Monday, 26 January 2026

NEW ENQUIRIES DAILY 2026

 


In order of composition, newest at the top. 

Photographs from Ashurst, New Forest unless indicated otherwise



Can I be a pedant

and point out that there are twelve corners

in three squares,

even if you insist on avoiding triangles?

 

(Three Corners Adventure Playground, Clerkenwell, London)

 




It feels polite

to blur this man

and his raggedy blanket

into a miasma of anonymity.

 

(Old Street underground station, London)


 


I suspect it’s the trainees

who get to design

the cardboard box building

that advertises the firm from outside.

 

(Wilkinson Eyre architects, Shoreditch, London)

 

I suppose you want

your ball back?

But we play hard ball round here,

so hard luck.

 

(Clerkenwell, London)

 

You wish it could be Christmas everyday?

If you do,

this house agrees:

it’s January 24th.

(Clerkenwell, London)

 

  

When the light falls

on what is not a veil,

you may find yourself veiled

nonetheless.

(I got a bit of cellophane trapped in the TLS: that's 'Self-Portrait in a Straw Hat' by Elisabeth Louise Viglée Le Brun, 1782)

 


Who is

this near-imposter?

And why are they

not stocking him?

 

(HMV, Southampton: Corey Kent – he needs to work on the hyphen – is a country singer born in Oklahoma, 1994)



 

Could you have found

a more appropriate backdrop

for such an impoverished

urban tree?

 


These circumstances

have remained unforeseen since 2017,

posing the question:

how hard can it be to foresee the past?

(the original closure was put down to a building problem, but as Nat West reduced their branches from 1,550 at the start of 2017 to 450 at the end of 2025, I don’t suppose much effort was put into solving the issue)




I've never been in there

Some online reviews

claim it’s misnamed,

others say it isn’t.

 

(Trip Adviser ranks it 19th of 25 restaurants in Totton, not an overwhelming endorsement, but based on very little data)



When did ‘mate’

start to mean

someone with whom

you do not mate? 

 

(Internet image illustrating platonic friendship)



You wait months

to find someone thoroughly orange

then spot four of them

coordinating orange acts to boot.

 

(Mayfair, London, January 2026: After taking the photograph for ‘Orange Revolution’, November 20205, I resolved to take a picture every time I saw a fully orange person) 




It’s lucky the car park isn’t very full

given that I’m taking up two spaces

with my otherwise-modest Toyota

and its greedy reflection…


(Southampton)



Tiles can be beautiful

but how often do we hear that

said of the grout

that we expect to hide beneath?


(Chancery Lane underground station. London)


         


If you happen to have

unmatched feet,

here’s your chance to match them for nothing

with unmatched footwear.


(Southampton)


    

I’m not convinced the complex scaffolding prize

is really worth winning:

they build it up, of course they do,

but fall down on the cash.


(Soho, London)


      

No wonder the police

are slow to respond:

they're all tied up

collecting malparked bikes.

 

(This implausible claim is made in South Kensington)




We’re forty miles from Surrey

Close compared with Yorkshire, Sydney,

Mars or the nearest nebula,

but a pretty long walk from here.

 

(Ashurst... Glasgow is 365 miles from Ashurst, Sydney is 10,700 miles, Mars is 140 million miles on average. The closest nebula to Earth is the Helix Nebula, 650-700 light-years away in the constellation Aquarius. One light year is 5,878,625,370,000 miles - call it six trillion - so we’re talking a decent schlepp there.)

 

 

I wonder how close

they think I think Mars is now?

And how much closer

they’ve persuaded it to come?

 

(South Kensington Underground Station. In case it helps the Science Museum, I believe the answer varies considerably. The closest Mars has ever been to Earth in recorded history was in August 2003, when the planets were approximately 35 million miles apart. This close approach occurs when Earth passes between the Sun and Mars, aligning the three celestial bodies. When I saw this poster in January 2026, Mars was 235m miles from earth, closer to the solar conjunction when it is opposite the Sun from Earth – near to the maximum distance 250m miles. So the museum’s timing is open to question: right now, I’d guess that most people seeing the poster do believe that Mars is closer than it is. To be fair, they might mean Luke Jerram’s touring artwork model of Mars, which you might have guessed was on view somewhere in Britain, though even that is currently accessible only in Massachusetts.)




