Thursday, 13 October 2016

The weird world of the Whitehaven Festival

In 1998 I came up with the idea that Whitehaven could stage a major festival (over a couple of glasses of wine mind you) and you would think that the strangest thing of all was that it became a success with one event attracting over 300k visits but no, there were far stranger things behind the scenes!
Take the claimers 
For example, and we had so many people try it on from tripping over cables that wern't there (let's face it that's like a chancers apprenticeship) to the down right ridiculous. How about the lady who claimed she was wearing £2500 Gucci shoes that were ruined by raw sewerage running down the harbour. It was an easy one to disprove as there were no pipes anywhere near her and when we asked to see the shoes, low and behold she had destroyed them by fire to kill the smell!
Then there was the lady who tried to sue for a blistered throat caused by the exhaust pipe of an Ice cream van. She claimed she didn't know the engine we would be running, all we had to ask was what was she doing with the exhaust pipe and the matter blew away (pardon the awful pun). We had a chap tried to claim for damage to cows caused by air shows so we videoed them one year when the Red Arrows were doing their best to get their udders in a pickle but happily the grass was far more interesting to the unpatriotic milk makers. We also had a lady (sorry girls but you really dont come out of this one very well) who tried her best to make us have a silent festival ie no air shows and no fireworks to protect her nervous horse. We even offered to have a Vet on standby for the horse but all she wanted was silence so we chose to give her that and ignored her.
Then theres the plain funny
I had arranged for a USA Film crew who were making a documentary about the US Navy to sit on the bow spirit of a tall ship to get a cracking inner harbour view of the Red Arrows. Thankfully they had tied the very expensive kit they were using to their back pack because when the reds did their close fast pass (yes that one, that makes you think they have been smoking something first) the cameraman screamed F,,, me and dropped the camera. That was a spine tingler. Fast forward a year and I was accompanying two senior US officers along the main front when the Reds did it again and the senior of the two officers shouted F,,, me was that a near miss! Fast forward 4 more years and I was taking Jean Christophe Novelli fresh from the stage behind St Nics Church to the harbour to meet one of our sponsors. Now Jean gets stuck right into the whole cooking thing but unless he is fully briefed, he can miss out on the whole scene. So there we were walking towards Stobbarts Marquee on Quay Street, JC was on his mobile and a Hunter Jet (yes it had to be a hunter, all engine no foreplay) came screaming over head causing JC to drop his mobile which smashed and scream F,,, me as I quickly added, Oh sorry did I not tell you about the air shows. Actually F,,, me should have been our motto,,, can anyone translate it to Latin?
Floyd bless his cotton socks was our first celebrity chef demo in the theatre we built in the rear of St Nics but despite his surroundings, his colourful language kept bubbling to the surface. A member of the local clergy spoke up and said rather light heatedly, Mr Floyd, this is still a house of God, to which he replied, Oh Bugger.
Then theres the tight gits
Why do I have to pay to get on the Sugar Tongue? Answer, because theres tall ships to see, chefs to watch and extra entertainment. Reply: Im not interested in any of that, to which we would say well come back on Monday for free then!
Why do I have to pay to get on the Tall ship, Ive been on that one before!
Why are you charging local children to get into the gig (Ndubz were headlining and were Number 1 in the charts that weekend). One woman even told me that if we put more effort into finding sponsors, I wouldn't have to rip kids off!
Can I just photograph the timetable page as I dont need the programme just the page?
£2 to get on a ship, what does that get me? It gets you on the ship; But what can I do on there for the money? What would you like to do, sail it?
How much are tickets for Status Quo? £39 each. How much for locals? £39 each! Fuck it then you can keep them.
We're not going to the gig but we are having a garden party to listen to them, what times are the different acts on and do you have song lists? Would you like to buy a programme? No, just give me the times!
Theres always just the plain daft
Are Status Quo staying in a Whitehaven hotel? No, why do you ask? Well if they arent supporting us I'm not buying a ticket to see them!
I've bought tickets for the Rugby ground to watch Status Quo, if it rains on the day will you be putting a roof over the stadium? No, just bring a hat!
This one was a regular after every festival: I missed the event as we booked a weekend away, you need to make the dates clearer and advertise better to which a fairly standard discussion followed; It's been in the local newspapers regularly for a year! I dont read them any more, It's been on BBC local radio and CFM, I  dont listen to them, Its been on Border TV ad BBC North East several times, I only watch Sky News, to which I would finally say well in that case can you give me your address and Ill knock next time!
The Newspaper say's Abba Gold are playing the next festival, is that actually Abba?
Conversation overheard by a local reporter on the Friday of one of the Festivals as crowds were heading to the harbour area, voices reported as locals: There must be something on this weekend!
I got a parking ticket during the festival, what are you going to do about it? 

