Earlier posts

Earlier posts
This blog is a continuation of an older one. To explore previous posts please click the photo above.

Saturday, 9 August 2025

Making music


My picture above seemed at the same time happy and sad, a typical Bradford city centre scene. The young man was trying his best to brighten things (and make a bit of cash I guess) with some music. Some of the guys cheering him on looked like the kind you often see staggering around with cans or bottles in their hand, arguing among themselves or wandering around aimlessly - but they seemed to be enjoying the music. 

Just on the corner here, there's a unit that shows some of the developers' vision for this area, what used to be the heart of the shopping centre in Bradford. The city council are managing a wide-scale reorientation of the city centre. Many of the shops have relocated to the Broadway Shopping Centre, lower down the town. The markets, higher up, have been closed and relocated to a new building on Darley Street. The Council has been undertaking a consultation on their plans for a 'City Village': a 'vibrant, inclusive neighbourhood in the heart of Bradford' which will be a key part of Bradford's wider regeneration story, with plans for new homes, jobs, retail spaces and public realm improvements. Whether I shall ever see this in my lifetime, who knows? And whether it will be any more successful than attempts to similarly revamp the city's historic Little Germany area... who knows? At least they are trying. 



Friday, 8 August 2025

Double trouble


The view of Salts Mill on a calm day is doubled in the reflections in the canal and that's no trouble; I think it is an iconic and unique scene. 

But... Trouble #1: The very dry spring and summer, leading to water shortages, has resulted in lock closures and restrictions on boat movements along the canal. This, in turn, is leading to the rapid growth of water plants along the navigation, as you can see here. Though it looks quite pretty, by the time the canal is opened again, I think it will be impassable! 

Trouble #2: This little family of swans, who managed to raise four cygnets this year, have had a tragic bereavement. About a month ago, one of the adult pair was found injured on the railway line, having been hit by a train. Although concerned people managed to get it into the care of the local swan rescue charity, sadly it couldn't be saved and died from its injuries. Swans bond for life, so the bereaved partner must still be wondering what happened to his or her soulmate. Nevertheless, s/he continues to keep the growing cygnets close and safe. 

Thursday, 7 August 2025

Island of....


What's going on in Centenary Square, outside Bradford's City Hall?  
Lots of Bradford 2025 volunteers, with a circle made of rope...


Oh gosh! Foam exploding from tubes...


Spreading out to fill the circle...


Children began to play in the edges, coming out covered in bubbles and colour...


The Island of Foam got bigger and bigger...


When the wind blew, the bubbles went everywhere. 

And then... they lifted up the barrier and everyone rushed in! It was a lot of fun! 


It was a creative art concept by Stephanie Luening, part of the Bradford City of Culture 2025. The foam is 94% water, 5% food colouring and 1% soap, pretty harmless unless it went right in your eye (and there were cleaning stations and first aid staff on hand). 

I wasn't brave enough to get close and get covered in colour, as it was strongly staining. I stood on a wall but then it was hard to get pictures of the whole thing. I needed to be higher; I needed a drone! There were a few flying overhead. 

For better pictures (taken by a press photographer from a large stepladder!) see HERE. 
 

Wednesday, 6 August 2025

Ullswater


Here's another in my series documenting the artworks I have on display in my home.  This is a painting on silk, of Ullswater in the Lake District, by Chris Pollard. I've had it many years. I bought it, on a whim, from the artist's pop-up stall in the White Rose shopping centre in Leeds. At the time I was replacing my kitchen (in my previous house) and had chosen light wood effect units and green and blue tiles, so the colours seemed to fit well. I liked that it is a real place - and not so far from here really - but also that it was rather an abstract and representational image. 

I've always loved the colours and, despite the piece being about 25 years old, they still sing vibrantly. When I moved to my flat last year and decided to paint myself a blue wall in the sitting room, it became obvious that this was the place for this picture. I love it! 

Tuesday, 5 August 2025

Kites, acrobats and dinosaurs


Some of the performances I saw at the BD Festival were more appealing to me than others. 'One Sky' was a vibrant dance spectacle inspired by India's kite festivals, performed by Pagrav Dance Company. In a nearby tent, children were making their own kites.  


