“Get a move on, Ostrich, you’re already 24 hours late with the weekend’s match reports!”
“For Pete’s sake, I’m going as fast as I can. Don’t you know there’s an extreme heatwave warning on?”
“Heatwave, what heatwave?”
“Well you might be a climate change denier, but I’m not. Went to put me head in the sand last night and scalded me beak!”
So, here we are then, in our first* Red Heat Alert, and I must say, it’s not quite as bad as all that, because down here in Dorset, we’ve actually got a lot of cloud cover at the moment, so it’s hazy sunshine and not rays beating down on you. Yes, it is hot, but interestingly, I see the BBC Weather App has reduced this afternoon’s temperature for the Blackmore Vale from 35C down to 33C.
* I did read somewhere that the Met Office only “invented” red heat alerts a couple of years ago, so it’s hardly surprising it’s the first …..
Mind you, the most worrying sign is the temperature from Portland Bill.

That’s not Portland Bill as in Dogger Bank, Finisterre and Rockall, the Shipping Forecast Reports, but Portland Bill as in “Portland Bill”, the £1.99 souvenir thermometer with a jolly fisherman and a red and white striped lighthouse which we bought from the “Lobster Pot” café while watching dark scudding clouds and high waves crashing over the point when we last visited the place about three years ago. "Portland Bill" lives on the kitchen window-sill and whatever the season, whatever the weather, has constantly displayed 63F since we bought it.

But today, it’s actually showing 80F !

So maybe climate change is real. Anyway, I’m sure it’s going to give the local BBC reporters hours of fun haring around Cambridgeshire this afternoon, breathlessly trying to find the “highest recorded temperature” …..
Cynical? Moi?
To the first of this week’s match reports, because you’ve actually got a BOGOF today. On Tuesday, down to the local Gillingham Town ground for a pre-season friendly, where I excelled myself my complaining bitterly that they charged me full Western League prices for a game against a minor Somerset County League side.

I’ve probably got meself banned from there now; must remember to keep up the anger management classes …
In the event, the final result very much flattered the home side who, in a feisty match, had difficulty at times in holding off their lower-rated opponents. In fact, Ilminster Town might well have won this one – if their no.17 hadn’t missed a completely open goal on 3m, putting the ball wide, we might have seen a different result tonight. Indeed, Gillingham only went into the interval with a 1-0 lead after an Ilminster player had unfortunately deflected a shot with his head past his own keeper (38m).
The visitors happily moved the ball around the park and put together some impressive passing combinations, using the wings well. I don’t record the number of shots each team has on goal, but I should think the count would have been well in the away side’s favour. In comparison, Gillingham were made to look pretty ordinary and didn’t really develop their attacking game until late in the second half, scoring a couple in the last 10 minutes which put a bit of a gloss on the result.
And if this hadn’t been a friendly, I think we could well have been looking at a number of cautions tonight; plenty of elbows going in and robust tackling throughout the game. The referee, in a normal match, might also have sin-binned a couple of players for backchatting.
Gillingham made it 2-0 on 66m, their no.8 controlling the ball well in the box, swivelling and netting from close range, before Ilminster pulled their goal back on 81m, their no.11 positively hammering the ball home from 10 yards. 2-1 might have been a fairer result for this one, but there you go …..
12/07/22 Pre-Season Friendly
Gillingham Town 4 Ilminster Town 1Admission £5. They were going to charge me £6. Larcenous!
No paperwork; refreshment hut and (presumably) bar were open, but didn’t partake.
Attendance 20-30
With the Impending Doom dominating the news bulletins, we decided on Thursday to take a wander down town and see if we could source some sun-hats. I only have two titfers to my name and neither is suitable for this weather. Indeed, one is a Canadian Lumberjack’s furry hat with large side flaps - both Mrs O and Master O disown me when I attempt to wear it.
“Makes you look like that fur-trapper in “The Revenant”,” says Mrs O.
“Huh. More like the bear.”
“WHAT was that, Ossie?”
“Nothing ….”
Anyway, Asda came up trumps. £5 for Mrs O; £8 for myself; Chinese, needless to say. And according to the labels, made of 100% paper straw.
“Can’t wait to see you take THAT out in the rain,” remarked Ossie, smugly.
“Shut up, you daft bird!”
So to Saturday. And my first visit to Coppice Street, the home of Shaftesbury FC for nearly three years, since when they have installed a new 3G pitch. On-site parking, always difficult at Shaftesbury, has been restricted by the setting up of a hand car wash business next to the clubhouse, and today the area behind the Social Club was cordoned off as well, possibly for resurfacing. So it was down to the Angel Lane public car park, and my first encounter with one of Dorset County Council’s brand-new super-duper solar-powered high-tech parking machines, which they are rolling out across the county to replace the old ones which were always breaking down.
Step 1 – Press the Green Button to Start.
Presses the green button.
Screen lights up.
“Out of Order”
You couldn't make it up ……
The creation of the 3G pitch, as well as levelling it, has freed up a lot of room for spectators behind both goals, and the ground now feels far less cramped than it did. The relocation of the dugouts (spacing them further apart) has improved the sight-lines from the small covered standing area on the far side, but you still can’t see any action near either of the corner flags if you’re in that shelter.
This game featured two Step 7 sides, Shaftesbury Reserves, with the visitors from the Hampshire Premier Senior Division. After a quiet start, Winchester Castle quickly took a two goal lead, both placed with precision low to the keeper’s right by their no.9. The visitors looked quite a composed and experienced side, and had little trouble in restricting Shaftesbury to ineffective, long-range attempts on goal which invariably went high and wide - until virtually the last kick of the half when Maskell got one on target, and the Winchester keeper duly missed it!
Second half substitutions provided Shaftesbury with a bit more youth and vigour. On 55m, Davis broke down the left, cut inside and beat the keeper from a narrow angle, and the winner came on 71m when Barnard slotted the ball home from close range in a goalmouth scramble. Tempers got a bit frayed after that

, and the referee (first sighting this season of the indefatigable Mark Chinnock!) had to calm down a couple of pushing and shoving incidents, but otherwise it was a decent, watchable game played in good spirits.
16/07/22 Pre-Season Friendly (11:30 am kick-off)
Shaftesbury Reserves 3 Winchester Castle 2Admission: £2.
Programme by donation: a rudimentary cyclostyled 16pp affair covering this season’s first team friendlies only – and therefore nothing about this particular game!
Refreshment hatch open, and was actually serving chips.

Way too hot for that. Still, stopped off at the chippie outside the ground and relieved them of one sausage and one saveloy (£3) for lunch ….
Attendance: 18