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Blog Roll > B J Burton website/blog

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message 1: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments My last website was down more often than it was up as the webhost server was repeatedly attacked by hackers.
I've slowly got around to launching a new one. I've transferred some of the info from the old site and some of the still relevant blog posts.
Having just spent a few days in Bath today's post is about that delightful city:
http://www.bjburton.co.uk/category/in...


message 2: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments Looks very slick and clean (is that from 3 hours in the baths?).

Hope this one gives you less grief :o)


message 3: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Yes, I'm all pruney. Thanks for the good wishes, Jud.


message 4: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Looks good BJ. I like it because it's clear and easy to read. It's always the young lads who think white writing on black is excellent!


message 5: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks, Kath. I trust you noticed that the review of your book was one that made the leap to the new site!


message 6: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments I have to confess I was immodest enough to look for it! Thanks me dear!


message 8: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks Rosemary.


message 9: by Jim (new)

Jim | 21812 comments A nice blog BJ but nowhere to click to say I liked it :-(

Bath is a fascinating place


message 10: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks, Jim. Not being on Facebook or Twitter I'm totally ignorant about the uses and abuses of social media. I hesitated for a long while over including the Wordpress social media buttons, but this Wiki excerpt persuaded me against it.
" the feature has aroused scrutiny over privacy concerns because the social plug-ins allow Facebook to track visitors to participating sites across the web, even if those visitors do not click the Like button, are logged out of Facebook, or are not Facebook users at all. The Like button is implemented similarly to an advertising network, and as more sites participate, gives Facebook a vast amount of information about who visits which sites, and when. When loading a web page which has the Like button enabled, the user's browser connects to Facebook's servers, which record the URL being visited, and the visitor's IP address and Facebook ID (if logged in). In June 2010 Facebook said it anonymizes this information after three months, and does not sell or otherwise share that information. The ACLU of Northern California cautioned website operators to be careful about installing Like buttons because "they're potentially telling Facebook about everyone who visits their web site, every time that person visits their web site."

My ignorance may well be making me over-cautious.


message 11: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments A few thoughts on the damage done to the Westcountry by the winter storms.

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 12: by B J (last edited Apr 02, 2014 04:55AM) (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments The second in a planned series of posts on one of my favourite places - the beautiful city of Bath.

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 13: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments A blog, with lots of photos, of our visit to the Broomhill Art Gardens. Not to be missed! (The gardens, that is, not this blog.)

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 14: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments I love the horse! And the three cuddly Graces!


Gingerlily - The Full Wild | 34228 comments Thats really cool. I loved the reflective man.


message 16: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments The cuddly Graces had me chuckling. It took me days to write this blog post because I couldn't decide on what photos to put up - I took hundreds!


Gingerlily - The Full Wild | 34228 comments I still somewhere hare photos from the Statue Park in Oslo. They would raise a few eyebrows...


message 18: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Dig them out - always happy to raise an eyebrow or two.


message 19: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Gingerlily - Elephant Philosopher wrote: "Thats really cool. I loved the reflective man."

That's a much better title for it. The artist calls it 'digital rendition no.3', which doesn't really stick in the mind.


Gingerlily - The Full Wild | 34228 comments B J wrote: "Dig them out - always happy to raise an eyebrow or two."

They are so old they are on film. I'll see if I can find them but it may take a while.

Here is a sample...
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/44/221...


message 21: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Wow - action packed!
I take it that's 'Man Throwing Off The Responsibilities Of Fatherhood'.


Gingerlily - The Full Wild | 34228 comments It certainly SHOULD be called that!


message 23: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Some chat about our local folk music scene:

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 24: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Eeeh, that were a good read! I loved Charles Causley by the way and have several books of his poems on my shelf. I still play my 12 string guitar and I'm a superannuated hippie who loves folk music. Great blog post.


message 25: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks, Kath. Glad you enjoyed it. I can see our tastes coincide on many things. Charles Causley was an interesting man, although he always refused to believe that. I can't read 'Timothy Winters' without suffering a bit of eye watering.
A friend of mine, Laurence Green, has written a biography of Causley called 'All Cornwall Thunders at my Door'. It's excellent.


message 26: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments He was indeed. I love Timothy Winters too. He had a down-to-earth view that I love reading still. I think he was a schoolmaster?


message 27: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Yes, he was. He spent nearly all of his life in Launceston, apart from the war years in the Royal Navy and brief spells in Australia and Canada. He taught at a Launceston school and lived in a tiny cottage with his parents, staying on there after they had died. He was friends with many of our leading poets and has been labelled 'the best Poet Laureate we never had'. I find his work totally accessible and very moving.


message 28: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments I've been catching up on reviews of some books I've read recently - some I liked and some I really didn't!

