Thread: Perfidious Albion Board: Oblivion / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Greetings to all the folks from Greater Britain and Hibernia - I am not staying up until 05.30 tomorrow morning to start your new thread as you pass into the New Year so here it is rather more than 12 hours early.

Enjoy.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
One of my Dad's favourite sayings! (Background story for another day and probably Another Place.)

Thank you, Wodders. And a Happy New Year to one and all - as midnight winds its way around the globe, let's hope for a merciful dawn.
 
Posted by birdsoftheair (# 15219) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
One of my Dad's favourite sayings! (Background story for another day and probably Another Place.)

Thank you, Wodders. And a Happy New Year to one and all - as midnight winds its way around the globe, let's hope for a merciful dawn.

Amen to that!
adding my wishes for a more hopeful new year for all.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
And a bloomin' happy New Year to all of you from me too.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Didn't recognise you at first with the new avatar, Amber.

Happy New Year to all the denizens of this thread, those who live here and all the expats.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
Blwyddyn newydd dda, i chi i gyd, as we say around here

[ 31. December 2011, 19:31: Message edited by: Trisagion ]
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Please translate the Welsh, Trisagion.

Thanks,
Gwai
All Saints Host
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
Whoops. First hastily bollocking of 2012 - or, more accurately, the last of 2011.


Happy New Year to all.
 
Posted by Lucia (# 15201) on :
 
Happy New Year fellow Brits! Race you to 2012, at least I'll get there an hour before those of you back in Blighty. (OK I know some of you are already in the new year, yes I'm looking at you WW!)

[ 31. December 2011, 21:42: Message edited by: Lucia ]
 
Posted by blackbeard (# 10848) on :
 
And my best wishes for 2012 from the most perfidious (south) part of Albion.
And be it known that in Greenwich we have the One True Time. Just over one hour of 2011 left.
Surely nothing more can go wrong in just one hour?
May 2012 be a blessing to you.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Blimey, Wodders, that was quick ... [Big Grin]

We're not quite there yet although a few premature fireworks have been set off (it's about quarter to nine here), but as we're going out with friends to take in the New Year I'll pass round my virtual bottle of Famous Grouse* now and wish everyone back home all the best.

[Smile]

* or other beverages of choice, obviously
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Happy New Year and may God bless all who sail in her!

Only one mile from Greenwich here but spent most of the last X hours in the pub having desperate fun with the diverse local community.

My liver wants the party to end, my backbrain demands another pint, and the sensible bit of my head wibbles.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It rained all day yesterday - it was overcast during the morning walk and spitting a little then when we got home it got serious and rained non-stop until dusk - further south in the state there were floods. Today not a cloud in the sky, bright sunshine, glorious day. Being tropical and coastal such changes are always possible.

We were visited by a party of kids last night all dancing and singing and wishing us a happy new year - two fifteen year olds shepherding a younger gang around, going down to about aged 9 years. All boys, of course, as here girls aren't allowed out in the evening, and certainly not in the company of boys!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Quiet and peaceful New Year's Eve. Church bells started ringing changes at around half eleven then the fireworks broke out at midnight. The rowdy night I thought one of my neighbours was going to have took place elsewhere, the neighbour is moving out soon, and the new series of Sherlock is on tonight. [Yipee]

Heavy rain is forecast for today, but plenty of good things indoors to do instead, and the first is going to be potato cakes for breakfast. So a great start to the New Year so far, hope yours is good too!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
The New Year managed to come without me waiting up for it. When I woke up at 6.30 am, it was here! [Biased]

(But other people's lovely fireworks woke me on the dot of midnight, but not sure if that counts!

But happy New Year to all on this thread, and I too missed you Amber, as you've changed your avatar!! But delighted to see you, whatever you look like!
 
Posted by Jabber (# 9668) on :
 
We had a good evening out at a friends house, but were home by 11pm as the small one wasn't overly settled in an odd bedroom. I was all tucked up before midnight (as was the small one) but woken by fireworks too.

We are now just off for a (hopefully) refreshing walk.
 
Posted by Gussie (# 12271) on :
 
Just enjoying things getting back to 'normal' after a fortnight of over-indulgence. I've just put the washing on and done the ironing and am thinking of settling down either with a good book or some knitting. A nice cosy start to the New Year.

Hope everyone else's New Year's are off to a good start.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Some rather good fireworks on the other side of the valley at midnight, otherwise pretty quiet. Small numbers in churh this morning though.

I'v got a couple of booklets of Cornish phrases, so apologies to Morlader if it's wrong - Bledhen Nowyth Da - Happy New Year, as we've already had it in Welsh!
 
Posted by birdsoftheair (# 15219) on :
 
No fireworks here and a quiet night all round. When we lived in Stromness (look here if interested) we were awoken by the Hamnavoe ferry sounding its very loud horn repeatedly at midnight [Eek!]

Today, I actually tried to go to kirk but it was closed due to lack of interest. [Disappointed]

Right now I'm feeling very decadent as I'm eating Orkney icecream with Balileys! Ask nicely and I might find some to share.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Serves you right for living in Stromness, doesn't it? [Devil]

Yes please to Orkney ice-cream and Bailey's ... nom nom nom.

Enjoyable dinner last night with friends (although as the restaurant was very busy, we had a long wait for our food, but it was worth it).

