In order of composition, newest at the top.
Photographs from Ashurst, New Forest unless indicated otherwise.
Surely
it isn't all that
surprising
to find a leaf and a cone
together!?
What bird could fly
with feathers this wet?
No wonder
they cast them away.
According to the Rule
of Three
that's the most ponies you'll find in a line.
I know because I frazzled my patience
trying to prove the Rule of Four.
Does this mean
you can park
with impunity
even in the middle of the pavement?
(Apparently not: ‘the
"Dark Green Line" at Old Street tube station in London is a
painted, dark green line on the pavement that guides people, particularly those
with vision impairments, to the entrance of Moorfields Eye Hospital's A&E
department. It begins at subway 4 and continues along City Rd. The
line provides visual and tactile guidance, making it easier for people to
navigate the area.)
(Fitzrovia, London)
Much as I'd like to
be critical
of phones replacing books,
with what do you suppose
I took these photos...
‘It's
telling me
I'm not where I am!’
she exclaimed,
as if an app might break the laws of science.
The rule I deduce is
‘If you’re tree, you don't get chained in’.
Which is quite right: trees are important,
they should be respected and allowed to roam free.
Small?
I guess, but then it is it cuddle pub,
and no one said the cuddling
was an optional extra.
(Amsterdam)
What I want to know
Is how do petunias decide
whether to stay plain
or opt for a coloured heart?
(Amsterdam)
The classical music
in this station
might seem a nice touch,
but I was told it was just to stop
young people hanging around.
(Wibautmarkt Metro Station,
Amsterdam. If true, that’s a sad reflection on perceptions of youth. That said,
next day the music was middle-of-the-road balladry. Was that just as
effective?)
There used to be A TV
quiz show
called ‘Where in the World?’
This would had left the panel
scratching their heads...
(Amsterdam)
If this
is
Utopia,
how come it receives
no stars?
(Amsterdam – actually a hostel, rather than a hotel
as claimed on the notice)
This sign wouldn’t
work back home
but the nifty Dutch
can ride their bikes two ways at once,
and one of those curved.
(Amsterdam)
It’s hardly fair
that a man with such flexible arms
should also have the benefit
of three legs.
I admit
to spilling soapflakes.
But did the floor make the flakes dirty
or the flakes make the floor clean?
The only one left undisturbed
by the announcement that the police would be called
was the slumberer who wouldn’t budge
though he hadn’t bought a burger…
(Incident in McDonalds, Kings Cross, London)
I guess we need
smaller burgers
or bigger mouths.
How hard
can the right decision be?
I’m about
to approach the Approach Estate
on which the pub is called The Approach
even though it’s so close to the middle
it ought to be called The Arrival.
Are these night daisies
lit by my headlamps -
‘nighties’ for short –
or just daysies that haven’t gone in?
Were I a playwright
I’d set my next drama
inside the accelerating turbulence
of a kettle.
If these nettles are
yellow
in order to warn us
that they don't sting,
I reckon they're somewhat confused.
(Totton: yellow archangel or golden dead-nettle, Lamium galeobdolon)
CoverMan
looks happier - albeit bemused –
than I would be if stuck down there.
How did it happen?
Ok this is a Berlin wall
not the Berlin Wall,
not that there's much left of that,
and I quite like this substitute.
(Berlin)
Berlin graffitists
are different class
How often does the Times Literary Supplement
get tagged in England?
Or is that a philistine 'J'?
(Berlin… I subscribe
to the TLS)
Anyone can sit on a
chair
– assuming there’s room – or a rock, ditto.
The question’s how often
you can sit on a rock on a chair.
(Work by Alicja Kwade in the garden of the Pace/Judin joint gallery, Berlin)
We determine the
sharpness
of all your teeth
and do so free
if your name is Charlie
(Berlin: close to
Checkpoint Charlie – now a tourist site, active 1961-89)

This jackdaw
is one of many in Berlin
acting as if they’re not just pigeon-sized,
but are pigeons.

This jackdaw
marched his shadow round
with what I felt was sentimental attachment
only to fly off without it.
This jackdaw
kept a sensible distance
from his reflection,
just in case he got caught out of step.
