FTHM Edition 137 – May 2026

Hello everybody. I hope you are okay and enjoying at least some aspects of your life. My closest friend Brenda had two falls last month and spent a week in Calderdale Royal Hospital where she was treated very well by everyone. She is now doing well.

This project is evolving nicely, and if you want to get involved with us (in a non-sexist, non-racist and non-homophobic way), please contact us at: dean@fthm.org.uk

We now have a new children’s book on our website called: Ringo Rattlesnake and the Vipers which is based loosely on the Beatles’ story. You can view it at: fromthehorsesmouth.org.uk/ringo-rattlesnake-and-the-vipers.

Dean.


  • My Not Very Serious Stars – May 2026

    Scorpio 24 Oct – 22 Nov
    An unexpected pregnancy in the family will bring a lot of joy – if everyone can stop judging. Today, why not give a service worker a large tip and make their day? A good time to travel into the countryside and wonder at the beauty of nature. Ignore the man at work who keeps needling you as he will eventually reap what he sows. Accept that love comes in many forms and many colours.

    Sagittarius 23 Nov – 21 Dec
    Alcohol is a crutch you need to abandon if you are ever to be at peace. It is a good time to purchase some currant teacakes. You are in a sea of debt, so, stop using your credit cards like they are free. However, don’t hesitate to ask for help if you feel you can’t cope. Accept an invitation to go get an eye-full of French culture and embrace the French nation. Invest.

    Capricorn 22 Dec – 20 Jan
    A close friend will take you aside and say something that initially seems negative, but on reflection, is very helpful. Your life may be purgatory at the moment but remember that a slice of heaven is just around the corner. A woman called Eve may try to lead you astray which is okay if you want to be led astray. Grow your hair down to your knees and become Hindu.

    Aquarius 21 Jan – 19 Feb
    A chest of drawers in a charity shop will catch your eye and may become a treasured possession if you acquire it. You will fall in love with a much younger person and love will bridge the age gap. Someone close to you will screw-up bigtime, so, it is time to stand up and be counted and serve them with a dose of compassion. Treat life like a box of chocolates.

    Pisces 20 Feb – 20 Mar
    Someone on the margins of society will illustrate the advantages of not being just one of the crowd. You may find that you need a small operation in the future, so, be brave. You are usually quite dynamic but now need a good rest to recharge your batteries. An ex-prisoner may demonstrate how we all deserve a second chance. Meditate if you think it will help you.

    Aries 21 Mar – 20 Apr
    A Scottish woman will make you act a bit sheepish when she offers you a portion of haggis. Time to take a look at yourself from a new angle. Have a shave or your husband may leave you for another woman. It is a good time to realise that you have already found what you are looking for. A man called Sid will verbally abuse you but he is just another vicious punk.

    Taurus 21 Apr – 21 May
    A trip to a spa would be a good idea as you deserve some pampering and a bit of ‘me’ time. If you’re lonely and like football, start to follow your local team and you will meet like-minded people. Worry may have invaded your mind, but hold on as everything passes. Give blood if you can overcome your fear of needles, as it will really help someone in need. Love is near.

    Gemini 22 May – 21 Jun
    Now is the time to wonder why trouble follows you around. You may be the jewel in your family’s crown, but you will soon realise that you are nothing special and very ordinary like the rest of us. A Buddhist monk you once looked up to, will give it all up for a crazy woman. Maybe learn a new language that will help you find your way around a foreign culture.

    Cancer 22 Jun – 23 Jul
    A trip abroad may be a good idea but don’t spend money there like a fool. Be careful about the language you use at work as there are a lot of politically correct judges around. It might be a good time to try for a baby if you think you can stop being the centre of your world and care for a little vulnerable person. Or buy some tissues as you may catch a cold anytime soon.

    Leo 24 Jul – 23 Aug
    Someone you thought you could trust will turn out to be a duplicitous snake who stabs you in the back when you least expect it. Out-of-the-blue you may receive a summons to attend court, so, put in the required appearance and you will be alright. You will show how you are like a superhero when you step in and stop a fight between people who are usually friends.

