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Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Activities with the RSPB Lancaster group - Birdwatching at the Wyre and in Fleetwood Marsh

On the 28th of March, I joined the volunteers of the RSPB to go on a bird-watching walk near Blackpool. Valerie was the chief host, but we had a few other volunteers including Ken and Michael, who were knowledgeable and helpful as well, and about 8-9 members who accompanied us. We met at the Wyre Country Park near Stannah, a suburb of Thornton. To reach there, I took a cab from the hospital, as I was going there directly from having completed my night duty. 

We began the walk down the Wyre river on a track specially made for birdwatching. A few of the members and Ken had telescopes that we used to identify and observe waders and river-swimming birds. We saw ducks, geese, gulls and a few other birds as we walked. It was a relaxed walk where we even got to admire the bushes and flowers around us. For example, I first came to identify the gorse bush with its distinctive, small yellow flowers. 

There would be high-tide within a few hours, so, after a hour-long walk which took us to a spot on the track where the water was already advancing on to the track, we decided to turn back and to walk back to the country park, where we took a break for lunch. I decided to eat in the cafe located here. They had an option to have chicken tikka masala with rice - which was actually quite nice. I do think, though, that they serve a very small portion of rice to go with the large amount of chicken. A cup of coffee to round off my lunch, and I was back with the others to proceed on the second part of the journey. This time, we would drive to the Fleetwood Marsh Natural Reserve at - where else - Fleetwood. The person who would take me in their car was one Mr Graham, and he and I had interesting conversations as we reached the marsh. I used Google Maps satnav to reach the location, and it took us there without an error.

At the marsh, we passed by a pool with a lot of water birds, and then on to the actual marsh, where, unfortunately, the river was quite a distance away, so we saw very few birds in the water. However, we did see some shells of whelk snails, and, on the way back to the parking lot, we saw and photographed wheatears that were hovering around at the back of the reserve over a steel stile. 

Graham then gave me a lift back to the hospital. We exchanged emails and promised to stay in touch. It had indeed been a great day. The big takeaways from today's activities were:


  1. Meeting new people. I met Maureen, Graham, Ken, Jim, Michael, Valerie and one more person whose name I cannot recall now. We had four others, but as they did not accompany us in the afternoon, I did not get the chance to learn their names. 
  2. Hearing a lot of bird calls that I struggled to learn. Among them, the easiest was the call of the chiff-chaff, which is, to be honest, exactly as if the bird uttered the two syllables "chiff" and "chaff" repeatedly; we also heard the song thrush, the goldfinch, the curlew, and a few others. 
  3. Sighting some birds for the first time, such as goldfinches, the egret, the wheatear (well, it was the first time in the U.K. - I have seen them as the "Northern" wheatear in Al Muwayh in Saudi Arabia) and a few others.
Here are a few pictures I took:

Greater black-backed gulls

 A herring gull takes flight

Adults and chicks of herring gulls

Tufted duck, female

Tufted duck, male

Wheatears
That's it for now. Do write in the comments how you found this post. 


Saturday, March 11, 2017

What I did in the last 4 days:Multitasking, reading, studying, sleeping and working

Dear Reader,

I have an idea that the title is not very catching. It sounds oh so plebian. And yet. these last four days have been extraordinary for me. Several small snippets of things I did occurred to me after I had finished watching a movie on Amazon Prime, so I thought to myself: what better example of a life led with variety than writing this chronicle.

I finished 4 consecutive nights on the 7th of this month and was granted three full holidays thereafter. Thus begins my chronicle.

Tuesday, 8th March.

I slept for about three hours during the daytime and caught up on the rest of the sleep only after everything for the day was done. The other activities included reading a bit of the Wilbur Smith novel "Golden Lion", cooking some lamb curry without a recipe but with a ready-made curry powder that I had purchased from India, speaking to my children, watching a few episodes of The Big Bang Theory (currently, I am on season 6) and finally, going out for dinner with Luckey to Sapori, an Italian fine-dining restaurant on Clifton Street. (Read my blog entry HERE.)


What was unique today? My first meal at Sapori, of course. Also, my first attempt to use a ready-to-use preparation to make lamb curry. To be honest, the curry was very, very simple to prepare. All I had to do was add 400 g of washed and cleaned lamb pieces, the entire contents of the lamb curry masala and 350 ml of water into my pressure cooker and then cook them for about 15 minutes, of which the last 10 were after sealing the lid closed. That's it. Amazing, isn't it? Yet, the curry turned out quite delicious.