(Berlin: jackdaws seem common, I’ve assumed these are male, but the sexes look very similar)

Twenty metres
set against a good deal less than one:
how hard would it be
to lift her up?
(The Luftbrückendenkmal (Berlin Airlift Monument) was inaugurated in 1951. Architect Eduard Ludwig designed the 20-metre-high reinforced concrete sculpture in the form of a stylized bridge pillar. It symbolizes the airlift that ensured the survival of West Berliners during the Berlin Blockade during 1948-49)
I’m not saying
German dogs can read,
but it seems they’re pretty competent
with signs.
they put the holes in blinds
in order to play with the light –
but why not?
(Berlin)
I guess you might
want a golden gorilla
to scare off any gold thieves
before they could steal it -
but wouldn’t a lion be better?
(Berlin – a shop
window displays several of these absurd monstrosities…)
What we need is
bigger bins
to hold the bins that have transitioned
from helping out
to adding to the problem.
(Berlin)
In case you don't
know
where you are
here are three
sufficiently graphic reminders.
(Somewhere in Berlin)
In a palpably absurd
challenge to optimal head positioning
this hotel feature the biggest and smallest
pillows I’ve ever seen.
(Hotel W22, Berlin. In
fact I was OK with the small one- but aware that I am odd)
Good morning
security,
here is my whippily
dangerous belt!
(Luton Airport. To be
fair, the reason security often asks for belt removal is that some metal
buckles can interfere with the images produced by body scanners, making it more
difficult to detect concealed objects)
Dandelion concerts
are always amazing:
you can bet on the crowd
being blown away.
A football shirt
is very nearly a good place to hide
if you miss the ball completely
in front of an open goal.
(My video capture of
Tyrick Mitchell, of Crystal Palace, after he missed a sitter in the FA Cup
semi-final against Aston Villa, 2025)
How many feathers does a fence require
in order to fly?
I suspect the answer’s a big-enough number
that this isn’t much of a start.
In the event of fire
throw a towel on the flames.
If that fails,
try the spray.
Even though their
delicacy
doesn't come with brittleness
I feel there's an affinity
between petals and eggshells.
(egg box in Penge, London)
I claim that the
important bricks
are those that hold things up,
not the ones that swell towards
their own importance in a frame.
(Islington, London)
I hear it takes an extra day
of driver training
to ensure that the buses of Leeds
can safely pass through the Henry Moore.
(Henry Moore's ‘Reclining Woman: Elbow’, 1981, is situated outside Leeds City Gallery)
I wonder that Miffy
Doesn’t advertise face cream:
she looks so unaffected
by those seventy years...
(Leeds: the exhibition
celebrates the cartoon rabbit devised by Dutch artist Dick Bruna in 1955)
That’s no problem
I shall stick
to wrapping paper, tracing paper,
newspaper, rice paper…
(Leeds University)
I'm not afraid
of swinging,
but that’s a frayed rope
and I am afraid of that.
I’ve sketched in
where I imagine Steve’s widow sits
so that his seat
spells out her name, Eve.
(Colbury churchyard,
bench dedicated to Steven Cooper – ‘sadly missed’)
Whatever these flowers
we’re going to
almost say
I think they’re now definitively quiet.
(Philip Larkin: ‘The Trees’, 1974 - ‘The trees are coming into leaf / Like something almost being said’)
One hardly expects to
see
a Rentokil control point fooling around –
but that's the way it seems to be,
even though Red Nose Day isn't until next year.
(Totton)
It looks as if
the small trees ganged up on the big tree
and now they have it
chopped and trapped for good.
Here’s the sign
thoroughly blurred
by the speed of the vehicles
passing across it…
(Totton)
Who can deny
the tug appeal of baby birds
as they stretch with beaks
beyond their head, or even body?
Nothing cows
the cows of Ashurst
unless it’s that they’re dogged by dogs -
or worried by horses horsing around.
It's sad to see cones
denied their purpose,
even if it's sadder
to see them allowed it.
Seeking this perfectly
fair allocation
of the grandkids’ Easter Eggs
I had one over I had to eat, then found
that I’d miscounted, and had to eat two more…
Autumn already!
How fast the Seasons pass
by which I mean to say of course
the Autumn of Petals.