    Virgo 24 Aug – 23 Sep
    Someone who has been like a father-figure for you will become ill and it may remind you how fragile we really are. Happily, there will be a new dawn of happiness for you and the horizon will look better than it’s done for a while. Your teeth aren’t looking good, so, may be save up and visit a dentist. It’s time you confronted a friend who’s gets on your nerves.

    Libra 24 Sep – 23 Oct
    Your health may not be too good at the moment, but you will pick up soon and go on to enjoy the summer. Also, your opinion of yourself may not be very high, but you are a good person and people should feel honoured to know you. Maybe buy an air-fryer and enjoy chips again. All-in-all, your life will improve, you will find love, and money will come your way! Think.


  • June’s World – May 2026

    Hello again. I Hope you’re all well. A month has elapsed so quickly, so, I’ll write my article now.

    Our oldest grandson Jake used to say that he fancied going to Australia to live and work. He currently works for a company called Scania and mends lorries. After six years he decided that he had saved enough money to realise his dream, so, he handed in his notice at work and prepared to go to Australia. Because Scania has different subsidiaries around the world, he went to Brisbane, in Australia.

    Unfortunately, his dream turned into a bit of a nightmare, and after three weeks, he was ready to come back! It wasn’t for him. He said it was a bit of a desert with pebble beaches and that ono one really bothered with him as the other workers were from other cities, and couldn’t speak English very well. Understandably, the man in charge wasn’t very happy that he wanted to leave so soon after arriving, as it probably looked bad for the company. Jake said he tried to fit in but it just wasn’t for him.

    However, Jake had enjoyed travelling business class on the way there, having his own compartment where he could stretch out watching T.V. as he chose. The journey lasted over two days. When he returned home, he came round to tell us all about his experience and we agreed that he had done the right thing if he was unhappy there. Luckily for Jake, he had been told that he would be able to get another job with Scania if things didn’t work out in Australia. He started work again almost immediately and only has to travel a bit further than to his former employment.

    Anyway, Jake seems to be happy to back into his old routine and enjoys seeing his friends. I said that at least he had had the experience – unlike a lot of young people.

    Like I’ve said a few times before, it will be lovely when summer is here again, although, to be fair, we’ve had some nice days recently. Unfortunately, there have also been some dismal days – but when you get well-over 80, it’s surely important to enjoy just being well.

    Well, it’s Selby-day which I still enjoy. The trees are looking good and beautiful flowers line the edge of the causeways. The park looks splendid with all the different types of flora.

    We did our usual things in Selby which included visiting different places. The town is very popular with visitors. We like to eat at a café called The Hub. After The Hub, we went to visit my niece-by-marriage who had just moved, with her husband, into a lovely bungalow. They said it was a mess when they bought it, but that they had spent a lot of time and money doing it up.

    Today, my husband is working in the garden which he adores; he’s arranging all the big stones around the garden as they were sinking into the ground. We’ve just had a nice cup of tea, sat wrapped-up against the cold and soon I will go back into the house to finish this article!


  • Townsend’s Quiz Time – May 2026

    Questions:

    (1) Moya Brennan who passed away in April 2026 was the lead singer with which Celtic band?

    (2) Which sport is played by the Chicago Bears?

    (3) Who is the main protagonist in “The Catcher in the Rye”?

    (4) Who was the first woman to win the Best Director Oscar?

    (5) What was the first food grown in space?

    (6) Which US president delivered a series of radio addresses known as “fireside chats”?

    (7) What card game has been a Mattel brand since 1992 and features cards with titles such as “Wild” and “Reverse”?

    (8) Who painted the 15th century mural “The Last Supper”?

    (9) Who is the current leader (as at April 2026) of the UK Green Party?

    (10) What is the only country that borders both the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf?

    (11) Which king of Scotland did Macbeth murder?

    (12) What country is also known as ‘The Land of the Blue Sky’?

    (13) Who is the Greek goddess of wisdom and strategic warfare?