Wednesday, 9th March:

I woke up late, having completed the sleep deficiency of the previous 48 hours. Today, Mumbaikar Pediatricians Drs. Hemant and Archana Joshi paid a visit to the hospital. Dr. Hemant had been talking with me since a week and was very keen to visit the Paediatrics department with me with a view to understanding how NHS works. He is a very different kind of person. Not very humble by nature - he loves to keep talking about his achievements - and yet, very humble and eager to learn. He presents a visage of a man who is an eternal student. I filled him in on all kinds of information. We went everywhere: the outpatient clinic, the ward, the special care babies' unit, and the A & E. We met with and interviewed nurses, healthcare assistants, play workers, outreach nurses, speciality nurses, and so on. The doctors also met Dr. Rabin Mohanty, with whom they had a 10-minute long chat.

Afterward, we all went to Basrai's World Cuisines restaurant at Talbot Road (remember, I reviewed this excellent place on my other blog? Read that review HERE.) Hemant and Archana's company was excellent, and I believe this: they went back very happy with the way the visit went. Dr. Hemant described it as a very happy day in his life because he said he had learned so much.

In the evening, I stayed home, doing this and that. Nothing else to write about.

What was unique? Obviously, the visit by Drs. Joshi. I did miss a "Meet the Author" programme that had been organised at the hospital - they had invited Mr. Steve Watson, the author of "Before I go to sleep", a psychological thriller that has been made into a movie a year ago.

Thursday, 10th March:

You can say this was the most uneventful day from among the four days that I am writing about. And yet, small things did happen. I remained in my rooms the entire day. This, in itself, is unique. From the time I came to the U.K., I have always ventured out of the house on every free day, so this was highly unusual. Over the past 1 week, I kept trying to call locum agencies to help me find a locum for today and for the coming Sunday. No jobs materialised. I had enough food in the refrigerator, so I did not need to cook. I watched a French movie on Amazon Prime. This was with subtitles in English. It is based on a true story and is called KALINKA. In it, the father of a 14-year old who is found dead in suspicious circumstances keeps investigating the matter after he has been stonewalled by everyone for bureaucratic, political, and other reasons. He finally gets the culprit after 28 years! A must-see movie. for every movie aficionado.

What was unique? The fact that a move in a language I don't understand can prove to be so riveting.


Friday, 11th March:

I went back to work after my three-day gap. It was a six-hour cover duty where I was supposed to go and see newly-borns on the post-natal ward. Nothing exciting actually on the job. But that all changed after I returned home. Today, I saw, outside my window, what seemed to be a new species of bird. Two of them were pecking things off the grass. Their behaviour, though, was reminiscent of commonplace blackbirds. I rushed to watch them with my binoculars. I brought out my RSPB bird guide, and discovered that these were nothing but juvenile blackbirds. Totally unlike their parents, these juveniles were brown in colour and heavily striated on their ventral aspects, as well as lightly striated on their dorsum as well. In my excitement, I forgot to click any pictures.


Later, I watched yet another thriller on Amazon Prime. This time, I searched for Before I go to sleep. And lo! It was there. Starring Nicole Kidman and Colin Firth, this thriller is the same one I mentioned above in connection to the Meet the Author. The movie reminded me of Ghajini, in which the Bollywood star Aamir Khan plays the role of a man who lives only in the present and forgets everything after 15 minutes. Well, Nicole here plays a similar role, except that her memory lasts till she goes to sleep at night. Nobody can be trusted as she lives a fresh life every morning. Everyone is suspect: her husband, the doctor who keeps calling her every day and takes her to the hospital, her best friend ... no one. An amazing story indeed. Again, I strongly recommend it. 

In the evening, I prepared roast chicken in the oven for the first time! I used Chicken breast pieces, some mixed herbs to marinade, and sunflower oil to baste the chicken pieces. It turned out to be easier than I had thought, and with this, my confidence in making stuff in the oven has gone up a notch

And that's about it for now. Eventful four days of my life. Thank you for reading. 

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Truly, knackered.

Working 4 successive nights is something I have just completed for the first time in hospital. It has been a mixed experience. This is because I worked as a registrar for the first two nights and as a senior house officer the next two. During the nights as a registrar, I was carrying the bleeps meant for a middle-grade doctor. This means that I was the doctor responsible for whatever happened those nights - on the hospital campus. One of my colleagues worked as a SHO "under" me. On the next two nights, I held the bleeps for SHO, and another colleague worked "over" me as a registrar.

This allowed me to see the work from both points of view. And, I hope, it made me a better doctor. I think I managed the ward reasonably well, considering that this was my first time as a registrar, albeit as a stand-in.

