Have lived the dream this month with a couple of dinners at Wetherspoons, the first at The Back of Beyond in Reading with Claire, chosen partly because it sells real ale and partly because it’s the only town centre venue with a river terrace. It’s also marginally less frequented by seedy drunks than Reading’s other two branches of JDW, The Monks’ Retreat and The Hope Tap. We had in fact intended to have a drink or two and then repair across the road to the Warwick, which now does Thai, but after a couple of beers I get a shameful urge to slum it with chips, so we ended up staying at BoBs for the rest of the evening. Followed this up in MK last week with Curry Club at the large JDW on Midsummer Boulevard (doesn’t appear to have a name attached) with Matt, Rebecca, Guy and Susan from work. Wetherspoons was offset with a civilised posh dinner with Ruth at the London Street Brasserie on 17 August. I hadn’t been to LSB for quite a while but the food is still very nice and it’s evidently found its niche, quite possibly partly as a ‘somewhere to take your parents’ venue for students.
Recent local Reading news includes the news that the campaigners for restoration of the King’s Meadow Baths, a Victorian lido next to the Thames near Reading Bridge, have finally abandoned their fight. While I think it will be sad if the building is demolished, trying to get it restored as an outdoor swimming pool always seemed to be a hopeless endeavour – and I’ve seen comments in the paper from older residents of the town pointing out that dwindling use of the baths was part of what led to their closure in the first place (they’ve been closed since the mid-1970s). Evidently the council had given the King’s Meadow Campaign a set period of time to raise the (presumably considerable) funding necessary to preserve and restore the building, but it doesn’t look from the recent news article as though they managed to raise even a fraction of what this must have been. Having said that, RBC’s seemingly different treatment of the Central Club, raised by several commenters on the above article, does seem a bit unfair. Better use of the money IMHO would be to restore the (when I last used it, extremely dilapidated) 1970s Central Pool on Battle Street, an excellent indoor municipal swimming facility of a type unlikely to be built again. That’s pretty unlikely though, due to a) the fact that I think the land is earmarked for part of the Chatham Place project; b) current collective national hatred of anything built in the 1960s or 1970s – no way the poor Central is going to attract a campaign group. I quite like the Council’s plan for a footbridge over the river between the two bridges though, and the restoration of the poor little pavilion in Christchurch Meadows as a cafĂ©, so hopefully those will go ahead.
Snipped this from the frequently telling ‘Most Popular’ section on the homepage of BBC News on 22 August – Bradley Manning’s decision to become Chelsea Manning occupies the top spot, but close behind it in second place was the news that Carlisle Castle has been recreated by a team of volunteers armed with custard creams. And it’s not as though this last week has been a slow news week. Misuse of terror laws and gross infringement of civil liberties, anyone?
A couple of amusing items recently from the OU noticeboard. Re the first: one hopes the poor chap did find his falsies, as I understand they aren’t cheap. Re the second: flippin’ nutcase.
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