    (14) Who is the only European golfer to have won more majors than Rory McIlroy and Nick Faldo, who have won six each as of April 2026?

    (15) What band was Ronnie Wood a part of before joining The Rolling Stones?

    (16) The Sentra, Altima, and Pathfinder are all car models made by which manufacturer?

    (17) Who killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel?

    (18) What toy is associated with the Jewish celebration of Hanukkah?

    (19) What is the most popular flavour of ice-cream worldwide?

    (20) In “Toy Story” what is the name of Andy’s mean neighbour?

    Answers: (1) Clannad (2) American Football (3) Holden Caulfield (4) Kathryn Bigelow (5) Spring onions (6) Franklin Delano Roosevelt (7) Uno (8) Leonardo da Vinci (9) Zack Polanski (10) Iran (11) King Duncan (12) Mongolia (13) Athena (14) Harry Vardon (15) The Faces (16) Nissan (17) Aaron Burr (18) Dreidel (19) Vanilla (20) Sid


  • Adventures of a Man Sitting Down #38 – May 2026

    Do you ever have those moments when things gather momentum? Something hardly significant occurs, then it develops a sense of meaning, finally you discover a strange confluence that has meaning beyond the simple actions that created it.

    It begins with a cartoonist named Baxter who died recently. I’d always been aware of his cartoons. They are droll and sarcastic but without being cruel. They are droll and sarcastic but without being cruel. They are quaint in the best possible way. Often, they involve cowboys doing things that are very non-cowboy. In memoriam, I went in search of the album of his that he’d illustrated the cover for. On it, two cowboys stare into the distance at a plume of smoke. It’s pure Boys Own except for the caption.

    For reasons I have no way to explain, I put it onto my record player last night. It was great! The music was a scatter-dash collection of tunes from America, Africa and other places that don’t normally get placed into a sequence on an album.

    I cooked dinner and really enjoyed the strange random sequence of choices made by the person who’d produced the record. Dinner was okay. The music was fantastic. Once it was finished I turned off the equipment, sat down to eat. It was satisfying in the sort of way that comes along rarely. I was sated and wanted no more.

    I’ve been circumspect about that caption. It explains the first paragraph. Those two cowboys are sharing this thought “Looks like the Sioux have got to another set of James Last albums.” Drawled The Kershaw Kid.

    The food was finished. I went to bed early. I thought nothing of the matter other than how appropriate the cartoon was for the tone of the album. I considered how people lead lives that inspire and amuse then simply drift away.

    On Saturday mornings I listen to Radio 6. This was the morning after the night before. The first thing I heard was the news. Liz Kershaw was reported as saying she’d lost her best friend. Her brother Andy had died last night.

    I’ve been record for years and years. I’ve never listened to it, confident it would be an amusing and exciting dip into the world of music. Then the cover artist died. I got it out. Then, randomly I put it on my turntable and cranked it up. The next day I discovered Andy Kershaw, its creator, had passed away on the day I finally got round to listening to it.

    Andy was a sweetheart. You could catch him on the wrong day and he’d be gruff but mostly, when I encountered him in Todmorden he had a smile and a cigarette on his lips, his faithful dog Buster by his side (at least, when I used to see him years ago). Cigarettes were what killed him in the end. Or cancer at least. Still, there’s any number of ways to go. He chose his end.

    The last time I saw him was at an event to celebrate forty years of Live Aid. He’d been given the job of presenting it after only having had about four months at the BBC. As he told his tales he really came alive. Live Aid was, for him, that confluence of events, inexplicable and marvellous. He wasn’t past his mid-twenties when it landed in his lap.

    Sitting in that room it was strange to consider the way in which he’d interfaced with millions of people in Britain and around the world. Not because he desired that sort of thing but because he loved music. That love opened the world.

    Even after his death he was still opening my eyes to new music. That’s a pretty successful Friday night!


  • The Anonymous Autist’s Guide to the Galaxy – The Trap of Accidental Friendship – May 2026

    Have you ever found yourself innocently standing in a queue, commenting on the weather with the person in front of you, only to realise – three weeks, four coffees, and one deeply confusing WhatsApp thread later – that you are now in a fully operational friendship?

