Tuesday 27 December 2016

Voodoo Man Christmas Tree And Postulating Pippin With Friends



The above Christmas tree which was made in about half an hour started to get a kind of Voodoo doll feel with the star on the top turning in to a little man and the tree getting a sort of Brazilian religion feel with the tassels. I nearly tied a yellow bow halfway down the tree which kind of reminded me of religious trees in Brazil that are given offerings.  The Christmas tree below shows Pippin and friends having Christmas fun.

Wednesday 7 December 2016

Spirits Have No Boundaries


Spirits can get anywhere, at any time, when least expected. They are not restricted by the physical confines that a human is and therefore they can remain or go as they please. I did come across some rather strange events up in Yorkshire, where I come from a few years ago and it is amazing how a person can sort of just end up connected to these events.

I was contacted by some quite close family members out of the blue and one of them had actually been in Milner Field house as a child when it was still standing before it was pulled down around the early 60's. This is a story within itself. The ghosts of Milner Field still disturb a lot of people even today. They are frightened of becoming infected by them.

Available on iTunes and Google Play.

Sunday 27 November 2016

James Lanham Of St Ives And Newlyn - The Dark Side Of Old Cornwall


I do feel quite privileged (perhaps?) to own this very old James Lanham bottle ( it has still got a tiny drain of something inside it and is corked), because of his connection to both the St Ives and the Newlyn Art Schools.

If I had to pick, I think I actually prefer the Newlyn Art School to the St Ives Art School, because of the gritty pictures of fishermen and boats. The Newlyn School actually shows that there were lots of poor people about in Cornwall and the whole business of fishing and other connected industries was to earn money for survival and to keep a roof over the fisher folk's heads.

In his book 'The Vanishment,' Jonathan Aycliffe describes the streets of St Ives, Cornwall, in winter as very bleak, cold and windswept.

This bleak part of St Ives is carefully never sold to the public as a rule. I have read countless books on St Ives and Cornwall in general, including many historical ones, but all extol the virtues of this twee tourist destination which to be honest looks ram jam fuddy in the summer - hardly a relaxing break! Some of the video's on YouTube about the area are hilarious.

Bring on something gritty, dark and meaningful about the place, other than a few shipwrecks, the odd shark, old creaking mines and a bit of surfing!


J Wadsworth And The St Ives Of Cambridge Bottle - The Other St Ives


There is another town called St Ives in the UK, besides the one in Cornwall and that is situated in Huntingdonshire/Cambridgeshire.

This particular St Ives is mentioned in Rupert Brooke's poem - The Old Vicarage, Grantchester.

The bottle above says 'J Wadsworth, St Ives Cambridge' and refers to a wine shop which still exists.

Talking of Cambridgeshire towns, I have actually been to Grantchester and have seen 'Byron's Pool' which is supposed to be haunted by Lord Byron himself no less.

My father actually went in to the  garden at 'The Old Vicarage' and got me a piece of Ivy from the exact hedge that Rupert Brooke was once photographed standing in front of, over 100 years ago.
I am sure the garden is fenced off now but at the time it was open and the house stands sideways to the road. We then went to a nearby pub, called the Rose And Crown but which later changed its name to the Rupert Brooke. At the time, this pub displayed the original manuscript of Rupert Brooke's 'Old Vicarage, Grantchester' poem under glass, so it was good to see it.

The little Ivy cutting from the garden of The Old Vicarage in Grantchester grew in to a plant and lasted for many years.

We had arranged to stay at The Pickerel Inn which was situated in Cambridge itself. Now this was quite some time ago and I do have to say I am sure the place is absolutely nothing like that now.

Well firstly after the drive down to Cambridge, we found the inn did not have our rooms ready and my father had to sleep in one of the pub owner's family's personal bedrooms so he was surrounded by someone else's clothes and belongings all night . My mother and self were given a filthy room which had dirty sheets and cat doober all over under my bed. I decided to sleep in the chair in my clothes.

The next day we decided to leave immediately, instead of taking the four day break we had planned.