(Petals under the same tree as 'The fortnight of glory' - opposite our house)
How long will he be waiting here
for the work to finish?
Long enough, I suspect,
to be pleased to be bronze.
(Woking: that is ‘Standing Man’, 2010, by Sean Henry)
Here’s the perfect marriage
of bollard and wall:
close enough to constitute a match,
yet different enough for independence.
Newport spiders
are considerate knitters:
out to trap and eat flies, yes,
but generously keen to keep them warm.
(Newport)
There's only one
question
to usk
about Newport:
what is the name of its river?
(River Usk, Newport)
Where is this transporter
bridge?
Newport, of course.
And it crosses the biggest tidal range
of any city in the world.
(Evidently more questions are, in fact, possible about Newport. It has one of just seven transporter bridges still extant. Moreover, the River Usk, which gives Newport the biggest tidal range of any city in the world, is crossed by five bridges in two miles as it runs through the city)
Is a triple teasel
known as a treasel,
or am I just
teasling?
(Newport Wetlands
Nature reserve)
It’s hard
to believe
that this picture is so valuable
it needs security
as intrusive as the Mona Lisa’s.
(Horton’s
Lounge, Newport)
It’s bad enough
that seagulls sit down
when they should be flying around
without them soiling their seat.
(Portishead)
If each bulb lights
the other bulb
and all of them light the wall
where does that leave
the purpose of illumination?
(Costa, Taunton)
Two ducks in a row
hardly seems a worthwhile score.
You might as well make
a duck in cricket.
(Portishead)
I can read the avian thoughts
What’s the big problem with soft mud
you can just fly up from,
soon as you land?
('Danger - Soft Mud' sign, Portishead)
I remember the bubble car
But I don’t remember
it being quite like this.
Wasn’t the car the bubble?
(Hatch Beauchamp, Somerset: a Range Rover chassis under preservation awaiting a matching top)
The fortnight of glory
is here again,
the fortnight of asking:
is that long enough?
I have discovered
how to take screenshots on my phone.
All I need to work out now
Don’t be deceived
by the presence of pots:
these flowers aren’t actually growing from them,
but out of the wall, as they should.
(Wallflowers thrive in cracks on cliffs and against old stone walls - hence the name, which is nothing do to - as is popularly assumed - with their being left at the edge of bouquets while other flowers garner all the attention)
Feeling boxed in
by human concerns,
he tried out tiger life.
It didn't really help.
(Milan)
What if the
windowscape
were to be a genre?
I reckon it’s well worth
looking into.
(Milan)
It’s a shame
I won’t be here long enough
to bring it to fruition.
(Milan – I was there 2-5
April 2025. I manually combined two flowers to make the third)
If I find a space
all well and good. And if I don't
I'm not about to lose my cool:
all well and good the same
(Milan)
Here I am, urinating
but keeping so still
the lights have gone off.
I guess that's some relief...
(Toilet cubicle with
movement-triggered lighting, Milan)
Some repairs
are simpler than others.
This one arrives at maximum simplicity,
leaving just the matter of effectiveness.
(Milan)
Irma's texts
are blank of meaning
unless you say that every meaning
lies encoded there.
(Irma Blank: Eigenschriften (Writing for the Self, 1969. In her pastel-coloured drawings on paper, the appropriately-named German-Italian artist (Celle, Lower Saxony 1955 - Milan 2023) repeated signs to make a meaningless written language)
I take it that women
don’t jerk
so much as stroke,
and that is Yuskavage’s point:
it is the men who are the jerks.
(Lisa Yuskavage: ‘Big
Blonde Jerking Off’, 1995 – as shown at the Palazzo Reale, Milan, 2025)
The net result
of Milan by night
is only the slightest
curtaining off.
These trees have been
so brutally cut back
they only let them out at night,
once the children are tucked in bed.
(Prada Foundation,
Milan)
Everything in Italy
tends to run late.
So is it only two o’clock
when the clock says three?
(Milan – while waiting
for my late-running pick-up)
It isn't so often
that buildings have faces,
raising the question: what’s it looking out for?
Surely not me?
