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Walking Commentary

Thoughts and cycling from Manchester to Rome in 2023

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Anchoritism

Radio Condor Skiing

July 22, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

Three words to start today. Skiing came to mind when I was listening to a discussion about the Andean Condor on the car radio the other day. The enthusiastic recommendation was to go see a Condor on your travels. The reason the Condor was being discussed was the recent publication of studies based on GPS tracking plus a motion sensor that counted the bird’s wing strokes. There’s a science alert you can read on this subject if you want more. Meantime, for me, the most interesting part is not that a condor flew for more than five hours without beating its wings once. Sure, it flew over 170 kilometres using nothing but air currents. I’m pretty sure this has been happening for millions of years. What I want to know if it ‘sees’ the thermals or relies on something else entirely?

Albatrosses fly huge distance too. Same kind of problem. Dovetail this with how both species manage to stay aloft and you have an interesting chance to find something new. New ways of seeing our world perhaps?

Volcanoes of food sustained my writing today.
[Read more…] about Radio Condor Skiing

Filed Under: Anchoritism, Fake Memoir Tagged With: albatross, altiplano, argentina, benedict evans, birds, bolivia, climate change, condor, photos, popular, saroche, substack, travel

Where are all the Curies?

July 21, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

In a normal world, there are people who study deviations beyond the standard. There’s a conventional heuristic (rule of thumb) that our most significant interests fall within three standard deviations from the meanest of any measure.

I journaled here of a corporate presentation I titled ‘To 3σ and Beyond’. That, together with the opening paragraph today, are (bad) statistics-based jokes intended to refer to new learnings that may lurk within less than 6.7% of a range of products or data.

[Read more…] about Where are all the Curies?

Filed Under: Anchoritism Tagged With: 3-sigma, anna rosling rönnlund, bernard mandeville, booklink, education, gapminder, hans rosling, inequality, isaac newton, marie curie, photo, probability, virginia woolf

Shaggy Fenec: Episode 2

July 19, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

Continuing from last time, you’ll recall that we were in a desert dealing with a health and safety policy that mandated a full test of an emergency response plan within four weeks of setting up operations. We were in week four and about to create a cautionary tale of ill-considered independent action that rivals Hilaire Belloc’s lion-eaten Jim.

‘And always keep a-hold of Nurse
For fear of finding something worse’

[Read more…] about Shaggy Fenec: Episode 2

Filed Under: Anchoritism, Fake Memoir Tagged With: booklink, emergency response, geophysics, photos, travel

Simplex 17,242

July 18, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

Richard Brautigan once misled me back in 1974. I enjoyed Trout Fishing in America so much that I read everything he wrote. At one point, he wrote that he didn’t write. His mental blocks were such that he typed, stopped, scrunched up the paper and threw it into the wastebasket. There, in the basket, the words reassembled themselves into a story he never wrote. I put many words in a bag and despite nearly thirty years of incubation, nothing much has hatched.

[Read more…] about Simplex 17,242

Filed Under: Anchoritism, Fake Memoir Tagged With: booklink, crossword, ignobility, infamy, irish times, lewis carroll, lrb, mexico, photos, popular, rachel nolan, richard brautigan, writing

Shaggy Fenec: Episode 1

July 17, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

Imagine a shaggy dog story set in a desert. Let’s call it a shaggy fenec story because of a desert fox that liked chickens that pecked after scorpions and camel spiders.

‘There was an old lady who swallowed a bird.
How absurd to swallow a bird.
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider,
that wiggled and wiggled and tickled inside her.
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly.
I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.’

Spiders, scorpions and vipers v hens, turkeys and fenec.
[Read more…] about Shaggy Fenec: Episode 1

Filed Under: Anchoritism, Fake Memoir Tagged With: birds, desert, emergency response, geophysics, photos, sahara, travel

Authoritarian Ignobility

July 16, 2020 by Simon Robinson Leave a Comment

Trending Authoritarianism

You can’t read I Will Never See The World Again without being affected by it. I challenge you to read what Ahmet Altan has written especially if you worry that you have become desensitised by the descending spirals of ever worsening news. Perhaps you are inured, worrying that you have a heart of stone. He writes with such elegance and equanimity that I am certain your heart will flutter several times.

Even those of us who are empathy-challenged will be troubled by many aspects of this book.

Three classic reads on my desk at the moment.
[Read more…] about Authoritarian Ignobility

Filed Under: Anchoritism, Fake Memoir Tagged With: ahmet altan, america, booklink, Covid-19, ireland, nurcan baysal, PEN international, pre-crime, turkey

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