    Not a deliberate one. Not a curated, mutually aligned, “we share interests and values” type of friendship. No. This is an accidental friendship. A glitch in the social operating system. A side-quest you never accepted, but which has somehow become the main storyline.

    It often begins with something trivial. A shared complaint about supermarket self-checkouts. A brief mutual eye-roll at a delayed train. A comment about how expensive avocados have become (again). At this point, both parties are simply passing through the moment – two ships in the night, exchanging harmless social noise.

    But then something happens.

    A second encounter. Recognition. A “We must stop meeting like this!” – which, in retrospect, should have been treated as the warning to stop meeting like that, even if it means a full rethink of your convenient, meticulously planned daily routine.

    Fast forward, and you are now trapped in a cycle of scheduled meetups, prolonged conversations about topics you have zero interest in, and a growing sense that you are playing a character in someone else’s life.

    You start to ask yourself difficult questions:

    • How did this happen?
    • What do we actually talk about?
    • Why am I now expected to care about their endless self-inflicted social dramas? If this sounds familiar, don’t panic. Help is at hand.

    Problem: The Involuntary Commitment Spiral

    Unlike intentional friendships, accidental ones lack a foundation. There is no shared context, no aligned interests, no soulmate-level bonding – just an unfortunate conspiracy of circumstances which are socially unacceptable to avoid.

    Each interaction leaves you feeling as if you are having an out-of-body experience in a dream you cannot wake up from, yet are fascinated by the unfolding events.

    Eventually, you reach the critical threshold: you have invested just enough time that withdrawing now feels like a betrayal, but not enough to justify continuing indefinitely.

    This is the Trap of Accidental Friendship.

    Solution: To Cope, or Not to Cope?

    As with all complex social dilemmas, there are several viable approaches, each with its own pros and cons. The key here is to remember that fortune favours the bold.

    Solution 1: Fake It Until You Make (or Break) It

    At the point you realise you’re in too deep to retreat gracefully, and would feel awkward just ghosting your new-found friend, you can become the kind of person who belongs in the friendship.

    This involves strict self-discipline and intensive training. Study their interests. Research their hobbies. Develop conversational scripts. If they enjoy gardening, you now enjoy gardening. If they follow a niche podcast about maritime logistics, congratulations – you are now an expert in container shipping.

    Over time, you may achieve a level of conversational fluency that allows you to maintain the friendship with minimal cognitive strain.

    Pros: You now have “a friend”.
    Cons: You now have “a friend”.

    But as the saying goes: “better to have someone and live a double-life than have no-one and be yourself… right?

    Solution 2: The “Narrative Escalation” Method

    If commitment to living a lie feels excessive, a more subtle approach may be required. However, simple, honest excuses like “I’m busy” are insufficient. They lack narrative richness and finality, which may invite follow-up questions.

    Instead, you must introduce mildly unusual reasons for not being able to meet up, such as:

    • “I can’t meet this week, I’m recalibrating my sleep cycle.”
    • “I’ve been selected for a short-term cognitive experiment involving controlled sensory deprivation.”
    • “I’m currently under observation due to a rare reaction to that sushi we had last week.” Eventually, you reach peak narrative:
    • “I apologise, but I’ve just discovered I am been intermittently abducted by a non-hostile extraterrestrial/interdimensional entity. Scheduling is difficult.”

    At this stage, the friendship will either dissolve naturally or evolve into something far more interesting than originally intended.

    Pros: A gentle phase out which avoids hurt feelings.
    Cons: Potential for being labelled an absolute fantasist, leading to being a social pariah.

    Solution 3: The “Plausible Absurdity” Method

    When all else fails, and you reach the point where you haven’t replied to the last three messages or calls from your new “friend”, and have no motivation or intention to reply, decisive action is required.

    This involves creating a situation so complete, so immersive, that continued contact becomes structurally impossible – without ever requiring you to be honest or having to deliver the brutal coup de grace of saying “I don’t want to be friends.”

