Like it's 'brother', the Alvis Stalwart I like the look of the Alvis Salamander.
Monday, 14 November 2022
Helicopter Airlines
Here is an interesting video from Celebrating Aviation with Mike Machat, on helicopter airlines, and regular passenger operations. Mainly in New York and Los Angeles, plus a few others. Not a subject that is often covered.
PASSENGER HELICOPTERS - What Was It Like Commuting in the Whirlybirds? - YouTube
Paul Adams from New Zealand
Sunday, 13 November 2022
LEWIS'S 3D PRINTED MARX MIKE HAZARD HAT AND FRIENDS

KEVIN'S MOEBIUS FANTASTIC VOYAGER
Matchbox Ford Group 6 - The Purple One!
YOU GOTTA REACH DOWN TO LIFT THE CROWD UP!
After the glory of our childhood toys came the fizz and gleam of modern music. It did for me and I guess for many as the crazes of infancy gave way to the crazes of youth.
My first musical craze was the pop music around me when I was a listening kid in the late Sixties/ early Seventies : Slade, T. Rex, Suzie Quattro, Donny Osmond, the Partridge Family, the Sweet, Leo Sayer and so on.
All this good stuff eventually coalesced around David Bowie for me and I bought all of his albums including his early stuff on Images, did a turn as his Ziggy Stardust at the High School talent show and bought some of his fabulous singles. I saw Bowie live at Preston Guild Hall in the early Seventies and thought I'd died and gone to Heaven.
During this period I was also obsessed with Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album and my sister introduced me to Lou Reed's magnificent Transformer, which excitingly had links to Bowie too.
As my hair grew longer in the mid-Seventies my tastes got heavier and Bowie and Lou gave way to hard rock and prog. Bouncing on my bedroom turntable now were LP's borrowed from my two Brothers' stereogram; Cream, Black Sabbath's Masters of Reality, John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers and the Bumpers/ Fill Your Head with Rock/Nice enough to Eat compilations. My Sister introduced me to the Yes Album and Wishbone Ash's eponymous first LP and Pilgrimage. Some bands she listened to sadly passed me by; James Gang, Caravan, Family, Three Dog Night and maybe Quintessence.
All of this good stuff for me eventually coalesced around Led Zeppelin, Rush, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Free, Jethro Tull, Uriah Heap and the heaviest of them all, Budgie, whom I saw live at Lancaster Uni around 1977.
Behind all the noise were some troubadours, especially Joni Mitchell and emphatically Neil Young. Again I have my sister Rene to thank for introducing me to his After the Goldrush and also to Van Morrison's phenomenal Astral Weeks and Veedon Fleece. Rene also played me Talking Heads.
In 1979/80 I co-formed two rock bands with my friend George [ and occasionally Keiron]. First it was a Blackpool prom busking duo called Alien Cage and then with two more friends, Boyley and Raff, a four-piece called Sirius, which gigged in a Preston pub called the Unicorn. Sadly we disbanded when my fellow band members went to Uni. I was 2 years older and without the band I left my home city too and lived on a bird reserve for a year. Turns out I'd left for good never going home again.
In the Eighties I was married with a young daughter. My old love of rock surfaced in a few bands I jammed with here and abroad and I always encouraged them to try classics like Free's Fire and Water and Tull's Locomotive Breath.
The Eighties' new wave and indie scenes largely passed me by. I wuz still a rocker really but friends did get me into the Smiths, Cocteau Twins and Teardrop Explodes among others. It was only much later that I came to appreciate indie, new wave and punk.
In 1990 a friend's 16 year old daughter came to live with us for a year to improve her English. She brought with her a bunch of cassettes, which she listened all the time to in her room. When she left, for some reason she left the cassettes behind.
13 years and a house move later in 2003, when I had my own man loft to fill with toys and listen to rock I rediscovered those cassettes, buried within the hundreds of tapes I had accumulated myself.