The dead on the living

seems the wrong way round.

Shouldn't the efforts of the living

be built on the achievements of the dead?  

 

(Southampton)

 


This is the cleverest pheasant I know

Aware that I take photographs,

he always strikes the identical pose

when I drive past, keen to be seen at his best.

 

(Minstead)



This type of Gellyfish

has no sting.

I doubt if they can guard themselves,

let alone the contents of the flat.


(Fordingbridge: my sister-in-law, Geraldine ‘Gelly’ Kent, is a keen aquarist)


         


Why didn’t we think

of that?

An external curtain

to intercept the drafts at source!

 

(Fordingbridge)


 

This is a dog-friendly pub

Yet should the pooches

really be

let loose on the cappuccinos?

 

(The Three Lions, Fordingbridge)


 

The pen is

mightier than

the penis

even though it has the same letters.


(Internet image)

 


I suspect this post 

of taking the double piss

by parking on the red lines,

then showing them up as insubstantial...

 

(Southampton)


 

No-one likes cones

But does that justify

treating one with this much

cone-tempt?

 

(Southampton)




Judging by the guide

to its wildlife in winter

even the hardest of the park’s inhabitants

will start to feel the cold.


                

 

The Big Van has gone

I don’t remember it having a tail,

but it seems to have wagged it

on the way out. 




File under

‘I can't believe

they're not leaves’

while knowing you can believe it easily enough.


(Kensington, London)



Do they sell buzzes and bangs

or is the shop called Onamatopia

because that was the least

onomatopoeic word they could conjure?


(Lyndhurst)


 

There's the whistle!

Have they just begun

or was that the sale’s

concluding Phweeeeep!!! ?


(Marylebone, London)

I know I’m not much

of a completer-finisher

but I do OK

when it comes to books and sex and Twix.


 

The moss caterpillar

is crossing the woodland floor.

Its butterflies are rather rare,

I wonder what we're in for?

   

From where

would you like

your bricks knocked out?

This wall seems to know.


(Totton)


    


Brett the window cleaner is a helpful chap

but he’s left our hosepipe out on the lawn.

Does he not realise that, under Stephian law,

that’s very close to a capital offence?




Here's a house

that failed the test

of reading the seasonally altered

waste collection schedule.




Having spent a summer

without occlusion

I’m happy enough to see, if imprecisely,

matters getting vague. 

 


That's what I call

a thorough felling:

I'll found a tree religion

if it rises from that!

 

        

 

Supposing the shadow

of wood on wood

were an illusion,

where would we be?  

 

 

Time again to monitor

how the paint is chipping

in the pedestrian underpass

that runs beneath the A 326.


 


The sun is winning

the tunnel’s light contest

despite the handicap

of 93 million miles.




Here may be where not to live

Right up against the railway line

at just the point where trains must hoot

to warn any pedestrians on the upcoming crossing.

 

(3 Foxhill Close, Ashurst)

 


A fridge

in the forest?

That

is not cool.


 

If I had a parking spot

as convenient as this

I, too, might be

exceptionally reluctant to leave it.


(Southampton)



 
These chafer grubs

appearing to grin at each other,

might both be looking to say:

‘It’s no good grinning when you’re dead’.



Has anybody seen a dog

without a blue lead?

It was being taken for a walk

by a woman with a matching lack.


 

The Forest Edge retirement flats

are three miles from any plausible forest,

leading me to wonder

just how big an edge can be…


(Totton)


 


Friday, 23 January 2026

SUPERMARKET MIX

In order of visits during Dec 2025 - Jan 2026. One can argue about what constitutes a supermarket, but in this case Tesco, Asda, Sainsburys, Co-op, Marks & Spencer, Waitrose, Morrisons, Aldi, Lidl, Poundland


Tesco

(Southampton)

How can an egg be happy

even if the hen

was pleased to lay it?