And  my all time favourite; Why can't we do that every weekend!





Thursday, 2 June 2016

Read on if you have a sense of humour!

If only Whitehaven was Monaco, what would life be like?
The heat and the wonderful bright sun would be our first problem. Look at how tempers are flaring about car parking and toilet issues right now and it's barely 16 degrees, can you image peoples impatience and lack of tolerance at 30 degrees? Still on the bright side we would see more and more of those wonderfully honed bodies that Whitehaven is famous for. I particularly love to see the old sea dog sailors who had a stomach tattoo done when they were as fit as a butchers dog and now regret not building some expansion into the art. There's nothing says fuck you quite like f     u     c     k     y     o     u!  Mind you unfortunate tattoos aren't the sole domain of the chaps these days and I often wonder if there's any personal embarrassment when a middle aged lady strips for the doctor and her tender parts are emblazoned with eat here or free milk. Still if we were Monaco, we could tolerate all this under the long hot sun.
I suppose we would have to have signs in the harbour area urging locals not to fly their helicopters off their yachts but surely they would be better than signs asking you not to let your dog crap or telling you theres a fixed penalty for littering,,, or was it loitering? Anyway I dont hang around to find out. Still, the water would be clean and there would be an assortment of multi coloured fish scavenging for waste from the many harbourside restaurants instead floating rubbish and the occasional shit eating mullet. But would we be happy? Personally I like the mullet although I wouldn't eat one and its interesting watching the rubbish float down from Pow Beck, you never know whats coming next, mind you watching seagulls fight over a tampon was a particularly low moment. Another bright side would be our Royal family as we would have to have a prince to be a principality. Who could that possibly be? I reckon Prince Starkie would work well, but where would the palace be? What about converting the top floor of the Beacon into a palace apartment and letting visitors pop in during the day to see portraits of Councillor Wormstrup and others from the old praetorian guard of CBC. The Royal car would have to be an electric leaf with a cycle powered generator in the back pedalled by a graduate on loan from Sellafield.
Lowther Street and King Street (to be renamed Prince Street) would be busier though with all the billionaires shopping. Never again would we see a charity shop with a half price sale in the window or an outdoor clothing store offering half price camping gear at the start of the summer.  Empty shops with long gone gigs advertised in their windows would be history and Poundland would be offering pots of caviare with a very short best before date. Mcdonalds would be upgraded to offer sides of salmon or spear caught squid in baps, presumably still with free coke.
One of the drawbacks in attracting billionaires off their gin palaces though would be the speed bumps. I mean come on, who wouldnt get upset if their brand new Veyron got stuck amid rift on County Council property? Mind you they would also cause issues for the Grand Prix race but I suppose the cars could cut up King Street instead and all the teams could use the old bus station as the pit stop (health and safety permitting of course)
The problem is that even if we were Monacco, many locals would still bitch, it's too hot, that yacht is blocking my view of Tescos, there are not enough charity shops and the ones that are here dont have sales on any more!
But at least we would have the sun


Saturday, 2 April 2016

Electric is here to stay baby

I've driven an Electric Nissan Leaf for three years now, so a cynic could say I've served my penance for mother nature and that I could return to the dirty world of fossil fuel with my head held high but guess what? You can keep fossil fuels and regular trips to the garage because I'm a convert. No, Im not a tree hugger, badger campaigner, stop cutting the hedges and save the dolphin type of chap, in fact the only things I get heated about lately are Man Utds away performances and the latest Donald Trump announcements. I know, I know the latter really arent important but the former definitely is.

Actually one of the best things about the Leaf is that Donald Trump would hate it and that gives me a bit of a kick every time I switch it on. Anyway, I have a habit of digressing but I was just about to tell you I had taken on my second Leaf from Edgars Rowrah and it was the easiest decision I've ever made. Trust me I've thought longer over whether its to be a tea or cappuccino!

