news
Armistice Day, in memory of veterans of all wars
[caption id="attachment_85" align="aligncenter" width="500" caption="Royal Air Force"]
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Had he been alive, this past weekend my father, Frank Knight, would have been joining his fellow veterans at the Cenotaph on Whitehall, London in the annual parade. He left his squadron as Flight Lieutenant, when it was disbanded - I’ve always suspected that he would have preferred to continue in the RAF after the war (he mentioned once that he had the opportunity) but his wife was going to have their first child and they chose to return to her parents in Argentina - where I was born a month before his official discharge.
He stayed for a while in Buenos Aires after his retirement (he worked as a salesman for a brewery, then for a steel company) and was at one time Chairman of the RAF Association there, but returned eventually to live in London, back to those of his surviving friends of that time - for though it was a tragic and awful time for humanity and the world - today we stop a little while in memory of all that die in wars and particularly this one - I think that bonds made then can never be undone. So honouring the memory o all veterans, and to Flt. Lt. Frank Knight, our Dad … with love,
Peter, John and Jeannie
About his Squadron:
No.172 Squadron was formed at Chivenor on 4 April 1942 from No.1417 (Leigh Light) Flight which had formed on 8 March to operate Wellingtons equipped with airborne searchlights on anti-submarine patrols. The first operational night patrol was flown on 3 June during which two U-boats were located and attacked. In August, seven aircraft were detached to Wick for patrols over the North Sea and were the basis of No.179 Squadron when it formed on 14 September. Patrols over the Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay led to many sightings and in March 1943 the Squadron’s Wellingtons were fitted with ASV Mark III radar to guide the aircraft into a position where their searchlights could be exposed to reveal a U-boat. This method soon brought results, U-665 being sunk on 20 March and the overall the squadron averaged one sighting for every four sorties.*
Between October 1943 and April 1944 detachments were based at Gibraltar and later, in the Azores. In September 1944, No.172 moved to northern Ireland and flew patrols over the Atlantic until disbanded on 4 June 1945.
Q
* Win one, lose one. From my father’s flight log: On the 8th. of October 1943, the German submarine U-340 was damaged and later scuttled (all crew but one rescued safely) but on the 7th. of January 1944 a surfaced sub blew a hole in one wing of my dad’s plane - the sub may have been U-380 or U-952 - but they managed to get home and land safely. For better or for worse that’s why it’s me, Q, here and not somebody else.
Linear Garden - a good idea
Somebody in this region tried this some years back: design a garden, with trees, flowerbeds, shrubbery and all, alongside a highway - it’s not too hard to do, as long as there’s some way of providing a water supply and some people willing to undertake a bit of regular maintenance (here, along Provincial Route 5 in Cordoba, Argentina, had the fire brigade of a town nearby provide irrigation services but it went to weed when enthusiasm from the volunteer gardeners ran out).
This morning’s Science Daily picked up an initiative prompted by The American Horticultural Society (as a ‘new idea’: fair enough as no one has published it formally as far as I know): From small, manicured beds of flowers maintained by community volunteers to extensive landscaping projects along America’s byways, roadside gardens are taking root.
Whoever can take credit, it is a good idea and deserves support from any authorities, groups, anywhere in the world: a win win thing if there ever was one. Best would be a cooperative of individual enthusiasts but it’s hard to imagine that many people that would take on a largely altruistic effort - this is a place where town councils, state and provincial authorities can meddle and provide fine outdoor work as ‘jobs for the boys and girls’ if they must. Better by far than enclosing inexperienced youths in administrative offices so that they can mess up peoples lives with careless form filling and messed up data gathering (but that is another rant).
If you happen on this post - keep it in mind and if you can, approach anyone you can to get this show - literally - on the roads in your region. And if you can, spread the word through trackbacks and comments on your space on the ‘net.
Q
American Society for Horticultural Science (2008, July 26). New Roadside Beautification Concept Studied. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 26, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2008/07/080717110228.htm
Q’s Place is still under construction - and about Spam
I have to find a good theme: Some look great at first but the text starts drifting across columns, or picture don’t quite stay put - at least, where I thought I put them. Others … I tried one and couldn’t find my way back into this site management place: Q was locked out of Q’s Place!.
Still working on this site. “Q’s Place” is a little low on an overcrowded priority list. Mrs Q and I discuss what might go here. It’s definitely be the place to put personal things, for friends and family as well as any that wander by and care for the kind of things we post. writing of course, and home making as we haven’t been able to settle down yet; for oh so many reasons!
This morning though there were forty seven messages spam queue, blocked by the wonderful WordPress Akismet plugin. Wonderful software, that!. But the topmost was nasty - a few hundred lines of filth. So long that it wasn’t practical to search back for any genuine messages.