I'm off to have a Sunday afternoon kip now before the carol service this evening.

sleepy piglet [Snore]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Afternoon kip?

But you are but a young whippersnapper, you shouldn't be thinking about afternoon naps until you are at least, erm, 60!

Pete and I were wondering yesterday how we managed all those years of not having daytime naps 5 days a week as we were working. Mind you one of my colleagues papered over the glass panels in his office door and we swear he napped every afternoon, after lunch.

But as I was but 48 when I retired I suppose I really shouldn't say too much.

- - - -

Pete was nearly mowed down by a couple of Muslim girls on bikes this morning - they came round a downhill bend and there he was in the middle of the road and they were going too fast to go round him on the official side so had to pass by on the other side, shouting "Hi, uncle" as they went.

Early morning Qur'an class restarted this morning, as did most of the local schools so even the paper boys were around a bit earlier - and the 10th Standard kids only have two months left before the big exams!
 
Posted by Jabber (# 9668) on :
 
I would heartily recommend afternoon kips if possible, but that might have something to do with being pregnant and running round after a toddler...

It's a lovely day here, so I think we might have to take a trip out to the park, but I'll just have another cup of tea first.

Who else needs a cuppa?
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I'll join you in a cuppa!

Lovely day here too, but I don't think I am that far from you. Lousy day yesterday - only people I saw were similarly dripping wet dog walkers! [Frown]

Lots of people out today, feeding the already overfed ducks and gulls. Seems the sun is noticeably stronger now.

Or am I just an optimist? [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Lovely sunny day here too, but probably best not to do too much, as I go back to work tomorrow, which means getting up before dawn and travelling home in the dark for the next few days, with daylight really only at lunchtime. This break has been good: I didn't expect it to be as enjoyable as it was.

It really feels as if spring is on its way today - glorious sunshine and you almost expect to see flowers. I'm so grateful that this time, we haven't had a winter like the past two. I like winter but not when it comes to pavements covered with compacted ice, and a five-minute walk turns into a twenty-minute struggle to keep upright and not slip.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I hope we don't get snow and ice like the last two years! My new job is at an office which is approached down a very steep hill!

We were woken very early this morning by some odd noises - looked out of our window to see that a local pub at the bottom of the valley was going up in flames. Thankfully, no-one was living in it, buut the remains werer still steaming several hours later.
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
?..
I'v got a couple of booklets of Cornish phrases, so apologies to Morlader if it's wrong - Bledhen Nowyth Da - Happy New Year, as we've already had it in Welsh!

Well ! Good on you for trying. Writing Cornish raises hackles everywhere and I have to say you seem to have one of the more contentious spellings in your book. Have a look and see who the authors are.

In anycase, you have wished "Year New Good" in, I think, "Modern Cornish". "Lowen" is Happy ;-)
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Yes please Jabber - ginger and lemon tea would go down very well.

We got home from Heidelberg at lunchtime after an excellent overnight crossing and set to taking Christmas down - all is clear now.

Work tomorrow - first in my new job - eek!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I'm here because I am procrastinating.

Yesterday I removes the strings from 3 guitars and a mandolin and has spent time polishing the frets and oiling the fretboards. The other 3 guitars and the banjo will have to wait. What I need is a guitar roadie to do the boring stuff like instrument maintenance so that I can do the enjoyable stuff like playing.

All I need to do now is remove excess oil before restringing and retuning the instruments. So that's the afternoon, and some of the evening sorted.
 
Posted by Ethne Alba (# 5804) on :
 
Over 60?....no
Pregnant?....absolutely not
Chasing after a toddler?.....sadly not at the moment

Having an afternoon nap?
YES!

Now, would anyone like a chocolate, there are...oh...four left?


( crumbs the box was massive, where've they all gone!)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No chocolate for me, thanks - I've just had a small bar of chikki, the local version of peanut brittle but generally a bit chewier.

Kids back at school today [as mentioned above] so some long faces today as their exam results start trickling in - poor lambs. At least they were only school exams preparing for the big ones in March.

Our 25 year old neighbour boy's leave is up and he is off back to Dubai and work in the morning - it has been great having him around for a few weeks and we will miss him when he has gone but at least with the internet and SMSing he will never be far away.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
I'm here because I am procrastinating.

Me too. Though mine's a neuroscience assignment, which, from here, looks like a lot less fun than the work you're avoiding.

Anyone want a piece of my Wispa Gold? Quick, before I ....

Whoops,too late. [Disappointed] I am such a disappointment to myself.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
And a Happy NewYear from Bethnei, too!

We actually saw in 2012 In northern Spain, twice....we were on a ship keeping English time, tied up to a Spanish dockside, so we had 2 New Years. Spanish fireworks followed by French champagne and English New Year. Was good!

New Year's Day was passed on the Bay of Biscay, where I'm sure that one or two people blamed Not Feeling Too Well on the bumpiness of the ocean (which it was, very!). I like a stormy sea, me!
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Well there was I thinking the excesses were over - and I arrived to the office this morning to find a box of (very classy and rather expensive) chocolates on my desk from one of my bosses.

Who wants to help me share the box?
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Happy new year folks! We are still in Englandshire, but will return north tomorrow (along with the gale force winds, hooray). Today I have discovered that nowhere in the bit of rural-ish Herefordshire that we are currently in sells pants, although of the few shops that were open several sell socks and tights which is no good, don't they realise people are overrun with socks this time of year but Santa isn't so good in the pants department? Have had to resort to the outlaws' washing machine (it's a bit cold to go commando).
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
Yesterday I removes the strings from 3 guitars and a mandolin and has spent time polishing the frets and oiling the fretboards. The other 3 guitars and the banjo will have to wait.

