Episoder

  • Hello :)

    So, despite recently moving out of Salford, I felt it was an interesting enough place to do a podcast about. Partly because 'Everywhere is Interesting' and my VA wanted me to prove it. And what could be more interesting than the location of the world's first municipal public park, the world's first bus route, the world's first street lighting, and the world's only canal swing bridge. And the UK's most polluted river, but let's not talk about that, and anyway the other half of it is in Manchester.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Running along country lanes
    * A potted history of the Salford area
    * Salford Central ... isn't
    * Salford Quays - the posh bit
    * Canals and Rivers and Bridges and Hotels
    * Old and Listed Buildings
    * Peel Park
    * Vimto
    * A short overview of Salford Pop-Culture from The Smiths to Coronation Street
    * Salford Firsts

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over. For this pod I've uploaded about 9 mins of extra content all about Salford's pubs, which I thought would make the episode too long for no real advantage, but which I might use in a future episode. Who knows!

    There are no contributions in this episode, although my VA does purposely misrhythm a song lyric at the beginning.

    Here, by the way, is my YouTube Short about Salford Lad's Club.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    Given recent big concert tours, it feels like the right time to do an episode on 'travelling for music'. It's a subject I didn't think I'd have a lot to say about, given I don't often go to concerts even locally, never mind for travels, but the more I thought about it, the more interesting comparisons and contrasts I could find between my trips.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * My first concert (Heavenly, 1992)
    * The first concert I travelled for (Bon Jovi, 1995)
    * Travelling to Paris to listen to French singers ...
    * ... three times
    * You Look Like Taylor Swift
    * Other ways of travelling for music
    [This latter point will be expanded and the episode re-uploaded once I get a further contribution]

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Contributions in this episode come from:
    * my old schoolfriend Alistair,
    * Claire, who blogs at Curious Claire, and
    * Juliet, who can be found at I Am A Polar Bear

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

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  • Hello :)

    I've been thinking a lot recently about nostalgia. I mean, I always have, but I think over time my feelings have changed about it. There's so many people who think 'life was better when I was young', and I wanted to probe more into that, into how I felt about nostalgia, why people of my generation tend to be nostalgic, and also put some colder facts around it.

    I also took a couple of trips recently to the places I grew up in, and it was interesting to compare memories of those places with how those places vibe nowadays.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * I have moved house yet again
    * Music and TV from my younger days
    * Why nostalgia is different for older generations than younger ones
    * "The Good Old Days"
    * 1970s comedy is barely golden
    * How nostalgia can affect your world outlook
    * The world is a better place now, statistically
    * Aircraft safety has improved
    * Foreign Office Travel Advice from February 1998
    * Some things change, some stay the same
    * The House(s) I Grew Up In
    * How it feels to go back to a childhood area
    * Birmingham and La Rochelle - when I tried to be amatonormative

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no direct contributions in this pod, though you do hear the voices of my co-conspirator V, my step-dad, and my friend Sarah, not that one, this is someone I went to Primary School with, and who might well be the person outside of family who I've known the longest - we met at the school gates on our first day.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    It's been noticed that I've now done 100 episodes. Quite which episode was my 100th is open to question as it depends on your definition of episode - indeed if you don't count the Twitter Space recordings I did with V, I've not got there yet. But, just like with counting countries, there's always going to be arguments either way, and in terms of what my podcast host and the podcast apps say, I've made three figures. So it seems kind of appropriate to acknowledge that. I am aware that one of my Glasgow episodes was 'what I wish I'd known before starting a podcast' and I didn't want to do another episode like that, so instead what I thought I'd do was an actual retrospective of the topics I've talked about in my podcast episodes thus far, so that people who may be new to my words and content can get a feel for the sort of things that I've talked about before.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Vague things I've been up to in the Spring
    * My most popular episodes
    * Extracts from my episodes about Uzbekistan, Bucket Lists, Apartheid, and Sexuality while Travelling
    * My favourite episodes
    * Extracts from my episodes about Travel Privilege, Influencer Responsibility & Integrity, and Instagram v Reality
    * Episodes I'm proud of
    * Extracts from my episodes about The Wars Of The Roses, Do You Have Pride In Your Country, and Travel Podcasting with ChatGPT
    * Some stats about my podcast and episode downloads