So if I haven’t acknowledged a genuine post: my apologies. Please post again. I know I should check in more often and look at comments held by Akismet before the list gets too long … of course it wouldn’t have done anything about the garrulous pornographer of that long, long comment.
Of course, one can just let the sewage through and then collect from Adsense? I doubt it, the good people at Google must be wise to that one, ages ago. Whatever, it’s sad to see so many twerps and nitwits using up bandwidth like this. Nitwits and twerps is too mild for those sad sacks that make a living promoting the junk.
Until the next one, soon I hope. Pictures of where we used to live.
Where we are now - which is also where we hope to move out from.
And some grandchildren pictures, and great pictures of great grandchildren as well.
Meanwhile …
Please don’t open the can !
Q
Let the good times roll! Am I done with computer crashes?
Open Office: It is a wonder we use Microsoft Getting used to it can take a while, the Ways of Word are very ingrained. Open Office has a huge number of extra features and I see no reason for not making it the default suite here, but I’m not yet confident enough to use it for submissions on-line, where the finished product will probably be opened with Microsoft Word.
[/caption]
Had he been alive, this past weekend my father, Frank Knight, would have been joining his fellow veterans at the Cenotaph on Whitehall, London in the annual parade. He left his squadron as Flight Lieutenant, when it was disbanded - I’ve always suspected that he would have preferred to continue in the RAF after the war (he mentioned once that he had the opportunity) but his wife was going to have their first child and they chose to return to her parents in Argentina - where I was born a month before his official discharge.
He stayed for a while in Buenos Aires after his retirement (he worked as a salesman for a brewery, then for a steel company) and was at one time Chairman of the RAF Association there, but returned eventually to live in London, back to those of his surviving friends of that time - for though it was a tragic and awful time for humanity and the world - today we stop a little while in memory of all that die in wars and particularly this one - I think that bonds made then can never be undone. So honouring the memory o all veterans, and to Flt. Lt. Frank Knight, our Dad … with love,
Peter, John and Jeannie
About his Squadron:
No.172 Squadron was formed at Chivenor on 4 April 1942 from No.1417 (Leigh Light) Flight which had formed on 8 March to operate Wellingtons equipped with airborne searchlights on anti-submarine patrols. The first operational night patrol was flown on 3 June during which two U-boats were located and attacked. In August, seven aircraft were detached to Wick for patrols over the North Sea and were the basis of No.179 Squadron when it formed on 14 September. Patrols over the Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay led to many sightings and in March 1943 the Squadron’s Wellingtons were fitted with ASV Mark III radar to guide the aircraft into a position where their searchlights could be exposed to reveal a U-boat. This method soon brought results, U-665 being sunk on 20 March and the overall the squadron averaged one sighting for every four sorties.*
Between October 1943 and April 1944 detachments were based at Gibraltar and later, in the Azores. In September 1944, No.172 moved to northern Ireland and flew patrols over the Atlantic until disbanded on 4 June 1945.
Q
* Win one, lose one. From my father’s flight log: On the 8th. of October 1943, the German submarine U-340 was damaged and later scuttled (all crew but one rescued safely) but on the 7th. of January 1944 a surfaced sub blew a hole in one wing of my dad’s plane - the sub may have been U-380 or U-952 - but they managed to get home and land safely. For better or for worse that’s why it’s me, Q, here and not somebody else.
Somebody in this region tried this some years back: design a garden, with trees, flowerbeds, shrubbery and all, alongside a highway - it’s not too hard to do, as long as there’s some way of providing a water supply and some people willing to undertake a bit of regular maintenance (here, along Provincial Route 5 in Cordoba, Argentina, had the fire brigade of a town nearby provide irrigation services but it went to weed when enthusiasm from the volunteer gardeners ran out).
This morning’s Science Daily picked up an initiative prompted by The American Horticultural Society (as a ‘new idea’: fair enough as no one has published it formally as far as I know): From small, manicured beds of flowers maintained by community volunteers to extensive landscaping projects along America’s byways, roadside gardens are taking root.
Whoever can take credit, it is a good idea and deserves support from any authorities, groups, anywhere in the world: a win win thing if there ever was one. Best would be a cooperative of individual enthusiasts but it’s hard to imagine that many people that would take on a largely altruistic effort - this is a place where town councils, state and provincial authorities can meddle and provide fine outdoor work as ‘jobs for the boys and girls’ if they must. Better by far than enclosing inexperienced youths in administrative offices so that they can mess up peoples lives with careless form filling and messed up data gathering (but that is another rant).
If you happen on this post - keep it in mind and if you can, approach anyone you can to get this show - literally - on the roads in your region. And if you can, spread the word through trackbacks and comments on your space on the ‘net.