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 29: by Katy (new)

Katy | 2662 comments Looks good (: I can't 'follow' it or am I being stupid?


message 30: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks Katy. I can assure you of two things: you are not being stupid and if there was a competition for being technology-stupid I'd be way out in front. It took me months to create this website slavishly following the instructions in Andy Williams' excellent book on the subject. If any links don't work, or there is some functionality missing, that is entirely down to my incompetence.
Hopefully it won't put you off dropping in from time to time.


message 31: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Hi Barry. Glad you got something out of my bottle! :)


message 32: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Hi Kath. Yes, like many a bottle before it, once opened the contents went down well.


message 33: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments May I put your blog link on my New Releases thread? Pretty please?


message 34: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Of course. Spread it far and wide.


message 35: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Thanks. Didn't want to assume!


message 36: by Katy (new)

Katy | 2662 comments It wont stop me visiting, BJ, but it might be something to consider (:


message 37: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments At a glance Katy, the 'follow' button appears to be a feature built into the site when you use a blog hosted by Wordpress. I can't see it as an option when you just use a Wordpress designed site hosted elsewhere. I'll have a look and see if there's a plug-in that would do the job.


message 38: by Katy (new)

Katy | 2662 comments Don't worry about it, BJ, if it's a problem (: I was wondering if there was a widget for it, that was all


message 39: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments More chat about folk festivals and fun in the Southwest.

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


message 40: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments A nice read there, Barry. I agree it's so heartening to see young, talented people turning to folk - although they've probably been soaked in it from babyhood, like ours were!


message 41: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks, Kath. You're always the first to respond - much appreciated. Yes, it's great to see so many youngsters getting involved in folk, both in the dancing and the playing. Some of the joys of the festivals are the unplanned events that just happen. Last year at Sidmouth,for example, after an evening concert we were in the Yacht Club. There was a group of us oldies with a guitar singing modern folkie stuff (John Denver etc) alternating with some teenagers down from Scotland armed with melodeons playing reels, jigs and singing very traditional songs. It was an absolute delight.


message 42: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments And of course, the beer doesn't hurt! ;)


message 43: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Folk music without beer is like a day without sunshine.
Do you know Kimber's Men? I think they are from your part of the world.


message 44: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Can't say that I do.


message 45: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments http://www.kimbersmen.co.uk/

They are excellent. Their double album 'Kimber's Men in Port' is one of my most played collections.


message 46: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments A post of thoughts and pictures on hamboning with Five Finger Frank in Sidmouth.

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


Rosemary (grooving with the Picts) (nosemanny) | 8590 comments I loved the New Rope String Band - they performed at our Fringe By the Sea last year. The wee boy sitting in front of us clearly was having the BEST time of his little life so far.


message 48: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments We found our daughter's holiday scrapbook recently (she was 7 at the time) with a poster from the local Morris men near the place we were staying - South Lakes. She's never been quite the same since - besotted with folk music and now has a harp. I blame the parents!

Love your posts, Barry. I feel like I was there!


message 49: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments Thanks for the interest, ladies. The NRSB obviously appeal to children of all ages. I come out of their concerts with my face aching.
Next year's Sidmouth Folk Week begins on Friday 31st July, Kath. With a little planning you can REALLY be there. A friend of ours plays the harp. Her husband always has a bad back!
John Kirkpatrick was at Sidmouth running workshops and performing. He turned up one morning sporting a black eye, which he described as 'a Morris dancing injury'. He said, "Go one, say it, everyone else does - 'it's no more than you deserve.'"


message 50: by B J (new)

B J Burton (bjburton) | 2680 comments A post about a day out at Widecombe Fair:

http://www.bjburton.co.uk/blog-2/


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