Breakfast was green mouldy cornflakes and just when we thought it couldn't get any more weird, we found we were sharing a breakfast table with the well known British actress Sheila Hancock. I am not in the least star stuck as I believe in Aleister Cowley's saying that 'Every man and every woman is a star' we all have our unique talents, so I couldn't have cared less who was at the table, especially in that place, but she was actually very polite. It turned out that Sheila Hancock was in a theatre production in Cambridge at the time and it was she who had gotten our other room.

On the way back home, we called at Grantchester, which was the reason I had persuaded my parents to actually go to Cambridge in the first place. Grantchester is roughly about three or four miles from Cambridge if I recall correctly.

Monday 21 November 2016

Pippin's Lighthouse And The Mermaid Of Zennor



Cuddly little Pippin making his home by the sea. This very adaptable little dog has done a fair bit of travelling around in his time. He is a good swimmer and enjoys frolicking by the pools and rocks looking for mermaids, such as the famous 'Mermaid of Zennor' from Cornwall mythology.

Pippin can also go on his inter-stellar adventures as he is transported by the lighthouse beam to many far flung places, ones that you would never dream he has visited, but he has of course - he is just keeping it a secret.

When Pippin sleeps he astral travels far and wide. Not even the sea can hold him back...

Tuesday 15 November 2016

Vampire Basilisk - I'm A Vampire


I have always had an interest in vampires since being a child and I used to watch the Hammer Horror Films with Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing with a sense of great delight. Vincent Price was also thrilling in the film adaptations of Edgar Allan Poe's creepy stories, where nobody ever really wins.

In one of her book, Dion Fortune wrote about a doctor who removed attached psychic vampires that were actually soldiers' spirits from the first world war. Although they were written as fiction, the stories were based on a real doctor who ran a nursing home for those with shell shock and nerve trouble. This particular doctor was well known to Dion Fortune and he ran a sideline, which was treating patients for occult troubles and one of these treatments was the removal of energy draining psychic shades or psychic vampires.

We wanted to do something that was actually filmed on Halloween - or Samhain to use its old name, that actually connected to the time of year. I am a published writer and poet, though always under pseudonyms. I have also appeared  in various newspapers and magazines as well as on TV and radio, but we are currently working on other projects, although I really do love blogging and have quite a number of blogs and websites.

I hadn't used some of them for a while though, so it is quite a discipline getting back to blogging again as I don't have much time these days, I have to fit it in, as and when, but the blog calls me still....

Vampire Basilisk puts forward the spirit of the vampire in all its glory...

Wednesday 2 November 2016

Pippin And The Pumpkins


l
 

Lovely little Pippin The Pooch enjoyed his Halloween night with two large pumpkin lanterns for company. Pippin is quite an active doggie - he is really in to everything and he is just so energetic, but at the same time very friendly, although he does bark quite a bit sometimes....

Sunday 23 October 2016

Film Due to A Word That Came Through Some Hair


My daughter used to have exceptionally long hair until three years ago when she had about two feet taken off the length because people thought she was a lot younger than she in fact is. She still has long hair, but nowhere near as long as it was - the 'tuning in' put her off!

She used to 'tune in' to the hair and one of the words she picked up on was 'Kundi' We had never heard the word before but a search found it meant 'door latch' in Hindi and 'butt' in Tamil. We got a lot of Asian songs together with the word 'Kundi' in them - we still listen to the songs now as they are good.

The song used in the film is a take off of 'Kundi Na Kharka' - we got to like this song and watched videos of famous Pakistani  dancer Deedar dancing to it. To really get in to things we also watched the epic film 'Ghandi' too

A taxi driver we met in the street agreed to be photographed for the opening shot of the film. Of course there is something occult going on somewhere. There are references to Aleister Crowley's 'Moonchild' and also to Paracelsus's homunculi experiment. 

Elephant Parody Film Of Other Dimensions


This is a partial parody on a well known song and it is also about Jumbo the greatest elephant in the world. Jumbo The Elephant - the real jumbo - came to a very sad end - he was killed by a train. Winston Churchill rode on Jumbo as a child at London Zoo before he was sold to an American circus. his keeper was ever faithful to Jumbo even after Jumbo's death. When I read a book detailing Jumbo's life - the ending was terribly sad  - so this film was a tribute to him.We managed to film some circus animals too.

Sunday 16 October 2016

The Man With The Flaming Tattoo - The Motorbike Magician Of St Ives, Cornwall



Dusk was closing in early and the choppy sea looked almost as if it was talking as the determined wave crest flicked like forked tongues as they rolled to the beach.

