Thursday, August 10, 2017

IN A FORMER LIFE I MAY HAVE BEEN A SPITFIRE PILOT….IF THERE IS SUCH A THING AS A FORMER LIFE THAT IS………………….

DSC_3465

Not sure where my late morning spurt of energy came from but come it did and I was able to get a few things done around the yard plus trim some branches back from a roofline on a neighbors magnolia tree.  

DSC_3491DSC_3488 DSC_3462DSC_3433DSC_3434DSC_3457DSC_3458

Pheebs and I took a spin up to Goderich then wandered a few scenic roads back home.  A bit overcast today so my camera had a rest this morning with very few photos taken except for a few flowers this afternoon.  Wished I knew the names of all our flowers but I don’t.  Many of them are wild flowers I’ve dug out of fields and ditches alongside the road.

DSC_3421

A COUPLE OF BEACH PHOTOS THIS MORNING

DSC_3424

A reader asked what I thought of the movie ‘Dunkirk’.  No doubt a good movie with a great sound track but here’s my problem.  I really wished I could go to an actual fact based movie and not view it with such a critical eye.  I’m not going to go into what I didn’t like about some of the scenes because I do understand the movie maker’s need to make the movie more interesting for the public and liberties are sometimes taken.  However, this movie is graphically interesting both audio and visually.  Because I have read just about every book out there on the ‘Battle Of Britain’ and especially those of the fighter pilots from both sides in the war I do have some knowledge about how aircraft were deployed, sorties, altitudes flown when and why, etc.   Having read the pilots stories about the lives they lived both in the air and on the ground there was one scene in the movie that was my absolute favorite and sent a chill through me. 

DSC_3464DSC_3487DSC_3484DSC_3493

DSC_3543DSC_3558DSC_3489DSC_3475

DSC_3485When you have read as much about Spitfires as I have you might understand the actual thrill I had near the beginning of the movie when 3 Spitfires flying in formation suddenly appeared large as life on the left hand side of the screen with the close-in camera following them from left to right.  And oh the throaty sounds of those Merlin engines.  Even now writing this I feel an excited chill about that scene because it sent an electric like shock through my body.  The scene with the camera panning those aircraft only lasted maybe five or six seconds but it made the movie for me and I will always remember the Dunkirk movie for that one special to me scene.   I’m sure most people will not be affected by that as I was but for anyone else who has flown those Spitfires like we book readers have I know they too will understand the power of that scene as well as every other scene showing the pilots, gauges, dials, and levers in their cockpits.  And the sounds as well.  I was fascinated every time a Spitfire appeared on screen as it brought back so many memories of the books I have read.  And as book readers well know it is not unusual to become immersed with the characters in a book and at the end when a main character dies and one closes the book for the last time it is like losing a best friend.  This is especially so with me reading non fiction books because the people in these stories and historical events were once real people……………

DSC_3472DSC_3490DSC_3496

Did you know that one of the two previous owners of our mobile home here in Bayfield was a Spitfire pilot.  And right above my head here sitting at the computer we have a framed artist’s print of a British Spitfire flying through clouds.  Soon as our sunroom was complete years ago we bought that Spitfire picture and hung it up there.  If I had a previous life I think I was a fighter pilot flying a Spitfire.  After all, I was born in October of 1944……………………

DSC_3619Clark-SpitfireDSC_3623

Below is a list of just some of the ‘non fiction’ books I have read since acquiring my Kindle a few years ago.  I read countless other books about the First and Second World Wars beginning way back in my Public School days.  My Dad was in the Canadian Air Force based in Nova Scotia during the war…………………….

Spitfire Pilot – David Crook DFC

Ginger Lacey – Fighter Pilot

Hurricane Squadron – Nick Thomas

First Light -  Geoffrey Wellum

A Salute To One Of The Few – Simon St. John Beer

Spitfire – Brian Lane

The Last Enemy – Richard Hillary

Emil’s Story – Linda Audrey Kantor

Tally Ho! Yankee In A Spitfire

My War – John C. Walter

By The Skin Of My Teeth – Colin Bownes

The First And The Last – Adolph Galland

Down In Flames – Ray Parker

Tail Gunner – R.C. Rivaz

The Few: American Knights Of The Air

Incredible Tales Of The Royal Canadian Air Force – Cynthia Faryon

352nd Fighter Group – Tom Ivie

The Sitting Duck Squadron – Andy Larson

Serenade To The Big Bird – Bert Stiles

Raiders – Ross Kemp

The Reich Intruders – Martin Bowman

Night Fighters Over Germany – Graham White

DSC_3614 DSC_3616

HAD A PAIR OF HAIRY WOODPECKERS AT OUR SUET FEEDER THIS AFTERNOON

DSC_3611GROANER’S CORNER:((  While attending a Marriage Seminar dealing with communication,
Tom and his wife Grace listened to the instructor,
'It is essential that husbands and wives know each other's likes and dislikes.'  He addressed the man, 'Can you name your wife's favorite flower?'
Tom leaned over, touched his wife's arm gently and whispered, 'It's Pillsbury, isn't it?

- Successful pianists know the keys to success.

- In the early 1900s Italian immigrants lived in spaghettos. But now that's all in the pasta.

Q: How was copper wire invented?
A: Two accountants were arguing over a penny.

------------------------------

Here’s a few great truths about life that adults have learned::

  1. Raising teenagers is like nailing Jell-O to a tree.
  2. There is always a lot to be thankful for if you take the time to look. For example: I'm sitting here thinking how nice it is that wrinkles don't hurt.
  3. One reason to smile is that every seven minutes of every day someone in an aerobics class pulls a hamstring.
  4. Car sickness is the feeling you get when the monthly payment is due.
  5. The best way to keep kids at home is to make a pleasant atmosphere and let the air out of their tires.
  6. Families are like fudge....mostly sweet, with a few nuts.
  7. Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
  8. Laughing helps. It's like jogging on the inside.
  9. Middle age is when you choose your cereal for the fiber, not the toy.
  10. My mind not only wanders; sometimes it leaves completely.
  11. If you can remain calm, you just don't have all the facts.

---------------------------------------

Knock knock.

Who’s there?

Thermos.

Thermos who?

Thermos be a better way to get this door open!!

6 comments:

  1. Al, have you ever thought about compiling your blogs into a book format? What a publication that would be for your friends and relatives. It would need to be more than one volume though. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really love that first photo today, just amazing.
    That sounds like a wonderful movie I could really get into thanks for the great description of it. Has been a lot of years since I have sen a good movie like that.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes, l'm sure you were probably a spitfire pilot in a former life. It just seems to suit you. Amazing depth of field on some of those flower photos!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm sure pilots require attention to detail - like those amazing photos! How fun for you to have a love of spitfires with the previous homeowner.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks for your opinion of the movie and for you list of kindle books as I am also a WWII enthusiast.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Got to see a real Spitfire take off when I was visiting the Imperial War Museum in Duxford, England. That was an amazing sight...and sound! One of my favorite aircraft of all time. :c)

    ReplyDelete