Must be some kind of a yoke.


 


Is it true

that Mr Kipling

has been making merry golly

with Miss Molly?


      


‘Big toys are all very well’

said the pink rabbit

from a dog-safe distance

‘but we live in a rather small burrow’.


(The pink rabbit is very far right)


        


No-one has ever explained to me

why making light bulbs energy efficient

has required them to become

so complex and expensive.


 


Tesco’s new transparent bread

is incredibly popular:

if only it were easier to tell

whether or not it’s sold out.


 


I see they’ve only

half-completed

the command to drop Anchor

to the bottom shelf.


 


The fish had to swim through

456 crimes in total

to get to the promised land.

Maybe it helped to be mad.

 

(There are 24 bottles x 19 = 256 crimes on the shelf)


                    

That’s plenty of Plenty

If it weren’t for the top corner’s

non-blitz of Blitz,

it might have been too much.

  

Sainsburys

(Southampton)


 

Celeriac

may well be

the brainiest of vegetables,

but is that saying much?


 


This Christmas I’m giving a forest 

by way of certification

that a tree has been planted

on every recipient’s behalf.


          

I’m starting a drive

to re-enact

Southampton’s paintings

in the local supermarkets.


(Lisa Milroy’s ‘Melons’, 1986, is in the collection of Southampton City Art Gallery)



Those are the curviest

straight edges I’ve seen

since the claims made

by the Brexit campaign.


 


Given that time

seems slower to insects,

I wonder how fast

this clock will be?


 

Hedgehogs are rare 

in supermarkets.

So many, I suppose, 

get run over by trolleys.

 

(Though world populations are healthy, hedgehogs are classified as Vulnerable to Extinction in Britain,  populations have dropped by up to 75% since the millennium, due to habitat loss, roads, and intensive farming. There are thought to be under a million left, as against 30m in the 1950's)
 

Asda

(Totton)

 


100% cleaner!

It sounds like a claim

that leaves no margin for underperformance –

but that would be ‘100% clean’.


(The headline actually translates in small print detail to ‘Removes up to 100% more bacterial plaque for cleaner teeth and healthier gums vs. a manual toothbrush’, in other words gets ‘up to’ twice as much plaque off than a manual toothbrush, which sounds a lot more modest and plausible)


       


Here is how to make the most

of any electric removal of plaque

if you enjoy solutions 

enough to seek the problems.



A tale hangs here

as that’s not a kangaroo

but a yellow-footed rock wallaby

that also has a [yellow tail].  

 

                


A French kiss would be slow

and rather creepy:

if you’re going to kiss a quiche

I can see why you’d want to be quick.

 


I’m not too sure

how shopping works in hell,

but there are enough demons here

to operate some sort of business.

 

 


I like the idea

of coffee being brewed

in a volcanic cafetière,

especially the lava latte.


 

There’s summat queer

about thinking of tea –

or should I say ‘char’ -

as English, let alone Tyke.


       


I suspect that Northern Comfort

is the same drink as its southern sibling

but meant to be served

just a little colder.



Some are naked

Some are innocent.

Those who are both

may be asking for trouble…


         


Thank you kindly

I’ve taken them all.

Or would have, had there been only one,

which there wasn’t.


The Co-op

(Ashurst, Lyndhurst, and Fordingbridge)

 



Are these limes?

Or is it just

a verdant backdrop

seeping onto lemons?


 


I think of tic tacs

as peppermint white –

as do other customers,

by the looks of that gap.


 

Italy comes to Lyndhurst…

Maybe not the weather

or the history or culture.

We’ll have to make do with the pasta.


 


Here, conveniently, are all five

of your ‘five a day’.

No need to resort

to dildos or cocks.


