Monthly archives: October 2002


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Seeds

Tem had chosen to go high. Now, as his wingman bore down on the lead wing, he was lining up for the best pass on the other two bombers. He let off a short burst at the second bomber, tracer passing slightly ahead of the target.

The wing�s pilot over reacted, pulling the plane into a steep bank, losing what little altitude he had and digging a wingtip into the river. The nose jerked down and smashed into the water and the plane began to cartwheel and disintegrate. Distracted by this, Tem overshot the third wing without firing at it. He banked and came around as tightly as possible for an attack from the rear.

Tem closed until he could make out the rear gunner struggling with his weapon, trying to prime it and bring it to bear. The Mima had a one and a half digit cannon slung in a pod under its centre line. Tem placed the gunsight above the gunner and released a burst from the cannon.

The cupola, gunner and weapon disappeared in a series of small explosions. Tem was congratulating himself when the top turret opened up and stitched a series of holes across the wing and into the fuselage just behind him. Tem fired all the planes guns, at this range few of the shells missed, as the top turret fired again. He didn�t feel the bullets that hit him, and thought only of the glory of his death as the fuel tank was ruptured and Betra turned into a fireball.


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Just thought I’d try laying out the pic of the day thumbnails a little differently.

Seeds

�Let�s keep this really tight and give them a show.� Mirl transmitted to the other two wings. They tried to put a little variation into each day�s fly past, for themselves and their spectators on the ground.

A few more runs and the flight would be at air show standards. They flew parallel to the water front in a staggered line, as slowly as they could manage so the demonstration of power lasted longer.

�What is that?� Mirl�s co-pilot mused. �I see movement.�

�Where?�

Mirl couldn�t make it out at first. Upriver, but approaching fast, two shapes were flying low over the water. He looked away, flicking the switch for the viewer, and one of them had gone when he looked back. The remaining plane was close enough to identify now. �That�s a Mima. I haven�t seen one since�..�

He had been too complacent. The last thing Mirl had expected was to be attacked on this routine bombing run. He knew it was too late when he shouted into the caller, �Break! Break! We are under attack!�


Seeds

The angry buzz of pistons pumping at high speed surrounded them. The gorge was three hundred spans wide at river level, growing to five hundred at the top of the thousand span walls. The forest closed over the top as a roof, reflecting and amplifying the sounds. �We set off early to avoid the bombing raid.� Marra�s tone was more annoyed than worried.

�The bombers would never be so low.� Dack commented, �And the noise is coming from that direction.� He pointed back toward the Big Lazy.

Marra put the paddle into reverse, holding their position against the current. They had been picking their way through the minefields, following a map they had promised to burn, when the noise had started.

The noise didn�t get much louder, but changed in character as the planes appeared from upstream. There were two monoplanes and two biplanes. The monoplanes were sleek single engined machines, their flaps lowered to keep from stalling at the low speed of the biplanes. One of the biplanes was a cut down bomber, refitted with gun cupolas on every viable surface. None of them carried a nation�s markings, instead they were decorated with wild colour schemes and stylised woodland demons.

Some of the gunners on the big biplane waved and saluted as they passed overhead. Marra and Morn returned the gestures. Dack made the sign of the Silver Tower and bowed his head in a quick prayer. �I think,� he announced, �that we may be in danger if we follow them out of the mouth of the gorge.�

�We have nowhere else to go.� Marra pointed out.

�Then we shall just sneak out when it is dark. I guess.�


Time, I think, for another trawl through the hits log to see what sort of searches have been getting people here (working backwards, most recent at top)-

Call Loggers

motor bike crash video clips

Moonraker mov

ruby home page salt gene pool(????)

wattle and daub pics

escorts in manchester bella (you can guess what other sort of things came up on that search.)

spinneyhead (who’d have thought?)

horizontal windmill pics

Clips of Reed Low fighting

gta 3 problem

gta 3 load problem

buddha shops

pics of nucular destruction (nucular again!! Unless this means that Dubya’s visited my site.)

I know my place – two ronnies and john cleese (which was in here last time as well, so this just reinforces the chance that people will find it again. Whilst I’m on the subject of increasing hits and standings in listings, I think it’s time I mentioned Britney Spears naked again. There you go.)

V12 engines

how far away could you hear the earthquake in dudley

amusing items dudley earthquake

pictures of earthquake in manchester dudley

free gay king pictures (I’m just reporting them, I don’t have to explain them.)