The tourist season had drawn to a close. That was not to say there was not something for the tourists to do.  There were always tourists around of some sort or another, whatever the season, enjoying some event or other, but the eclectic little Cornish seaside town was essentially most visited during the summer months when cars would jostle for the limited parking available and the pretty gift shops and markets sold their wares in abundance.

The many sea food outlets and restaurants also did a roaring trade. Almost anybody who had ever wanted to be an artist came here and that is why a famous London art gallery had open a branch right here near Porthmeor Beach.  The old Pathe newsreels of yesteryear with the proud cockerel emblem, had in their archives, a filmed news article showing enthusiastic painters  creating the features of a pretty dark haired model on their canvasses back in the 1950’s, back in the day.

Yet the day was still now.  The incredible enthusiasm to paint and create was felt by many thousands who had ever walked the boards of the scenery stage of St Ives and this carried on in to the present day with artist colonies and painting schools continuously going full and noisily enthusiastic throttle, much of the time.

Most people painted one of the representations of beaches in or around St Ives Bay.  Those beaches had been expressed at least a million times by a million lives touched by the brush and the palette, as the stately colours wove their Neptunian magick once more and all over again, for ever and ever.

Had Vincent Van Gogh chosen to paint in Cornwall instead of France, then instead of his starry night scenes he could have painted the cloud Genie who rose from the sky in a formation over Porthmeor beach, or at least, that was what appeared to be happening in one dawn photograph.

The photographers too were their element here - there was always another angle, another interpretation to be captured by the flick of a light meter and the heavy click of the sturdy camera button, to ensnare another piece of heaven forever on the microdot of the cameras memory card.

Caradoc was still rather in awe of his surroundings. He was getting used to things, adapting to the new situations that were presenting themselves to him daily.  He knew he was lucky and that he had fallen on his feet. At his time of life it wasn’t always easy to start again, not these days, not with the recession and everything making it difficult for those who were not in the first flush of youth to actually survive, never mind get a decent paying job..

Caradoc knew all about job loss - he had gone from being the manager of a thriving car garage one minute, to being ‘given his cards’ as they used to say in the old days and being out on his ear the next. He’d tried setting up on his own but in the northern English countryside there were just too many who had the same idea - a glut - in fact, of car mechanics and decal decorators.

It hadn’t helped Caradoc that he’d had the rent to pay on a very swish olde worlde style whitewashed cottage in the middle of a forest and near to a very picturesque lake.  Caradoc sometimes wondered about the lake monster that was supposed to live in the very murky depths of the grey lake. 

The Windermere lake monster was not as famous as his Scottish cousin Nessie, hailed from Loch Ness, but there were a fair few folks who had testified to seeing his scaly, sleek grey body, nonetheless, stealthily surfacing and breaking through the icy waters of Lake Windermere in the deepest, darkest and most beguiling starry night, as he looked up wondrously from his watery subterranean home at the white boats snoozing softly in their moorings at the nearby Windermere Marina corral.  After looking round and flicking his proud head crest, he would dive once more, invigorated, to his lake dragon home and when the people of the town awoke in the morning there would be no sign of such a happening ever to have existed.

Caradoc then took his mind way back down south to rest on the notion of the seals that could sometimes be seen in St Ives harbour. His life had changed really, one Saturday night when he had been at a loss for something to do, but he hadn’t wanted to be with friends or stay in alone. He had, at that time, recently split with a long term partner and he felt unusually restless, so in the end, after some careful deliberating and musing, he had decided to visit a local bar, come cinema, come eatery all rolled in to one, depending on which section or door the customer entered by.

Caradoc had been propping up the bar with his pint, idly watching the other customers. A platinum blonde girl with a pink fluffy bandana, her short day-glow skirt gently undulating against the tops of her slim tanned legs, whilst her revealing, white top curved and molded to her like a second skin, gave Caradoc a definite and meaningful wall to wall 4D smile as she reached for her Caribbean white rum and coke , topped by a fancy little paper umbrella. Caradoc noticed she had very electric bright, even teeth, that reminded him, for some reason, of a vampire or a werewolf.  He politely smiled back, but other than that, made no further opening gambit or moves suggesting he’d pulled for the night and after a while, with a toss of her foam white locks, the girl moved on to a neatly dressed, coat hanger shirted, sandy haired man, who looked every inch, the conservative, moderately successful, accountant.

