… really bad day today.
Mind you, this was only to be expected considering that I was still awake at 02:30 this morning working.
It takes quite a while to extract the data files from the failed hard drive on the other laptop and to make sure that absolutely everything was saved onto the external back-up drive.
In fact by the time that 02:30 came round and I was seeing double or even treble and there was still a long way to go, I created a little batch program to do it automatically. It’s amazing how much I can remember of T223 when I put my mind to it.
The net result of all of this was that when I awoke at 06:00 it was all done.
And then I had the job of configuring the other laptop.
This is one that I bought a few years ago when I was living on the farm. I wanted a cheap laptop to work the auto-diagnostic kit. It had to have a CD-ROM but not much else, and someone produced one in which the on-board mouse wasn’t working. And an external mouse is no big deal.
But going back to the issues of the UK’s engagement with the EU, I decided that I ought to go back to having a desktop computer as a main set-up. There’s a company in Stoke-on-Trent that is well-known for making bespoke computers and they would do whatever it was that I needed.
So I sent them a mail and the reply was “we don’t sell our products abroad”. Yes, the UK has never ever got to grips with the idea of the European Union. After all, it’s not the first time that this has happened. Far from it, in fact.
And the Rosemary rang me up and we had a good chat for an hour and a half. We were laughing at the clueless rabble who are running the UK right now, where the guy who negotiated a deal with the European Union then resigned because he didn’t agree with the deal that he had just negotiated. Does it get any more clueless than this?
Finally I could get down to dealing with the High Arctic, only to be immediately interrupted by the pompiers. You can tell that it’s getting close to Christmas – they are now collecting their funds for the annual p155-up, selling their calendars.
This was the cue to have a little doze – hardly surprising – and when I awoke it was almost 13:30 so another late lunch.
This afternoon, I really did attack the High Arctic Day Three and spent a good deal of time on it.
That was despite an interruption to join the crowds milling around the Pointe du Roc in the glorious late-autumn weather.
It really was a beautiful afternoon and I spent quite some considerable time watching the waves come crashing down on the rocks just offshore.
It was a typical late autumn scene out there today
Walking around the headland to the point overlooking the harbour, I noticed that we seem to have a new arrival in port.
I don’t recall having seen this boat before so I can’t tell you very much about it right now.
What I’ll have to do one of these days is to have a wander around down to the harbour one day if she’s still there and see what I can find out about her.
Despite these interruptione, I’d finished all of the meta tags for the photos on Day Three of the High Arctic, split the page into four (or is it five?) and started the meta tags for the pages, when I was overwhelmed.
Not just slumping with my head on the desk either, but on the bed under the covers flat out for well over two hours. And you’ve no idea just how painful it was to awaken. It took me a good 20 minutes to gather up my wits which is a surprise seeing how few I have these days.
Tea was pasta and falafel and then a walk around the walls of the medieval town.
Now provided that nothing else goes wrong, I’ll have an early night and catch up with my beauty sleep. You have no idea just how much I need these days.

Diving platform on the beach at Plat Gousset

The tide coming in at the Plat Gousset

View across the town of Granville to the Port de Plaisance

Restaurants down on the port de plaisance.










