The new leaf has a higher power battery, not that I ever had any issues with the old one. I used to charge it three times a week overnight and send the car an email first thing in the morning to switch on the heated seats and climate control,, yes you can do that with the Leaf so no more cold mornings waiting for the windows to defrost, its all done ready for your arrival in the car a bit like an electronic concierge. Anyhow, I had a meeting to attend in Grasmere and with the A591 Lakes road still impassible it was either the diversion from Hell via the M6 or the springtime pleasures of Hardknott Pass. For those of you who have never done Hardknott and Wrynose Passes let me just say they have to be on your bucket list and preferably before you end up as a possible cardiac patient because while stunning, they aint for the faint of heart. For me it was the first time over the pass in a Leaf so I did have a little fear in the back of my mind that it could be embarrassing but I needn't have worried. About half way up the first part of the pass and it was going well but I was worried that the Leaf was holding back a little until I remembered to switch it out of Eco mode which greatly reduces the supply of power. It should be called something far more exotic though such as turbo boost or launch control because that's exactly what it did halfway up the pass. It went into launch mode causing me to pull back sharply on the power because this baby would have eaten up Hardknott and spat it out. The fabulous but sometimes hairy thing about this wonderful Pass is that rather like The Duke of York, once you've marched all the way up, you have to march all the way back down and that's where the fun really starts. The fun starts there because as regular Pass drivers know there's an awful lot of braking going down the other side and the wonderful Leaf generates electricity every time you brake, now isn't that a cool trick!

I plugged it in at Grasmere for an hour during the meeting and then set off back over the same Pass but this time having got the hang of how much electricity I was going to use, I switched on the heated seats and steering wheel and trust me the latter is a blessing to anyone with bad circulation or arthritis! I got back home with 16 miles of charge to spare and four christmas trees on the dashboard. Yes, Christmas Trees because for some reason known only to Mr Nissan the Leaf rewards you with a tree every few miles of ecological driving and four meant that I had been really kind to mother earth while having a cracking time behind the wheel.

One more thing worth noting when you are out on a journey in the Leaf is the sound system by Bose. Its quite incredible and feels so immersive that even the Blues sounded really good. Yep, the Leaf has it all and some, more tech than the space shuttle, the smoothest of rides due to there being no gear changes and some really potent power when you need it. Go Leaf Go!


Saturday, 16 January 2016

Is wine really bad for you


It seems that after 20 years of promoting and loving the wine business, I now find myself on the wrong side of the Government health watchdogs. Alcohol is bad for you they proclaimed, Hogwash I replied, no level of alcohol is safe they shouted, tell that to a Scot I cried, but we are only looking out for your good health they announced, mind your own sodding business I retorted, but we know best they screamed, not according to my pleasure receptors you dont I yelled and so the argument goes on. The Editor and I had convened an urgent COBRA meeting (Cumbrians Opposed to Bureaucratic Ratifications on Alcohol) and we discussed whether continuing this wine column could see either of us taking a trip to see the big man in a black maria. After much discussion about our abilities to withstand questioning and whether we would have to abandon our families and accept a new life engaged to a Scouse drug dealer named Big Bob, we have bravely decided to take the risk for you our wonderful readers. However if we are snatched off the street and flown to Guantanamo Bay, please turn out in force and remember the Cumbrian Two, united we stand, while  divided we could be writing love letters to Big Bob.

Anyway, regardless of Government pressure, I will fight on in the business even if I end up hovering outside Costa with a big overcoat on, pockets full of illicit claret while trying to decide if any of my street clients are working for the man. In the evenings you will have to call my mobile number which I’ll change every few days so dont forget to step into the BT phone booth on Lowther Street where my number will be constantly updated, Ill probably be alongside Micky who can fix you up with umpteen different powders to snort up your nose and Scary Mary who promises lots of love for under a fiver. This is where having an electric car could come in handy as deliveries in the wee hours of the morning would be silent and stealthy but what about the legal ramifications for you the end abuser of alcohol. If a police search of your house turned up a decanter and glasses would that in the future arouse as much suspicion as gold scales found in a two up two down on Kells? Would possesion of alcohol become an offence or merely consumption? Can you imagine sitting down to a re run of Downton Abbey with a glass of Port and having the front door kicked in by the police. Then again if alcohol gets banned the bureaucracy will probably be in such a state of political correctness that police decision will be made by committees rather than officers. They will be forced to consider so many things before signing off on a raid that you should have time to drink the evidence and wash the offending glasses.

