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28th Jun 2010

"Hey! What are your travel plans for this weekend? Just firming up logistic details and working out whether to head off in boots/kayaks on friday/saturday. Weather forecast is brilliant."

I'm not one to balk at short notice, so a message like that on Wednesday two weeks ago necessitated a fast trip to P&O's booking site, a late ferry on Friday and fast drive up past Loch Lomond and through Glen Coe at 1:30 on Saturday.

Errors of communication aside, we had a fantastic couple of days with Henry, Kathie and others. Some highlights (mostly focussed around the kayak trip to the campsite) in the grid below, clickable as usual.


22nd May 2010

I must have had a setting wrong on the camcorder to make everything so washed out, but I kind of like the effect. So really it was subconsciously deliberate.


10th Mar 2010

Here we witness the true power of modern technology being harnessed for truly pointless ends. It amused me for 20 minutes.

It goes like this:

  1. Point camera at compressed compost pellets
  2. Add water (that bit's quite low tech, actually)
  3. Mix to a Beethoven classic
  4. Blog it for the world to admire

Bonus points to anyone who can identify what the tray is sitting on.


7th Mar 2010

We've been running a youth club at our local church for the last couple of years. Here's a wee short we put together this weekend:

Disclaimer: all images and audio blatantly ripped off from 'tinterwebs.


25th Feb 2010

What do you get when you combine the above three elements, several scripts found in the far corners of the internet, free location-aware image hosting from Picasa and a few hours of meddling?

Something like this.

Click on an album to see the images displayed on a map. Zooming in shows more pictures, clicking on any thumbnail shows that particular picture.


22nd Feb 2010

Last week some time, the BBC news led with their usual story; a UK soldier had been killed in Afghanistan. The second story was that a strike in that country had "accidentally" killed 12 civilians.

Today it gets better. A strike yesterday killed 33 civilians and no fighters. The only mistake here was that there were civilians found dead after the strike, not that there were lots of people killed. Quoting from the BBC again:

The Nato commander said in a statement: "We are extremely saddened by the tragic loss of innocent lives.

"I have made it clear to our forces that we are here to protect the Afghan people, and inadvertently killing or injuring civilians undermines their trust and confidence in our mission.

"We will redouble our efforts to regain that trust."

Assuming he speaks for our country, are we as saddened by these 33 lives as the 56 killed in London two and a half years ago? It's to be expected that we're unlikely to reach the level of news saturation reached then: pictures of buses ripped open, closed underground stations, blood soaked rags, stretchers. But are we likely to ever hear about this again?

Let's raise the stakes. If the London bombings had been carried out by an official government, say of Iran, would we have been satisfied with a "full investigation" and efforts to "regain trust?"

We don't have the trust of Afghans. We haven't had it for a very long time. Launching airstrikes at convoys without checking who is in the vehicles, followed by putting it as the third story for a day or so on our news, depicts perfectly why we will never again have their trust.

If even one of the types of atrocities committed in Afghanistan were committed by a foreign government on UK soil, we would be more likely to talk about invasion and occupation than allowing them to "regain our trust." And that sentiment would not fade for several generations.