Scene magazine - October 2021

Page 42

42 Scene

TWISTED GILDED GHETTO

ROGER’S RUMINATIONS

Waves of Silence

Travellers’ Tales

) Annwfyn and I had grown up together, been born on the same day. Living in the Welsh valleys there was endless opportunity for adventure and for rain. The lush deep green of the mountains and riverbanks caught this verdant opulence from the frequent rains drawn down from the Atlantic clouds by the mountains, which curved around the valley, walling us in, in our soft, green prison. Annwfyn and I had spent that summer building dens, weaving towered bracken and laying down a thick carpet of pine needles that we’ve carried across the stream from the scented darkness of the forest.

) Suddenly it’s autumn, not many people had a summer holiday, not that there was much summer weather. But we can now all start planning foreign holidays, but it isn’t going to be very simple. The ill-fated traffic light system is flashing all sorts of colours. We are advised to avoid all red list countries, but they can change colour overnight. The rules governing vaccine passports are confusing, but it is a good plan to get an NHS Covid Passport, but not all countries accept them.

BY ERIC PAGE

This was the ‘70s; behind the green curtains the old industrial waste lands of South Wales were breathing their last rusty groan. Coal mines, steelworks, rolling mills, quarries and huge fantastical mechanical monsters which shuttled the raw materials in buckets the size of buses along the cables stung across the valleys. Now gone, the soft ghosts of heritage have taken their place, the river runs with trout, not coal dust, the mines are museums, the rolling mill sill, the quarries filled with their own bones and forested over for 40 years, the steel works replaced by gleaming hospitals built on the only flat land for miles. It’s this silence which always startles me when I return, the churning, clanking, clanging, blasting noise only exists in my memory, the only industry now the busy bees. Annwfyn had pinched some rope; we’d climbed to make a swing in one of the huge old oaks hugging the steep slopes. Early October, still warm enough, the hedgerows full of nuts and huge sweet blackberries. We climbed the tree and tied the ropes when the rains came in. Shrieking under the sheets of water we dashed into one of the old mine openings, dark solid openings in the granite, long disused, often home to toads and bats and curtained with glistening cobwebs, there were shelters. We obviously knew not to go too far inside, knew the danger of the endless abandoned industrial scars going back before the Romans. It rained on, the path turned to a brown slurry of leaves, twigs and flowers, our flowers floated in slow circles in the puddle, our faces streaked with rain, laughing at the torrents when the grumbling started, the deep dissatisfied groan of slagheap and shale shifting. Within a moment Annwfyn and I were chest deep in cloying sludge, trapped by the sucking mud. Fear froze the moment into my mind, I can see her looking at me, trying not to panic, holding my hand. The rain stopped, for hours calling, crying, getting very, very cold, then night came... I’d never been so scared in all my life. Annwfyn sang to me to keep my spirits up, and then sleep took us. A hard slap woke me, the light burning my eyes, strong arms reaching, pulling me up, blankets, towels, wiping, wrapping me, thrown onto a blanket I was carried down the mountains. We’d been missed, the dogs had been sent out, searching all night. Cwn Annwn had sniffed us out, the hound of Annwfn we called it. Annwfyn’s huge dog led the frantic rescue party to us, or so I’d thought. In the yard my mother stood holding Annwfyn’s mother, weeping. They’d found her body first, she’d been swept away by the torrent before the toxic slurry closed around me. Drowned. She’d never been holding my hand all through the night, keeping me safe, singing soft songs to keep me awake, telling me everything would be OK, that we’d be found soon. I’d felt her hand in mine all through that long night, told the policewomen who looked away sadly at Annwfyn’s mother. “Shhhhhhhhh,” she said, “you hit your head, imagination, she was never there”. At her funeral that cold October morning, my arm in a heavy plaster cast, I heard a snatch of song from across the valley, coming from deep in the darkness of the pines and a giggle. I smiled to myself and learned to be exquisite and never explain.

BY ROGER WHEELER

Conflicting reports are arriving from all over Europe of some airport staff vigorously checking every bit of documentation, particularly in Easten European airports, whereas in Germany and some parts of Spain no one is particularly interested. Some people are getting through airports faster than ever before, Gatwick in particular. There’s no rhyme or reason. Arriving in Gibraltar en route to Spain, the carefully prepared online entry forms for Spain are waved aside, the airport authorities now want an entry form. Gibraltar has now effectively become part of the Schengen Area although part of the UK, which in effect means that flying to Gib technically allows you access to virtually all of Europe. But don’t try it, a border guard somewhere won’t like it.

