Thursday 26 September 2013

Lowlife 37 - Basking in the Basket Glory

Basking in the Basket Glory

Even I concede that the internet can be a wonderful thing.  On Tuesday I purchased a Mega Sonic Cat Repeller, a bargain at £14.99, half the price of the usual RRP.  The Repeller is required as I have recently noticed that next door’s cat is not satisfied with digging up her owner’s lawn but has now progressed onto mine, causing several pot holes.  I could raise the issue with my neighbour but I surmise that there is little she can do about the issue, short of keeping the excavating moggy indoors, which is somewhat unreasonable, and I am keen to maintain our excellent neighbourly relations.  So a quick search on the internet revealed various feline rebuffing products and I decided to not mess about but to go straight for the top of the range, number one best-selling Mega Sonic Cat Repeller. 

Apparently the product works by projecting an infrared beam across the lawn and is alerted when a moggy enters its field whence it fires a small but lethal missile and destroys little kitty on the spot, leaving only its smoking tail resting forlornly on the lawn.   I am of course fantasising.  In actuality the Mega Sonic shoos Tiddles away by emitting a high pitched voice (that is inaudible to the human ear) which terrifyingly asserts (in the voice of Christopher Lee), “you have one second to get off this lawn moggy before the Grim Reaper appears with a scythe (and I have it on good authority that he is in a foul mood today) and you end up in a chow mein in the Rharely Peking.”

Of course the days before the internet were simpler times and one could still find the required information as to how to solve a problem by raising the issue in the pub and people would spout forth their simple housewives’ remedies as how to solve the problem, all of which tended to be poppycock and less use than a comb to cue ball headed Abdul Dave in the Flagon & Gorses.

I used to have a cat living in Codger Mansions but she has long since shed her fury mortal coil.  My brother Codger made it a term of renting his house that I would look after the cat Holly, who I used to call Bloody Holly at 0500 hours as she would nip at my feet while I tried to sleep as she wanted to be fed.   When it was time to take Holly to the vet it was a right game getting her into her cat box unless you caught her unawares and shoehorned her in there before she got spooked.  If I tried the fish in the back of the box tactic to lure the cat in she used to look at me and think, “you can f*ck right off if you think I am falling for that old trick.”  Ironically, when she was on the veterinarian’s table sh*tting herself with fear all of a sudden the dreaded cat box seemed more attractive to her than the Flagon & Gorses does to yours truly. 
Talking of the Flagon Toby-in-Tents horrified me on Sunday when he disclosed to me in the pub that he had recently tipped a whole bottle of ouzo, one of my favourite spirits, down the sink.  Being a former member of Amnesty International I am not in favour of capital punishment but such a heinous act should be punished extremely severely.   This was the first of three alcohol fiascos this week.  On Monday Tesco dutifully delivered my monthly shop to Codger Mansions but instead of including a bottle of the delightful Sicilian lemon based spirit limoncello they instead delivered a bottle of Jeeves Original fruit mixer drink (17.5% ABV), which even mixed with lemonade and ice is ghastly; the drink tasted like a chilled cough mixture shandy.  The third incident in the triumvirate of booze disappointments was me erroneously ordering a bottle of non-alcoholic beer at Villa Park on Tuesday, which was later compounded by the team incompetently being knocked out of the League Cup without so much as a whimper. 

Toby told me about his shameful Greek spirits crime after we had completed our 10k charity run on Sunday morning.  We did well for first time racers so to congratulate ourselves on our efforts we ventured to the Flagon & Gorses at noon for some much needed R&R including the consumption of delicious Portuguese cakes cooked by Tony’s girlfriend, the lovely Samuka Dudlovski.  On arrival we were greeted by the sight of the hard settles in the bar having been completely re-upholstered with soft, cushioned seating, which on the face of it should provide more comfort for the punters.  However, by early evening on Sunday I started to get the numb sensation in my rear that one gets towards the end of a film in the cinema but such numbness never used to prevalent with the hard, wooden settles; mind you I would hazard that this will not be an issue for the vast majority of Flagoners as few will remain in situ in the same spot, uninterrupted, for seven hours.