And I though we were overun with musical instruments! Though we'e actually passed the harp (3 octave) to a young friend who's learning, and Darllenwr's passsed two guitars to another friend as he had a new 6 string last year, and is currently awaiting a new 12 string. Oh, and I sold the mandolin (just a cheap one) as neither of us was using it.
 
Posted by angelica37 (# 8478) on :
 
Happy New Year to everyone, and it's back to reality tomorrow as I'm working and 3 out of the 4 schoolage offspring are going back. Still there are a few Christmas goodies left to eat and drink including two bottles of wine and a lot of cookies
 
Posted by cheesymarzipan (# 9442) on :
 
Was expecting a quiet day today, then a phone call from my friend to say 'will you come to Shopping Centre on the bus with me to pick up a buggy?' led to a fairly enjoyable day shopping with her (and small person) instead of lounging around at home. I forgot to go food shopping, which will annoy me tomorrow, but I did manage to get some new boots in the sale which I can wear to work and keep my feet warmer than shoes...
edit: how do you have cookies left? we made gingerbread ones, and they lasted less than 24 hours! Still got some christmas cake though. omnomnom.

[ 02. January 2012, 20:26: Message edited by: cheesymarzipan ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
For reasons I can't explain I don't have to go back to work until Wednesday; I haven't had two statutory holidays at New Year since I left Scotland.

Consequently, I've been a complete couch-piglet today and spent the whole day curled up in front of the Top Gear marathon on BBC Canada ... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Somehow I got my left toe caught in my right trouser leg and tripped on the stairs yesterday, breaking my fall with my bad arm - it was a bit sore! It still is a bit sore so off to physio this afternoon but to the city this morning in search of little bits of not-that-complicated cable not available here.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Poor you, Wodders - if I didn't know you were TT I'd have said put more tonic in it ... [Big Grin]

Hope you haven't done any major damage.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:


Consequently, I've been a complete couch-piglet today and spent the whole day curled up in front of the Top Gear marathon on BBC Canada ... [Hot and Hormonal]

No need to blush about being a couch piglet - you deserve it. But Top Gear? Blush away!!

I am up earlier than expected - I set my alarm to continental time and forgot to re-adjust! Never mind, nice to have plenty of time for breakfast.

[Smile]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Wodders!
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
Dear Lord, Wod!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I was just thinking about Smudgie.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
Are we not having a Scots' one, like we usually have had? It's better as it doesn't get so big and it's easier to get about it's different area. Please give us one.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Oh Wodders, silly sausage, get well soon. This penchant for comedy falls is most unbecoming (seriously though, hope it is fixed soon).
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Bonne Année, tout le monde! (TR: Good Year Everybody)
Our visitors (with a very cat allergic but cat loving daughter) have just left. Lovely to see them - but lovely to be alone again. Said daughter decided to go down with a chest infection so was hacking and wheezing away all morning, inbetween cuddling cats. Yes, I know...but at 11 she's old enough to make her own decisions! (Somebody tell her parents, please...She is an over indulged only child.)
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
A wheezy and snotty happy new year from darkest Surrey, where I'm meant to be back at work but in fact am sitting at home wrapped in comfy cardies and drinking lemsips. Sadly, both Macarius and I have been ill the whole holiday - I think it's about 20 years since I've been so ill for so long. Macarius looked at me a little while ago and said, 'You look awful'. Thanks, I love you too.

Aaaargh! I couldn't even ring the old year out/new year in and missed it terribly.

It's been a complete washout and now it's January.

M.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm sorry you feel so awful, M. - I hope you feel better soon.

I dashed to the city, got exactly what I wanted remarkably quickly and dashed back again - I was home by 1 p.m.! Very successful little trip. We went out into town this afternoon which means I have had almost no nap time today so I think an early night is indicated.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Now I'm going to have an early night but I've just watched 2 Wallace & Gromit stories, including the one with the villainous penguin - well, we all know about them on the Ship, don't we?

Goodnight.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Thanks for the kind wishes, WW. I know it's Only A Cold and that I'm Not Really Ill but I am still feeling pissed off and sorry for myself.

Have a nice early night; Wallace and Gromit are good!

M.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Wallace and Gromit are always good - get well soon!

First day back at work. I arrived without problems, then the weather turned up. Rain smashed against the windows, wind moaned through two sets of doors, puddles rushed across the car park, trees danced crazily. A colleague's partner phoned to say a tree had fallen blocking their road, another's phoned to say their gazebo was now a mangled heap of metal at the end of the garden. Needless to say public transport was seriously upset.

It seemed calmer at lunchtime so I went for a short walk, giving up on the umbrella after it had blown inside out twice in first few minutes. Amazingly, the sun came out. The place looked wonderful: sunlight on the wet road made it blaze with gold, leaves dripped with silver, the flooded lane had some beautiful reflections from the houses.

All in all, an interesting start to the new year... how was it for you? We have more of this to come, apparently.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
More roads turning into rivers, horizontal rain - oh, I hope not.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I'm hobbling in to grumble...

