The web pages of Stephen Penney


Thursday, 4th November, 2004




Bobby

Bobby. 1982 - 2004


Bobby was a present from my Parents on my 4th birthday. He's lived a long, happy, and healthy life with us. His health has deteriorated over the last six months, and a week ago it got to the stage that he was having difficulty eating. He was no longer enjoying life, so we decided enough was enough and took him to the vets to be put to sleep. He is buried in our back garden now. It's good to know he no longer feels any pain. He has been such an important part of our family, he will be missed more than words can describe.


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Thursday, 28th October, 2004
In 2003 a peal of Erin Caters was composed by Ander Holroyd and rung by the Cambridge University Guild.

The composition was the first to be composed on the "Magnificant Six" plan, and has intrigued me ever since. I arranged a few quarter peals based on the same plan, one of which I called last night:

St Albans, Hertfordshire
St Peter
Thu, 28 Oct 2004 in 47 mins (24-0-3)
1260 Erin Caters
Arr. S W Penney from A E Holroyd
1 Bj?rn E Bradstock
2 Stephen W Penney (C)
3 Christine M Carter
4 Geoffrey Dodds
5 Claire C Nicholson
6 Graham A Duke
7 Richard Sales
8 Gerald Penney
9 Brian C Watson
10 Richard A Smith
First of Erin as Conductor

123456789
---------
a 738495162
5b 345678912
a 951627384
a 318642975
a 987654321
a 372615948
b 135792468
b 912345678
b 495162738
c 123456789
---------
a = 1s 6s 9s 10 12s 13
b = 1s 6 9s 10 14 15
c = 2 4 5 8 11

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Friday, 6th August, 2004
Great British Beer Festival

I left work about 5 last night, just as a big storm was brewing - it threatened to chuck it down, but the only rain I saw was a few drops as I walked to the station. A train and three tubes later, I was at Kensington Olympia tube station. I'd not brought an A-Z, and was thus relying on my own cunning andwit to find where the Olympia was (I'd not been there before). My plan wasto find some people with beards and beer bellies and follow them. None were in sight, however I followed the crowd of a hundred or so people that got off the tube with me to the entrance, which was just across the road.I joined the 100 yard "non members" queue, which went down in about 5 minutes. Kensington Olympia is huge, I had a quick look round for my friends, and then made a couple of phone calls before realising the building was twice as large as I'd realised.
The trick is at these things to get a pint glass (three quid on sale or return) and drink halves - that way you get to try more beers, and they invariably fill the glass way over the 1/2 pint line. However I started offwith a pint of "Mole's Best Bitter" (4.0%) to line my stomach, and to give me time to suss out what was what.
We were stood next to a stall seling burgers at extortionate prices, including lamb, free range pork (do you really get battery pigs?) and Aberdeen Angus beef. They'd sold out of pork and lamb, so I had a beefburger with cider onions for 3 quid with my next half pint (Leek "St Edwards Ale"4.6%).
There were various stools around and about, most of which sold the usual beer festival paraphernalia - t-shirts, beer towels, books etc, and there was a tombola stand next to us where you could win naff prizes. My third beer was Bullmastiff "Welsh Black" (4.8%) - it's from in Penarth, just south of Cardiff. We used to cycle there to a pub which sold Bullmastiff Gold for a pound a pint. Happy days.
Next I wanted Dark Star "Espresso stout", so I went up to the appropriate bar to discover they'd sold out of it, so I had "Sunburst" (4.8%), with which I had another beefburger, with mustard I spilt down my pint glass and had to lick off....
The bars were split up mostly into areas of the country, as well as a few brewery bars, so I tried to cover as much of the land as possible. I'd not had anything from the West Midlands at this point, so I had Teme Valley "TheDark Stranger" (4.4%) next. Some of our groups had got some cheese and olives in, which were very nice but the brie didn't really compliment the beer very well....
Time was running short at this point, and I'd limited myself to 8 half pints, as I'd have to get up for work the next morning. It was 10pm, half an hour before last orders, and I had two halves to squeeze in. So I went up tothe nearest bar and got a half of York "York IPA" (5%), and with five minutes to go Follygold "Drinking is folly" (5%).
I usually keep my beer glass as a souvenir, but didn't fancy my chances of getting it across London and back home without breaking it, so handed it in and got my three quid back. As everyone piled in the tube, a few of us decided it would be better to wait a while, and so avoided the crowds byf inding a nearby pub and had a quick pint of Adnams. I got to Kings Cross about 12.30, and proudly told someone looking at the timetable that I knew when the next train was. He pointed out that I was looking at the Saturday timetable, and I was looking at 11.30, not 12.30. I got a taxi from the station and got home about 1.30.
I can't deny getting up this morning was a bit of the struggle, although I think I'm suffering more from the lack of sleep than from the alcohol. All in all a very enjoyable evening. I shan't be returning again this year -by all accounts it gets very crowded on the Friday and the Saturday - but it's certainly a must for next year.

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Tuesday, 15th June, 2004
Miniamp

I used to have a smokey amp that I bought from firebox.com. However, after a couple of years of owning it, disaster struck and one of the battery leads broke off. Looking inside the miniamp, the battery connections are well hidden, and I decided the only appropriate course of action was to remove all the casing and the copious amounts of glue to get to the circuit board. This meant destroying the cigarette box shell, but as it was useless without doing this, it was the only thing to do, despite my doubts about my soldering skills.
So it sat in my drawer for about three months, in pieces and useless, until I could find an empty fag box to use to build a new shell. As I don't smoke, this could take a while.
However, last night I was trying to think of some way of getting my webcam more permanently fixed in the right direction, so I don't have to constantly get it pointing out of the window rather than down at the windowsill, and I started to wonder if I could use the Terry's "egg and spoon" egg box that I was given at Easter.
It turned out it wouldn't work, so I set about modifying it for use with my miniamp - I cut two holes for the sockets, and one for the speaker, and glued the speaker in place. Then I soldered the battery connectors back on with surprising sucess.

   


Amazingly it now works as well as it did before - here's the intro to "Some might say" that I recorded using it tonight. So there we have it - (probably) the world's only guitar amp within an egg box. Rock (and indeed) on.

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Tuesday, 25th May, 2004
A few weeks a go I bought a Pentax Optio 555 camera. I took it with me to a friend's wedding in Wales, and took a couple of detours around Aberystwyth and Cardiff. The photos are here.

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Wednesday, 7th April, 2004
Lent

This year I gave up posting to Ringing Chat for lent. To render this somewhat pontless however, I've been saving all the posts I would have sent, and put them all on one page here.

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Wednesday, 3rd March, 2004
Do I not like orange

I've finally got rid of that horrid orangy/brown colour for the visited links.

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Thursday, 26th February, 2004
Error message of the week

I've never had a "catastrophic" error before when trying to save a word document.



It still saved my document ok, so whatever the problem was it can't have been all that catastrophic.

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Saturday, 14th February, 2004
I've added a compositions page, which includes all the compositions I've rung to peals.
Here are quick links to the individual pages:

Triples
Triples and Major
Major
Caters
Caters and Royal
Royal
Cinques
Cinques and Maximus
Maximus

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Monday, 9th February, 2004
You'd think the editors of the WH Smith GB Road Atlas would be a bit more careful about the where they place their gridlines:



A bit unfortunate for the residents of Cuckoo's Nest. fuckoos_ne69 sounds like someone's hotmail address.

I forgot to mention that this was noticed by Gail a few weeks ago on our way back from Chester. I'm not nearly observant enough to have noticed something like this myself.

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