I enjoyed the days of sobriety leading up to the road race so much last week that at breakfast on Monday morning I resolved to have a pop at it again over the days that followed.  Such delusions of sobriety lasted less than an hour as the Flagon’s own Chilli Willy called me an at early hour to inform me that he will be in Birmingham all day on a course and he requisitioned me for a lunchtime pint or three.  In the words of Al Pacino in The Godfather III, “Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in.”

In many ways the lunchtime pint with Willy and the Phantom was a rare treat as in these times of austerity I have cut back on such indulgences.  In the period of austerity after the war my dear Grandad Charlie grew all manner of things, as many people did, to supplement his family’s rations and it was a practice he continued for all of his days.  Even though we are in a period of austerity now I have grown nothing except for my overdraft.  I buy my tomatoes from Tesco and take great pleasure in complaining about the price.  Mind you I doubt very much whether anything of any use would grow in the Codger Mansions garden on account of the lack of sunlight, the murky conditions and the proliferation of hungry insects, not to mention the cat sh*t from the aforementioned next door’s moggies.  Even the hardiest of vegetables would have none of it and would quickly sink back down into the largely infertile soil after popping out above the ground and surveying the shabbiness of the surroundings.

Unusually I have had a horticultural highlight this week as I consider myself to have finally won the Furnace Hill hanging basket war with my neighbour Lester Fester, which finally reached a thrilling climax.  Arguably (though I dispute it myself) Fester’s hanging basket has looked more resplendent and colourful than mine throughout the summer months but Fester has now taken his basket down and as mine endures (and still looks illuminating after my gentle and devoted care) I have taken Fester’s actions as an admission of defeat.  In my estimation I am the ultimate winner of the war and I am not hesitating in basking in the basket glory.  Little victories of course make life worthwhile.

If I was a highflyer in my career like Willy Mantitt then I could relate the hanging basket story on the networking circuit but alas I am less of a highflyer than a limbo dancer with house bricks in his pockets. I’d imagine that “networking” is a euphemism for everybody getting drunk on the company’s money and if you do happen to get a good contact you lose the business card anyway through being awash with booze.  And in the unlikely event that your hangover lets you remember the contact’s name the following morning and you look him up and contact him, in the cold light of day you realise that he’s a bumbling fool but you didn’t grasp it at the time because you were sozzled. 

One man who was not a bumbling fool was the 19th century painter, writer and explorer George Catlin, who made it his business to document the lives and traditions of Native American tribes in the old American west as he thought, correctly, that the tribes and their culture would all but die out.  The other Sunday in the Flagon Gary Sitting Bull tipped me off that there is currently an exhibition of Catlin’s work at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, so I toddled off there to have a look and it was highly impressive and entertaining.  One of Catlin’s painting depicts a rites of passage practice of suspending young braves from the ceiling of a tepee by rope, which is secured to the body by pegs dug into the brave’s flesh; the brave hangs in such a state until he passes out and he is then cut down.  I would be less than pleased to partake in such a barbaric and brutal custom so if I were a Native American I would form my own tribe called the Wussies whose rite of passage would be to down a pint of bitter in one go without spilling a drop.  The first rule of the tribe would be that under no circumstances are members allowed to tip bottles of Ouzo down the naffing sink. 

© Dominic Horton, September 2013.



Wednesday 18 September 2013

Lowlife 36 - Running on Empty

Running on Empty

I see that Philip Hollobone, the Right Honourable Member of Parliament for Kettering, has called for a ban on Muslim women wearing burkas and other similar head garments in public because it upsets his sensibilities.   Hollobone (who would be better named Hollohead) said that he wants to see the faces of burka wearing women so he can say hello to them when he passes them in the street.  I hope for the sake of all Muslim women that they do not have to suffer the displeasure of having to see the disagreeable Hollobone on their travels.  I wish someone would bung a burka on the MP in question so his unpleasant face is not exposed as he is a singularly ugly individual; he would then be a berk in a burka. 

I am not calling Hollobone a racist but when he had the privilege of studying at Oxford he was, according to Wikipedia, a member of the Monday Club, a far right pressure group which is notable for having promoted a policy of voluntary, or assisted repatriation for non-white immigrants which mirrored the pledge made in the Conservative Party's General Election Manifesto of 1970.   Hollobone might be a bit uppity as he got divorced this year and he would most likely be at his happiest telling Muslim women to remove their burkas or veils fulfilling his role as a special constable. 