Working nights means you need to sleep well the day prior to your first night, and then, every day following. In that respect, I guess I am a poor sleeper. I tried to sleep longer hours, but couldn't manage more than five and a half tops. On my third morning, I even took a herbal sleeping pill - but it did not lengthen my sleep time by even a few minutes. All I am saying is - I can get by with a lesser amount of sleep compared to an average bloke.

The other thing that doctors (or other healthcare workers) do when they do night shifts is that they carry with them a lot of food. This can either be a healthy mix of, say, sandwiches, fruit juice or fruit, and some healthy snacks, or, as is more usual, a mix of some healthy stuff and also some unhealthy stuff like potato chips, carbonated beverages, chocolate, and so on. I can admit candidly that my diet goes for a toss when I am on a night shift. My food bag resembles the second type of mix. For example, on my first night, I took rice, paya masala, a bag of low-salt, hand roasted chips and a caffeine-free Pepsi. On the fourth night, I had a white bread chicken mayo sandwich, a Pepsi (the same as before) and orange juice. Thus it goes.

Finally, when the night is full of work, as it was on the last of the four days, one can get really tired. Even so, I managed well, I think, thanks to the 3-4 cups of tea that I had in between running around doing the chores.

And that's about it for now. Thanks for reading. Do share your comments below.

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Living it up_ Birthday # 57 ... been there, done that.

Yet another milestone crossed. Older by a year, younger by a hair's breadth. Life lived one more year. One more month. One more week. One more day. And now, I am officially 57. It doesn't seem like it, though. If asked how old I am, I would say I like to think I am 16 - give or take 41.

The day yesterday began like a damp squib. I reached my ward at half past eight (as usual), attended the handover, and went to the post-natal ward to do my duty for the next eight-odd hours. In between, I was called to attend two or three deliveries. In the afternoon, I went for lunch and a teaching session in the teaching room below our ward. Lunch was sponsored by Abbott Nutrition, while the teaching was done by Alison Simmonett, one of the consultants who works in our department. Her case presentation and discussion were instructive and stimulated the desire to learn more. Food was a combination of a sandwich/baguette, fruit, fruit juice and some cupcakes. I reached for a Caesar Chicken roll, and it was quite nice.

In the afternoon, work at the post-natal ward continued until four p.m. Then I returned to the paediatric ward to await the evening handover. And at about half past four, I finished for the day. I invited a few of my colleagues to join me for dinner as it was my birthday, but no one was really receptive as they had other commitments. Story of my life, I thought. Everyone loves me for my humility, my knowledge and my affability, but no one forgets that I am at an age they are not comfortable to have an enjoyable evening with.


So, off I went to Costa. Sipping a special Caramel Cortado (that they have only introduced a few days ago), I felt content in some ways and missed merry-making with my family or close friends - which I would have done had I been in Mumbai.

I usually have an extra-hot coffee with a bit more milk than usual, and the baristas know that so well that they serve me my Cortado just the way I like it. This time, the difference was in the caramel granules they put at the bottom of the cup, a shot of caramel that they dissolved in the coffee, and the gentle sprinkle of even more caramel granules that they added over the top. I was digging into the new combination with pleasure. It was an hour or so before I wounded up my stay in Costa. By then, I had spoken to my daughters, my wife, a few other friends, and also played my cell phone games and so on. It was time to return to my rooms. My plan was to go out for dinner later in the evening. It would be a dinner all by myself, but I would make it count.

But destiny had other plans for me. I got into a conversation with Luckey. She told me she was going to go out for drinks with some English friends of hers, but then offered to have me go with them.  नेकी और पूछ पूछ ? I agreed immediately. And thus, I went to Ma Kelly's North at Talbot Street for a night out with Luckey and her friends.

The friends were her school friend Roberto (Robs) and his friend Lidya. Both of them stay around London and were vacationing with Robs' parents who stay in Blackpool. I arrived first, and went past the intimidating bouncer, who allowed me in and even opened the door for me. Inside, a live stage show was on with a guitar-playing male singer belting out oldies such as "The Summer of 69". Luckey and her friends joined me after almost 20 minutes of waiting. After the introductions, we went straight to the bar, where I ordered a Jack Daniels with soda and ice.



I had no clue there would be no dinner. I ended up having 2 packs of roasted peanuts as I whiled the evening away with a drink or two, a lot of dancing and some great friendship parleys with Luckey's friends as well as a few new ones - one of whom was a mum of one of the kids who our department treats at the hospital.

After the partying, I went to drop Luckey, and then returned home in a cab. It had started off badly, but when the day ended, I was aglow with happiness. I did have fun, and I did make some new acquaintances.