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no direct contributions in this pod, though a couple do appear in extracts.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    This is part three of an overview of my recent trip to the Caucasus region of Eurasia, and covers the four days I spent in Armenia. I talk about why Yerevan feels quite Soviet, why Armenia and Azerbaijan don't like each other, and the architectural legacy of being the world's oldest Christian country.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Asexuality Interview with an unexpected newspaper
    * Local Elections
    * How to spend 7 hours in Yerevan with a backpack
    * The Yerevan Cascade(s)
    * The Soviet vibe of Victory Park
    * Kond Historic District
    * The Cathedral of Saint Gregory the Illuminator
    * The Blue Mosque
    * Monasteries in northern Armenia
    * Why Armenia and Turkey/Azerbajian don't like each other
    * The Armenian Genocide Memorial
    * Food and drink in Armenia
    * Going home
    * Impressions of Armenia and being non-binary there

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no contributions in this pod, though I would like to link my appreciation to Envoy Hostels and Tours.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    This is part two of an overview of my recent trip to the Caucasus region of Eurasia, and covers the five days I spent in the country of Georgia, mainly the capital city Tbilisi. I also talk about far too much cheese and garlic, the worst beer I've ever had in my life,

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Audio quality of recent episodes
    * Problems when your debit card gets cancelled
    * Arrival in Tbilisi
    * First experience with Georgian food
    * Transport in Tbilisi
    * The Georgian National Museum
    * Beer and bars in Tbilisi
    * Uplistsikhe - the city built into a sandstone hill
    * Food in Tbilisi
    * The overnight train to Yerevan
    * Tbilisi street sculptures
    * The cable car and the Mother Georgia statue
    * Being enby in Georgia

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no contributions in this pod, but I do want to provide some links:
    * Blog post by Wander-Lush on how to catch the train between Tbilisi and Yerevan
    * The 80 Days Pod about Georgia
    * Polar Bear Juliet's post about sulphur baths in Tbilisi
    * Polar Bear Juliet's post on the Chronicles of Georgia
    * Tales of a Backpacker's blog
    * Little Lost Travel's blog
    * Blue Marble Vagabonds' blog
    * Jon (Everybody Hates a Tourist)'s blog
    * Jason and Carla (Don't Miss The Plane!)'s YouTube Channel
    * Traverse Events' Website

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    So, as you know, I've recently been away for two weeks, ostensibly to attend the Traverse Travel Blogger Conference, which this year took place in Tbilisi, in Georgia. I've never been to that party of the world, and it'd always been on my list.

    I clearly went at the wrong time of year, but that's just what happens sometimes.

    This is going to be the first of a couple of pods about the trip, and concentrates mainly on talking about the conference itself, the background to why I went, and on my first couple of days travelling, mostly spent in Azerbaijan.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:

    I'm not running at the moment The Traverse Blogger Conference Niching out my website Background to my journey 4 flights and 5 airports One day in Baku Mud volcanoes Ancient and mediaeval rock art Fire Temples and Fire Mountains Impressions of Azerbaijan, including money, language, and queerness

    A PDF transcript will be available shortly.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    It's coming up to Valentine's Day (and Quirkyalone Day), so this feels like the right time to issue an episode all about love, sex, and illicit encounters while travelling. Obviously there's content warnings in here, mainly for, well, sex and kink, but I do always try to keep it quite light-hearted. One might well ask how an AroAce can talk so much about this subject. Well.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Full Swap Radio
    * Meeting people in backpacker hostels
    * Dating apps
    * Why I don't use dating apps but might use hookup apps
    * Staying safe on the road
    * Interesting hookups I've had on the road
    * Good and bad dating app experiences from contributors
    * Long Distance Relationships
    * Relationship Admin