The Rum Story would probably be able to continue but without the sale or sampling of Rum. The new narrative would be written by Kim Yong Ill’s former speech writer who now finds the UK a far more receptive place for his talents. Whether coach loads of people would actually want to visit to be lectured on the hazards of the past and how much more beneficial a carrot and turnip smoothie is to your future longevity I dont know. Then again the cellar under their front shop window could once again be filled with stone bottles of illegal alcohol accessed via the stern assistant who is actually secretly allied to the Cumbrian Two and to whom a secret handshake grants access to medicine bottles full of rum. The number of Grandparents with bottles of Calpol in their overcoats would triple over night. Deli counters in the Supermarkets would ask you to sign a waiver stating that under no circumstances would the pumpkin seeded wedge cheddar you purchased  be washed down with alcohol. Council allotments would have regular inspections by the fruits for fruits sake committee and heaven help you if you seem to be focussing too much on elderberries, blackcurrants or heaven forbid grapes. Theres another product whose sales would be restricted. Grapes would probably have a colour changing ingredient genetically bred into them that turns the resultant liquid high vis yellow if it comes into contact with alcohol. A visit to Wilkos could get you on the terrorist watch list if you ended up combining buckets, yeast, sugar and bottles in the same basket.

Still, despite all the new red tape, you can always rely on the Cumbrian Two to bring the truth (as we see it anyway) to your palate regardless of the looming attention of Big Bob or a bed in Cuba.

Friday, 23 October 2015

Monday, 15 June 2015

It takes only one drink to get me drunk. The trouble is, I can't remember if it's the thirteenth or the fourteenth. ~George Burns

The term ‘over the top’ which as we all know refers to examples of extremism or excessiveness is thought to have originated in the WW1 British Trenches when officers would order their men over the top of the trenches but how many of us have genuinely experienced an over the top moment?
What is over the top though? Rolls Royce fit an umbrella inside the door frame of their cars, even the ones destined for the Middle East but is that a luxurious touch or excess? Wayne Rooney is paid £300k per week but often puts in a third division performance, Bugatti built the Veyron, a car with twin engines and a maximum speed in excess of 200mph when the only place you can really open it up is a racetrack and Royal Dragon place genuine 23 carat Gold leaf in their Vodka even though it adds zero to the flavour. Examples of excess or justified under any conditions? Julius Caesar was stabbed 23 times with long wide bodied blades when experts have often predicted one would have done the job. Excess or safe planning? Some wines from Burgundy can be worth £2k per bottle while their neighbours literally over the adjoining fence can be as little as £10 so is that over the top or coincidental geography?
I’ve enjoyed wrestling with conundrums like those above for years and usually come down on the side of good planning and luxurious touches as I don’t really believe I’ve ever seen anything that couldn’t be justified in some way, even Rooneys wages; that is until Friday night in London. Dianne and I were staying in a lovely hotel in Kensington, London which boasted a Michelin starred chef and we decided to try his food out. I considered the Scampi and changed my mind but thankfully the neighbouring table ordered it and I say thankfully because I don’t think I will ever erase the Silence of the Seafood image from my mind. The actual Scampi themselves were wrapped in some sort of pink fluff that made them look like candy floss but the plate decoration was the star of the show. The Chef had taken a langoustine and publically humiliated it. Not only was it not destined to be consumed, it was mounted high above the plate with four extra long cocktail sticks shoved up its Jacksy. An ignominious end to a graceful creature. I ordered the Lamb chops which would have been a shining example of the ridiculous had it not been for mr Langoustine simply because of their size. They should really have been termed Embryo chops because they were genuinely so tiny but then we saw another table being served up some sort of plastic globe with a bright pink syrup inside and a cocktail stick in the top. I asked the waiter who started to explain what sauce it was when he veered off to say that the Chef likes people to interact with the food. Silly me, I thought our part of the interaction was to eat it!  Dianne ordered a tiramisu for a sweet and I joked that it would really make my evening if it arrived on a cocktail stick which made her laugh but guess what,, it did! Try to imagine it and if you cant, pop into the shop and I’ll explain in more detail but if there was ever an example of Over the Top it was our chef that evening.
So, when faced with a prime example of edible excess, what is the best wine to counter it with? Thankfully on Friday, I had ordered wine in my safe zone because the menu looked like a tad pretentious and when in doubt about flavours, Ive always found solace in a Gran Reserva Rioja. Slightly closed on the nose, Riojas rarely clash with food aromas and their vanilla dominated palate is an easy match with a huge range of foods from meats to fish and pasta. Rioja is still mainly produced from Tempranillo or Grenache grapes. I prefer a majority of the former grape because it takes to oak like a duck to water. The fruit tends to be soft and dumbed down but absorbs and releases the vanilla flavours of the wood with ease. Soft, creamy fudge flavours with ripe juicy tannins, the Gran Reservas are the easiest food match ever. They can take the sting out of curry while adding velvety fruit to a good steak and body to a pasta dish. Gran Reserva Riojas are aged for a minimum of 5 years of which two must be in cask but many of the ones Ive fallen in love with over the years have seen more than a decade of ageing. Some of the big international Rioja houses such as Faustino occasionally release very old stocks and its currently possible to purchase off the shelf 1964’s and 1970 vintages which says a lot about the structure of the wine and even more about the particular producer. In the past, it was not uncommon for some bodegas to age their red wines for 15–20 years or even more before their release. One notable example of this is the Marqués de Murrieta which released its 1942 vintage gran reserva in 1983 after 41 years of aging and it was absolutely delightful and yet other products including spirits such as Bourbon and Malts can get what is often termed Oak Burn from excessive time in a cask and it leaves them tasting dry, bland and sometimes smoky.
The other thing I like about Rioja is that they often bottle their wines in the full range of sizes, especially the gigantic bottles which are perfect for parties where you want to impress the neighbours. I opened a Matuzalem of Rioja to celebrate 20 years in business last week and it poured nearly 60 glasses to happy punters before running itself dry.
Anyway, I apologise for digressing today but the poor langoustine was there for the taking to be honest and the look on its face with those four lances poking up its bum will be with me forever.
Gerards Picks
Don Jacobo Gran Reserva Rioja
Stunningly presented with a gold label, this dark crimson red wine is a soft explosion of stewed fruits and fudge with vanilla custard and a few cigars thrown in for good measure.
 Richardsons £21.99
Faustino 1 Gran Reserva Rioja
Similar to the Don Jacobo but without the hints of cedar wood and cigar smoke. Faustino 1 does have more visible tannins as well which makes it absolutely perfect with barbeque steaks and burgers (posh burgers mind you)
Widely available £19 to £23

