Sunday, 12 December 2021

69th ANNUAL THAMES HARE & HOUNDS ALUMNI CROSS COUNTRY RACE


On Saturday 11th December 2021, when most of the world were running to distance themselves from Omicron, our hardy warriors were racing against 38 UK alumni associations on the very muddy and slippery course which is Wimbledon Common. This was the 69th annual Thames Hare & Hounds UK Alumni Associations' cross country race and the UK ODU's sixth consecutive year of participation.

Because of Covid, last year's competition took place remotely and then 16 ODs, competing from all over the world, came in at 5th (out of 30 teams) our best performance yet. This year, with several of our key runners off sport or lost on the London Underground or just lost, we nevertheless ended up at a very creditable 18th, seeing off some stiff competition along the way. Although not raining, conditions were grim and in some parts quite treacherous, so our placing - for chaps more used to the balminess of a Cape summer's day  - was not to sniffed at.

At our after-run debrief, It was resolved that next year we will build the numbers, stamina and post-match refreshment resilience. We have Eton in our sights!

In the meantime, to John Thuysbaert (W, 2003), Brendan Raubenheimer (F, 2005), Caelim Parkes (O, 1990), Chris McPetrie (M, 2010) and Ant Marten (S, 1990) well done boys. [editor's note: word on the course was that Ant Marten - who flew in from Chicago for the event - had probably outspent his closest rival by about 150% on race kit. Your commitment and sartorial elegance, Ant, are much admired].

Thanks must go to Adrian Kritzinger (F, 2006) and Dillon McEvoy (O, 2005) who were booked off so couldn't run but turned out to consult and motivate. And to Rowan Nicholls (O, 2010) who was beaten by the TfL and James Klatzow (K, 2008) who may have thought this year's race was, like last year's, virtual, we're counting on you for 2022.

The on-course support from Tara Berwin and cocker spaniels Lille and Kida (courtesy the Raubenheimer / Kritzinger kennels) was much appreciated.


Click on the photos to enlarge (and feel free to download)


Chris McPetrie, at the check-in desk, explaining to a disbelieving race orgniser why what seemed a good idea then does not seem like one now



Chris McPetrie, Dillon McEvoy, John Thuysbaert and Brendan Raubenheimer


Chris McPetrie, Ant Marten, Caelim Parkes, Dillon McEvoy, Adrian Kritzinger, John Thuysbaert, and Brendan Raubenheimer with Lille and Kida in front

Pre-race, Brendan and John wondering whether they can count on the others

Getting ready at the starting line and --- they're off

Coming home: first John, then Brendan, then Caelim, then Chris and then Ant


Post-race, John and Brendan wondering where the others are

Everyone accounted for and none more relieved (possibly surprised) than Lillie and Kida

Post-race refreshments - Chris (right) questioning the authenticity of Dillon's sick note ...

... and John questioning Adrian on his


John, Brendan, Dillon and Chris


18/39 - well done team!





Thursday, 7 October 2021

A DRINKS RECEPTION WITH PETER ELLIOTT AT STONEHAGE FLEMING

ODs, as everyone knows, have a lot to say. If you're an author, that's expected. If you're a lawyer, well, talking forms a large part of "billable hours". So it was interesting and fun for ODs to come together at a drinks reception on Tuesday 5th October to hear how much and what an OD lawyer who became an author had to say. For this, we were at the glorious offices of Stonehage Fleming, one of the UK's (and international) foremost private wealth managers, who do so much to support the UK Branch. Our thanks as always go to Hamish Sinclair (S, 1992) who is a senior partner with Stonehage, 

The occasion was to listen to Peter Elliott (W, 1967, right) speak about how he moved from writs to writing which is his true passion.

He spoke about how, from his rather glorious home in the Languedoc, he is able to research, develop and eventually write — mainly history — books which, increasingly he publishes himself. History because he loves the connections which emerge from and merge into other stories.