(Milan Central Station - the face is part of the monumental architectural scheme from 1931, and is actually meant to operate as a fountain from the mouth, though it was not operational when I was there)
Here is the aesthetic rule
for tourists in Milan:
cases may be any colour,
so long as they are red.
(Milan)
I have nothing to say
about John Cage’s visit to Milan
which is why
I’m saying it.
(Milan: if I were to
say something, it might be that in 1959, Cage was a guest of Luciano Berio here.
The image shows him at the piano on that trip. His most famous statement is ‘I
have nothing to say, and I am saying it’, which draws attention the
impossibility of saying nothing, for once a frame of communication has been set
up, the emptiness in it will speak. As it does in 4’ 33”, his most famous
musical statement.)
Here’s the red van
ascending what I take to be
the red hill of Redhill.
I’m not sure that they call it that, but still…
(Redhill, Surrey: the road seems to be called Redstone Hill and Ladbroke Road at different points)
I thought I was in complete control
but my grasp of the matter was incomplete
as I suppose was the word ‘complete’,
the first two letters having gone missing.
Exactly when
are you allowed to park here?
Perhaps a red and yellow line
means any time you wish…
(Southampton)
That's
enough pineapples
I get it
that they’re gold
but that's enough.
(outside
the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge)
It was hard enough
to find a place to charge the car
even before
the colour-matching regs came in.
(Fitzrovia, London)
What the forests
of London
lack in scale
they make up for in drama.
(St Pancras, London)
Temptations
have come a long way.
These days an apple
Is hardly worth the finishing.
(Basel)
Symbiosis is a
wonderful thing
Were I a roof I’d want some moss
to keep me warm. Were I some moss
I’d want a roof to grow on.
(Southampton)
What colour is
safety?
It’s hard to say,
but apparently not
the traditional yellow.
(Holborn, London)
I hope this cormorant
doesn’t plan to nest here:
I suspect that might be
classified as mooring.
(Regents Canal, Kings Cross, London. It seems unlikely: cormorants usually nest in colonies on low cliffs)
Just look at the beauty
of that modulation!
And set aside the matter
of location.
(Urinal,
Holborn, London)
'That’s not an option’
she explained, ‘it’s a noption’.
And I realised why the word
had not caught on.
Is that an
abbreviated breakfast
served with abbreviated tea?
Or breakfast with no ‘s’,
implying that there’s coffef but not tea?
(Marylebone, London)
The key to life
is a sense of purpose.
Plenty of people struggle,
yet these pigeons have it cracked.
(Southwark, London)
File this barber
with Fatboy’s Gym, Tortoise Taxis
and the Lose-It-All Casino
as names you might choose not to give a business.
(Chichester)
After the carnival
a confetti of colourful memories
lives on
in every detail of the city.
(Basel: I arrived just after the 2025 Carnival – a three day binge of drink and masked parades running 4 a.m. on 10 March on to 4 a.m. on 13 March – but despite a speedy clean-up of the major messes, confetti was still visible everywhere)
I estimate this croissant
at 150,000 calories.
She looks pretty skinny, though -
maybe she can cope.
(Lucerne: a typical croissant has 300 calories. I reckon this one is x 500)

It may be a trick
question
but can you tell the difference between
the modernist coot Fulica
atra moderna
and the more traditional Fulica
atra classicus?
(Lucerne: the trick being to decide whether the coots on the inlet of Lake Lucerne are more interested in the buildings closest to them, or the more distant ones we can see in the pictures)
Who could fail to be
impressed
that the mannequins of Switzerland
go to the trouble
of sourcing the clothes that have been photographed?
(Lucerne: I've never seen this done in Britain)
Sweetzerland
is useless:
lots of chocolate, lots of watches,
but I can’t find a chocolate watch.
(That said, though I didn’t see one, the choco-watch is a
known item - for example, as sold by Beyer Watches & Jewellery, Zurich. I did see adverts for chocolate placing me in 'Sweetzerland')
Life is good
as an Easter Rabbit.
Our only concerns are being eaten
and the shadow of the Big Rabbit, looming above.
(Läderach Chocolatier Swiss, Lucerne)
Here’s when it occurs
to me
that I am gazing down
on Picasso gazing down
on Fernande gazing down.