I would look like a berk if I had purchased the trousers I tried on this week in a well-known high street store.  I was kindly given some gift vouchers for the store for my birthday so I toddled along there to redeem the vouchers in exchange for a desirable piece of clothing.  I hazarded upon some chinos and was faced with a choice of straight or skinny and being of a certain age I plumped for the straight version but when I tried the trousers on they were so tight fitting that at one point I thought I would have to ask the shop assistant to call the fire brigade to cut me out of the trousers.  All of which begs the question as to how tight the skinny fitting version of the trousers are; they must give a free tub of petroleum jelly with the purchase to assist the wearer to get in and out of the trousers.  And yet I see young men around and about wearing such leg clinging britches and their movements do not seem to be too restricted, even when the chap donning the trouser is of the portly variety. 

I prefer a bit of room for manoeuvre in my attire and I value comfort above being a slave to fashion. It struck me walking up Colmore Row in Birmingham in the drizzle the other day in my plastic mac, sports jacket (which has a tweedish air) and brown brogues that I am slowly morphing into Peter Sallis’s Clegg out of Last of the Summer Wine. There is a fine line between looking distinguished and having the appearance of a stereotypical pensioner and I think I have unconsciously crossed the line into Cleggdom.   Anyway, returning back to trouser talk I prefer to have a little bit of ventilation around my crown jewels and for them not to be confined.

Fortunately I am not confined in my vocabulary due to the magic of the invaluable Thesurus.com and the word of the day on the site today is “fleer”, which means to grin or laugh coarsely or mockingly, which is something that the delectable Carla von Trow-Hell does to me all the time from behind the bar in the Flagon & Gorses.   On Sunday evening she derided me for concluding the evening with half a pint of Thatcher’s Heritage Cider stating that it was a drunk’s trick to finish off with a glass of cider or two.  Little did Carla know that the half of cider was to launch me into a week of dreaded sobriety ahead of Sunday’s 10k “fun” run with Toby-in-Tents.  It’s no coincidence that simply by adding the letter “i” the word run is transformed into the word ruin, which is fitting.  (Conversely, extracting the letter “i” from the word married leaves the appropriate word marred.)  

The process of me drying out this week will be like drying out of the timbers of the Mary Rose and it has been conducted under strict laboratory conditions, which has involved hot baths, cold showers and a particularly poky self-made tomato and chilli soup.  I added braising beef to the soup, which ruined some perfectly good beef and a good soup in one foul swoop (in fact it would have had to be chicken to be a foul swoop, but you get my drift.)

So on Sunday I will be running on empty, booze wise.  The scientists and dieticians will tell you that alcohol is detrimental to sporting performance and while they are undoubtedly right the majority of the time anyone who has experience of amateur sport will tell you that is not the whole story.   Apparently, Fudgkins is a far better golfer when hung over and the slovenly Tim Jameson, who I used to play darts with in the Fairfield, could barely throw an arrow unless he had consumed so much booze that he had to put a beermat on top of his pint so he could remember which one was his, but once Tim reached his optimum booze state he was a magnificent darter.  And I would imagine that many of us will have stories of man of the match performances playing football or five wicket hauls at cricket after waking up in the morning on an unknown sofa in Darlaston with memories of what happened the previous evening slowly fading away like a ship on the horizon.  

My old Sunday league football manager Sweeney used to have a mantra that he subjected his players to that went “drink as much as you like on Saturday night but ensure that you are in bed before midnight”, as he considered that sleep was more important than sobriety to any self-respecting Sunday league footballer. 

When you are not a professional sportsman and life and boozing gets in the way of sporting dedication, the goal posts are moved.  One Christmas Sunday morning circa 1993 the goalposts literally seemed to me to be moving after an unfortunate turn of events.  The Fairfield Drive Christmas dinner party was staged the night before and given that the weather was freezing and a heavy frost was forecast in the morning, I was safe in the knowledge that the game would be postponed due to a frozen pitch, so I was free to imbibe what I wanted.   The party went swimmingly well, despite Herman Trotsky twice collapsing into the Christmas tree during an impromptu after dinner speech. 

