his potato patch. Initially, the Police were mystified. Foul play couldn't be so easily dismissed, as he'd hardly gone and chopped off his own head. But who could be responsible for such a ghastly act perpetrated upon such a well regarded pillar of the local horticultural community? So this line of enquiry had to be pursued. But it led nowhere, no escaped lunatics, no wild beasts and it had all gone quiet on the local axe murderer front. It was thought that he'd gone off to pastures new. They simply had no leads. That was until a few hours into the enquiry a blood smeared sheet of rusty old corrugated iron was found embedded in the neighbouring railway embankment. This discovery,  combined with the recent summer gales, some of the worst in recent memory, led the D&C Police to establish the facts behind such a dreadful occurrence.
Evidently, during the storm one of the sheets of corrugated had come loose and aware of this and the potential damage to his seedlings Ernest had gone down to the shed during the storm in order to secure and make good the roof. While in the middle of making good the damage it was assumed that a further sheet of metal became completely loose and took off in the wind high up into the sky before planing down upon Mr Lovering and despatching his head from his body. Denzil with his aeronautical knowledge was able to give us an illustration using a beer mat of how this may happen. Apparently, it all a question of windspeed and lift. The corrugated combined with metereological conditions could easily have set off this unfortunate chain of events. With the corrugations acting like ailerons, the sheet would have soared off very much like his model stealth bomber upon a gust high up into the sky and once the wind dropped gravity would have come back into play and the sheet would descend rapidly, on the wing so to speak, back down to earth cutting like a bacon slicer through anyone or anything within it's trajectory. A further gust would then once again launch it away up into the air before winging it's way back to earth at a great velocity and plunging into the embankment.
At the subsequent inquest although Ernest Lovering's horticultural skills were never called into question his construction skills were and a few people described him as a bit of a bodger and ultimately this fact led to his unfortunate demise.
Davey and Denzil were rapt by this tale. Davey concluded "Well I never. So, correct me if I'm wrong, but those BTAA feckers by moving his tools into the new community shed must have awoken his restless spirit. Bleddy restless I'd imagine as he'd been forced to hobble about the "other side" for all these years on one good leg after his other one was unceremoniously dumped and later entombed in the shed after the body was removed under the assumption that he was hardly going to need it"
"Exactly", I said reaching for a spare roast potato from the stack of plates being carried by a passing waitress.


Tuesday, 19 June 2012

A Tale of The Granny and the Rabbit Hole Drugs.

Medellin, Pablo Escobar, the Juarez Cartel,  Arturo Beltran Leveya, Los Zetas, Los Nortenos, General Noriega, El Chango and Tony Montana all of these are significant names and locations in the pantheon of the global drugs trade. Now another name and place can be added to this notorious list, Landkey and The Granny. Both Landkey, the quiet North Devon village which has found itself at the centre of the global drugs trade, and the narco nom de guerre, The Granny will soon assume their place in this ever expanding hall of infamy. I'm sure that when Los Tigres del Norte or a similar electro-mariachi ensemble hear of The Granny's exploits over here in North Devon they are bound to set about lauding her outlaw life in song and the tale of the Granny and the Rabbit Hole Drugs(La Abuela y Los Drogas del Agujero de Cornejo) will be born and rise to become a top seller in the bandit hit parade.
The Granny and her shady associate Mr X are thought to have handled at least fifteen shipments of cocaine over a period of eight months and were using a caravan on their smallholding out at Landkey as a distribution point. According to police, who had them under surveillance for some time, they were running a "family business" as wholesale dealers in cocaine (t'wouldn't be the first local family business to be founded on the gains from illicit activities neither) Once again Devon and Cornwall police have managed to nab chummy by using up to the minute technology, they had at their disposal a device which logged vehicle number plates, I suppose in this case it could be some sort of fancy telephoto lens, and after some weeks watching the comings and goings at the vegetable plot they were able to swoop. Whereupon, they discovered a quantity of cash, several thousand pound at least at the last count and saw Mr X, just before having his collar felt, throwing away a packet into a neighbouring field. However, as the packet had just lodged in a hedge the police were able to retrieve it. Later after extensive forensic analysis they were able to ascertain that it contained a significant amount of cocaine. Interestingly the packet was embossed with an Alice in Wonderland motif which turned out to be the logo of the family firm. They then brought in Misty the local sniffer dog and began to undertake an extensive search of the property and it wasn't too long before the keen nosed 2 1/2 year old Dachsund Springer Spaniel cross soon uncovered 173 grams of the drug down a rabbit hole. Thinking about it I suppose the Alice and Wonderland reference may have provided a clue as to where the drugs could be found. Sherlock Holmes maybe, D&C police unlikely.
Of course, due to it's prime Atlantic location and the propensity of many of it's inhabitants towards enjoying the odd puff, toot or two, this is not the first time North Devon has found itself mixed up in the international drug smuggling business. A few years back armed police swooped upon a boat moored at Bideford Quay which contained millions of pounds of narcotic cargo and bales of the stuff are often washed up on local beaches and coves. I meself keep an eager eye open for such a windfall down at Ashford Strand. To my mind it's the local equivalent of winning the lottery, better odds and all.
Now I've heard of all sorts of methods used the concealing and transportation of drugs including the use of mules, but I reckon this must be the first time in the history of narcotrafficking that rabbits have been involved. Another first for North Devon.



Could Landkey and The Granny find themselves the anti-heroic subjects of a narco corrido like this one? I must say I do like the tune.

Saturday, 16 June 2012

Puffin attacks Razorbill, Lundy

 

Blimey, I see it's all kicking off over on Lundy. I must get over there some time this year and catch up with all that's been going on. I think I'll take me tent and spend a few days birding and a few evenings in the Marisco Tavern. Tell you what though those puffins can be right little buggers. They'll have you if you disturb them. One time I was mobbed by a whole flock of them when I was fishing off the rocks. They came down from he cliffs, hundreds of them, all was a blur of beaks and feathers as I beat a hasty retreat back to Benson's cave. I left me sandwiches and bait on the rocks and they soon made short shrift of that. Picked clean in seconds. They might look all cute and innocent but they're cold hearted killers inside.