Caradoc saw no loss in this, the girl hadn’t been his type, not really.  He was forty after all and she looked no older than twenty.

He was pleasantly surprised then, when he looked up from bending his head a little, straight in to the eyes of a lady with long red hair and determined, self-assured, marble-shiny blue eyes.  She was, he guessed, in her mid-thirties, her freckled arms sparkled from the gold body powder she had skilfully applied before the beginning of her shift, yet her facial make-up was very subtle and he liked the contrast.  Her black work vest and trousers looked well on here diminutive frame.

"Hey babe, what you got?" Caradoc enquired, mouth parched from an afternoon in a dusty shed with his Harley Davidson.
"What d'ya want?" she replied, with a cheeky wink.
Caradoc was suddenly conscious that he hadn't washed his hair for a week and his workshop shop clothes may have been playing a tune of their own - but no matter, the scent of an honest day's work might just be about to pay off.
He'd been spending like a penny millionaire in Amsterdam recently, so he thought he'd push the boat out with a whiskey.
"So, what do you do?" he asked, keeping it nice and simple.
“I work here”, she said, “I’m a bartender, but I’m way over qualified for the job - I’m really a designer.”
“What happened?” asked Caradoc
“Life - that’s what happened” she said  “Kept picking the wrong boyfriends - got left pregnant and the rest, by an unfeeling fella - blah de blah sad story - though I don’t know why I’m telling you all this, it’s not as if I know you and you don’t want to listen to my problems when you’re on an evening out.”
“Try me, I’m a good listener” said Caradoc.  “So”, he mused, “Did you keep the baby?”
The woman looked away suddenly. “No… look, I shouldn’t have said anything, I feel rather embarrassed now … I don’t even know your name”.
“My name is Caradoc, after my great granddad, but my friends call me ‘Doc’ for short”.
“And are you a doc then?” she said as the ghost of a smile flitted across her elfin face.
“No, I’m a motor mechanic” he replied “Anyway, what’s your name? He asked quickly.
“Lucy” She said simply.
And that had been that really.  In between snatched moments taken alongside tending the bar with the other staff, she had begun a cozy friendship that turned all the more warm and fuzzy as the night progressed. Their mood became one of pure ambience, as Caradoc realized how dazzled he was with this artistic lady.
Next morning dawned bright and clear. Back in the deep Woodland Cottage, Caradoc and his new lady, Lucy woke to the sounds of birds cheeping at the window.
“Why don’t you move in with me” said Caradoc
“That would be great” smiled Lucy “I’ll just have to go and pick up my belongings and collect my dog from my mother’s house.
“Oh I just love dogs”, Caradoc laughed, “I used to keep them back at home.  I had a spaniel when I was younger”.
“You’ll like my dog” Lucy beamed, “he is a gorgeous Jack Russell and I call him Pumpkin”
“Pumpkin, eh, sounds like a friendly little guy to me. I was thinking of getting another dog myself so I can’t wait to meet him” Caradoc winked as he said this - whilst sweeping his chestnut tousled hair from his open friendly face.

Later on that day, news filtered round the little town concerning the fact that a young woman, a platinum blonde party goer, wearing a day-glow skirt had been pulled from Lake Windermere. Foul play was suspected but as yet there were no real leads.

And now Caradoc was in Cornwall, musing on the whirlwind romance and finally marriage that had occurred over the last two and a half years.  Himself, Lucy and Pumpkin were now an established trio and both Caradoc and Lucy were enjoying running their decorating and renovations business, whilst doing some car mechanic jobs here and there.

A life near the ocean wave, sun, sea, art in bucketsful, fish and chip shops, restaurants, a free flat to live in provided by Lucy’s mother - all should have been great.
Caradoc regularly updated his social networking pages with happy leers and grins, whilst Lucy saw herself as the archetypal mermaid. She imagined herself beneath the foaming waves, being waited on by handmaidens in a green grotto full of pearls and fine gemstones left by a pirate, her shimmering turquoise blue fishtail stretched out on her shell chaise longue, whilst her red hair fanned out behind her.  What did it matter now that the deep russet tones of her childhood were assisted these days, by skilled hairdressing application of occasional bolder red highlights? She was certainly swish and she loved her tanned arms which were lightly speckled with freckles like a newly laid hen’s egg.