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Contributions in this pod come from: Maja (Away With Maja), Kylie (Between England), and my friend Kitty.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    Of course it’s the New Year, and as such, the travel world is plastered with lists of ‘where to go in 2024’, ‘best places to visit in 2024’, and the like. Now, I have to say I’ve never been terribly fond of these sorts of things on a fundamental level for a number of reasons. I mean, sure they provide a good quick way of inspiring people, especially people who are relatively new to travel, but sometimes I feel that they tend to be quite … well, have a listen and see if you agree with me.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * Back to Glasgow for re-coloured hair
    * My eyes are getting old
    * Time Out's "The World’s Best Cities For 2024"
    * Great Cities are Big and Western
    * Forbes' "Where To Travel And Avoid The Crowds In 2024"
    * What does 'lesser-visited' even mean?
    * British Vogue's "Best Places To Travel in 2024"
    * National Geographic's "The Cool List 2024" - https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/uk-cool-list-2024
    * CNN's "Best Destinations To Visit in 2024" - https://edition.cnn.com/travel/best-destinations-to-visit-2024/index.html
    * Conclusions

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no contributions in this pod, it's just my voice.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    And so to the second part of 'let's make a podcast that's going to cause more unfollowers than followers'. Mind you, let's be honest, I've had several podcast episodes like that, and nothing untoward has happened. Maybe I should be more controversial. There again.

    I wasn't originally sure what to do for this episode. I toyed with the idea of doing one on 'ancient and mediaeval Travel Bloggers you need to know about', but I realised it would require far too much research in the time I had available. However using the very first one, Hanno The Navigator, as a 'hook', I realised I could go down a very different path, which combines history, Instagram, and ethical behaviour, but not in the way you might expect.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * A very brief housekeeping update
    * The voyage of Hanno The Navigator
    * Issues with the surviving account of Hanno's voyage
    * Why everyone should take more selfies
    * The South Sea Bubble
    * History is elitist and biased
    * Why editing photographs isn't that bad really
    * Hanoi's Train Street
    * Geotagging and the problem of lost cities
    * Recording the mundane, from pencil sharpeners to Friendship Books
    * Viking helmets don't have horns

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    There are no contributions in this pod, it's just my voice.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    Well, you may be pleased to know I survived my trip to SE Asia. But it was a close-run thing as you'll hear at the start of this episode.

    Anyway. It's Christmas. I should do a pod about this time of year. And this is one I've cobbled together at the last possible moment. I think I might well whine a bit more than usual in it. But it's fine; this isn't my time of year by definition.

    Topics discussed in this episode are:
    * The most 8 minutes I've ever had on a plane
    * My Christmas is low-key
    * 100 Countries by Age 50
    * American Christmas Music Radio
    * Whamageddon!
    * Christmas trees
    * Australia at Christmas
    * Christmas markets I have seen and drank at
    * Family Christmasses growing up
    * Pantomimes
    * New Year traditions

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Contributions in this pod come from my friend Anne-Laure, who can be found on Instagram; my mother, who doesn't have a web presence of any note; and Amanda Kendle, of the Not A Ballerina website.
    Also, the Deck of Many Aces podcast can be found wherever you listen to podcasts, but they're hosted here by Acast.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    As I'm currently away on a backpacking trip around South-East Asia, it makes sense to issue a podcast episode about the previous time I went to this part of the world (mainland, anyway, not the many islands off the coast) - back in 2012 to Laos and Cambodia. This episode is specifically about the Laos part of the trip; the subsequent Cambodian adventure will be my featured in next podcast.

    A PDF transcript of this podcast will be available when I return, for ... admin reasons.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.