“It is impossible to predict if international travel will ever fully recover, but in the meantime, so long as you carefully and fully research what various protocols, if any, exist, then there is no reason why you shouldn’t go wherever you would like” No doubt we are all upset by the news that the EU has banned all travellers from the USA as well as several other countries. The British are very welcome in France and most if not all the European countries. The EU updates its travel recommendations every two weeks, based on Covid-19 infection levels. To be considered ‘safe’ a country needs to have no more than 75 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants over the 14-day period. The good news is that most tour operators, holiday companies and travel agents are now offering fully flexible options meaning that there is a very low deposit and it is all fully refunded if you decide not to travel. Although the EU speaks on behalf of all its member countries their opinions are not binding on any of the national governments. Denmark, France, Germany along with many other EU countries have abolished nearly all controls for fully vaccinated visitors from the UK. But you need to check each government’s website as they will all need some sort of declaration of your vaccine status. Canada has now relaxed their restrictions, so long as you have been fully vaccinated you can now enter the country with no problem. The view of the World Tourism Network is that no one knows what the world of tourism will look like in six months, a year, or two from now. It is impossible to predict if international travel will ever fully recover, but in the meantime, so long as you carefully and fully research what various protocols, if any, exist, then there is no reason why you shouldn’t go wherever you would like. Health warning: All these notes were correct at the time of writing, September 1, but be prepared for changes.


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Relaxing Kneads Professional Massage raises £300 for LGBTQ+ charities

1min
page 5

Brighton & Hove Frontrunners raises funds for Lunch Positive

1min
page 5

New report on supporting trans and nonbinary survivors of sexual violence

2min
page 6

Terrence Higgins Trust launches World AIDS Day Ribbon Walk 2021

1min
page 7

MindOut plants Suicide Memorial Tree in Hove

1min
page 7

City Council shares updated Trans Inclusion Toolkit with schools

2min
page 8

Helen Jones, MindOut CEO, steps down

1min
page 9

Hull University announces scholarships for LGBTQ+ students

1min
page 9

Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAIDS, visits Brighton

3min
page 10

Free QTIBIPoC Mental Health First Aid Training course

1min
page 11

New study reveals main healthcare issues facing TNBI and QTIBIPoC communities

3min
page 12

Brighton Half Marathon to take place on Sunday, October 10

1min
page 13

The winds of change are afoot at Actually Gay Men’s Chorus

1min
page 13

My Transgender Date

2min
page 15

The Little Big Life

2min
page 39

STUFF & THINGS

2min
page 39

Laurie's Allotment

1min
page 40

ARTS CORNER

2min
page 40

CRAIG’S THOUGHTS

5min
page 41

ROGER’S RUMINATIONS

2min
page 42

TWISTED GILDED GHETTO

3min
page 42

RAE’S REFLECTIONS

4min
page 43

LGBTQ CHURCH/ PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

2min
page 44

TURN BACK THE PAGES

4min
page 45

Book Reviews

6min
page 46

AT HOME

3min
page 47

CLASSICAL NOTES

10min
pages 48-49

All that Jazz

2min
page 50

ART MATTERS

2min
page 50

Design of Birmingham HIV/AIDS Memorial revealed

2min
page 52

Birmingham LGBT agrees new premises

1min
page 53

Birmingham Bulls RFC announces new sponsorship deal

1min
page 53

Local drag act debuts family- friendly queer shows

1min
page 53

MEDWAY AND GRAVESHAM PRIDES 2021

4min
page 54

SPOTLIGHT ON... MARK FARRELLY

4min
pages 38-56

LOVE IS NOT AN IDEOLOGY

2min
page 37

CHELSEA GIRL

4min
page 36

10 QUESTIONS WITH... DIVINA DE CAMPO

6min
pages 34-35

MAKE IT RIGHT. OR PAY BACK, IN KIND

4min
pages 16-17

AMBER CADAVEROUS

6min
pages 26-27

QUEER IN SPIRIT

6min
pages 24-25

DONNA SUMMER: I’M A RAINBOW

5min
page 30

WHO YOU GONNA CALL?

10min
pages 18-20

TAKE IT ON THE CHIN

4min
pages 14-15

MIGHTY REAL

8min
pages 31-33

TALES OF ARMISTEAD MAUPIN

7min
pages 28-29
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Scene magazine - October 2021 by Scene LGBTQ+ Magazine - Issuu