(you still have a little rogue 'taber' in there, Diane)
Lovely to know that there's so much Scottishness spread throughout the world.
Unfortunately, England seems to be the exception, though I'm told there's a Burns Society up the road form me in Chester. I shan't rush to join - it'll probably turn out to be an annual reunion of plastic surgery patients.
I had a good weekend too. I went to RAF Cosford's annual Air Show with the gang. Not a new experience for me, but the highlight certainly was. Midway through the magnificent Red Arrows formation display, the entire nine Hawk aircraft disappeared from view and didn't come back. An announcement was made that an unidentified aircraft had entered the airspace over Cosford unannounced and without permission, and that for everyone's safety, the arrows had flown out of the area until the situation was resolved.
There was bemusement and not a little concern among the 50,000 crowd (well, at least among those standing round us - I can't speak for everyone) that this may be the actions of subversive terrorist organisation, though panic failed to set in thankfully, possibly because the hot dog vendors stood their ground.
The second announcement was slightly more faltering than the first - the intruder had been identified as a powered hang-glider. The daft sod had managed to stop the might of the RAF's crowning glory with his foolhardy mission. After about 15 minutes of the commentator calmly (I thought, in the circumstances) explaining why it was probably not this pilot's finest decision, to steer his craft into military airspace without permission, especially during an air show, accompanied by increasingly regular shouts from the crowd along the lines of "Shoot the bugger down!", the Red Arrows re-emerged from the haze for their farewell 'split' and flew off back to base, having used up their allocated fuel for the display.
I've yet to discover what happened to the hang-glider pilot. Hopefully (for his sake) he's still up there.