They were a revelation! I adored what was on them. Fresh, loud sounds which were clearly very rocky. Some of the tapes only had song names written on them, so I had no idea who was playing. Songs like Jeremy and Evenflow. Others had band names like Temple of the Dog and Mudhoney. I can still feel the excitement I felt when I first heard Temple of the Dog belt out 'You gotta reach down to lift the crowd up!'
I didn't know it at the time but I was listening to Grunge.
Grunge, like Punk, was a flash of lightning in a dull sky. Grunge's particular sky was Seattle in the late 80's/ early 90's. I was listening to mix tapes of LP's recorded from that time thirteen or fourteen years later! Grunge had already come and gone but I wasn't bothered. To me it as fresh as a daisy and despite being in my forties, once more I felt excited about music.
I listened to all the tapes incessantly and eventually worked out the bands: Soundgarden, Temple of the Dog, Mudhoney, Nirvana and the mighty Pearl Jam, whom I loved the most.
As it was now the age of the CD I bought the albums on the tapes, especially Pearl Jam. Eventually I packed up those old cassettes and returned them to that young student, now in her thirties!
Two decades later, now in my 60's, I'm still fascinated by Grunge. I'm not alone and last night there was a documentary on the telly to give us what we want, the story of it.
Although disappointingly non-chronological [I like origins and endings in order] it did remind me of the fuzz and wail of proper Seattle Grunge and the amazing local music scene it came from.
Green River, Malfunkshon, Mother Love Bone, Skin Yard, together with global superstars Nirvana, Soundgarden and Pearl Jam. They all knew each other and back in the late 80's/early 90's Seattle owned and loved them.
I wish I'd been there.
Have you had musical crazes readers?
ASTRO PHOTOS
As it turned out to be a fairly clear night sky yesterday evening I thought I'd take a few snaps of the Moon and stars.
The waning gibbous Moon dominated the sky, and here's a shot I took. Sadly where I live has a fair amount of light pollution. I'm close to two car parking areas which remain lighted until the early hours, so I accept I'm never going to get the sharpest photos, but in spite of that it's always satisfying to get a real time image of an object millions of miles away.
Here's a shot I took of the Sword of Orion which includes M42 aka The Orion Nebula, which is around 1,350 light years away. Even with the light pollution, it's still easy to spot.
Here's a link to a site dedicated to the Orion Nebula. https://orion2nebula.net/the-orion-nebula-region
Finally, a photo I took of another group of objects in the night sky, which are easily seen by the naked eye; The Pleiades, or Seven Sisters, an open star cluster , and only a mere 444 light years away!
GOING COMMANDO
I remember buying in and selling tone of these bad boys, the Commando robot from 1999.
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CHECKLISTS BY BRAND (FOR COUNTRY BY COUNTRY SEE TOP OF BLOG)
PROJECT SWORD SPACEX TIMELINE
- 1968 SPACEX LT10 CONCEPT
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER REAL THING
- 1969 LUNAR CLIMBER & MOONSHIP
- 1968 PROJECT SWORD ANNUAL
- 1968 TV21 #168 PROJECT SWORD PHASE 2
- 1968 PLEASURE CRUISER CONCEPT
- 1968 CENTURY 21 TOY MANUAL
- 1967 SCOUT 1 CONCEPT
- 1967 NUCLEAR FERRY TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER CONCEPT
- 1966 HOVERTANK IN COMIC
- 1966 NUKE PULSE NEEDLEPROBE IN COMIC
- 1966 ZERO X FILM DEBUT
- 1966 MOONBUS IN COMIC
- 1966 SPACE PATROL 1
- 1966 P3 HELICOPTER IN COMIC
- 1966 SAND FLEA AND SNOW TRAIN
- 1966 MOBILE LAUNCH PAD IN COMIC
- 1965 SPACEX MOONBASE CONCEPT
- 1965 APOLLO FIRST UK TOY AD
- 1962 NOVA CONCEPT
- 1962 MOONBUS CONCEPT
- 1961 MOON PROSPECTOR CONCEPT
- 1953 MOLAB CONCEPT