His talk covered the journey from his first forays into authorship to now publishing fairly large scale and meticulously researched books on subjects always close to his heart. He took us through the process of writing and onto the tricky and challenging topic of publishing and printing. All while strictly sticking to his daily country walks to keep him and Maddie (his wife) sane.

His presentation can be seen HERE.

We are immensely grateful to Peter to making the trip across from France and for sharing what he has to say, as it were, so engagingly.

A guest list is reproduced at the end of this post so house and years are given there.

Lastly, apologies for the poor quality of the photos which were taken on a mobile phone!

Please click on them to enlarge

Peter Elliott, Garry Southern and David Jordan

Peter and Maddie Elliott and Peter Robinson

Mike Leach, Thomas Withington, Chris Leach and Michael Cockburn

John Parker-Wood and Mikes Maskell with Caelim Parkes and Anton du Plessis in the background

Tim Loughton, Caelim Parkes, Anton du Plessis and Hamish Sinclair

Back: Michael Cockburn, Chris and Mike Leach, Anton du Plessis, Caelim Parkes and Hamish Sinclair
Front: Bruce McGregor, Greg Baldwin, Margie Charnock, Menna McGregor, Mark Charnock and Marlene Parker-Wood

John Campbell and Dominic Ward

Miles Maskell and David Jordan


Miles Maskell and Thomas Withington

The Guests


Monday, 20 September 2021

INAUGURAL GOLF TOURNAMENT BETWEEN THE UK ODs AND THE OLD BOYS OF MICHAELHOUSE AND HILTON

 

The ODs: Dermot Commins (G, 1980), Seb Franke-Matthecke (S, 2003), Dan Linegar (K, 2010), Stu Commins (F, 2006), Dave Riches (K, 1996), Nick Stirton (F, 2002), James Pickering (O, 1997), Doug Mallett (M, 2007) and Bruce Good (F, 1993).  Note the new OD golf shirts (white)

Building on the long and close relationships between our four schools and the recent launch of the LinkedIn career and mentoring group, it was inevitable that matters would come to a head in the world of sport. Golf, to be precise.

Thanks to the tireless efforts of Alex Price (M, 2008), nine ODs went up against the best of the Kwazulu-Natal midlands — and lost — just — to Michaelhouse. The uneven numbers meant resorting to a new handicapping and scoring system which makes the Duckworth-Lewis model look simple, but after much scrutiny and double-checking, all that separated us ODs from the winners was 0.4!

Many of the old boys from each of the schools know each other and so the day felt more like the renewing of old friendships than a cutthroat golf tournament.

Played on the Silvermere course in Cobham, Surrey in excellent conditions, a rematch next year and the every year onwards is a "must". With big thanks to Hilton and Michaelhouse for being a part of this.

The three teams
Stu, Seb and Nick

Dermot and an Old Hiltonian

Doug and Dermot

Doug - not his most attractive pose

Stu and Doug

Stu, Doug, Dave, Seb, Nick and James

Seb, Dave, James and Nick

Dave and Nick

Nick and Seb

Relaxation and rehydration at the end of the day


Tuesday, 14 September 2021

THE 2021 UK ODU ANNUAL DINNER


2021 is the 125th anniversary of the founding of the ODU.

It has been more than two years since the UK ODs sat down to break bread at their annual black-tie dinner. If I recall anything from my school physics, it is that energy is never destroyed ; it's just converted into another form. In this case, into a supremely enjoyable 2021 dinner where noise and camaraderie in equal parts testified to amount of pent-up energy just waiting to get out - and it did.

Back at our old stomping ground, the very grand Carlton Club in London, a full-capacity of 92 ODs and guests (with many on a standby list) looking very dapper, assembled on Friday 10th September, to remind ourselves what these dinners - when we could still hold them - were like. Covid in all sorts of ways is long!

