Stuff: Top Ten Blog Posts 2024

Having posted that I was unable to post a top ten from 2024 looking at the dashboard I realised I could see the stats for the blog posts from 2024.

In 2024 I published 410 posts, though 366 of those were for the photo of the day. So that meant 40 real posts. In 2023 I published 99 posts. Now in 2022 I published 429 posts on the blog, though I really only published 40 “original posts” then, with 365 photo a day posts and 24 advent posts. In 2021 I published just 46 posts to the blog. I did 423 posts in 2020, in 2019 it was 68, in 2018 I did 89 posts.

The tenth most popular post was Bristol Harbourside in the 1990s Part Two.

The post at number nine was Bristol Harbourside in the 1990s Part One.

The eighth  popular blog post, was a nostalgic post about Remembering the Bristol Temple Way Flyover.

Seventh post was a post reminiscing about The Longleat Miniature Railway.

The Longleat Miniature Railway

Sixth most popular post about Changes at the railway station in Weston-super-Mare.

The fifth most popular blog post asked the question “the cafe on tv at weston super mare is it real” which was a post about people Google searching that phrase and ending up on my blog. Now those same Google searches send people to this page rather than the original post on Cyril’s Cafe.

The post at four was Remembering The Eagle has Landed which was a post reminiscing about the film from the 1970s starring Michael Caine.

The post at three was from January 2024 and was from my series of Then and Now post, Then and Now – Cheddar Yeo Sword.

The second most popular post on the blog was a reflection on Young Sheldon about The significance of the cow…

The top post for 2024 was the same as the top post for 2023, it  was “I guess you guys aren’t ready for that yet. But your kids are gonna love it.” Which was Michael J Fox joining Coldplay on stage in New Jersey in 2016, playing Johnny B Goode from Back to the Future.

Ashton Gate #50places2025

Went to Ashton Gate and watched Bristol City lose 1-2 to Wolverhampton Wanderers in the FA Cup third round.

It was a good match and I enjoyed watching it, despite Bristol losing.

Glastonbury Tor #50places2025

For Christmas 2022 I got a National Trust membership. It had been a few years since I was last a member, went to quite a few new places and returning  to places I had been to before.

I have been thinking about joining again for 2025. However, there are quite a few National Trust places you can visit, which don’t need membership, such as Glastonbury Tor.

Though I have visited Glastonbury quite a few times over the years I have been living down in Somerset, I had never climbed the Tor until October 2017.  With some lovely sunny weather, and some frost, I decided I would head off to climb the Tor again.

Glastonbury Tor is a distinct prominent hill amongst the Somerset Levels and can be seen from a quite a distance.

It is topped by the roofless St Michael’s Tower. There was originally a  wooden church, however that was destroyed by an earthquake in 1275. A stone replacement, the Church of St Michael built on the site in the 14th century and over the centuries has been restored and partially rebuilt several times. Now just the roofless tower remains

The hill and the tower are now managed by the National Trust. Mythically the Tor was thought to be the Isle of Avalon, a legendary island featured in the Arthurian legend. When the surrounding land was swamp, the Tor was essentially an island.

It was back in 1190, that Avalon became associated with Glastonbury, when monks at Glastonbury Abbey claimed to have discovered the bones of Arthur and Guinevere.

There is plenty of cheap parking in the town itself and there are a range of esoteric shops that also deserve exploring (after you have climbed the Tor). As you might expect there are a fair number of teashops too.

This year I have planned to visit fifty places. Glastonbury Tor is the first of that fifty.

No top ten for 2024

Fishing boat on a shingle beach

Usually at this time I would publish a blog post of the top ten posts of the previous twelve months. However WordPress have stopped doing free stats for blogs that show adverts. So I don’t have detailed stats about the top posts.

In 2024 I published 410 posts, though 366 of those were for the photo of the day. So that meant 40 real posts. In 2023 I published 99 posts. Now in 2022 I published 429 posts on the blog, though I really only published 40 “original posts” then, with 365 photo a day posts and 24 advent posts. In 2021 I published just 46 posts to the blog. I did 423 posts in 2020, in 2019 it was 68, in 2018 I did 89 posts.