OK, so I know it's been a bad day on the trains, fare increases (mine is 6.2%, on a monthly ticket, 5.9% on a weekly ticket, and 5.75% on a day ticket. All worked out courtesy of my maths students today... their idea, who was I to stop them doing something so useful with a lesson on percentages!) bad weather affecting trains. It's back to work day for loads of us, and also it seemed on my line, loads of people who'd been away for Christmas/New Year returning home, who are, shall we say, less accustomed to travelling on trains.

So, pretty full train, and all spare seats full of luggage/coats/newspapers. And, us regulars taking no notice, but politely standing our ground, or rather insisting on a seat. Yes, I do want to sit down, I'm sorry it means you've either got to get up and let me sit by the window, and put your coat somewhere else, or you've got to move to the window seat so I can have the aisle seat, but tough. I didn't quite get to "Look, I work with teenagers with interesting behaviour issues, and they end up doing as they're asked... you don't stand a chance." but I was on the verge of it!

Then, ten minutes or so late, we reach our destination. To find a seriously overcrowded platform, (previous train out had been cancelled, and we were only two carriages instead of the usual three) and one couple utterly hellbent on getting on the train before anyone could get off. With three large suitcases... my shins bear the bruises, and my ears are ringing with all the names I got called for suggesting they needed to let us off the train first. Fortunately, a member of staff was nearby and dealt with them, but still....

Ouch. [Waterworks]

I was going to do things of a useful nature when I got home, but decided on a late afternoon/early evening nap instead.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisymay:
Are we not having a Scots' one, like we usually have had?

Here it is. [Smile]

I'm sorry to hear about all your gale-force fog and horizontal rain; if it's any comfort we're supposed to get about an inch and a half of rain tomorrow, when I'm going back to w*rk, so you have a fellow-sufferer.

M - I hope you feel better soon. If you want that lem-sip to not taste horrid, add extra lemon juice and Manuka honey (which is supposed to be more helpful than taking anti-biotics) and a smidgin of whisky.

I'm still getting through some foodie Christmas pressies - we were given a huge jar of home-made antipasto, which from what its creator said is made almost entirely from Things We Don't Like* but, inexplicably, tastes rather good spread on crackers. I also have some Cumberland rum butter, which is magic spread on toast - do help yourselves.

* like tuna-fish, anchovies ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I didn't know they made rum in Cumberland [Biased]

Off to the Dr today - blood will be drawn this morning then back for results this afternoon. Pete can't get his head around this get your results the same day idea but here it is just how things are done. The results also belong to the patient and not to the Dr, which seems a novel idea to me but everyone here expects it.

They are right, too.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
WW, it seems amazing to me as well to get your blood test results the same day! Hope they were OK.

I went back to work this morning and when a colleague wandered into my room and said 'What are you doing here?' (it was meant in a kindly way), I disgraced myself by bursting into tears. Tried to make it into a joke but not very well. Oh well.

I apologised to him and we had an interesting discussion about how the English always apologise for everything (he's Irish). I know that my default option is to apologise, whatever the situation. When I was a teenager and my father was teaching me to drive, it used to drive him barmy that I said 'sorry' all the time - in the end, I was saying, 'I'm sorry for saying sorry...'

Is it just me?

M.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My default is apology as well although I'm better since I did the assertiveness bit - well, a little bit better.

Blood tests were okay and we'll check again in 3 months but Dr concerned about my high pulse rate, something I have had since birth. He insists I carry on with a Beta Blocker, although he has changed the drug but never suggested exercise which is the only thing that has ever worked for me in the past - but then he is a smoker and possibly just a tad[!] overweight so...

Must get back on bicycle and get more exercise, even if it hasn't been recommended medically.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... The results also belong to the patient ...

Well, it's your blood ...

You must have the last surviving Smoking Doctor™ - he's such a rare breed you probably ought to preserve him in formaldehyde and put him in a museum. [Big Grin]

As my dad used to say, back to old clothes and porridge* for me today too, but as I only work 2½ hours on a Wednesday it was a nice, gentle transition from being off over Christmas and New Year.
* Not actual porridge you understand ... [Projectile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We like porage, we do - after Mrs E's operation in November 2010 I often made her porage for brekkie and she was a real fan.

There is a man perched most of the way up a palm on the other side of the field chopping bits off it - HWMBO and I both reckon he is welcome, it's not a job we'd do for a big clock - it looks VERY precarious.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Ooh, porage with banana for breakfast is the highlight of my day at work.

M.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Enough talk of porage please. My dog has been very ill..........

(and he cost me £50 at the Vet just now)

Another wet and windy day. Though funnily enough a windy day cheers me up even if it is wet. Its wet. gloomy and grey still days that get me down.

Coffee anyone? Hobnob biscuits, plus milk choc digestives (we don't like milk ones)
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Oh Nicodemia - I'm sorry about your poor pooch,hope he gets well soon, for his sake and that of your pocket!

Yes please coffee and many virtual biscuits please (the kind with no calories)

[Big Grin]

I have just had two interesting days in my new job - back to studying now - eek!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Hobnobs for me, please - I have the drink ready here beside me.

The palm over the way is down now, it looks like they are clearing the land ready for more building - hardly surprising as it was sold as building land. We'll still be sad as it was nice whilst our solitude lasted.

