What’s Shakin’ On The Hill

News travels fast on Medium —Stories worthy of attention

David Acaster
4 min readDec 10, 2021
Image of farm trailer in foreground of photograph of Silbury Hill, Wiltshire 2400BC
Early morning photo by the author of Silbury Hill, Wiltshire, which is part of the complex of Neolithic monuments around Avebury, which includes the Avebury Ring and West Kennet Long Barrow, and was probably completed around 2400 BC.

I’m partly guilty in the demise of newspapers and magazines. Online reporting has done quite a bit of damage, too, with Instant News. At one time I took three national dailies, the music paper New Musical Express (NME) and two monthly Guitarist magazines.

Now all I get is one national paper at the weekend and it takes me all week to read it — doing the crosswords/puzzles — browsing through all the endless supplements.

When I was a kid growing up in the UK in the 1960s, news travelled around my village by bush telegraph. A story might take a week to make our local newspaper. A policeman in our village once told me that if I committed a misdemeanour on remote Flamborough Head (30 miles away) he’d hear about it. I think it was a warning not to get into mischief. There’d be no hiding place. He’d find out what’s shakin’ on the hill and be coming to see me.

Among the mountain of articles on Medium, there are a few that have caught my attention recently. They have intrigued…

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David Acaster
David Acaster

Written by David Acaster

British, retired, loves reptiles & amphibians, keen on history, steam locomotives, travel, real ale and still trying to master that Fender Stratocaster.

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