Closer with the jab
My Manchester is as
much a strange place as it is familiar, I still take my walks through the usual
routes and at times veer off down a side road to discover something I did not
know about my city. Buildings of rare or unusual architecture that one would
never have thought was down a particular lane, a canal ending like a cul-de-sac
the wall perched high up your imagination wonder what a mishap might portend,
but we feel safe.
Down by the Sikh gurdwara, there was an assemblage of people and some donning high-visibility vest but
strangely not of the typically Sikh ethnicity. For the Saturday, it had been
turned into a vaccination centre, the need to get the apparently vaccination-averse
ethnic minorities into the Covid-19 vaccine programme is moving into their
community spaces. I hope the uptake is welcomed and the sceptical are being won
over.
New friends in the
park
Then I finally got to
have a proper conversation with the lady and her companion who feed the birds
in the park every morning when I am out for my walk. As usual, the greetings
and the weather starts the proceedings before we put in our complaints about
people who care little for the park leaving their litter all about the place.
We then move to the
nicer things of life, nature; the new ducklings so recently hatched, the rare
kingfishers that have not been seen for a while, the wild around the park that
allowed otters to thrive and deer to graze into urban spaces, then the occasional
terror that becomes of the usually idle and placid River Irwell.
Many personalities of
River Irwell
Whilst I am
fascinated by the ebb and swell of the river watching the levels on a website,
where they live, they are threatened by floods, to my fascination, they have concern
and sometimes dread. Her companion who I assumed was her husband is a family
friend, her husband is busier now with the church nearby as they learnt that I
am already 5 kilometres into my walk when we meet in the park. [Flood
Information Service: River Irwell]
My ears attuned to her
broad Lancastrian accent that I got used to when I holidayed with a family in
Lancaster, we introduced ourselves by name and bid each other a good rest of
the weekend. Indeed, I do miss the joy of conversation with strangers.
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