Lucy even loved Caradoc’s tattoos.  He had decided he was getting a mermaid tattoo with her name on it, but she has asked him not to do or at least to put it in a secret place as it was something she wanted to keep private, especially for them when they were alone together.

The only thing that bothered Caradoc were the nightmares, where he dreamed of pushing someone off the jetty in to the water but they were of course just dreams.

As Caradoc walked along Porthmeor Beach, very deep in thought, he did not see the trim blonde lady who looked to be a well-kept 40 something approaching him, until he bumped in to her.
“Oh, I am sorry”, he said contritely before attempting to walk on.
The lady got hold of his arm, very lightly. “I teach at an Ashram in London”, she said. You can call me Sita, it is the name I use now. “It’s just that I noticed you were carrying a lot of shadow” she continued.
“What do you mean” asked Caradoc
“I can see dark swirls around you. I do dance meditations and I contact the Higher Intelligences to use my body both as a temple and a channel for these higher thought forms and teachings. You are definitely carrying a shadow and it is one which is getting longer.  I feel you have moved away form a situation that haunts you and yet one day you will go back to it and by then you will know what you should do about it.  I can tell that you have had a difficult life and that you have had to do what you can to hold on to your beliefs.  However you are proud and strong and they will work for you if you give them a chance”, the lady finished her speech whilst pulling her purple jacket tighter round her and arranging the folds of her long patchwork skirt which lightly scraped the floor.
“So you can chase shadows then”, smiled Caradoc, secretly grinning to himself more than he let on.
“I am both a Spirit Walker and A Shadow Dancer that is true, in the Shamanic traditions” she told him matter of factly, “but this is not what I mean”, there is a darkness around you, like the swirls of a deep lake if you will forgive me for saying.
“Don’t you mean a deep sea” he said.
“No, on this occasion, I meant a lake.  What is your name anyway?”
“Call me Doc”, he said. “Caradoc sounds too formal”
“Well Doc you’re on” she laughed.
“Do you live in London then?” he asked her
“No, I live in Devon at the moment, by the sea actually, just as pretty as this, in a little white cottage.  I used to live in St Ives though and have contacts round and about this area.  I’m visiting one of them right now as a matter of fact, that’s why I’m here. I commute to London frequently and to Bristol too.”
“You sound very mysterious, not to mention very busy.” Caradoc was staring far out at the sea line, his mind conjuring up a myriad of exotic spices and dances with thumb cymbals, in a plush desert tent
“Yes I’m going to be setting up some dance mediations classes in the area”. She pushed a stray piece of tawny blonde hair from her forehead.
Caradoc could smell the salt of the sea on her. She smelled fresh, like a perfumed pearl and she wasn’t bad looking for what he considered to be her age either, a well-honed late 40’s..
‘I’ll have to get back to my wife soon” Caradoc knew that was abrupt but did not know what else to say.
“Oh, my partner’s at home in Devon, right now, then tomorrow he’s going to see his family in Wales for a week” Her eyes looked straight in to his.
“Aren’t you going with him?” It was a reasonable enough question
“No”, was all she said, then “I could tell you a lot about him about the other people who try to use my energy for themselves - that includes him and his friends. A lot of his friends are women. He is even friends with his ex-wife! My daughter is at university in Bristol, but she is from a former marriage of mine and my ex-husband attempts to manipulate me through her.
“Fancy a quick drink then Sita?”Caradoc gave her a sidelong glance. “Strictly business friendship, of course”
“Of course” she really smiled then, showing smooth white even teeth, “Anything else would take my sacred power”.

Next day, as Lucy and Caradoc listened to the radio as they got out their paste table and started on the latest renovation, this time for a holiday lets owner, a local news broadcast informed them that an unidentified woman, thought to be in her late 40’s had been found in the sea. She had last been spotted by locals yesterday evening, walking on Porthmeor Beach and chatting animatedly to a tall man in his early 40’s, with neck length tousled brown hair.