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Life is definitely too short to miss trying this wine

Hello and welcome to the first of me wine blogs, tasting notes or drivel, whichever title you prefer.
The question I keep asking myself as I approach the 20th year of our Fine Wine business is how did a chap who thought peach Concorde was the height of middle class desire end up selling wine at up to £400 a bottle in a small town in West Cumbria? Tis a long story and over the next few blogs, Ill gradually introduce the history of our business in between offering you some personal suggestions to try at home.

Although I can remember having wine in the house as a youngster, it was mainly Sanatagen Tonic wine or Cyprus Sherry, both of which are quite disgusting so my first experience of a decent red wine was always going to be make or break. I remember it being a merlot from Chile and I remember thinking it was quite fantastic that you could get so many complex flavours out of a singe grape variety. Later that year, Dianne bought me Oz Clarkes wine guide for Christmas and the following year, we were listed in the next edition as specialist fine wine merchants! Over the nearly 20 years since, we've take the business and ourselves on a journey most people couldnt even dream of involving celebrities, submarines and Iceland! Yes, I did get that last sentence right and the strange thing is it all feels normal now.

Anyway, this is called Tasting Note No 1 so I guess we need something wet, alcoholic and preferably sealed with a cork. The latter is neither here nor there in terms of the quality of the wine anymore but I do like the whole ceremony around removing the cork, far more romantic than unscrewing a stelvin but then I am a tad old fashioned.

Im going to start the tasting notes with a long time personal favourite red wine called Method Ancienne Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 from the Springfield Estate in South Africa. Ive tasted numerous wines from Springfield, none of which have ever let me down but up until this lovely creature came along they were all commercial mid week specials ie wines that were okay with fish and chips or a packet of cheese and onion crisps.

The Method Ancienne is in a different league. Planted on a rocky outcrop of land that was previously thought unusable for vines, the plants have had to work hard to present the fruit and what they create are tiny rich almost over ripe grapes that are densely packed with flavour. The Cabernet is aged for 2 years in French Oak  barrels and a further 3 in bottle before it leaves the vineyard and the patience shows on first taste. Bottled unfiltered, so it may throw a small sediment after standing for some time (the extra flavour benefits of unfiltered wines far outweigh the issues with sediment), the fruit is litterally bursting to get out when you free the cork. Warm almost sweet aromas of violets and pencil shavings lead into a sumptuous palate of almost syrupy blackcurrant fruits held together by lush soft tannins. The finish is long and I found the Method Ancienne at its best with a rich hard cheese or the full Sunday Roast although I have been quite decadent in the recent past and just enjoyed it for what it is, a superb and rightly described Fine Wine.

