An explanation of some of the May Day activities: At 6 am, the Magdalen College Choir sings from the top of Magdalen Tower. My sister, N, was visiting for a few days around May Day - we got up and headed down to Magdalen, but the police blocked the street off just before we got there (not sure why they did this). We could see the top of the tower, though, and the speakers the college had set up meant we could hear, too, when the crowd wasn't too loud. We also saw a streaker (well, he kept his boxers on), who jumped the barrier and tried to get closer to the tower, only to get tackled on the tarmac by half a dozen police officers. He was grazed but grinning as they put him in the police van. Unfortunately, I didn't take my camera, so I have no photos for you.
The beating of the parish bounds and the coin toss are actually part of Ascension Day, which happened to fall on May Day this year (40 days after Easter). I just watched the end of the beating of the bounds, when they arrived back at the college. The whole thing takes three hours: first, a service at one of the churches in the parish (our college chapel is the other), then each member of the congregation takes a willow wand, various members of the clergy take religious icons (such as the cross you can see in one of the photos), and the whole group walks to specified points, beating the willow wands on the ground, marking the walls with chalk, and saying prayers. They finish up at Lincoln College, where they are served with lunch and ivy beer. Students from Brasenose College - which is also located in the parish - are allowed to come through the door between the colleges (usually kept locked) and drink ivy beer. This is in recompense for when, several hundred years ago, we let one of their students get killed by townies after curfew. Yes, we have long memories here - what did you expect?
After lunch, some of the college students throw hot coins from the tower on Front Quad to school kids waiting on the grass below. Why hot coins? Well, apparently Lincoln students were not always the nicest of people (in case you hadn't worked that one out already), and used to toss hot coins to beggars in order to be mean. (Some people say it's to teach the kids a lesson about greed, but I don't think the coins are so hot these days!)
In the evening, the Lincoln Choir sings from the top of our tower - this is a fairly recently instituted tradition.
The other photos are from several walks over the last couple of weeks.
(aka what happens when you mess around in boats...)
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