On the morning after the dinner party the house looked like a scene from the apocalypse but I dodged tidying up by escaping to football to go through the formality of the game being postponed.  To my horror the ageing referee Ernie Pike turned up and declared that the game was on despite the pitch being harder than the settles in the Flagon & Gorses as, quoting Ernie, “the pitches are hard in the warm weather at the start of the season and games are played then.”  It was at this juncture that I deeply regretted following the aperitif of a skin full of lunchtime pints with a bottle of whisky, shared with El Pistolero whilst cooking the turkey curry for dinner.  We had a decent result, an away game drawn 2-2 and I scored off a corner but I could remember none of this after the game.  If I had been interviewed by Geoff Shreeves for Sky Sports post match and he had asked me my thoughts on the contest I would have had to say, “I’ve absolutely no idea Jeff.  What was the score by the way?”

The ever interesting Drew Monkey knows the score, having had his fingers in a number of pies over the years, including owning canal barges, being an environmental officer, all things brewing and playing in folk and soul bands.   Drew’s folk band are playing on Saturday night as part of the Flagon & Gorses’ annual International Talk like a Pirate Day celebrations, an event which sadly I cannot attend due to the damn run on Sunday morning.  I suppose I could go to the pirate evening on Saturday but it would mean either not drinking (which would be a more torturous experience than being a political prisoner in North Korea) or consuming beer and suffering the consequences on Sunday morning.  Toby-in-Tents suggested that I get blind drunk on the pirate night and get people to sponsor me not for finishing the race but for actually making it to the start line.   On Sunday evening in the Flagon Drew entertained me with stories of near death experiences he had over the years and it is a miracle that he is still alive.   I sincerely hope that I do not have a similar story to tell after the run on Sunday morning.


© Dominic Horton, September 2013. 



Wednesday 11 September 2013

Lowlife 35 – Doomsday Delights


Doomsday Delights

I did something today that I have been meaning to do for many a moon and now I have finally got round to doing it I feel like a big weight has been lifted off my shoulders.  And yet the process of becoming unbaptised was so simple.  Unbaptism.org explained that all that I had to do was to sign a simple Unbaptismal Certificate that they provided to me and get my signature witnessed, which the Phantom willingly did.  And that was that.   The website went on to say that if I want to do a proper job I could frame the certificate and hang it on the kitchen wall above the washing machine and/ or serve notice of my unbaptisement on the church that originally made me undergo the baptism ceremony without my consent, which I was of course in no position to give due to the fact that I was a mere baby.   Instead of willingly forcing defenceless babies into being Christians it might be more beneficial to them to bless them with a more practical privilege, such as making them lifelong members of the Camping & Caravanning Club.

It might be the case that my childhood baptism hitherto gave me the protection of god, so now I am relieved of her/ his guardianship I could be in right shtook.   If my ailing car Pat, which has been giving the old death rattle of late, packs up on its next journey then I will know that the almighty is exercising her/ his celestial muscle to express her/ his displeasure at my blasphemous action.  I don’t think god will take such action as I do not believe in the existence of the being of course, which is why I unbaptized myself in the first place.   After the unbaptisement I went straight to hell, well hell on Earth that is, in the form of Primark Birmingham, to obtain some new shirts as my errant washing machine ruined a couple in the week.

Unlike the Frymaster General I did not ruin my shirt on Saturday night by spilling curry down it in the Fluke restaurant, which we retreated to after a day out in the Jewellery Quarter with Chilly Willy, Carla von Trow-Hell, Jolly D, Harry Gout, Toby-in-Tents, Samuka Dudlovski, Jonty Von Rossi, Tom Holliday, Philly the Gent and Desmond Dekka.

The Frymaster has strangely behaved himself every time we have been out of late, which is highly unnerving, but I know through experience that he always leaves his mark.  He stayed at Codger Mansions on Saturday night and on Sunday morning I offered him a bacon sandwich, as a good host should and he answered, “go on then I’m starving as we didn’t eat anything yesterday”, to which I replied, “we went for a curry you buffoon, look, it’s all down your shirt.”  Anyway, the Frymaster must have slept fully clad as when I stripped the bed to fumigate it after he left there was a curry stain on the bed sheet.  And before you query the nature of the stain, I am as sure as I can be that it was curry and not bum gravy.  Jolly D was so lubricated on Saturday that when we entered the restaurant he missed his seat and as a result of gravity he fell to the floor, which is at least better than Sleepy Tom Parker’s usual trick of passing out in his chicken tikka masala. 

