Having a rest on the way up Mount Etna, Europe's highest volcano, in May 2022.

Who am I?

After studying chemistry at the University of Strathclyde and then working in the Ministry of Defence in London followed by 7 years as a librarian in what was then the Polytechnic of Wales (now the University of South Wales) I moved to Devon where for many years I was the science and engineering librarian at the University of Exeter. From 2002 onwards I was in charge of the St Luke's campus library in Exeter and was also an honorary fellow of the Peninsula College of Medicine, a new medical school established as a joint venture between the universities of Exeter and Plymouth. (Later on Exeter's medical school became separate from Plymouth's).

Since retiring I have moved back to Wales, the Land of My Fathers, or Hen Wlad fy Nhadau in the words of the Welsh national anthem. As an adult I have learnt Welsh, which was my father's first language, and Danish which was my mother's native tongue and speak both reasonably well even though not as well as a native speaker. I enjoy studying family history, a never ending task, hill walking, and travelling.

The photo above is an indication of two of my interests; travelling and hillwalking. It hows me taking a rest on a hike up Mount Etna, Europe's highest volcano, in May 2022. As Etna was erupting intermittently I was not allowed to go all the way to the crater rim. My father did not have that problem in August 1943 when as a soldier in the British 8th Army he climbed to the top with a some of his friends when they had a few free days between the end of the fighting in Sicily and the invasion of the Italian mainland.

Before retiring I was quite active in writing articles, mainly about information retrieval. See my list of publications for details of that work.