Pete a bit under the weather this morning so not sure if he will be up for a walk later.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Wet and windy day? Some very active gales last night having some fun banging the lids of wheelie bins up and down. Five trees blocking various roads round here and a few more on railway lines so going home will be an adventure again.

And speaking of fallen trees, tomorrow will be the last day of my Christmas tree. I shall miss it – I do like the sparkle of the decorations and the glow of the lights in amongst the dark green. Has everyone else taken their decorations down?
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Tomorrow is the day for us to take our decorations down...most of our neighbours have already done so. We still have a wreath on the front door...

Windy and feels very chilly here. The wind is in the wrong direction, so that rain is being driven into the church under the roof tiles.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
I'll be taking them down on Saturday. I have a garland wrapped around the curtain pole that I'd like to keep, but Mr D says it's too Christmassy. Shame! (There are no curtains on the curtain pole though...)
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:


The palm over the way is down now, it looks like they are clearing the land ready for more building - hardly surprising as it was sold as building land. We'll still be sad as it was nice whilst our solitude lasted.

Awww - I'm sorry. That happened to us a few years ago, instead of fields we now face a housing estate. Ho hum, pig's bum.

Ariel - our decorations always come down before we go back to work, I can't face the job afterwards.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Anyone for tea? Kettle's on. And a whole tin of Sainsbury's family assortment biscuit type efforts. I bought them 'cos the tin looked like a radio. Yes I'm sad...Get in there quick before I eat all the jammy dodgers!

Happy new year to everyone here. I hope the poorly arm wasn't too badly damaged in the fall, WW.

Our decorations will probably be coming down on Saturday - I know it should be tomorrow, but I'm going to work, and tired, and I can't be bothered. I'm such a slattern.

It's so windy here still. The recycling people ought to be coming today and people's bags of plastics and papers are blowing all over the place. Luckily people have been trying to weight them down, and rescuing wayward ones, with the result that I don't think anyone has their own recycling outside their house. Oh well, I don't suppose it matters.

This morning Child A opened the door to my sister & kids just as a huge gust of wind blew through the house - large enough to lift the loft hatch which then swung open, hitting Mr Jt9 very hard on the head. I was rather worried (it was a big bang) but he assures me he's ok. It didn't knock him out, and the resulting language demonstrated he still had the power of speech... [Biased]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Pete felt well enough and we did walk - I spent much of it peeling a stick to make a switch but why is it that when I threaten little kids with a switch all they do is laugh?

The good news when we got back is that I tried my right hand on the brake lever of my bike and I can manage to pull it okay - tomorrow I may actually get to ride for the first time since the beginning of last August! I may try a little ride around the block between the morning walk and breakfast.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The wind is, at last, easing a bit, though a coworker's car was hit by debris on the motorway this morning and he needs a new windscreen. [Frown] It's not a good time for cars: friends had theirs written off just before Xmas, daughter's is having its CD player replaced (under warranty, I should hope), my team leader's car is just plain sick while ours wheezes and creaks as usual.

If we leave the window open for ten minutes the weather might still blow the Xmas decoraations down.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Our bedroom window is usually ajar, and I got home today to find it had blown fully open and the net curtain had blown outside the window. Thankfully, it hadn't been raining - or if it had, the wind had dried the curtain.

We'll be taking our Christmas tree down this evening. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Tubifex Maximus (# 4874) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Our bedroom window is usually ajar, and I got home today to find it had blown fully open and the net curtain had blown outside the window. Thankfully, it hadn't been raining - or if it had, the wind had dried the curtain.

We'll be taking our Christmas tree down this evening. [Waterworks]

I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...I will admit the road was decorated with bins when I went to do my run this morning and my walk to the train was a lot slower than normal.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... after Mrs E's operation ...

Remind me never to come to you for post-operative care ... [Eek!]

Nicodemia - Poor wee dog. [Frown] Hope he feels better now.

I'm having an Age Crisis™ - as if the prospect of turning 50 next month wasn't bad enough, I had an e-mail from my nephew last night to say that he and his wife are expecting a baby in July, so I'm going to be Great-Auntie Piglet.

Haven't yet plucked up the courage to broach the subject of her forthcoming grannyhood with my big sister though ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A friend in UK had a SAGA brochure actually ON his 50th birthday!! He was NOT amused!

In March I'll be 63 - does that qualify as mid-60s?
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A friend in UK had a SAGA brochure actually ON his 50th birthday!! He was NOT amused!

In March I'll be 63 - does that qualify as mid-60s?

Not even close, Wodders. I'll let you know when, OK?

SAGA?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Can you remember that far back?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...

Me too!

I am VERY thankful that our North Sea crossing was Sunday night, not any other night this week! (Visiting son in Heidelberg for New Year) It was choppy - but 'rock you to sleep' choppy - not 'shake you out of bed' choppy. We always have a window cabin so that I can check the sea.

[Smile]

Morning all, I have plenty of hot beverages and warm croissants.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sod what any ****** doctor might say - I'd love a warm croissant - or several!

I am terrible as I like to put even more butter on them and then some really sharp marmalade.

Gosh, I love food!

- - - -

I didn't cycle before breakfast but I did do a circuit of the local block afterwards, only about 1.5 km but I managed it and showed to myself that I can brake ok although the wrist position isn't yet comfortable - if I cycle more it should be good physio for the wrist. I'll book the geared bike in for a full service and use the single speed for the time being.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Tubifex Maximus:
I slept all the way through the gale last night. When I got to school everyone was saying "Wasn't the wind terrible" and I said, "Nope, slept through it...