The pre-Dinner reception was in The Morning Room and it was soon obvious that the evening would be special. ODs mingled across years and lockdown stories abounded, but now in the context of restored liberties (almost). Adrian Kritzinger (F, 2006) supplied the very wonderful sparkling wine which provided the grease that started the wheels turning. Not to be outdone, Anthony Record MBE (S, 1956) most generously donated the fabulous wines from his estate, Domaine Gayda and Michael Cockburn (F, 2006), James During (B, 2007) and Devan du Plooy (G, 2007) delivered their very refreshing Co.bru beer. To all of them our huge thanks.

The warm-up over, we marched off to The Churchill Room for the dinner.

Our OD speakers for the evening: Anthony Record, Choppy Bands, James Gardener, Calum Wehmeyer and Francois Louw

We stood as James Gardener (W, 1974) opened the formal part of the evening with an original grace he "curated" (as they say nowadays):

Benedictus benidice
Nikonwabele ukutya kwenu
Vir kos en klere, dank u Here
For food and friends, thank God. Amen

Then, standing in for our Patron, Raymond Ackerman (S, 1948), Anthony Record MBE welcomed a full house of 92 ODs and guests and read a message from Raymond. 

Although a small island, the UK is a beast when it comes to travel and Anthony singled out Calum Wehmeyer (B, 2017) who came from Edinburgh and who proposed the Toast to Bishops, having been drawn, as is tradition, from one of the youngest ODs present. From Bath trekked Francois Louw (W, 2003) and from Yorkshire, Richard (G, 1976) and Joy Montgomery. And from Cambridgeshire Nick Koster (F, 2007). Many other ODs had travelled into London from faroff places and for that we are very grateful.

From even further afield, he welcomed Dr Rudolf Beekman (O, 1962) and his wife Marjan who had come in from The Netherlands, as had Cormac Petit (O, 1973) and his wife Nahnya. 

Anthony and Carole Record had come France. 

And Choppy Bands (K, 1990) our brilliant MC for the evening, had flown in from Dublin. His relaxed but effective crowd control combined with his urbane charm and witty and eloquent delivery surely makes him indispensable for future dinners. 

We were delighted that Ashley Pople (St Cyp's), the first non-Bishops Bishops Rhodes Scholar, was also with us. She is about to receive her DPhil from Oxford and head off, next month, to New York where she will be taking up a position with The UN as a development economist.

After the Welcome, Calum proposed the Toast to Bishops and what a toast that was. It is difficult to say whether 92 Bishops Old Boys can be moved to tears of affection for their alma mater, but Calum got them very close. His Toast and congratulations to the ODU on its 125th anniversary is reproduced at the end of this blog.

Our guest speaker was Seema Jasmal who delivered an engaging and motivating talk on grabbing opportunities, using time wisely, pursuing one's passion and sharing our delight by reminding us - should that have even been necessary - of the recent Bishops v RBHS 1st XV rugby match which Bishops won 50-10. Seema, who is one of the UK's most accomplished and entertaining TV sports' presenters, was charming and artuclulate and added wonderfully to the atmoshpere of the evening.

Francois Louw was in charge of the reply and thanks and picked up on one of Seema's messages of "if you don't know your purpose, follow your passion; if you follow your passion, it will lead you to your purpose". That struck a chord. His thanks were pithy and on point.

After a delicious main course and dessert washed down with OD wine, sparkling wine and beer, we returned to The Morning Room for an ever-increasingly popular after party which extended until 12.30am when ODs dispersed into the night, who knows where, but eventually heading homewards (presumably) reflecting on a great evening and hoping that next year's will be uninterrupted by viruses of any sort.

Our thanks as always to The Carlton whose gracious staff never fail to go the extra mile to ensure a happy and successful evening.

