In the summer heat we visited a cool salvage yard in Hornsea last week.
There were cars.
Three big ships in dry dock.
Anything of interest readers?
In the summer heat we visited a cool salvage yard in Hornsea last week.
There were cars.
Three big ships in dry dock.
Anything of interest readers?
In another shot the cap is placed with an incomplete Action Man and a uniform.
We're back in gorgeous Hornsea by the sea and I was faced once again with Candy.
Candy is the name I've given to a large shop display doll in the window of a charity shop. I blogged about her last September and yep, she's still there in the same chair. This time I even asked if she was for sale but no chance.
As this round of our MoonBase International custom toys slowly comes to a close, our latest reincarnation is this 1960's Action Man knockoff.
This was Bill's childhood buddy and along with some of the original kit he totally deserves a new lease of life. The buddy that is, not Bill!
With a good scrub-up and freshly cleaned clothes, Bill's buddy, via the Quartermasters Store, has been sent on one last mission before hanging up his dog tags:
To secure the back garden for the summer!
That Palitoy Action Man Lancers cap I found yesterday ( thanks for ID 'ing it Paul) .....
reminded me of an officer I once found at a German flea market and blogged about 13 years ago.
The new cap would have sat well on this fellow, albeit a cheapo I think. The uniform was by Schildkrot.
Sometimes things come to those that .....
Camp!
The weather's warm and the site in Hornsea is brilliant. A flock of geese are camping next to us!
Whilst admiring the facilities - pool table, showers, phone chargers - I perused the exchanging bookcase and lo and behold there's a paperback I've been looking for for ten years, one Harvest Home by Thomas Tryon.
Written by US actor and author Tryon, the book, as I've found out online, was a New York Times bestseller in 1973. A folk horror set in rural Connecticut, the plot, centered on a remote community following the old ways, is slightly reminiscent of the Wicker Man.
Stephen King didn't rate it, a contemporary of his novel Salem's Lot.
Nevertheless, Harvest Home went on to become a popular spooky US TV film as well back in the mid-Seventies. I've never seen it.
Tryon wrote The Other too, again, an American paperback I've never seen in the wild here in Blighty.
Have you read or seen Harvest Home readers?
Blimey, I thought these were SpaceX toys at first glance on the net!
They look great though!
What do you think?