    Examples include:

    • Announcing that, following that Spiritual Awakening festival you saw whilst you and your “friend” met up for coffee in Ilkley last week, you have had a profound spiritual awakening and are relocating to Nepal to live as a reclusive monk, taking an immediate vow of silence.
    • Explaining that years ago you applied to MI5 for a job, which you had forgotten about, and you have been recruited for a confidential government role and must cease all personal contact with immediate effect.
    • You have finally decided to permanently live on the home planet of the extraterrestrial/interdimensional entity that was intermittently abducting you in order to reduce emissions from the spacecraft and do your bit in the fight against Climate Change.

    The key is conviction. Deliver the narrative with calm certainty, and exit. Block their number and move on as if nothing ever happened.

    Pros: Immediate resolution which you will periodically smile about.
    Cons: You may need to avoid all known areas indefinitely.

    Join us next time, where we explore advanced techniques for dealing with some of the most challenging people in the known universe – The Professional Idiot.


  • The Dry Pawed Adventurer – May 2026

    I might be twelve years old, but don’t let the “senior” label fool you; I’ve got enough personality to fill a palace, even if I only stand about ten inches off the ground. Being a Chihuahua–Jack Russell mix means I’m basically a high-voltage battery in a tiny, fuzzy casing, and I approach every single day like it’s the best one yet.

    Not too long ago, my humans took me on an adventure that felt like I’d stepped right into the pages of a storybook. We stayed in this massive, leafy place with a giant, bubbling bathtub running through it—the humans called it a river—and the air smelled like damp earth and excitement. My favourite part of the woods was watching the Giant Dogs in the field nearby. My humans called them horses, and I spent a long time watching them graze with intense curiosity. They were very quiet and very large, but I made sure to stay alert and soak in the peace of the surroundings, just in case they wanted to play.

    From the woods, we travelled to the beach, which I quickly decided was actually just one giant sandbox designed specifically for me. I treated that entire coastline like my personal kingdom, sprinting up and down the shore until my little legs were a blur. I brought my favourite rope toy along for some truly epic games of tug-of-war, though I had to be careful with my footwork. You see, while I love the sand, I have a very strict “dry paws” policy. As soon as the sea tried to sneak up and touch my toes, I made sure to dodge it. I’m an adventurer, certainly, but I am not a fan of soggy paws.

    That trip brought out a different side of me, too. After a long day of patrolling the forest and the shore, I found I quite liked the calm of the outdoors. I was perfectly happy just sitting still for a while, watching the world go by before curling up for a deep, satisfying rest. Of course, no expedition is complete without the rations. I made sure to enjoy my biscuits, and on the extra lucky days, I managed to score a bit of peanut butter or a carrot with a world-class crunch.

    Now that we’re back home, I’ve returned to my usual professional routine of playing, eating, and taking very long, very serious naps on the couch or in my cozy bed. Even when I’m dreaming, it’s easy to tell that those days by the water and under the trees are part of what makes my life feel so full. I don’t really need grand journeys to be happy; I just turn every moment, whether it’s a sprint across the sand or a quiet snooze after a snack, into something worth remembering. Life with me is never boring, and honestly, as long as I have my rope and my humans, every day feels like a brand-new adventure.


  • Brenda’s Wildlife Corner – May 2026

    Neon tetra

    The neon tetra is a freshwater fish found in Amazon streams in southeastern Colombia, eastern Peru and western Brazil. It is also successfully farmed in southeast Asia. It is imported in vast numbers into the USA, but this is largely from farms.

    Tropical fish enthusiasts are attracted to the neon tetra’s outstanding coloration and people all over the world keep it in regulated tanks in their home. In the wild, it can live in water with a pH of 4.0 to 4.8, but when they are kept in aquariums, they can tolerate a pH of 6.0 to 8.0.

    The male tends to be slender with a straight blue line while the female is rounder and tends to have a bent blue line. Some can live up to 10 years in the wild, but only 2 to 3 years in an aquarium. They a shoaling fish and are relatively easy to keep in dim lighting with a lot of tannins in the water.