Until next year, Floreat Bishops

The full guest list and Toast are given at the end of this post
Click on the photos to enlarge them

The Pre-Dinner Reception

Andrew Floyd, Michael Mills and James Gardener deciding who to be

David Jordan and Andrew Floyd

Mark Jones, Nick Smith and Stuart Crawford-Browne

Michael Cockburn and Kamal Sacranie

Wendy and Nick Heesom, Anthony and Carole Record

Lloyd Bowden, Calum Wehmeyer, Nick Cunningham and Jessica Williams

David Jordan, Andrew Floyd and Rudolf Beekman

Peter and Marie Syfret with Susie Nixon-Eckershall

Kosta Scholiadis and Stuart Crawford-Brown

Tom Horne and Rob Brink

Chris Leach, Nick Boswell and Mike Leach

Nick Koster and Charles McGregor

Keegan Sutherland, Tom Horne, Rob Brink and Max Alexander

Stuart Commins, Francois Louw and Pete Karstel

Richard and Joy Montgomery

Steve and Audrey Hofmeyr with Caelim Parkes, and in the background, Andrew Floyd, Rudolf Beekman and Neil Orpen


Ian Currie, Nick Boswell and Brendan Raubenheimer

Chris Leach and Rupert Tripp

Nicole Suckling, Joy Montgomery, Steve Suckling and Richard Montgomery

Greg Baldwin, Graham Thomas and Grant Challis

JJ van de Vyver and Ashley Pople

John Parker-Wood, Carol Lyon nad Mike Taylor


The Dinner

The seating plan - nemesis of any party planner

The lull before the storm

Darren Bosman, JJ van de Vyver and Paul Cohen

Menna McGregor and Audrey Hofmeyr

Tim Loughton, Nick Heesom, Anthony Record and Nicky Bicket

Richard Gabler and James Plimsoll

Paul Cohen and Andrew McAlpin

James Plimsoll, Tom Horne and Chris Leach

Jackie Wilgar and Andy Jackson

Choppy Bands and Anthony Record

Max Alexander, Rob Brink and Stuart Bristow

Rudolf Beekman

Choppy Bands, Anthony Record and James Gardener

James Gardener saying the Grace ...


... and standing for it


Anthony Record with the Welcome

Seema Jaswal (speaker) and Zandy Macdonald

Nick Heesom, Anthony Record and Nicky Bicket

Richard Gabler, James Plimsoll and Chris Leach

Calum Wehmeyr proposing the Toast (1)

Calum Wehmeyer proposing the Toast (2)

Calum Wehmeyer proposing the Toast (3)

Standing to propose the Toast (1)

Standing to propose the Toast (2)

Seema Jaswal on her way to give the main speech

Seema giving the main speech

Listening to the speech (1)

Niall Carroll, Choppy Bands, Graham Thomas and Grant Challis listening to Seema

Francois Louw replying to the speech and thanking Seema

... and handing her a gift from the ODU, triggering some hilarity from Choppy!

Bruce McGregor and David Jordan

Greg Chiappini

Francois Louw, Seema Jaswal, Zandy Macdonald and Richard Koster, with the Carlton staff gathering in the background to be thanked

Mark Jones, Justin Thorne and Darren Bosman

Dugald Macdonald, Francois Louw and Seema Jaswal



Richard Montgomery and Andy Jackson

Cormac Petit and Menna McGregor


Nick Smith, Mark Jones and Pete Karstel

Ashley Pople and Brett Ormrod

John Parker-Wood

Choppy Bands and Nick and Wendy Heesom

Rupert Tripp and Max Alexander

Rupert Tripp, Max Alexander, Nick Boswell and Rob Brink

Peter Syfret and John Parker-Wood

James Gardener and Steve Hofmeyr


Then to the After Party

Ian Currie, Dugald Macdonald and Brendan Raubenheimer



Gabriela Grodzki and Stuart Bristow




Choppy Bands and Steve and Nicole Suckling

Justin Thorne and Nick Koster

Chris Leach, ..., Doug Mallet, Mike Leach and James Plimsoll

Neil Orpen and Joy Montgomery


Keegan Sutherland and Daniel Russell


Sam Mitchell and Candice Grupping

Chris Leach, Nick Boswell, Mike Leach and Ian Currie

Stuart Commins, Adrian Kritzinger and Michael Cockburn

Stuart Crawford-Browne, Choppy Bands and Andy Jackson

The last moments of the after party for those who managed to go the distance


The Toast to Bishops
(click to enlarge)

The Guest List
(click to enlarge)