Near St Georges' Hall, a trio of acrobats performed Weightless, 'dismantling big problems into moments of laughter'. They were very good! 



Finally, the market area was invaded by dinosaurs, 'Saurus', towering over our heads and searching for food. At one point they nearly ate me! These performers were balanced, impossibly, on stilts tapering to points, whilst manipulating those massive costumes and long necks. Amazing! (I always thought I was quite clever, in my younger days, to manage high heeled shoes, never mind stilts.)


Monday, 4 August 2025

BD Festival


The BD Festival in Bradford is a free, annual event over two days, featuring street theatre, music, dance, creative workshops and a host of performers around the city centre. I've never been before. I find such things a bit overwhelming and I get a serious case of FOMO! You can wander around and miss everything, if you're not careful, because the performances tend to begin at the same times, on the hour and half hour, in different areas so either there is nothing much going on or everything happening at once! It's also a bit tricky to photograph, trying where possible not to show children's faces and always dodging people walking across and photo-bombing! However, I enjoyed wandering round and I did catch a few good little pieces of action. 

The lively singer was Sinead Campbell with her backing musicians. The Jamaican-Irish, northern powerhouse soul singer 'delivers uplifting catchy grooves with emotion-infused vocals and vintage touch'. She had a great voice. 

I think the dancer below was Dorine Mugisha - very expressive! 



There were various giant puppets, including 'Giant Baby Gareth' whose 'Norbert Nannies' had trouble keeping the pram on the straight and narrow. (They are, of course, a reference to the famed Norland nannies, one of whom looks after the royal grandchildren.)


In the Norfolk Gardens there were various interactive wooden games that were keeping lots of families amused. 


Urban Safari had a comedic act that encouraged the children to participate - lots of roaring! 

This was just a small selection of what was happening. If it all got too much, you could lie back on a beanbag and watch Cloudscapes, a 'sonic art installation'. I'd have enjoyed that but I can't wear a headset with my hearing aids, sadly.   


 

Sunday, 3 August 2025

Waxing crescent

 

As the sun set earlier this week, the moon rose, neatly placed between the trees. 

The waxing moon, when the illuminated portion of the moon is increasing, generally symbolises growth, new beginnings and the manifestation of intentions. It's a time for setting goals, taking action, and building momentum towards desired outcomes. (So says AI anyway!) 

'Be the moon and inspire people, even when you're far from full.'     K. Tolnoe

'Don't worry if you're making waves just by being yourself. The moon does it all the time.'     Scott Stabile


'Those are the same stars, and that is the same moon, that look down upon your brothers and sisters, and which they see as they look up to them, though they are ever so far away from us, and each other.'   Sojourner Truth

I find there's something really inspiring and strangely comforting about the fact that the moon that I can see is the same moon that you can see, wherever in the world you are. 

Saturday, 2 August 2025

My dad


I just wanted to record that my dad, Ralph, would have been 100 years old today. I find that a little hard to believe - and quite honestly I'm glad he didn't live that long! He was a lovely, truly gentle, man but in his later years he had Parkinson's Disease, which progressively diminished his quality of life. He died in 2002 aged 76. The photo above, one of my favourites, was taken on his 70th birthday. The one below was in 1947, shortly after he and my mum started dating, when he was 22 and doing National Service. I don't seem to have any photos of him on his own and that, I think, is in itself significant. He was truly a devoted family man and loved nothing better than to be with my mother, my sister and me, and among his wider family and friends. 

He trained as a telephone engineer, a career he pursued all of his working life, from apprenticeship to being in charge of a telephone exchange and, towards the end of his career, a specialist troubleshooter trusted with sorting out the most complicated faults and problems. He retired just as digital technology was coming in, something for which I think he was thankful as I don't think he'd have enjoyed having to start to learn new systems. 