Over the following two years Caradoc’s nightmares increased. They seemed to happen around specific times – particularly at the pagan solstice areas – such as Winter Solstice or Summer Solstice. Caradoc didn’t believe in any of that mumbo jumbo, he liked riding the crest of the wave on his surf board or tinkering with his newly purchased motorbikes. He wasn’t against any of those who chose to follow the old ways more lately known as a New Age lifestyle, but he was too level headed to really go for any of that kind of thing. He saw them as the stuff of TV shows and film epics – not real life.

If the Lady Lovidbond ghost ship had rounded the corner of the bay and knocked Caradoc off his surfboard he wouldn’t really have noticed.


Lucy was busy fussing around her mother who had also moved down to join them. Caradoc liked to think he got on well with Herbert, who was Lucy’s mum Caroline’s new partner. It was serious this time and bound to last, Lucy had explained to him as she ate some newly baked edible seaweed pasties.

Herbert was a lovely man – he was a professor at Exeter University and kept an apartment there but right now he was helping out with an artist’s colony who had bought some old mine building further up the coast and needed Herbert’s expertise as they were doing a project on time slips, alternative realities and interdimensional space travel. Just the thing for a physicist to delve in to in his spare time.

Soon it was St Ives Music Festival time again. This year, the big event was Trevannon Gayle, known as Trev G, who actually hailed from Devon. Trevannon was a former mid 90’s starlet who had had some minor success with a Gothic revivalist band called ‘Slinky Livingstone’ who did a number of the Whitby Goth festivals around that time. He used to go on stage dressed as Dracula with his long black hair flying around him, mangling his Fender Strat, driving the strings in to finger cutting cheese wires, whilst his balding cohort and front man, Jeff Tregarth, belted out vampire influenced lyrics to a heavy base back up, played by Trev’s girlfriend, TV production assistant Morwenna James.

Trevannon himself worked for a national TV company and edited the morning and evening news. It was such a dull job he thought, but his status as a TV backroom supervisor and ‘tech guy’ got him back stage passes to the concerts of the very famous and his FaceSpace page was filled with pictures of these encounters. He had various new bands on the go and even had an album out with a lady lawyer who sang part time but now lived in Manchester with her partner and baby. He wished she still lived in Devon but you couldn’t have it all.

Trevannon did not really get on with Jeff Tregarth. Unlike Trev, Jeff did not court publicity openly, he just wanted acclaim as a good lyricist. The secret opinion amongst the followers of the band was that whereas his composition was good and tight, on the downside, the songs were incredibly wordy meaning that Jeff had to sing very fast to fit the actual syllables in to the tune. This sometimes left him dizzy and out of breath.


When Morwenna was found dead in a back ally with bite marks all around her neck, completely drained of blood the day after the main show of the St Ives Festival, the press had a field day and Trev found himself the subject of both local and national news.

This was both good and bad. It was good because his album ‘Lights Are On But No One’s Home’ got serious airplay and impressive reviews from the big boys of music and was very bad because the police saw Trev as a suspect even though Trev had provably been at a party held at St Ives SPEEK-EEE ZEE Jazz  Club at the time of Morwenna’s demise.


Caradoc, meanwhile, was hot footing it back to Carbis Bay after a pub crawl with the South West Interior Decorators Association and could not understand how he has suddenly gotten covered in red paint or even why it was on his face. Especially paint that had a weird smell – like blood.

He was going to ask his uncle, who ran a large timber merchants’ outlet in the Midlands to give him enough timber for an underground bunker as he had noticed sunlight was really getting to him lately – and not in a good way. He had decided to deck out a local cave which ran directly in to a mine shaft as his new trendy and posh living quarters and restaurant. He was sure Lucy would approve, after all – she was his special mermaid and what was not to like? The cave was near the beach but protected from the lashing waves by a bluff so that it was nicely dry at high tide and also it had the added bonus of being very dark.


To be continued...

Thursday 22 September 2016

Fantastic Choccywoccydoodah Dinosaur - Totally Amazing!


I really have to give this item the head's up. It was really well presented, arrived on time  and was generally just fantastic. We have watched Choccywoccydoodah when it is on TV since 2012, but this is the first time we actually bought something from this outlet. We did not expect too much, to be honest as we thought the TV stuff may contain a lot of hype and clever editing.