    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    I've been meaning to do a pod specifically about running for a while; it's something that I mention quite often in my housekeeping and I've also tangentially talked about it in smaller sections on pods covering a wider remit. As such, some of what I'll talk about you'll have heard before, but I felt it was the right time to cover this topic again now.

    Topics discussed include:
    * My purple hair
    * All the ways I've been social this month
    * Cross-Country running at my secondary school
    * Why I rarely run when travelling
    * Meeting up with other runners on the move
    * Running clothing and shoes in luggage
    * Travelling the world for marathons
    * A first foreign marathon experience
    * An overview of Parkrun
    * Parkrun Tourism in several forms

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Contribs for this episode came from:
    Steven Ericson - Steven on the Move
    Steve Biggs - Biggsytravels
    Alice (TrafficConeLlama)

    Here is the blog post Steve Biggs mentioned where he talked to his father about marathons.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    Well, this is an unusual episode in several ways, but the main one is the relative lack of personal updates and housekeeping. If you want to know what I’ve been up to this past month, now would be a great time to sign up to my monthly Newsletter, deets below!

    Now, I’m aware I don’t talk about my background or my family much, save for the occasional regular subtweet to my my mother. But anyway. A couple of years after I was born, my mother re-married. And Gary, the chap she married, had an interesting job – he was a refrigeration engineer in the Merchant Navy. While he’s long since left that role (he had some twenty-five years since doing the same role for a large supermarket chain specialising in frozen foods), this was how I first knew him, and thus may have been a childhood influence on my travels.

    And it occurred to me, after I’d done a few of my podcasts, that it would make an interesting episode – it’s travel-related, it’s a historic snapshot of a life that’s very different now, and above all, it’s not something I think many of you would necessarily know about. I certainly didn’t know a lot about it growing up, and as you’ll hear, there’s probably some reasons for that. So a couple of years ago I went to visit, took my laptop and microphone, and set about interviewing him all about his life and his adventures. The full 2hr 11min interview is available on my Patreon, along with some images of the ships he served on.

    Note he has a strong accent and a slightly fluid way of speaking. This did not help the transcription.

    Topics discussed include:
    * What is the Merchant Navy and why he joined
    * Seasickness and bad weather
    * What problems could occur en route
    * How big the ships he served on were, and how they were structured
    * What the working life was life, and who he served with
    * Food and drink on board
    * How he'd pass the time on long journeys
    * Shore leave and visiting off-brochure places
    * The Merchant Navy now

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    Well, that was an unexpectedly long break. To be honest I wasn't planning it but I did kind of need it. But just in case you needed confirmation: Everything Has Been All Right. So far at least.

    Anyway, this episode is a short one, just in part to let you know I'm still alive, partly to give you an indication of what to look forward to in the new series of episodes, for a given definition of series, and mainly to give you a housekeeping life update. There's also a call-to-action for future episodes. Normal service will be resumed next time. For a given definition of normal.

    A PDF transcript of this podcast is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello :)

    So, why did I call this episode 'everything is going to be all right'? Well, it's a mantra I've been repeating to myself quite a lot over the past month or so. If I say it enough, I might actually believe it.

    In this episode I talk about my feelings about moving to Manchester, and why while I was initially emotional about the move, I quickly realised why it will go all rather well. I also talk a little about my issues with my phone, which is why I've been quiet online of late, then about the journey from Carstairs to Lockerbie, and finally a section about recent news stories that will make you feel that everything is going to be all right.

    A PDF transcript will be available shortly.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello!

    Yep, I've created a podcast with the help of AI, in this case specifically ChatGPT. Now, the first question you might ask is of me is why, given my skill with words, my unique and distinct voice, both literal and metaphoric, and a preference for real stories and experiences over auto-generated ones, am I dabbling with AI? Well, the answer is manyfold, as you'll find out.

    What I look at here is how useful AI would be in creating content, assessing how good the information it provides is, and wondering whether it's something we should be embracing or something we need to be fearful of.

