Showing posts with label neighbours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neighbours. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 January 2020

community matters - the plane man



My neighbour, Mick, is an extraordinary man. For the past few years he’s been quietly assembling a plane in his garage - it’ll be ready for its maiden flight later this year.

Mick became interested in aviation as a very young boy and after leaving school he secured an engineering apprenticeship, his first rung on the ladder to the cockpit.  He went on to study engineering and design at University and spent most of his working life at Boulton Paul Aircraft.

Boulton Paul has a proud history. Founded in an ironmongers’ shop in Norwich in 1797 it moved to Wolverhampton in the 1930s and has since become a leading specialist in the design and manufacture of aircraft flight control systems.  Mick has travelled the world with the company and has worked on many prestigious projects including the design of system controls for Concorde.

Away from work, Mick first took to the air as a glider pilot before graduating to motorised flight. Now retired, his pride and joy is the plane under construction in his garage, its single wooden prop burnished to a loving shine.

Here’s what Mick has to say about community …

Q. What does community mean to you?

A. My interpretation of the question leads me to believe that in such an environment one is surrounded by like-minded individuals with similar goals. This leads people to seek out each other for the common good in most cases.

Q. What do you get from community?

A.  As they say "birds of a feather flock together”. I get a sense of being part of the group. As part of the group we all get to share each other’s life experiences if we chose to do so. It’s satisfying to be able to help each each other.

Q. What do you give to the community?

A. I would like to think that I give my candour and sense of enthusiasm. In my working life it was always good to share experiences and provide a sense of direction to others, particularly people just starting out in their own careers. It was satisfying to see people grow in confidence, knowing that maybe I had a small part in that process.




 

Sunday, 30 June 2019

the work continues ..



So now the foundations have been dug across the road there are huge piles of soil and clay to remove.
 


 










Sunday, 23 June 2019

the foundations



We're really looking forward to having new neighbours opposite. Work has now begun and they've very kindly given me permission to photograph the building project.

Here's the foundations being put in for the new extensions.











Saturday, 16 January 2016

I'm fixing a hole...









Dear Sheddists,

it's now a few weeks since I pressed the button on my career - literally!

Mentioned in dispatches

The Thursday before I retired I completed an on-line application to be removed from the Roll of Solicitors and after a short, silent prayer dispatched it into cyber-space.  Mrs electrofried and I had concurred that after almost four decades of practicing the law the prospects of ever getting it right seemed exceedingly slim so off went the application - my career finished at the press of a button.

What a relief!  After three months of saying goodbye to clients and colleagues I felt more like Frank Sinatra at the end of yet another farewell tour.

Christmas holidays

At first it doesn't seem like retirement, just another Christmas break. But now the reality sets in! The presents have been opened, the tree taken down for another year and the family have gone their separate ways once more.

My new life

So here's the start to my new life!  What a wonderful time I had yesterday. I spent all day in the freezing cold with four marvellous neighbours, three of whom are also retired. We filled the pot-holes that pepper our road with over six tons of hard-core.

It was a cross between 'Last of the summer wine' and 'Boys from the Black-stuff', which for our overseas followers are two very different comedy programmes.



Yours as ever,

electrofried(mr)