However the item - a green chocolate dinosaur, was incredibly nicely presented in every way and also came with special ribbon and a pretty card.

Monday 29 August 2016

Steve Film About An Unusual Person


Steve was (and still is) an Asda supermarket worker (Asda belongs to Walmart but for some reason, instead of being called Walmart in the UK it is called Asda). Steve had lived in the Netherlands for a long time with his Dutch wife, but had later returned to his birthplace in the UK, when the marriage folded. Steve was what is known as a 'character'. He was the kind of person to exchange banter or a joke with whilst doing the shopping.  Steve did have a moody side though and it was clear even to the observant shopper that he was not always in the best of tempers. The Steve film is a little ditty of the 'art' genre from 2011 - a kind of tongue in cheek smile.

Sunday 28 August 2016

Seagulls Of Scarborough


Beautiful Scarborough in North Yorkshire compares very favourably with St Ives in Cornwall and any of its surrounding towns and villages. True  - we don't say 'Hello maid' or 'How are you lovely? - which is also a Devon expression - but we might say ''Thar's a fine lass' instead!

The seagulls are just as 'seagully' and the landscape is just as hauntingly attractive! Pippin, the pooch namesake of this blog - astral travels to Scarborough in his sleep.

Wednesday 10 August 2016

Paranormal Art Film With A Hidden Message From Autumn 2008 - It Is Here!


It Is Here! - is a Paranormal Art Film which has previously been on other websites. It was made in Autumn 2008 and was totally inspired by old fashioned Victorian supernatural stories. The film also contains off the cuff singing and music as it all blends in together. It Is Here, is still meant to show that there are other further dimensions than the more obvious reality of the human mind.

Sunday 31 July 2016

Lammas Witch Coven Celebrations Attended By Pippin The Dog From An Alternative Universe


Our Witch Coven held some delightful Lammas celebrations. Lammas (Loaf Mass) is also called Lughnasadh and is the first actual harvest festival of the year. The coven gave an offering of a special loaf and some beer. Many spirits attended also.

.Pippin the dog is incarnate but when he sleeps he does sometimes goes astral travelling. He is quite adventurous with this and lets people know when he is around with a bark. For those who find all that kind of stuff far fetched - I would suggest reading the books of author and broadcaster Tom Slemen. His most famous works are the 'Haunted Liverpool' series and he is also well known for  another book called 'The Mind's Secrets - part of the UneXplained series. Tom Slemen frequently mentions alternative realities and gives real scientific evidence to back this up. Another good book on this subject is 'The Elegant Universe' by Brian Greene.

Happy Lammas!

Sunday 24 July 2016

Polpeor Studios Through St Ives Arts Club - Cornwall Expression As The Wind Blows

Beach Scene by A.B. © 2016

Polpeor Studios through to Saint Ives Arts Club, not to mention Porthmeor Studios or The Tate - the very many voices of expression echo over time; oozing artistic passion whilst riding the highs and the lows for a momentary pleasure of seeing one’s finished work on the walls of a gallery, waiting to be admired.

So why Cornwall, that mysterious little foot of Britain - out in the sticks and likened to a pigs trotter beneath the head that is Wales? That is how my mother was taught to remember that particular area of the United Kingdom when she was at school.  To a child who had to draw maps freehand, this was a great help!

The same teacher apparently described Italy as a boot and Sicily as the stone the boot was kicking! For reference, there is a Cornwall in New York state area and another in Canada too.

Returning to the British Isles, Cornwall is often remembered for the fact that tarot artist Pamela Colman Smith went to live there.   She had a house near the Lizard Peninsula.  ‘Pixie’ as she was affectionately known, is best described in the book 'Bohemia In London' by Swallows And Amazons author Arthur Ransome, though he actually refers to her as 'Gypsy'.   Her cousin, the actor William Gillette, was the first person to play Sherlock Holmes on stage.

Cornwall would not be complete without a bit of 'Rebecca' or 'My Cousin Rachel' from the famous pen of Daphne Du Maurier whilst Maria Branwell, mother of the Bronte sisters (and Branwell!) originated from the Penzance area.

See also http://mysticalmardale.blogspot.co.uk/