    The neon tetra is an omnivore so, it is important to provide it with nutrients like brine shrimps, daphnia, freeze-dried bloodworms and micro-pellet food.

    This species of fish is easily farmed and can breed after only 12 weeks – but this is more difficult in home aquariums. Diseases like “neon tetra disease “hamper the successful keeping of this fish and diseased fish must be immediately removed to contain the problem.

    There are of course many varieties of tropical fish on the market, but many people appreciate the splendour and colour that the neon tetra brings to a home.

    * Ref. Wikipedia


  • FC Halifax Town Season Review – May 2026

    We are now almost at the end of the 2025/26 season. Halifax have two matches remaining and, after Southend’s victory at Aldershot a couple of days ago, they can no longer reach the play-offs to try and regain their place in the English Football League.

    Whilst that might seem like a disappointing way to close out the season, on the whole, there have been plenty of positives under the stewardship of Adam Lakeland who only joined the club in June 2025 after the departure of previous manager Chris Millington.

    I think the majority of Town fans were expecting the team to finish in the lower half of the twenty-four-team division. The fact that they are likely to finish in eighth position (worst case scenario is ninth) has to be viewed as a good season for the club.

    For the majority of the season, Town had been in and around the play-off positions. It was only in the last six weeks or so that our hopes realistically diminished. This period coincided with a couple of disappointing results away from home combined with some rather difficult home matches against many of the side who were higher up the league table. It was always going to be a tough ask to pick up many points against these opponents, especially considering that The Shaymen have a lower playing budget than most teams in the division.

    I have been a season ticket holder for every season, bar one, since the 2008/09 season. I missed two home league matches during the current season. Unfortunately, we lost those two matches despite decent performances on each occasion.

    One of the highlights of the season has been the emergence of several players who we picked up from lower divisions. Lakeland joined us as from National League North team Kings Lynn Town. Amongst the players recruited from there, were Cody Johnson and Josh Hmami. The two midfielders have been standout players for us this season in my opinion. Others to have performed very well were fellow midfielder Will Hugill and centre forward Will Harris. Harris was rumoured to have been a target for League 2 Oldham during the January transfer window and it was speculated that a bid was received and subsequently turned down. Hmami apparently submitted a transfer request during this same period but he sustained an injury and it is not known whether any bids were received. In hindsight he may have regretted his action as fan support for him waivered a little upon his reintegration into the side although, some really good performances in more recent matches seems to have got the majority of fans back onside.

    I would say that Town’s promotion-push really hit the buffers in early February. In the match at Aldershot, they surrendered a two-goal lead when conceding three goals in a five-minute period to lose 3-2. Four days later they conceded an added time equaliser to Brackley from the penalty spot.

    The final nail in the coffin was the 2-2 draw at home to Tamworth on Easter Monday where Harris failed to convert from the spot in added time, this denying us the victory we so desperately craved. Our penalty taking this season has certainly been an Achilles heel with the number of spot kicks missed approaching double figures.

    There have been some really good team performances during the season. A 3-2 victory at home to Boreham Wood was one of my personal highlights but my favourite was a match we didn’t actually win. This was the home match versus Rochdale where we fought back for a 2-2 draw after being 2-0 down on 87 minutes.

    I would say that we have potential to improve next season although, this will be impacted as always by how many of the current squad we lose in the summer and how good our recruitment is.

    Here’s looking forward to a successful 2026/27 season!


JOLLY JUNE CHARLTON SHARES SOME MORE OLD RECIPES

  • Old Fashioned Ginger Nut Biscuits – May 2026

    Old Fashioned Ginger Nut Biscuits

    Ingredients:

    10 oz of plain flour

    7 oz of sugar – half caster sugar/half soft brown

    1 teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda

    2 teaspoons of ground ginger

    1 ½ teaspoons of baking powder

    6 oz butter/margarine

    1 tablespoon of golden syrup or clear honey

    2 tablespoons of milk

    Method:

    Preheat the oven to 160 C. Place all the dry ingredients in a mixing bowl. Melt the butter and syrup over a gentle heat making sure it does not boil. Pour this mixture into the dry ingredients, add the milk and mix thoroughly. Shape into about 36 small balls and place on greased baking sheets spaced well apart and flatten slightly. The biscuits spread to about 2½” across. Bake for 16-18 minutes until browned. Leave to cool on a tray.