£29.99 per bottle in Richardsons, 26 Lowther Street, Whitehaven

For those of you new to our strange business, we're based in a tiny Georgian Shop on Lowther Street Whitehaven from where we hold stocks of all manner of old Port and Madeira as well as a wide range of fine wine including the classics from Bordeaux and Burgundy. We also roast our own coffee and as of late, we stock ranges of products from several Lakes suppliers such as Brysons Plum Bread, Bedrock Gin and Farrers Lakeland Blend Tea. We also major in hampers so if you need a special gift at any time of the year just give us a few hours notice and we will prepare a bespoke Hamper gift. In Dewcember please give at least a days notice.

Anyway ladies and Gents, more to follow next week and I'll put formal tasting sheets on our web for download from this coming weekend.

Bottoms up

Gerard Richardson MBE

Monday, 14 July 2014

Was that okay for you?

Well, we completed our major events programme for the summer last weekend with a fabulous gig by Big Country, The Stranglers and Bob Geldof only for a chap to walk in the shop on Saturday afternoon asking when the festival was happening. I reminded him that it was finished for good and was being replaced by a series of other events and then proceeded to list them for him. His next question? When do the events start? If he had ignited a fart over my pavement sign I wouldnt have been as surprised but you know what, in the true spirit of a seasoned local, I told him the events started next May and watched him leave peacefully, probably off to his padded cell to count his sea shell collection.

Anyway, in case you werent there, the gig itself was superb, as was the weather. Dianne and I were invited backstage to talk wine to Bob Geldof who turned out to be the most unassuming person you could imagine. A nicer gentleman you would find it hard to meet. Turns out Bob (just to his friends, Sir Bob to the rest of you) has just bought the state vineyards off the Ethiopian Government and was keen to talk to Jancis Robinson arguably the worlds leading wine expert. Twas Bobs lucky day as Jancis and I go back a long way so he should now be on his way to securing world class advice courtesy of a little gig in Whitehaven last Saturday. Big Country were superb musicians and opened the gig. Sadly their set seemed to end as fast as it had begun but Bruce and the team were so lovely, they joined the crowd to watch the Stranglers. As usual a few minor issues came up meaning I missed about half their set but I was back in the crowd for the big hits and by the time the opening chords of No More Heroes drifted across the pitch, my brain had turned back the clock 30 years and I had to forcibly stop myself from doing the pogo stick. Remember that crazy dance? It was actually inspired by bands like the Stranglers but while my brain kicked into gear just in time to save my dignity, lots of others didnt. I can only assume they were numbed by alcohol in the pit area of the crowd, either that or someone was making a killing selling his parents supply of Tramadols to the audience.

Anyhow almost before we knew it Bob Geldof and the Rats were taking to the stage and no one could argue that the guy had stage presence. Crikey, singing was optional with him but thankfully he did. Musically the Rats were as close to perfection as Madness and Geldof only matched by that other charismatic performer we had a few years ago, Boy George. I watched as respectable pillars of the community became engrossed in the moment and turned back into teenage punk rockers, probably railing in their minds against the very establishment they now represented. Sometimes the power of music is just awesome. Anyway, after a final blistering 'We are the Boomtown Rats' was belted out towards Dent fell, I popped backstage where I was asked the most surreal question of all by Mr Geldof; Was that okay for you? Thankfully my breath was taken away because the only reply on my mind was Ooh, yes, yes, yes, Oh my God yes, true Meg Ryan style.

Anyway, from the heights of the events and hobnobbing with legends back to reality is a bit of a fall and gets no easier no matter how many times you do it so heres to a humdrum existence for a few weeks, reading stock catalogues, planning Christmas orders, roasting coffee and so on, while all the time remembering that Sir Bob Geldof called me Gerard and asked if the gig was okay for me?


Monday, 9 June 2014

Blinkered Lives

If your reading this then this blog definitely isnt describing you but if you know someone who fits the description please give them a nudge in the right direction?

Ever since the day of the first Festival in 1999 when I was walking down the main street with a reporter friend and the group of people in front of us said, 'lets head down to the harbour, it looks like theres something on' despite massive pre publicity, Ive known there are small groups of people for whom news comes only in the form of gossip rather than intent to learn. This year however it would seem like that original group have bred like catholics (yes, before anyone takes offence, Im catholic and yes we do breed well) because the week before each event so far Ive had to deal, often, face to face with groups of indignant folk who say they had no idea any events were planned. Theres also a large number of folk who seem oblivious to last years big news that the festival is over. I had one charming discussion with a lady who was quite indignant that she had missed the WW1 Parade. I told her it was in the Whitehaven News on several occasions but she doesnt read that, I also told her it was on BBC radio and CFM but she didnt listen to that rubbish (her words) and when I told her it had been promoted extensively on social media, she doesnt do that. When very exasperated I said I didnt know where she lived, she nearly blew up saying 'why do you want my address?', Why to pop round and tell you personally when we have things on to which she replied, now your just being funny and walked off!