Despite too many drinks being consumed on Saturday, Sunday turned out to be a highly pleasant day which encompassed a fabulous family meal, bands and beer at Wassell Grove and the usual Flagon visit.  Sometimes people think that the day after a heavy drinking session (which I will call doomsday) is a living nightmare but it does not have to be.  Usually the only option on doomsday is to start drinking again and if you are in this position you need to take action before 1600 hours, which is The Point of no Return.  

Failure to play the booze card before The Point of no Return leads to a swift decline into a horror filled abyss, which will overwhelm and terrify the patient.  Once you start to drink again on doomsday the alcohol will be introduced to the drink which is already in your system and once old booze and new booze have shook hands and exchanged pleasantries you will start to feel right as rain.  But you can’t rush these things and small sips are the order of the day, it is a slow and steady process.  Trying to force the pace can become counterproductive and can worsen the patient’s condition as opposed to enhancing it.  So be warned.   

I actively enjoy drinking myself back to health on doomsday and such times represent some of my favourite boozing days.  A typical doomsday would see me in the soothing environ of the Flagon & Gorses enjoying a palliative drink with the Pirate or other Flagon dignitaries such as Paul Debilder and Mother Teresa or Francine Jacks.

When people say they are having a dry day on doomsday it fills me with a sense of panic and deep dread, even though I am not in the person’s shoes.  Such drastic and ill-considered action often leads the patient to an interminable day of agonies on the sofa, which to my mind is a waste of a day.  People often take this tack on doomsday through ignorance or lack of experience or, even worse, piousness or guilt but it is without exception a grave mistake.

If one steers the ship on the right course on doomsday and has a gargle to loosen the chest and ward away the lurking devil then it begs the question what does one do on the following day (post-doomsday), or as the Geordie Marcus Bentely would say on Big Brother, “Day 3”?  Stopping drinking suddenly on post-doomsday could pose the same problems (albeit less severe) as coming to an abrupt halt on doomsday itself.  I always a favour a tactical withdrawal on post-doomsday and I ingest a modicum of alcohol to ensure a terror-less state and a night’s sleep of sorts.    

On post-doomsday if I do not drink at all I will almost certainly have a re-occurring nightmare of mine (see Lowlife 21) as soon as I fall asleep, so I need to drink enough alcohol to ensure that does not happen whilst conversely drinking as little as practically possible in order to finally go booze-less the following day.  So drink intake on post-doomsday is a fine balance and failure to get such balance right can lead to either me having nightmares or having to drink again the following day, which is a rocky road to be going down. 

The only low point of doomsday on Sunday was the “special” Szechuan I had from the Rharely Peking Chinese takeaway which was only special because it seemed to consist solely of rice and vegetables, so it lead to me sifting through the dish having a game of hunt the meat.    I finally found a meat like substance which was masquerading as chicken but if the creature it emanated from had ever clucked in its life then I am indeed a Chinaman.  The Baby Faced Assassin got me again.

Willy Mantitt and the Pirate both had doomsdays on Monday after returning respectively from junkets to Berlin and Belgium.  Mantitt decided to face the doomsday horrors head on and inexplicably went dry but the Pirate predictably took the less fraught route of a phased retreat and had a pint in the Flagon where he regaled us with tales of his trip to Belgium, which seemed to consist mostly of him drinking 10% ABV beer.

On Tuesday I took the first steps towards testing my vodka and veggie burger diet idea (which I have named the V&V diet – see Lowlife 34).  Not wanting to rush into things I skipped the veggie burgers and went straight to the vodka.   Vodka and tonics seem to have magical properties.  I had two on Tuesday, as large as would be poured by a Greek barman, and I felt physically and mentally chipper on Wednesday morning or as well as I could be.   My pancreas was either having a long lie in or was unaffected by the VATs.   What’s more the VATs helped me to sleep like a log, which is not usual, with me being a fretful sleeper.  All I need to do now is get onto the veggie burger bit and I’ve cracked it. 