    Topics covered on this podcast include:
    * I'm leaving Glasgow (soon)
    * My expectations and understanding of AI
    * Getting AI to come up with a list of questions to ask on a podcast about remote places
    * Getting AI to answer said list of questions
    * Assessing the viability of AI's answers
    * ChatGPT finds cute cafes in Glasgow
    * How AI would explore its hometown
    * What AI thinks about hiking barefoot
    * Travelling as a non-binary person seems to be at the edge of its knowledge
    * A Listicle about Solo Travel
    * ChatGPT and beer
    * Conclusions, usefulness, limitations, and things to be aware of

    There are no contributions in this episode, unless you count ChatGPT itself. Voices for ChatGPT were provided by free online text-to-speech websites, by the way, and I tried to mix them up a bit.

    A PDF transcript of this episode is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello!

    This podcast episode is all about Chernobyl. It's an episode I've had pencilled in to do for quite some time, if in part because I went there in 2014, and never wrote anything about my visit at the time so I felt I ought to, you know, get round to it at some point. I even mentioned this in a podcast I did last year, Back In The USSR. Didn't do it then either, because, and I quote, "I think if I did it would make the pod much longer than I'd intended. In any case it probably deserves its own discussion." I guess this is that discussion.

    Topics covered on this podcast include:
    * I'm leaving Glasgow
    * The dead railway station at IBM Halt
    * A brief history of the 1986 explosion at Chernobyl
    * What I was doing in 1986
    * Why I wanted to visit (and why I wasn't barefoot)
    * Visit to the Power Plant
    * Walking through the ruined town of Pripyat
    * Health and Safety in a Nuclear Fallout Zone
    * The Duga-1 Radar Array and the Russian Woodpecker
    * Chernobyl City and the people who stayed

    Contributions in this episode come from: Helen Matthews, Jane Spurin, and Jess Harling

    A PDF transcript of this episode is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)

  • Hello!

    As you know, I'm always touting the idea of Hometown Travel, and exploring places close to home. Remember, people travel across the world to visit other cities but other people travel across the world to visit yours. Everywhere is interesting, And of course many people might not be able to visit places far away, but still want to enjoy the experience of travel and discovering somewhere new.

    I've been living in Glasgow for two years, and I've walked round a lot of it, using the many railway stations as waypoints, It seems logical therefore to talk about some of the things close to where I currently live, and there's a convenient railway line that loops around my local area to follow. This is the Cathcart Circle, and I figured each of the ten stations on it has enough to fill a podcast. Indeed, a few could probably manage a podcast on their own, but I am not the Roundel Round We Go Podcast and I'd argue there's less call for an entire pod on the Glasgow suburban rail network than the London Underground.

    But what do I know?

    Topics covered on this podcast include:
    * Google Analytics 4
    * My future on Twitter
    * Introduction to the Cathcart Circle
    * Pollokshields East - theatre, gardens, and Sikhs
    * Queen's Park - clue's in the name
    * Crosshill - dead football stadiums
    * Mount Florida - alive football stadiums
    * Cathcart - parks, bridges, waterfalls, country houses
    * Langside - Instagrammable houses and a very short battle
    * Pollokshaws East - old buildings and benevolent Tories
    * Shawlands - Pollok Country Park
    * Maxwell Park - expensive villas and international cricket
    * Pollokshields West - tenement housing and community spirit
    * Crossmyloof - a free gift, and a building that moved

    There are no contributions in this episode, but I am thankful to Scotrail, the organisation that runs the railways in Scotland, for putting all their recorded station announcements into the public domain last year. I may, may, have taken liberties with it.

    A PDF transcript of this episode is available.

    As always, if you have anything to say about the topic, or indeed about my podcasting in general, leave a comment or let me know. I have a newsletter with extra content, and where I'll be mentioning future podcast episodes if you want to make your own contribution.

    I also have a Patreon - if you like what you hear, and want to access exclusive content (or just to show your appreciation), then head on over.

    Until next time, bye for now. :)