Surely its impossible to be so isolated in life that you know absolutely nothing and yet so ignorant and insular that you genuinely believe its someone elses fault. Ive looked extensively in Estate Agents windows on Lowther street this week to see if theres a rush on Hermits Caves in the area but no, just normal houses in normal areas where people still talk to each other.

One person on Facebook had a pop and when I explained that we had covered every media angle there was, including several that werent invented when I started all this off in 1998, he said rather angrily, 'Its not my fault if your chosen methods of promotion didnt reach me'! Question: Whose fault is it then? Its absolutely fine by me if people want to drop out of the local news circles altogether but how dare any of them come into our shop and blame myself, Lou or Nadia. I call on all news hermits to accept their own issues with local news and take responsibility for their own failure to be socially aware of activities in their own town, especially when events such as the parade and the Home and Garden show attracted people from over 200 miles away.

That brings me to another question. Is this just a local thing in which case do we all need to be worried that it could go viral? Can you imagine a virus that makes one ignorant of life around oneself while also making us blame others in the process?

Its certainly a growing phenomena, as is the inability of many to read beyond the first two lines of a story. We took a call early this year from a school wanting to book for the dinosaur exhibition and the caller was quite annoyed when told that the exhibition was a three month one in 2011!

Anyway, if you know anyone who suffers from these problems, and, as no one has lain claim to a cure, may I jump in and suggest you get them to pop into my shop to purchase rather than to moan and then invite their neighbours around for a glass at least once a month to pick their brains. Alternately, just buy the Whitehaven News and here endeth the longest advert for that newspaper ever!

I need wine, a big glass actually

toodle pip for now

Friday, 23 May 2014

cheeky bugger

I keep pinching myself to see if Im dreaming but following the recent Home and Garden Show in Whitehaven, I noticed a new phenomena. Its was that there were no complaints or even acidic comments. Thats the first time in the 16 years Ive been torturing myself to put these events on that no one has disliked it, or put another way, everyone liked it. Ive puzzled over why and the only conclusion I can come to is that people who are genuinely interested in Homes, Gardens and cookery tend to be more happy and accepting. Long may it last.

Those of you who came may have bumped into my old friend Oz Clarke, wine expert and raconteur second to none. In all the years Ive known him, Id never heard him speak so I sneaked into one of his talks and he somehow managed to get from the topic of New Zealand Sauvignon to a woman setting fire to her breasts! He is a superb talker and very entertaining so if as he insists we must, we get him back next year snap up any opportunity to get into his talks.

The whole weekend saw a galaxy of famous faces slain by their new found love for the town as many others before them had been. Charlie Dimmock was perhaps the single most popular new celebrity. To be honest Charlie lights up a room with her charm and wit, the fact that she is also an expert in her field is just a nice bonus. Of course we also had old favourites Sean Wilson and Jean Christophe Novelli. Jean and his chef friend Felice turned up at our house on the thursday night to cook tea and without giveing too many secrets away, it was sublime. Ive never experience a michelin star meal before so to have my first one in the house was special. Just to make the night even better, renowned Gardener Toby Buckland turned up just in time for dessert and 'selfies' with my daughter Brenna. Trust me, if Carlsberg did takeaways they would have looked like thursday night!

The weekend was more than just celebrities however, it was first an foremost our first real attempt at a dedicated retail event and as such it was a huge success. For the first time since we started the events in 1998 we seemed to have cracked the curse of Fridays and drew a massive crowd for our stalls of which there were over 140. The Home and Garden Show was of course planned originally around St Nics Gardens and while the main focus of the event headed to the harbour, we did manage to get enough volunteers to completely weed all the beds and to replant them with a cracking donation of bedding plants from Bloomfield Nursery, Lowca. On that score, by the way, Charlie Dimmock was helping volunteers plant when one cheeky bugger walked past, pulled out a viola and walked off with it in a plastic bag! If she had asked nicely Id have given her two.

Anyway, sorry for the gap in blogs but myself and the wee team have been doing  our swan act trying to keep the wheels on the events in recent weeks but we now have a massive gap or three weeks to write lots of thanks you letters, pay the bills and relax before it all starts again with tall ships.

Time for a cuppa I think.