            

The neck oil of the eternal

rises to the north

of Hell’s black heart

and none of it sounds like beer.

 


‘Made like you would at home’?

I was hoping for something

more adventurous

and even a little better than that.




£2.10 per kilo

is either a tad expensive for nothing

or a curious way of expressing

what may be a good price for plastic trays.  


 

I’m not prejudiced enough

to say that I didn’t expect to find

matching houndstooth waistcoats and caps

dappering the Co-op – but I didn’t.

 

(The Spanish ‘Madrí Excepcional’ beer features the ‘Chulapo’, the epitome of fashionable trends in 19th century Madrid)


 

Four aubergines

make ten eggplants,

by the look of it,

implying a peculiar rate of exchange.



It would be brave to sell Rocky

were your finances

likely to run aground,

so I take this as a positive sign.


(In 2025, the Co-op Group's finances were significantly impacted by a major cyber attack, leading to an estimated £206 million in lost sales. Despite this, the Co-op has maintained adequate liquidity)


Marks & Spencer

(Bond Street / Green Park, London / Southampton)



I’m itching to see a product advertised

as ‘not as good as it used to be’.

I’d snap it up

for honesty.



What does it take to be

‘outrageously chocolatey’?

79%, says the box,

but it would need a hundred plus to fully outrage me.


 

But don’t these sloths

just hang beneath the canopy in gloomily eponymity?

Not at all: they switch between sunny and shady spots

to regulate their temperature.


(Of 'Sunny the Sloth', M&S say: 'Live life in the slow lane with this adorable milk chocolate hollow sloth, with white and dark chocolate decorations. Just the thing to keep your Easter celebrations chill')


How expert are Marksologists?

1921 is open to doubt,

and Mary severed no tomato heads:

she burned dissenters at the stake.

 

(I take it that a Marksologist is an expert employed by Marks & Spencer. I like the packaging, but they seem better on natural than human history. 1921 is just one of several claimed origin dates in the 1920’s and 30s for both the cocktail and its name. If it was invented in New York in 1921, the connection to Mary Queen of Scots came later. Henry VIII’s Catholic daughter, who reigned England and Ireland during 1553-58, gained the epithet ‘bloody’ through her attempts to reverse the Reformation by prosecuting Protestants. 280 dissenters were burned at stake, to little effect in that respect, her attempts to return property and power to the church being quickly reversed by her younger half-sister and successor, Elizabeth I)



 

Remember the days

of glass bottles and milkmen?

Then I guess you’re too young

for typists and pay phones. 







According to Wittgenstein

the world is everything that is the case -

in which case, there's plenty of world

to be unpacked right here.

 (That is the early Wittgenstein: the claim is the first proposition in the ‘Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus’, 2021. He meant that the world isn't just things, but the states of affairs describing how objects combine and exist – even in M & S, Southampton)


I can imagine

taking a shine to these shoes

if shiny were my thing

or, come to that, the world’s just now.


       

As someone slim

in the lands of chunks,

I’d like to point out that chunky thoughts

need not be restricted to musings on unchunkiness.

 

I guess that means

this is unjust food –

grown and delivered by grievously exploited labour

at a huge cost to the environment.

 


Not only have these crisps

never been fucked,  

it sounds as if they’ve pushed right on

to never being kissed.



Waitrose 

(Southampton)





To be an Easter Bunny

is to face 

an ethical dilemma:

is cannibalism allowed? 






Bring on the Pekingese

Chihuahuas and Pugs!

If bread can be wild,

I wonder what can’t?

 

(‘Wildfarmed' white sourdough actually refers to the bread being made from grain grown using regenerative agriculture - farming methods designed to restore soil health, boost biodiversity and capture carbon, while avoiding pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides) 


            


Might I just comment

on the accuracy

with which the Accuracy

is stacked?



 

What the Heck

were the founders thinking,

adopting ‘What the Heck!?’

as their guiding motto?