Q
American Society for Horticultural Science (2008, July 26). New Roadside Beautification Concept Studied. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 26, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2008/07/080717110228.htm
Q’s Place is still under construction - and about Spam
I have to find a good theme: Some look great at first but the text starts drifting across columns, or picture don’t quite stay put - at least, where I thought I put them. Others … I tried one and couldn’t find my way back into this site management place: Q was locked out of Q’s Place!.
Still working on this site. “Q’s Place” is a little low on an overcrowded priority list. Mrs Q and I discuss what might go here. It’s definitely be the place to put personal things, for friends and family as well as any that wander by and care for the kind of things we post. writing of course, and home making as we haven’t been able to settle down yet; for oh so many reasons!
This morning though there were forty seven messages spam queue, blocked by the wonderful WordPress Akismet plugin. Wonderful software, that!. But the topmost was nasty - a few hundred lines of filth. So long that it wasn’t practical to search back for any genuine messages.
So if I haven’t acknowledged a genuine post: my apologies. Please post again. I know I should check in more often and look at comments held by Akismet before the list gets too long … of course it wouldn’t have done anything about the garrulous pornographer of that long, long comment.
Of course, one can just let the sewage through and then collect from Adsense? I doubt it, the good people at Google must be wise to that one, ages ago. Whatever, it’s sad to see so many twerps and nitwits using up bandwidth like this. Nitwits and twerps is too mild for those sad sacks that make a living promoting the junk.
Until the next one, soon I hope. Pictures of where we used to live.
Where we are now - which is also where we hope to move out from.
And some grandchildren pictures, and great pictures of great grandchildren as well.
Meanwhile …
Please don’t open the can !
Q
Let the good times roll! Am I done with computer crashes?
Open Office: It is a wonder we use Microsoft Getting used to it can take a while, the Ways of Word are very ingrained. Open Office has a huge number of extra features and I see no reason for not making it the default suite here, but I’m not yet confident enough to use it for submissions on-line, where the finished product will probably be opened with Microsoft Word.
I have to find a good theme: Some look great at first but the text starts drifting across columns, or picture don’t quite stay put - at least, where I thought I put them. Others … I tried one and couldn’t find my way back into this site management place: Q was locked out of Q’s Place!.
Still working on this site. “Q’s Place” is a little low on an overcrowded priority list. Mrs Q and I discuss what might go here. It’s definitely be the place to put personal things, for friends and family as well as any that wander by and care for the kind of things we post. writing of course, and home making as we haven’t been able to settle down yet; for oh so many reasons!
This morning though there were forty seven messages spam queue, blocked by the wonderful WordPress Akismet plugin. Wonderful software, that!. But the topmost was nasty - a few hundred lines of filth. So long that it wasn’t practical to search back for any genuine messages.
So if I haven’t acknowledged a genuine post: my apologies. Please post again. I know I should check in more often and look at comments held by Akismet before the list gets too long … of course it wouldn’t have done anything about the garrulous pornographer of that long, long comment.
Of course, one can just let the sewage through and then collect from Adsense? I doubt it, the good people at Google must be wise to that one, ages ago. Whatever, it’s sad to see so many twerps and nitwits using up bandwidth like this. Nitwits and twerps is too mild for those sad sacks that make a living promoting the junk.
Until the next one, soon I hope. Pictures of where we used to live.
Where we are now - which is also where we hope to move out from.
And some grandchildren pictures, and great pictures of great grandchildren as well.
Meanwhile …
Please don’t open the can !
Q
Open Office: It is a wonder we use Microsoft Getting used to it can take a while, the Ways of Word are very ingrained. Open Office has a huge number of extra features and I see no reason for not making it the default suite here, but I’m not yet confident enough to use it for submissions on-line, where the finished product will probably be opened with Microsoft Word.
Click to continue reading “Let the good times roll! Am I done with computer crashes?”
Here we go, round again!
Experimenting with the theme, after the web log became inaccessible from a corrupted change I made to a new one I loaded - it was supposed to show pictures, and somehow that feature made the post impossible to load. Got back in, though, directly through /wp-admin, so that’s a lesson learned for another time; as no doubt there will be many, many more. Now the Sitemeter counter seems to have gone. Steam on regardless! In this place, we must learn by doing, no other way!
Q
Experimenting with the theme, after the web log became inaccessible from a corrupted change I made to a new one I loaded - it was supposed to show pictures, and somehow that feature made the post impossible to load. Got back in, though, directly through /wp-admin, so that’s a lesson learned for another time; as no doubt there will be many, many more. Now the Sitemeter counter seems to have gone. Steam on regardless! In this place, we must learn by doing, no other way!
Q