Tuesday, 6 May 2014

What a wonderful day

Parade day in Whitehaven May 6th and my alarm ie Mrs R went off at 6am which felt like the night before to me but hey ho there were lots of things to do if the day was going to be successful. I opened the shop at 06:30 which was a record even for us and by 06:35 I was attaching bunting to anything that stayed still for more than 5 minutes much to the annoyance of the Harbour Geese who took it on themselves to act as a protest group this mornng. Its the first time Ive ever looked at them and imagined an orange stuck up their jacksie while they finish off on Gas mark 2. I spent a lovely 30 minutes moving goose poo 10 foot to the right away from the parade area much to the chagrin of my lovely shoes.

Next came dressing the dias for which Im eternally grateful to Focus Scaffold for making. I purchased two Navy Blue sheets from Wilkos the day before to cover the stage but dint realise until Mrs R and Mike Briggs from Babcocks were fitting it that Id bought fitted sheets with elasticated ends. Great on your bed but dreadful when the aim is to make the Lord Lieutenant look like Lieutenanty. Still, its amazing what can be achieved with tie wraps and gaffer tape although I can assure you the public got a far better view of it that the VIP's!

Just about the time we were finishing the Dias, I got a call from the Red Devils wanting to know where their safety boats were (having a cuppa in the marina office as it turned out as they werent on duty for another half hour) while the navy were informing me that the Colour party (the chaps with rifles) were just arriving and could I say hello. While on my way to say hello I was asked to give a second interview with BBC Cumbria then a quickie (sadly not sexual) with CN group meaning that by the time I got to the Bulwark Quay to say hello the Lads had somehow passed me on their way to the Sugar tongue to catch me instead. Still, it made me look really attentive as I was there just as the Royal Marine Band arrived rapidly followed by the RAF so I pretended it was all pre arranged that I would welcome them and smiled as they all said how wonderful the personal touch was. By this time I was starting to feel confident that all would go well and headed off for a meeting with our volunteer marshalls and security staff at event HQ (remember the corridor on the way to the toilet in Richardons). 20 minutes later we were heading off to the South Harbour with security and Marshalls to explain the changes to parade orders that I had only heard about a few hours earlier but feeling confident that nothing could go wrong only to find the place swarming with public so desperate to watch the parade that they were taking up residence in the actual parade ground. It was about the same time that I realsised that the people who had parked their cars on Quay Street really did intend to leave them there through the parade rather than pay for parking and allow for decent photos by Joe Public. The selfishness of some will never surprise me these days!

Before I knew it, time was flying and it was 30 minutes to the parade step off. I was due to be at the Exhibition to escort Johnson Beharry VC and the Lord Lieutenant onto Lowther Street but got to the foot of the street and found that they had used common sense and taken care of it themselves. The walk down King Street with a true national Hero and watching the amazing reaction from the schools was something I will never forget. Ive paid for celebrities less popular than this guy! Anyhow, by the time we got back to the Waterfront which we were using as a base for the VIP's, the crowd had completely cleared the parade area ad we could hear the lovely tones of the Royal Marines Band getting louder by the minute, followed by a rumbling clapping noise that really warmed the heart. Anyway, the next few minutes flew by and before I knew it, parade inspections were done and the speeches started and I inched my way through the crowd to the sound van to ask them to up the volume considerably. On the way back to my previous location which for some reason I felt compelled to head to the Petty Officer in charge of the Royal naval Colour Party came over with a really serious look on his face and I thought Ohh shit, whats happened. Mr Richardson he whispered into my ear, the commodore said you would probably be good for a few cans of beer for the lads on the coach back! Music to my ears, by this time problems I could do without, several cases of beer, no sweat. That same team were doing some state function in London the following day so heaven knows what state they would be in if they got through all the beer we put on board that coach.

In a flash we're into the air shows and all I could hear across the harbour was Ooh, Ahh (I almost expected the crowd to add Cantona to it) as the planes did unbelievable things but the highlight for me was watching the red devils team come down with one guy sitting on top of the chute below him. How in gods name do you do that? Before I knew it I was recording a final interview with ITV and walking back to the shop to remove the bling and head home for a cuppa which rapidly turned into a bottle of wine. And that is where todays events end. A day of minor issues and major highs not least of all was sharing the town with Johnson Beharry VC a real super hero. That reminds me to say thank you to our wonderful sponsors NMP without whose unwavering support none of this would happen.

Anyway, Im writing this half cut so if you dont mind, Ill say toodle pip and complete the job.

I didn't see that coming but the ice cream helped.

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