(Apparently the Keeble family, who founded Heck in 2013, wanted to convey an alternative attitude. ‘Heck’, incidentally, is a 19th century euphemistic alteration of ‘hell’)



 

Do horses eat horseradish?

No more, I suspect, than dogs give dog roses,

pigs speak pig Latin,

or cats wear the cat’s pyjamas…

 

(Those animal names effectively operate adjectivally here: broadly, horse = ‘strong’, dog = ‘bogus’’, pig = ‘silly’, cat = ‘trendy’, from the slang for a cool person)


 


It’s cold outside

so this may be the very place

to settle in smug snugness

with that free cup of free coffee.

 

(Waitrose offers its cardholders a free coffee with any purchase, provided they bring their own cup)




Might we accuse Teapigs

of speciesism –

for featuring dogs and a hen,

but nothing remotely porcine on their packs?

 

(I purchased 240 PG Tips for £5, incidentally: 2.1p per bag, as against 15 Teapigs for the same price - 33.3p per bag! That 16-fold ratio felt impressive...)


Morrisons

(Totton) 



I’ll have a dozen durex

and a test kit please.

I’m covering all bases,

chastity aside.


 

Twisted

or original?

I like to think

I’m both.


          


I don’t like the look of these

which is just as well:

I wouldn’t like to come across

as solo-meal lonely.


 


I remember

rushing home to catch a programme,

having to ask to be put through on the phone,

and nutmeg under spices. 


('Nutmeg' is Morrisons' somewhat odd choice of name for its in-house brand: 'from laid-back essentials to statement-making styles')

Aldi

(Southampton)



One potato

sweet but lonely

seeks similar 

to share a homely tray.

 


I’m a hard man to please

I’m not sure softer,

or even the softest,

is going to do it.


 


I’d be the one

getting the ribbing

if I returned to our house

with an Easy Home Ribbed Bathroom Set.


Lidl

(Totton)




If we’re buying the net

there's 20%  on top of the price,

assuming that would then be given net.

I hope we’re buying the oranges.


(Net prices exclude VAT, while gross prices include it. Packaging attracts VAT, so 20% would currently be added to the net price of the nets to reach the gross price.  Fruit is zero-rated for VAT, so the net and gross prices are the same)




What are the chances

of a diet surviving

a monstrously stuffed

and overloaded feast?

 

       

 

Suddenly

the stink of cut-price perfume was upon me

and I knew

she wouldn’t do.


What would Freud have said?

In The Middle of Lidl,

even if it isn’t conscious,

lies its id.

 

(According to Freud in ‘Beyond the Pleasure Principle’ (1920), the id is the organism's unconscious array of uncoordinated instinctual needs, impulses and desires. in the store's words 'Cruise along our Middle of Lidl aisle for household kit that you never knew you needed. From gardening essentials and outdoor furniture to nifty additions for your kitchen and bathroom, all at great prices, of course!')

 


What do you fancy?

Balls, snaps, flakes, shells, shapes?

For breakfast in bed,

it has to be pillows.


Poundland

(Totton)





‘Love doesn't have to cost a fortune’

but if your Valentine’s

only worth a pound

you may be in the wrong relationship.


(Title is from Poundland promotion)



‘Allo Vera

fancy popping up some time?’

‘Not likely, I’ve heard all about

what you smoothies are like!’


 



Him come to me at midnight

Him ultra-strong.

Him mighty.

Me mighty strongly touched. 


        

I suppose these should arouse me

or at least attract me

to the thought of how they’d look,

but all I can think of is sleep.



Remember when

‘raspberry’, coconut’ and ‘apple’

would have been enough,

even if exotic for shampoo?

 



There’s sufficient magic here

to kill off every extant fairy,

were they to turn

the spells on themselves.


 

Easter’s getting serious

The Christmas tinsel’s

just come down

and now the eggs and carrots have arrived. 


 

I noticed this plea

against retail crime,

warning thieves off fabric conditioner -

as if that were the likiest target.