04-13-2020, 11:31 AM
Hello (again) everyone.
Since Andy was kind enough to include me in his recent e-mailing I thought I would look in and take the opportunity to reacquaint myself with this place. I seem to have joined originally in 2008 although I dropped out and deleted my account because ... well no need to go into all that. I rejoined in 2014 to be able to respond to some messages and seem to have looked in once every two or three years since then.
Professionally I am a self-employed musician/writer/composer whose paid work dried up overnight a couple of months ago. Like the rest of the musical world I have attempted a few online shows, but these don't pay any bills.
I am guessing that many returning folk will remember my partner, Princealbertofb. He still lives in the Alps and I still commute (or I did) between the Fens and the Alps. This month we will have been living in this peculiar manner for seventeen years. The virus chased us across Europe earlier this year. We arrived in Venice to take part in carnevale the day before it all kicked off and parts of Northern Italy were locked down. We escaped Venice one week before the rest of Italy was closed and on our return to France, I went into my first fourteen day quarantine. This meant changing my bookings on the five trains it takes to get back to England. I was away from home for a month. On the day before I was due to travel back to England the French government announced the closure of France the following day at mid-day. More by luck than anything else I managed to get home as planned and went into my second fortnight of quarantine.Â
Quarantine is not very different from how I normally live - on a narrowboat most often moored in a very isolated part of the Fens. Social distancing is not something I have to worry about. There are probably only ten people, five dogs and six horses in this square mile or two. My nearest neighbours are fish, moorhens and kingfishers.
That's probably more than enough to be going on with. I can't guarantee being back in very often, but I wish you all well.
marsh
Since Andy was kind enough to include me in his recent e-mailing I thought I would look in and take the opportunity to reacquaint myself with this place. I seem to have joined originally in 2008 although I dropped out and deleted my account because ... well no need to go into all that. I rejoined in 2014 to be able to respond to some messages and seem to have looked in once every two or three years since then.
Professionally I am a self-employed musician/writer/composer whose paid work dried up overnight a couple of months ago. Like the rest of the musical world I have attempted a few online shows, but these don't pay any bills.
I am guessing that many returning folk will remember my partner, Princealbertofb. He still lives in the Alps and I still commute (or I did) between the Fens and the Alps. This month we will have been living in this peculiar manner for seventeen years. The virus chased us across Europe earlier this year. We arrived in Venice to take part in carnevale the day before it all kicked off and parts of Northern Italy were locked down. We escaped Venice one week before the rest of Italy was closed and on our return to France, I went into my first fourteen day quarantine. This meant changing my bookings on the five trains it takes to get back to England. I was away from home for a month. On the day before I was due to travel back to England the French government announced the closure of France the following day at mid-day. More by luck than anything else I managed to get home as planned and went into my second fortnight of quarantine.Â
Quarantine is not very different from how I normally live - on a narrowboat most often moored in a very isolated part of the Fens. Social distancing is not something I have to worry about. There are probably only ten people, five dogs and six horses in this square mile or two. My nearest neighbours are fish, moorhens and kingfishers.
That's probably more than enough to be going on with. I can't guarantee being back in very often, but I wish you all well.
marsh