Me too!
Me three!

What revoltingly clear consciences we must all have. Or we're going deaf. Or it's the drugs. [Biased]
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I think it all depends how tired you are. One morning this year at Taizé (camping) I got up and everyone was talking about the thunderstorm overnight.

rouge: Was there a thunderstorm then?

(I think it was also quite a small thunderstorm compared to the one I had camped in a couple of years previously which literally went for about 8 hours and where the lightening was so bright it was like broad daylight inside the tent)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
MoT and service today. Got away with the minimum charges and nothing needing to be done - huge relief. Now I can start to plan for a holiday [Smile]

Decorations still up. I'll be packing them away tomorrow morning, but I'm keeping them up for Old Christmas Day. It's been a beautiful day - went for a walk today and it felt like spring with a deep blue sky, strong sunlight, clouds scudding across the sky and birds darting here and there. Really pretty.
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
I slept through the Great Hurricane of 1987 - even though a tree fell across the road two doors down!
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Ooh, yes, Macarius and I slept through the Great Hurricane* too. I vaguely remember half waking and saying something like 'Bit windy tonight'. I wish I slept that well these days!

We had no electricity and had to sit in the car the next morning to put the radio on to find out what had happened.

*I imagine many countries would laugh at us calling it that

M.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
We slept through it all in 1987 too. I remember idly thinking that there was quite a bit of debris on the road on my way to work the next morning, but hadn't a clue what people were talking about when I got there.

Same this time, too. I'm not really sure how bad it was here, but we did lose two branches - one quite large - from one of the trees in our garden, so I guess it must have been quite bad overnight.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Wandering in shivering to blag a cuppa and some biccies. I had my first day off since December 23 yesterday (OK, I got all 3 English Bank Holidays as leave too), so, of course, I had to fix a puncture, our boiler was misbehaving again, so the plumber was in for a fair chunk of the day, then he had to confer with the landlord, then he rang to apologise that the replacement boiler won't be able to be fitted till Tuesday...

So of course last night the old boiler died and we had no heating bar my little space heater. Have now borrowed another one from a friend, so 2 rooms vaguely warm. Current temperature in the bathroom is about 12°C. [Eek!] Where's the shivering smilie when you need it?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... SAGA?

Saga is a travel company catering for over-50s. They used to use the hall of residence where I lived in Aberdeen during the long summer holiday, and some of my friends worked there as domestic staff. They referred to it as "Sex And Games for the Aged" ... [Snigger]

Talking of sleeping through silly weather, I was in Italy on a school trip in 1978 - in fact when the Pope died in 1978 - and I apparently slept through a terrific thunderstorm in Rome. I was quite annoyed to have missed it.

I spent this evening listening to two sorts of music I'd never normally choose to listen to - blue-grass and bagpipes. The local Presbyterian church was having a fund-raising concert and D. was asked to play, and the other acts were a local blue-grass band and the St. John's City Pipe Band. Much as I dislike bagpipes (especially indoors [Eek!] ) I got quite misty-eyed when they marched in playing Scotland the Brave, and even more so when they played Highland Cathedral, as the cathedral in question is St. Magnus.

almost homesick piglet [Tear]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Piglet travels down memory lane:
quote:
in fact when the Pope died in 1978
Which pope was that?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Piglet travels down memory lane:
quote:
in fact when the Pope died in 1978
Which pope was that?
Probably the Roman one, I don't think the one from Antioch died that year - neither did that nice Canadian Pope, whose name I forget.
 
Posted by Yam-uk (# 12791) on :
 
John Paul I ??
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
2 popes actually died in 1978. One was Paul the somethingth, and the other was John-Paul 1. JP1 died at the end of September, and I can be that specific because I heard the new on my radio while I was on my honeymoon!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I was on holiday in York with my parents and wondered why the flags on the convent were at half mast.

If anyone lives near Monmouth, or is going to be near on holiday, the Shire Hall is worth a visit. The courtroom is open, and you can do a sort of video tour of the trial of John Frosr, one of the Chartists involved in the Newport Rising. Very interesting, and extremely good value for the princely sum of £2.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It was John Paul I - he'd only been Pope for a few months. Was he the one Dan Brown bumped off in Angels and Demons (sort of)?

It was a very peculiar feeling being in Italy at that time - the whole country seemed to close, even the weather broke (we'd had a week of glorious weather before the thunderstorm). We were travelling round doing an opera that had been written for the school by Peter Maxwell Davies; the day the Pope died we were supposed to be on in Milan, but that show was cancelled. We did our last performance in Rome the night after the thunderstorm, but to a half-empty theatre and in a somewhat subdued mood. There was one member of our party who was a Roman Catholic (they're quite a rarity in Orkney) and he was allowed to go and file past the catafalque to pay his respects.
 
Posted by birdsoftheair (# 15219) on :
 
Gosh piglet, that experience is one to remember!
Nothing much to report at Birdsnest recently except for seemingly incessant rain and gloomy skies.

I really don't like this time of year and am desperate for the first hint of spring like snowdrops. We don't have any in our garden so I will have to scout around in other folk's to find any. Probably too early yet anyway. I used to have some made out of glass in a little vase that looked so real, but I can't find them and think they may not have survived all the house moves. [Frown]

edited for spelling.