As a father, he was loving and generous, even if not terribly demonstrative. He was pretty soft-hearted too. It was usually my mother who enforced the boundaries. I've many good memories of him, especially the times he and I shared together, just us. (Gentle reminder to dads to make sure to have some one-to-one time with your daughters!) He drove me up and down the country to various interviews at various universities before I left home, and made sure we did some exploring and enjoying of whatever city we were in. He had a great sense of humour and used to make us laugh by reciting 'Albert and the Lion' and other such funny monologues, as well as having the usual repertoire of 'dad' jokes. He was aspirational for us and worked hard all his life to provide us with security and a comfortable life. When my daughter was born he proved himself a fantastic grandpa: patient, kind and thoughtful and a wonderful support.  

It's easy, isn't it, to take one's parents for granted? I count myself very fortunate to have had a loving, stable and responsible father, whose love for me I never doubted because it never wavered.


Happy 100th birthday, dad! 

Friday, 1 August 2025

Show pieces


The centre of Bradford has some lovely and historic old buildings that they are working hard to keep in good shape and in use. It would have had more if it weren't for the mass destruction of Victoriana that took place in the 1970s, replacing some lovely old buildings, including the Kirkgate market, with Brutalist concrete monstrosities. In recent years many of those have been demolished in their turn, creating the spaces that are now part of another radical plan to transform and update the city. 

The Alhambra Theatre, above left, opened in 1914 and has since had several adaptations, the most recent being in the 1980s, when the 'glass box' was added to the front to increase the useable space 'front of house'. I think it was a very successful refurbishment and the theatre is a lovely place to go to see a show (though pricey, of course!) 

What is now Bradford Live, above right, was once the Odeon cinema (where I spent many happy hours in my student days). The art deco building opened in 1930 as a cinema and was one of the first to show 'talkies', finally closing in 2000. It then lay derelict and in increasingly bad shape until a visionary plan arose to revamp it as a live music venue. The progress was bumpy and the Council, who put a lot of money into it, looked on shaky ground when the original developer pulled out. Thankfully it has been taken over and just reopened. I don't know if it will host any shows I'd like to see but it looks fabulous inside, from pictures I've seen. 

The other jewel in Bradford's crown since the early 1980s is the Science and Media Museum, one of the few national museums not situated in London. Sadly, the wonderful photographic archive it originally held when it was opened, which led to some truly memorable photography exhibitions, has been hived off to the V&A in London, leaving the Media Museum to concentrate more on the technical aspects of photography, film and TV.  


 

Thursday, 31 July 2025

The Tower of Now


'The Tower of Now' is a public artwork recently installed in the newly landscaped Norfolk Gardens as part of Bradford UK City of Culture 2025. The soaring sculpture is by the internationally acclaimed artist Saad Qureshi, who was born in Pakistan and grew up in Bradford. 'Inspired by memory and place and how our sense of who we are can be shaped by the buildings we see around us', its intricate woodwork takes inspiration from Bradford's historic buildings with their towers, domes, ornate windows and mill chimneys, as well as temples, mosques, synagogues and Chinese pagodas. It represents communities coming together, which is something we really celebrate in Bradford. I liked it, in real life, rather more than I expected to from seeing pictures of it in the local press. 

It really needs to be appreciated from the angle from which I took the photo above. It's juxtaposition with Bradford's City Hall, for me, puts it into context. Seen from the other direction, all there is in the background is the shabby gable end of a building on a building site. (They might at least have temporarily covered that in a sheet or some plywood to disguise it!) 


Alongside, they have made some attempt to clad a fence, using mirrored sheeting that reminded me of those Halls Of Mirrors you get in a funfair. Cue for me looking rather shorter and fatter than I think I do for real! 


 

Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Norfolk Gardens


For many months, the centre of Bradford around City Hall has been a mess of roadworks. The transformation is finally complete, so I went along to see what they'd done. They have, rather boldly, closed a large area to traffic, making it safe and accessible for pedestrians and cyclists. They've landscaped it, turfed it and planted it with nearly 8000 plants, including 57 new treesbirch, rowan, maple, lime and juneberry, with cherry trees to form a blossom boulevard.