Mind you, I did treat myself to decent vodka, whose name I can’t pronounce or spell as it is all in Russian.  When I switch to Aldi’s own vodka the experiment could well go sour.  I see that Tesco do a vodka in their Everyday range, which basically suggests that it is fine to drink vodka every day, which is a green light if ever I have seen one. The other thing with the VAT situation is that on Tuesday night I had a heavy cold and my nose was streaming like a tap but on Wednesday morning I had a mere snivel.  No wonder the Russians drink Vodka by the gallon.

© Dominic Horton, September 2013.


Thursday 5 September 2013

Lowlife 34 - Not on Your Life Sonny

Not on Your Life Sonny

I do love a walk through the Jewellery Quarter on the way to work in the morning, it’s a beautiful place and it delays the inevitable by a quarter of an hour.  I got off the train one stop early today and strolled through what is to my mind the best part of Birmingham central as it is my birthday, 42 years young but I do not look a day over 50 so things are not too bad.  I don’t know where the year has gone since my 41st birthday, it must have slipped down the back of the sofa.  The downside is that once I arrive at work the highlight of the working day is over and it is all downhill from there.  The place was particularly alluring this morning and given the September sunshine, the many resplendent hanging baskets and the cries of seagulls it had an almost seaside feel. 

Given the growing residential element to the Jewellery Quarter there are now many tempting and stylish looking cafés (in addition to the hearty greasy spoons) and I always promise myself that I should treat myself to breakfast in one of these establishments before work one morning.  I never have visited one of these café though as I do not rise early enough from my Codger mansions flea pit and I can rarely afford such a luxury anyway. 

Even though like most other industries the jewellery trade has been affected by the enduring recession the Jewellery Quarter still bustles with life and even at an early hour shop owners and Jewellery workers are going about their business. 

It’s a depressing thought stumbling into work in the morning and realising that I am imprisoned there until 1700 hrs, at which time I flee on the dot.  It always amazes me that I am usually the only person in the department that actually leaves on time as all my other colleagues mostly stay later like masochists, suckers for punishment.  Some of them might feel like they will be rewarded in heaven but I am not sure what the Mexy’s excuse is as the Mexicans seem too obsessed with hell and death to pay any attention to anything as fanciful as heaven.   And the Phantom is from Grimsby and it is well known in religious circles that persons from that town are refused entry into the heavenly after world. 

The singer Cher does not seem like she is ready to go anywhere near the heavenly after world as judging by the way she looks she thinks that she is still in her 20’s.  Cher has just announced that she is to start touring again at the age of 67 and I suppose that is no mean feat for a pensioner, though Mick Jagger and his aged Stones cronies have barely stopped touring for years.  It is Cher tastelessness that the Californian born singer is trying to make herself look a third of her age and her blonde hair (or wig) with red streaks gives her the appearance of a raspberry ripple ice cream.  I am not suggesting that Cher should dress like Nora Batty out of Last of the Summer Wine but a modicum of taste with regards to her age would not go amiss.   Cher did a farewell worldwide tour eleven years ago so all of the punters involved probably feel a bit miffed.  Mind you all of Cher’s plastic surgery makes her look like she is back from the dead so that could be seen as justification for having a resurrection tour.   Am I going to one of her shows?  Not on your life Sonny. 

One sixty something who does not try to look younger than his years is the Pirate, the gregarious landlord of the Flagon & Gorses and in fact contrary to Cher, the Pirate appears more advanced in years than his age.  Like Cher the Pirate is also going on tour, hot trotting to Belgium for a beer junket next weekend.   Last weekend I witnessed the unusual sight of the Pirate sitting in the bar on Saturday night and he seemed relatively sober to boot, in other words he was more sober than me.  It transpired that he had entrusted himself to serve an Indian meal to revellers in the back room.  Once he had stirred the pot in the kitchen he sat down to a pint and given that he was effectively undertaking the dual tasks of serving the curry and drinking beer it could be said that he was balti tasking.