[ 08. January 2012, 16:39: Message edited by: birdsoftheair ]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
We have our first snowdrops in the front garden! It's always lovely to see. So you can come and look at ours, birdsoftheair, but I'd rather you didn't look at the rest of the garden...

M.

[ 08. January 2012, 16:56: Message edited by: M. ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Odd sort of day, by half eleven it was bright sunshine and I wavered between taking the car out somewhere and going for a walk. I did the latter instead. Lovely blue skies and a real early spring feeling to the day, the trees and hedges almost seemed to glow in the light, the water sparkled, lots of birds around, and you could really feel that not only spring, but summer was just around the corner and that it would be glorious.

As I started to walk back the sky began to cloud over until we were back to the normal shades of pearl greys and the breeze dropped a couple of degrees of warmth, and everything started to look drab once more. We were back in January again as if it had never happened.
 
Posted by Banner Lady (# 10505) on :
 
Have just had a skype session with my youngest child, from an alley in London. B4 is finishing a European trip, and after spending Christmas and New Year in the UK was calling from outside her hostel to send exciting news. What was this earth shattering information?

Apparently she rules at Beer Pong.

[Disappointed]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
BL, you must be so proud ... [Big Grin] What the blazes is Beer Pong? [Confused]

All this talk of spring and snowdrops and such is all very well, but here in God's Province™ we haven't really had winter yet.* Spring is scheduled for the second Tuesday in June, at about half-past two in the afternoon (if wet in vicarage).

* The foot of snow we had a few weeks ago doesn't count, as it went away.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We're off to get new identity cards today - not at all sure why I am asked to go as I'm fairly sure, being a mad foreigner, that I am not eligible, but I will take all my paperwork and see how soon they send me home again. On the form they spelt my name completely wrong [I don't recall ever being called Rose before] but they got the date of birth and gender correct.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
If they called you Rose, are you sure they got your gender right? [Big Grin]

I really must stop messing about here and go and turn that chicken stock into soup.

not quite motivated piglet [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
You might need to be identified as a friendly foreigner!!!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yup, that's me - the local friendly foreigner!

They did it, I now have a sort of Indian identity thingummybob - now that is SO cool!

Can you imagine the complexity of registering 1.2 BILLION people? They have quite a system going, it must be costing an absolute fortune. The finger-printing was inkless and the iris cam was painless - AND we were out by 9.30!

The bonus is that I am no longer known in their system as Rose - I am now known by my rather better known lifelong name, as known to the Special Branch in UK and India - though for rather different reasons.

...and I drove the jeep there today, first driving since the accident and I managed fine - this is good as we go away on Thursday and I want to be able to share the driving.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Rose burbled:
quote:
...and I drove the jeep there today, first driving since the accident and I managed fine - this is good as we go away on Thursday and I want to be able to share the driving.
[Eek!] I will be clutching my rosary for sure!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Can you imagine the complexity of registering 1.2 BILLION people?

Especially when they all speak different languages. [Confused]

quote:
... known to the Special Branch ...
Do you really want to admit that? [Eek!]

Soup is now made - help yourselves.

industrious piglet
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
You might need to be identified as a friendly foreigner!!!

Given the three heads, naybe 'friendly alien'.

Re the driving: hope you're on good terms with St.Christopher, Pete.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:[QUOTE]... known to the Special Branch ...
Do you really want to admit that? [Eek!] ...
I'm quite proud of it really - here I am known because I am a three headed alien [three heads mean I can both eat more and talk more - and even at the same time] and in UK I was one of those nasty, subversive peace activist people and so, I am led to believe there was a file on me for that at one time. It must be a VERY boring read!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
...Re the driving: hope you're on good terms with St.Christopher, Pete.

Thank you F(r)iend. [Razz]

[ 10. January 2012, 07:02: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I would not be too worried if I was PeteC, HWMBO must also know this. I somehow suspect Wodders is going to have to put up a determined effort if he does not want to be chauffeured the whole way.

Jengie
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
I would like some sympathy please. I have had a really nasty cold since Saturday...it started in my throat, went to my chest (yukky coughing) up to my nose and back to the chest (dry coughing) It is presently residing in my sinuses.I went to work yesterday but was wiped out by the end of the day, so today i've cancelled my lessons.
The trouble is that MrD also has caught a cold,but from a different source to mine, I suspect. His isn't so bad and he's accused me of "enjoying suffering" . I think he thinks that if he doesn't feel so bad then I mustn't feel bad...and I'm just malingering.
Please show me some sympathy so I don't feel the need to attack MrD with a blunt instrument ( or a mug of honey and lemon!)
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Poor you - sounds awful.

I'd retreat to my bed...
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Whether or not this will work depends on the savviness of Mr. Dormouse - but could be worth a try…

If it's a cold, it may not be worth going to the doctor's but if you take a trip to the pharmacy and look suitably sorry for yourself you should walk out with a satisfyingly large paper bag full of stuff. It is a stereotype that when you go into a French pharmacy for one thing you always come out with at least four things, but the stereotype is TRUE [Biased]

Then when Mr Dormouse says there's nothing wrong with you, you can point to all the stuff that the zealous pharmacist has kindly supplied you with - cough medicine, nasal rinse, maybe even some eardrops if you're lucky - and convince him that you're at death's door.

