Today Reading has gone festival mad and there is no Bank
Holiday Monday to follow.
My housemate
Nat called from the landing to check for signs of life and that I wasn’t cancelling
because we are heading to town for the Chilli festival before moving on to the
Water festival and some music (and drama) at the Abbey Ruins. Nat has been a
friend since I was young(ish) and foolish. Now she tolerates and I think at
times enjoys the old fool. The first time we met had chilli’s and dark Morris
Dancing and both were involved today, in part.
We began with Chilli’s.
Nat has
an asbestos tongue and a sword-bearing mentality but she doesn’t like the taste
of wood so in the health and safety and hygiene world of 2019 that means sampling
peppers that could rip out your internal organs has become tricky. There are
wooden, disposable forks but there is less bread available to sample their
fiery delights.
We had
Chilli “Gummy Bears” though.
What draws
a person to Morris Dancing? I must meet one and find out but not today.
The events
we are interested in are hours away but the water is near so we headed to the
tow path.
There’s a rubber
duck race!”
What
fully grown man could resist this?
Not this one. £1 for 3 ducks as I joined the queue. Actually,
I made the queue because there was only one in front but it wasn’t an express
lane.
“There’s got to be an easier way than this but I can’t find
it.”
The ‘Duck Lady’s’ resigned tone didn’t suggest she had spent
too much time searching for it.
“And someone forgot her glasses.”
She suggested a gesture to her colleague and we all knew who
she meant. My pound collided with the other coins and the Tupperware while my
three ducks stumbled into the plastic barrel.
There are
probably only a handful of things that make me smile more than a child with a
balloon which I witnessed today. A child dropping a balloon and an adult
desperately trying to rescue it while the wind teases it away. Bent in an
undignified, childish manner genuinely believing this time will be different as
the balloon once more wriggles free. Fantastic! (Another is “Large White
Baps” in Tesco, always makes me smile.)
***
The weather is, according to Nat (and the un-available on
Android Nat App,) schizophrenic while families argue and friends smile but
there is overwhelmingly a balloon culture to the day as we headed to a play
that was being performed. It was a period drama that we witnessed with the cast
dressed in jeans and Nike trainers and printed scripts. It was good but we left
before the conclusion to watch the Gospel Choir.
The
Choir sang well and with an enthusiasm that was infectious until all that was
left was “La Morte Subite,” a band that do not fit anymore than they want to. Zarand,
the band leader/singer/ dis-organiser/ hurdey-gurdey (I’ve no idea either!)
player, was a neighbour of Nat’s before I knew her and he is a man who’s sense
of excitement is infectious. The man with the happiest smile I have seen coupled
with a Jools Holland joy and an ability to play the accordian, guitar, triangle
and the hurdey-gurdey.
It is
Gypsy music and it is happy. Defiantly happy. Sung and shouted in several
languages with one message (and no sense of chronological time.)
We
stopped at “The Nag’s Head” for a final pint and I checked my phone.
No
missed call.
No text
message.
My rubber duck didn’t win.
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