(‘Head of a Woman’, 1909,
thought to be Fernande Olivier, 1909, in the Rosengart Collection, Lucerne)
I guess they’re wondering
why they bothered to swap umbrellas
given that it’s pretty much
stopped raining.
An octet with one
member cut off at the legs
may sound problematic,
but – as they all play guitar –
the impact may be hard to hear.
(Nicholas Micros: ‘Strummer’, 2009-12, Zurich. According to the artist 'eight identical cement mortar figures play a string less Picasso-esque guitar and make a circular procession on a heavy wheel. It’s the same injection cement used to support tunnels and mines during construction. The circular parade has no beginning or end. The eight-sided wheel is cast in the prized material of high modernist architecture, industrial concrete, and is imprinted with a radiating geometric depiction of infinity')
To get frontally
pregnant
is understandable -
but to get posteriorly pregnant as well
does seem a little bit careless.
(Niki de Saint Phalle:
‘Gwendolyn’ 1966 at the Tinguely Museum, Basel)
I see the logic
Smoke is curly,
chimneys ought
to be curly, too.
(Basel)
I'm not
one
to gamble
but it looks fairly safe
to cross the railway here.
Here is my self-portrait
as a finger
covering the camera lens
even as I’m caught by it.
I want to see
the painting that she couldn’t paint,
not the one she could.
(Tracey Emin: ‘I
Wanted You To Fuck Me So Much I Couldn't Paint Anymore’, 2020 – as shown at
Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, 2025)
This disposal makes a
lot of sense
You don't need hands -
let alone gloves -
to climb up steps.
(Blackfriars, London)
Here's how to count
at least in part.
I wonder how high
the lesson will go.
(St James’s, London)
To name an
establishment
after one chocolate biscuit
could be coincidence –
but to name it after two…
(The Playhouse Theatre, near Trafalgar Square, London, has – since 2021 – been advertised as the Kit Kat Club while it is hosting a revival of the musical Cabaret, which features a nightclub of that name. The original Kit Kat Club was a political and literary club for Whigs in 18th century London. That name came from them meeting in on the premises of a pastry chef named Christopher (Kitt) Catling, who supplied meat pies called ‘Kit-Cats’. Rowntree's, of York, originally created the Kit Kat bar in 1935 (Nestlé acquired Rowntree's in 1988). Club was first made in Ireland by Jacob’s – now owned by British firm McVitie's.)
onto the street –
that now takes on
her fleshy aura?
('Venus' mattress, Covent Garden, London)
Just how soft
can an execution get?
I can't think too much further
than a hood.
(Southwark,
London)
Probably too obvious
to enter into
any contest for the
best t-shirts slogans.
(Hampstead: I saw the
shirt in 'action', but I didn't get a photo)
It hardly looks
a big enough road
to cover the 91 miles to Lymington.
Hampstead would be pretty good going.
(Camden, London)
‘I'm quite a bit
bigger than you’
‘Yes, but your nipple is rusty -
and anyway, shouldn’t we aim
to be the same size?
(Marble Arch, London)
Economics trumps the
future
madmen rule what they haven’t turned to rubble,
the moon rises indoors…
All is not well.
(Mayfair, London)
When the Blue and Red Gap Snake
flips its white tail
you know it is about to strike.
Yet I am brave!
(Connaught Village,
London)
I know what I’m meant
to think
‘I must get to Brighton’.
I know what I do think:
who is Joe
Bonamassa?
(St Pancras Station, London - it turns out he’s an American blues rock guitarist, singer and songwriter. For all I know he isn't that obscure, but stands in for the fact that almost everyone is obscure to most people)
It's as if
the full extent of my training
as an electrician
has been laid bare for all to see…
(St John’s Wood,
London)
I'm surprised they
keep going
So little happens at this station,
you'd think they might be tempted
to sell some news from further afield.
(Stockwell Underground
Station, London)
If that’s all
that’s left of the car
I think I’ll take a scooter
or the bike.
(Swiss Cottage,
London)
What is the word
for a gap in the crack?
and is there
an appropriate sealant?
(Marble Arch, London)
I was hoping
the sign would say
STRICTLY NO RUNNING
as I scooted by…
(Barbican, London)
I used to live
here
but I couldn't sleep.
