Change of Plans
Feb. 26th, 2013 09:41 pmSometimes we need a change of plan to make up even a better one. Such was the case with the following weekend when I was going back down to Brighton. Four weeks time it will be Easter and thus, to metaphorically kill a number of birds with one stone, I will be spending the week down on the Sussex coast.
The FTLC (Floating Tuesday or Thursday Lunch Club) has been reactivated and will be initialised on the 28th March, plus the planned visit to Evening Star this Saturday will now be on the Easter Saturday, and I will return to Kent on the following Tuesday. Concurrently with this will be a heap of wonga from a fish with an angel, and that will make the week even more pleasurable.
I have been watching the last seasons of Battlestar Galactica (BSG) on DVD which I borrowed from the lending library, The storyline is fascinating and the finale just brilliant. One of the better sci-fi TV series from across the waters
What i liked about the series was the idea that humans came from outer space to look for the lost planet of Earth and with their humanoid Cylon counterparts ditch all technology to start afresh on this Earth 150,000 years ago and that the young Hera child ( a hybrid between human and machine) becomes the mitochondrial Eve of our present human race..
And guess what? In the Philosophy and .. series of books there is one on Battlestar Galactica.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylon_(reimagining)
The FTLC (Floating Tuesday or Thursday Lunch Club) has been reactivated and will be initialised on the 28th March, plus the planned visit to Evening Star this Saturday will now be on the Easter Saturday, and I will return to Kent on the following Tuesday. Concurrently with this will be a heap of wonga from a fish with an angel, and that will make the week even more pleasurable.
I have been watching the last seasons of Battlestar Galactica (BSG) on DVD which I borrowed from the lending library, The storyline is fascinating and the finale just brilliant. One of the better sci-fi TV series from across the waters
What i liked about the series was the idea that humans came from outer space to look for the lost planet of Earth and with their humanoid Cylon counterparts ditch all technology to start afresh on this Earth 150,000 years ago and that the young Hera child ( a hybrid between human and machine) becomes the mitochondrial Eve of our present human race..
And guess what? In the Philosophy and .. series of books there is one on Battlestar Galactica.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylon_(reimagining)