The Pirate now seems to want to exercise editorial control over Lowlife and dictate what does and what does not appear in the column.  Being slow on the uptake, it has taken the Pirate nine months and 33 episodes of Lowlife to realise that I am likely to write about his disclosures to me if they are of sufficient interest.   He must have taken advice on the matter as he has implored me numerous times in the last week or so to not publish a particular comment that he has made.  Conversely, the Pirate has asked me to publicise the pub’s annual International Talk like a Pirate Day, which this year is on Saturday 21st September; it is unclear what fee I will be paid for this advertisement but is unlikely to be sufficient to even purchase a second hand copy of Treasure Island.

Unlike the pirates in Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic I will not be drinking any rum this evening, despite it being my birthday.  It’s supposed to be a non-drinking day, so that feeling of emptiness will descend at booze o’clock.  I bought some Chinese herbal tea to drink the other week as a booze substitute but it tastes filthy and I don’t know how the Chinese put up with it; they obviously don’t sell PG Tips in the Orient.  I would rather drink smooth pour nitrokeg Mild than Chinese green tea and that’s saying something.  Mind you, I’ve found that oddly the worse the mild the better it mixes in a black and tan, which is one of those puzzlers that no one will ever work out. 

Vodka, and not rum, is the drink I propose to use for my revolutionary vodka and veggie burger diet (the V & V diet), an idea that I hatched after a chance meeting with a bookmark.   The bookmark was kindly supplied to me with compliments by The Book Depository, an excellent firm who peddle second hand books and despatch them worldwide, even to Codger Mansions.  You will see from the photograph above of the bookmark [email and papers versions of this column only – Ed] that there are only 73 calories in a regular veggie burger, whereas there are 279 and 359 calories in a regular ham burger and cheese burger respectively.   The new diet fad appears to be the 5:2 diet whereby you eat normally five days a week and only consume 600 calories two days a week.   600 calories means that one can eat five veggies burgers (one for breakfast, two for lunch, one for tea and one after the pub) and still have enough calories left to imbibe four single vodka and slim line tonics.   The idea sounds like a winner to me and if I publish a book on the matter it could make me more money than the Half Pint to Heaven book (see Lowlife 33).   Unless anyone has any better ideas, the book could be entitled Veggie Burger for Tea with a Large VAT!

Given my newly found half pint habit Jolly D has playfully christened me with the nickname HP, which means I suppose that when I am cheekily verbally abusing the Pirate it will henceforth be known as HP sauce. 

***** STOP PRESS *****

Flagon Theft, the Pirate Bereft

Just as Lowlife was going to press I heard news of a break in at the Flagon & Gorses whereby a thief broke into the pub in the dead of the night in the early hours of Thursday morning, smashing a window in the bar to gain entry.  It sounds like Hazel O’Connor has been at it again.  I was informed by Ung Pirat that the thief stole the charity bottle, to which I replied, “Just the bottle? You think that he would have stolen the money contained in the bottle as well.” 

So just as the interior renovations in the Flagon are complete the Pirate now finds himself having to replace a large window and find a new charity bottle.  Let us just hope that the thief wounded himself in the act of breaking the window to gain entry.  Stealing charity money means the thief is a genuine lowlife and it makes one wonder whether it was someone who has attended the pub and knew that the bottle was there.   The bar staff at the Flagon now need to be on the lookout for a punter covered in bandages who pays for a pint entirely with small change. 

Diet Claims Holds No Weight

After investigating my veggie burger and vodka diet claims, minutes before this column was to be published my researcher hastily alerted me to inaccuracies in its content.  Anxious to avoid litigation, publication was suspended so I can clarify the position with regards to the calories contained in a veggie burger.  It transpires that there are approximately 160 and not 73 calories in the foodstuff, roughly 80 calories in the burger and 80 in the bap.  In my defence the picture of the veggie burger on the bookmark does include a bap but in hindsight it appears that a “1” has been erroneously omitted from the quoted figure of 73 (i.e. I am guessing it should read 173.)    Even so, five veggie burgers and four slimline VATs only accounts for 1212 calories, less than half of a man’s recommended daily calorie intake of 2,500, so all in all the V & V diet could still be used to reduce the Pirate’s burgeoning beer belly.

© Dominic Horton, September 2013.