I always said it was time for the world
to slow time down.
(Barbican, London)
I do not look down on
Boots
A perfectly respectable store, I’d say –
and yet I do
look down on Boots.
(City of London –
store in basement, visible from street)
If the answer
is Saint Gobbaine,
then what was the question
and why was it asked?
(Fitzrovia, London)
Surely air feels more
like nothing
I’ve been to Cheltenham,
and it didn’t feel radically
different from Gloucester.
If that is a heron
it has quite a wingspan:
I'm not surprised
the dog doesn’t chase it.
(Barbican, London)
The phallus
of the Duke of York
is big enough for bragging rights
but I can't see it getting any action.
(St James’s, London:
The Duke of York Column is a monument to Prince
Frederick, Duke of York (1763-1827), the second son of King George III,
designed by Benjamin Dean Wyatt, with
the statue atop it by Sir Richard Westmacott raised in 1834)
How far from Windsor to London?
The original twenty-odd miles
takes on another hundred
by the time you get to Canada.
Fairport Convention
were at their peak in the seventies.
Now it’s just them
in the seventies.
(I saw Fairport
Convention at the Turner Sims Concert Hall, Southampton in February 2025. To be
fair, the problem isn’t so much fading powers as the lack of any replacement
for Sandy Denny, who for example wrote and sang their best-known track – ‘Who
Knows Where The Time Goes?’ in 1969 and sang with them only 1968-70 and 1974-75
- not to mention Richard Thompson, their other top songwriter, who left in 1971)
Who is this as gold as brass?
And did they bother to paint the rear
of what we must assume should be
a very golden marble arse?
(St James’s, London –
this is the Athenaeum , built in 1827-30 by Decimus Burton, home of the
Athenæum Club and of the golden marble statue of Pallas
Athenae by Edward Hodges Baily (1788-1867), who also put Nelson
on his column)
Here are the moments
before the lifts
when I wonder:
will I find a severed head?
I would not go quite
so far
as the titular echo of ‘tiresome’,
but it's true
that I've seen such things before.
(‘Trisome‘, 2000 by Anthony
Cragg at the Arts University Bournemouth. A trisome is a chromosome occurring
three times - rather the usual twice - in a cell. That aside, it’s a pretty
typical Cragg.)
If we
look like indecisive bricks
consider this: we sorted the order
to build ourselves -
the brief did not incorporate chromatics.
(Bournemouth)

Is discontinuity
the curse of life,
or just what keeps it
interesting?
(London Underground)
Why are these tulips so sad?
Is it because they are wilting?
Or are they only wilting
because they were discarded?
(Connaught Village,
London)
Notice how
this ‘no dumping’ sign
demonstrates by way of warning
the very behaviour it seeks to prevent.
(Paddington, London)
How should I take
this?
That all will be restful under the sky
or that I won’t have a roof
while the celestials do their thing?
(Premier Inn, Edgware
Road, London)
Vertical trees
have had their time,
and they’ve been good
but this is the horizontal wood.
(Cambridge Heath,
London)
These are the night
railings
keeping by force
to their rainy day order,
but doubling up with shadow.
(Islington, London)
These are blank times
by day and by night.
No wonder the faceless
are modelled in the shops.
What sort of driver do they want?
dodgy parking dawdler,
demon paced dasher
or a dream parcel deliverer?
(Holborne, London)
To steer himself
clear
he makes up a rule:
the blacker the blonde,
the smaller the ratio of ‘Hi!’ to ‘Fuck off!’.
Whoever thought that
Valentines
was such a serious matter?
Is he pondering whether the message is right,
or wondering who it would suit?
What kind of
reception
is all that graffiti?
Yet it could be worse:
nothing here is legibly offensive.
(Millbrook, Southampton)
Not just any pothole
but our pothole,
outside our house.
The affection that generates
is, however, limited.
If paving slabs are
kept in place
by treasury tags
then the budget for street repairs
Is even more stretched than I’d thought.
If catkins
are the best that’s available
it might be best
not to walk home.
Some slippage
is inevitable
when comparing the ideal
to the reality.