“raid.mov”

nude hunting camp pics

traithlon fetish suits

lift him over the threshold

And a few site who’ve bounced surfers here because we’re in the same rings-

Summer Daze?, mad musings of me, Autumn Blog, The Plastic Cat, Janitor, Destinyland, thereisnoarizona, luceo magazine, Colours of the wind, Notes from Atlanta

I’m also somewhere on this page.


The dog has pink feet. This is what happens when you take her for a walk around the back of Cogra Moss where there are still spoil heaps from the iron ore mines. But she’s happy, and is currently snoozing at my feet. Of course, in an hour or so, she’ll want to do the whole walk again….

Another biggish chunk of Seeds. I’m thinking of doing a few pictures based upon the ‘Battle of the Big Lazy’, but I’ll have to slot them in amongst all the other things I’ve got to do-

They had been hand cranking the motors every day, turning them over to keep the internals coated in oil. It would have been better to fire up the engines for a few hundred spans each day, but fuel was too precious. They had managed to brew up a sort of moonshine that worked well enough in marine engines, but aeroplanes were much more temperamental beasts.

From all the debris scattered around after the Battle of Big Lazy, they had been able to patch together a flight of six planes. Tem had crash landed his Mima fighter on a spit of land and run like a mad thing for the old growth trees on the bank. He had been reunited with the engine in the airframe of Betra, the plane he had named for his wife. It was almost a Mima, albeit one stripped to the minimum. It was not a weapon to be used lightly. The wheeled carriage it sat upon would drop away on take off and it could not be landed without incurring great damage. But today was the day it would see action again.

The old growth trees in this part of the forest around Big Lazy were thousands of seasons old, and hundreds of spans around. Hangars had been carved out of the tree trunks and runways built on stilts out toward the great lake. Whether the planes gained air speed or not, they would drop off the end of the ramp a few hundred spans above the water and have to fly or splash. Tem calculated ways to hit the right speed, adjusted his goggles and made to pull the canopy closed. When his hand grasped at air he remembered they had not been able to recover any of the formed plastic glass.

Word came down through the wires for the spotters hundreds of spans above. The big silver bombers were back and, as on previous runs, seemed ready to dip low over the forest workings before releasing any ordinance.

In its prime, the Mima had possessed an auto starter, but this reconstituted version had to be manually turned over. After three goes, the engine turned over. In the hollow of the tree it was too loud to think. Tem eased the throttle up until he could feel the plane tugging at the wire that restrained it. He gave a signal and the wire was released.

The plane jumped forward, slowed a little, then started accelerating. Tem hadn�t expected the surface to be so rough, or for it to be so frightening that the trees rushed past so fast on either side. He felt the lightness as the wings started to lift, but pushed forward on the stick to keep the plane down as it gained more speed. He pulled back again as the gap above the lake filled all his vision.

For a moment, the plane faltered. It hung in the air, halfway between flying and falling. The throttles were pressed to the maximum, and the propeller�s pull soon became enough to lift the plane. He banked to the left, South.

Other planes had launched at the same time. Four of them had reached the end of their ramps, the last hadn�t started or had crashed off its runners he guessed. One of the biplanes had crashed straight down to the water. It was made mostly of wood, but the weight of the engine was slowly pulling it under. The pilot released his straps and pushed away for the shore.

So four of what might have been the Hidden Army�s only six aeroplanes headed down the Big Lazy toward the narrow valley at its southern end. They hung back to the speed of the slower biplane. If their calculations were correct, this would bring them out over the logging camp just as the silver wings did their fly past. The lumbering bombers would be at their most vulnerable then and could probably be shot down. If they were wrong….. If they were wrong, the loss to the Hidden Army would be huge.


Hey, I’m on holiday, okay. I’ve been enjoying the Lakes with an attention hungry Springer Spaniel and getting on with those geeky things- modelmaking, RPGs- that I have the time for in Manchester but never get around to. I think I’ve taken enough photos to keep me going throughout October.
Holiday reading-
e. by Matt Beaumont. Very funny attack on an ad agency, and office politics in general. Having it all told in e-mails may seem a risky ploy at first, but it allows for a sort of minimalism where you can easily unserstand all the events without needing the full narrative.
Sex and Drugs and Sausage Rolls by Robert Rankin. Odd, very odd, but endearingly so. There is so much time travel and such going on in Brentford that I’m surprised everyone doesn’t meet three versions of themselves in the High Street every day.
World War: Striking The Balance by Harry Turtledove. That’ll teach me to start reading a series with the fourth book. This one is proving hard going because the huge cast has to have their back story filled in as you meet them. It has an interesting premise- the Second World War is cut short by the arrival of an alien attack fleet which expected to meet medieval warriors and only has slightly better technology than the humans.