Joining up with the mirror pool in City Park, on the other side of City Hall, this central area of town is now largely focused on the civic and cultural life of Bradford. Newly pedestrianised streets from here down to the Broadway Shopping centre are all part of a bold vision to 'zone' the city centre, reduce the sprawling and mostly empty former shopping areas and make it a more pleasant, safer and more compact city centre. Buses and traffic have largely been diverted to a circular route around the centre, with the exception of vehicles necessary to service the central area. 


One of the claims is that it will increase biodiversity in the city and, judging by the number of bees, butterflies and other insects on the plants, it certainly looks to have attracted wildlife. Money came from from the Transforming Cities Fund, awarded by the Government in 2020. I think, personally, it has been well spent and will make the city more attractive for visitors, both local and from further afield. 

Tuesday, 29 July 2025

All aboard for 'The Railway Children'


I had an exciting adventure with my daughter and grandies the other day, when we went to see a production of 'The Railway Children', one of the Bradford City of Culture 2025 events. Closely modelled on the original 1906 novel by Edith Nesbit, and the film that was made in 1970 (rather than the more recent sequel), it all took place on the Keighley and Worth Valley heritage railway, where both films were made. The story is of a family who have to move from London to the countryside when their father is (wrongfully) imprisoned as a spy. 

We boarded a steam train at Keighley station (all part of the show) and were transported up to Oxenhope. The girls were excited to spot deer from the train windows, animals that I imagine are quite used to the steam trains passing regularly along the line. There was plenty of time to look around Oxenhope station and buy merchandise and refreshments before the actual performance began. 


My youngest granddaughter was invited to climb into the loco's cab and the engine driver explained what everything was and how it all worked. 


Then we went into the engine shed, which had been turned into a theatre with seats along both sides. The performance took place on moveable staging along the tracks in the centre, which doubled as both rooms and trains, depending on the narrative. It was hugely imaginative and very well done. There were even subtitles on an app on my phone so that I could actually follow the dialogue, which added a great deal to how much I enjoyed it. 



We weren't allowed to take photos during the performance, of course, but I did snap a couple when the cast first came in. They walked up the side stages and chatted to the audience, even singing 'happy birthday' to one little boy! 


The story was faithful to the original, and included the most dramatic episodes. At the end of Act One, the landslide on the railway line was recreated using a massive pile of suitcases and trunks (instead of rocks!) that crashed down with a roar. Then came the famous scene where Roberta (Bobbie) and Phyllis take off their red flannel petticoats and wave them to stop the oncoming train crashing... at which point a REAL steam train came chuffing into the theatre! 

The same train returned at the end, bringing home the children's father: 'Daddy, my Daddy!'  And yes, I did cry... as I always do when I watch the film - much to the amusement of my grandies.  


It was a wonderful evening, memorable and magical. I'm so glad we went - and I recommend it to anyone local (if you can afford it, anyway; these productions are not cheap). It's on until 7 September. 

Monday, 28 July 2025

Where am I?


If you're a regular reader of my blog and you don't know, then you haven't been paying attention! 


No prizes for guessing correctly... This is, of course, one of my happy places - the River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey, the Duke of Devonshire's Yorkshire estate. Although it was threatening rain, I decided I'd make myself walk the circular route, past The Strid (which is usually as far as I get) and along to the aqueduct, returning on the other side of the river.  According to my phone app that's about four miles, with some quite steep ups and downs along the way. 

The grandly castellated aqueduct hides the pipe that carries water from reservoirs up in Nidderdale to the city of Bradford. It's a good place to cross the river if you don't want to walk all the way to Barden Bridge. 


There's a good view from the aqueduct. In the distance you can see Barden Tower, once a hunting lodge for the estate, dating back to the 15th century. 


From the high path on the far side of the river you get a good view down into The Strid, the famous chasm where the wide river suddenly narrows and deepens dramatically to pass through a rocky ravine. After a couple of days of rain, the water was churning through, quite unlike the slow flow I saw on my last two visits here. 


And so, back (in the drizzle which by now had set in) for a drink and a cherry bakewell tart (my favourite!) in the Cavendish Pavilion, before driving home. A good day out.