If I
worked here
I'd be tempted to make an ill-tempered resignation
simply to be able to shout:
‘Fuck ING!’
(ING
Bank, City of London)
If they’re going to be invisible
you’ll need your clothes as permanent
as the skin you'll see through them -
for how would you know when to throw them away?
(Fitzrovia, London)
The view
through ‘View’
is rarely worth the framing:
I had to wait five minutes
just for a walker and dog.
(Naomi Blake: ‘View’, 1977, in the gardens of Fitzroy Square,
Fitzrovia, London)
Is whatever’s not allowed and when
under water far enough
to claim you were floating
This is an important
cone
crowned and cloaked
with its own praetorian guard,
and also an assistant.
(Fitzrovia, London)
Grass: green
Tub: greener.
Water: greenest
of them all?
Execution would be
too harsh
as a punishment for fly posting -
yet, were that applied for this offence,
I could at least appreciate the irony.
(Brussels)
Could all of this
burst
like a bubble,
not just the fleeting excitement,
but the longest-standing stone?
(Cathedral square, Ghent)
The city
of Ghent
seems very relaxed:
even the plants
get a chance to sit down.
(Ghent)
The tricky question
of whether to take the plunge.
‘Is the water too cold? Am I sure I can swim?’
before you realise, ‘Fuck it, I’m a duck!’
(Ghent)
If I were a tree
I wouldn't choose to be Belgian:
and, if I were Belgian,
I wouldn’t choose to be a tree.
(Brussels)
Late January
and it’s still Christmas in Brussels -
on account, I assume,
of the seasonal role of its sprouts.
(Brussels, 26 Jan 2025)
Do pigeons normally
hunt in threes?
Only if they come across
an exceptionally elusive chunk of bread.
(Bethnal Green,
London)
Given that they can’t
quite claim
to be parked between them,
what’s the punishment for these tins
violating double yellow lines?
(Bethnal Green,
London)
These
branches seem
to have kept themselves together OK,
but how far can the deconstruction go
before they stop being a tree?
(Cambridge
Heath, London)
What is all this
pseudo-comic crap?
Wouldn’t it be quicker
to set out what you can
flush down the loo?
(South Western Trains,
Weymouth to Waterloo)
Is this an
abstraction?
Not if you’re engaged
in the decidedly figurative matter
of trying to climb it.
(Parthian rock
climbing gym, Southampton – my grandchildren are regulars)
Is this a campaign
for alcohol-free communions
or just a chance for an actress / model
to show some playful spirit?
(London underground stations. Lucky Saint is a beer with just 0.5% alcohol. The adverts, timed to coincide with ‘dry January' 2025. feature photographs by Rankin. The agency involved explains that ‘the Lucky Saint name and brand world leans in to beer's brewing history that began in monasteries with monks hundreds of years ago, and this is where we’ve taken our tone of voice from as well.’)
I'm not one
for speciesist assumptions:
here's a pigeon headed for
the reader registration desk.
(British Library, London)
in being for more than the usual bikes:
seems any old thing
can be attached here for disposal.
(Clerkenwell)
3 a.m. …
Probably the optimum time
to suffer an emergency,
given the absence of traffic.
(Police car, Kings Cross, London)
What happens in Dulwich
stays in Dulwich, as the saying goes…
So I threw this twist of green into the station bin
after it had seen me round the village.
(Dulwich, London)

One of these flowers
makes extra sense:
could any bee resist
the lure of a backlit bloom?
He knew he had to mind the gap –
who hasn't heard that?
Some gap in the mind
must be what he fell down.
(Waterloo Station,
London)
This is a reasonably popular model
among those who feel
that you don’t want a fence
to cut off the view.
You might not expect
much heat
to be radiated
from a homeless unit on the street,
but at least this has a pipe.
(Somers Town, London)
‘Water meets beer’?
In fact, it’s all in the natural family:
water meets the ‘citrus blast’
of ‘Mountain Dew’.
(Fitzrovia, London)
Buildings made of
stone?
I guess it's an option
if you run out of bricks
or mud or straw.
(Holborn, London: Stone
Buildings were constructed from 1774-80 as the first step in an ultimately
unrealised plan to rebuild Lincoln's Inn entirely in stone)