  • Shrewsbury Biscuits – May 2026

    Shrewsbury Biscuits

    Ingredients:

    8 oz of self-raising flour

    5 oz of margarine

    4 oz of sugar

    1 egg

    Grated lemon rind

    Method:

    Cream margarine and sugar, add beaten egg and mix. Work in the flour and flavouring until a stiff, smooth paste is obtained. Roll out and cut into shapes. Bake in a moderate oven for about ten minutes.

  • Homemade Custard – May 2026

    Homemade Custard

    Ingredients:

    600 ml of whole milk

    1 vanilla pod

    6 large egg yolks

    75 g caster sugar

    Method:

    Pour the milk into a pan. Slash the vanilla pod and scrape out the seeds. Add the seeds to the cold milk and throw in the pod. Heat the milk to boiling point, remove from the heat and leave to infuse for 15 minutes. Beat the egg yolks with the sugar until they are a pale golden colour. Remove the vanilla pod from the milk and place the milk back on the heat. Gradually stir in the egg yolk and sugar mixture and cook until thickened. If it goes lumpy, don’t despair – just pour it through a sieve. May be eaten hot or cold.

  • Horseradish Sauce – May 2026

    Horseradish Sauce

    Ingredients:

    4 tablespoons of horseradish root

    1 tablespoon of white wine vinegar

    Pinch of English mustard powder

    1 teaspoon of caster sugar

    150 ml of double cream

    Salt and black pepper

    Method:

    Mix all the ingredients together, season with salt and pepper to taste and serve with beef.


  • The Lake Isle of Innisfree – May 2026

    By W B Yeats (1865 – 1939)

    I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
    And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
    Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee,
    And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

    And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
    Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
    There midnight’s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
    And evening full of linnet’s wings

    I will arise and go now, for always night and day
    I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
    While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
    I hear it in the deep heart’s core.


  • FTHM Fun Quiz – May 2026

    Questions:

    (1) What is the French word for shark?

    (2) Which country manufactures the most machine-made carpets?

    (3) What was Wham’s first album called?

    (4) How old was Jeffrey Epstein when he died?

    (5) What is a sceptre?

    (6) How much is King Charles worth?

    (7) In which year did the soap Coronation Street start?

    (8) Who invented the video camera?

    (9) How much is the green worth in snooker?

    (10) When did Mussolini come to power in Italy?

    (11) What is the chemical compound of nicotine?

    (12) What is the currency of Austria?

    (13) Where was the actor Patrick Swayze born?

    (14) What nationality was singer Sacha Distel?

    (15) What is the capital of Bolivia?

    (16) What is the Spanish word for water?

    (17) Who played the Incredible Hulk?

    (18) Which newspaper has the biggest circulation?

    (19) Where are most diamonds mined?

    (20) Who is the heaviest person ever to have lived?

    Answers: (1) Requin (2) China (3) Fantastic (4) 66 (5) Decorated staff or rod carried by a monarch or ruler (6) £640 million (7) 9 December, 1960 (8) Louis Le Prince in 1888 (9) 3 points (10) October 1922 (11) C10H14N2 (12) Euro (13) Houston, Texas, US (14) French (15) Sucre/La Paz (16) Agua (17) Lou Ferrigno (18) Yomiuri Shimbun (19) Russia (20) Jon Brower Minnoch, 635 kg

    Editor’s Final Word: Thank you very much for taking time to read this magazine and I hope you enjoyed the experience. If you want to contact us, please do so through: dean@fthm.org.uk Best wishes, Dean, Brenda, Graham and Hari.


Editor’s Final Word

Thank you for reading this e-magazine. You can get involved by contacting us at: dean@fthm.org.uk

Best wishes, Dean, Brenda, Graham and Hari.