You're welcome. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Lots of sympathy from me, Dormouse - I am horrible when I have a cold and feel just so lousy. Pamper yourself and get well soon.

Much [fairly languid] activity chez nous as we get ready to go away tomorrow. I must remember to pack a couple of t-shirts as it can be cool up there in January and at night - daytime no problem.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Dormouse, ISTM that you have A Bad Cold, but Mr. D. has Man-flu (i.e. a slight cold) and he can't quite get his head round the fact that you feel worse than he does. There probably isn't much you can do except let it take its course, keep warm and take hot drinks with Manuka honey at regular intervals until it goes away.

There's something going round these parts called ILI which stands for Influenza-Like Illness. Presumably when a woman gets it it's a cold, and when a bloke gets it it's flu. [Devil]

We seem to have had a slight attack of winter here; it started snowing at about 8 o'clock this morning and carried on most of the day, so now we've got about six inches, but it's blowing about and some of the heaps left by the snow-plough are closer to a foot.

Not enough for a snow-day though ... [Frown]
 
Posted by justlooking (# 12079) on :
 
On the subject on cold remedies, I've found a Bad Cold responds to the whisky/honey/lemon juice/hot water treatment. You need generous amounts - a double whisky, tablespoon of honey, juice of a large lemon, all stirred together and topped up with hot water. A couple of aspirin helps as well.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Get well soon, Dormouse. Someone I know has had a cold since the middle of December, only starting to clear up now.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Good morning all - windy windy windy windy today. The cladding has blown off the front of our house, grrr - it just missed my car - phew!

In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

We need at 'Keep the endangered apostrophe' campaign. Mind you - apostrophes where they shouldn't be are far worse!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Very windy here too, though the SUN has come out! [Smile] Its been rather an endangered species round here lately.

Though I suspect this is the brighter but very much colder weather arriving which has been forecast.

Which I prefer.

I could[put the kettle on and get the hobnobs out if anyone is around?
 
Posted by Banner Lady (# 10505) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
BL, you must be so proud ... [Big Grin] What the blazes is Beer Pong? [Confused]
.

I now have it on good authority that Beer Pong is played by setting up 10 glasses half-full of beer at each end of a large table (billiard/ten pin bowling style). Then each player uses a bat and ping pong ball to see who can 'score' by getting a ping pong ball into one of their opponent's glasses. The object is to make the opponent have to drink all ten half-glasses first.

You hear it here first.... [Ultra confused]

[ 12. January 2012, 09:49: Message edited by: Banner Lady ]
 
Posted by Banner Lady (# 10505) on :
 
Ahem: you heard it here first. I sincerely hope the ping pong balls have been washed before play. [Roll Eyes]

[ 12. January 2012, 09:53: Message edited by: Banner Lady ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
...In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

We need at 'Keep the endangered apostrophe' campaign. Mind you - apostrophes where they shouldn't be are far worse!

There's a pub near us called The Merchants House [sic] which has a Special's Board [also sic].

Drives me mad.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Good morning all - windy windy windy windy today. The cladding has blown off the front of our house, grrr - it just missed my car - phew!

In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

We need at 'Keep the endangered apostrophe' campaign. Mind you - apostrophes where they shouldn't be are far worse!

There are at least two such society's in Britain already:

There is Apostrophe Protection Society and the Association for the Annihilation of the Aberrant Apostrophe founded by Keith Waterhouse. The former is based in Boston, Lincs and looks at least halfway serious while the latter was based in a pub or restaurant of Mr Waterhouse's choosing and as he died in September 2009, the AAAA may have died with him.

ps, sorry about your house cladding but, let's face it, you had thought seriously about removing it, hadn't you? Not in January though.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
arrrrgggghhhhhh!

Yes - and CD's, DVD's and banana's!


[Waterworks]
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
Tell yourself that they are just changing their name to something about stones that are made to go in the water? [Biased]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Hello, again all, home a bit early this evening, so enough time to look at the Ship before bell ringing practice. The first time I've been able to ring since the Carol service before Christmas (still not quite better from my horrid cold).

Originally posted by Welease Woderick, ages ago
quote:
My default is apology as well although I'm better since I did the assertiveness bit - well, a little bit better.

I know it's a long while ago but I've been thinking about this recently. It was prompted by my comment that my default option is to say sorry. On reflection, I don't think it's anything to do with lack of assertiveness (I would confidently expect anyone who knows me to fall about laughing at that suggestion). I just think 'sorry' can mean anything from 'I apologise profusely for what I have done' through 'How terrible that should have happened to you' to 'Oops, we seem to have accidently brushed each other's sleeve'.

A sort of general, all purpose, sympathetic word.

Sorry*, that probably wasn't interesting to anyone but me.

M.

*I genuinely didn't realise I had written this until I previewed my post...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
M, don't worry about it. The Irish default that I was preset with is also to say "sorry" in similar situations and I've been called on that a few times myself. Sometimes it elicits a puzzled reaction and "why are you apologizing for something that isn't your fault?" in instances where it's being used as a gesture of sympathetic listening as much as an apology. I guess it's just a cultural thing.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Wonders why computers are so b****y-minded, sometimes. One might almost suspect them of sentient thought....
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...

You're not Canadian* are you? [Devil]

Regarding the disappearing apostrophe in Waterstone's: why? Does it use up too much ink? Poor little thing, what harm had it ever done anyone?

[Frown]

Next time the post of Apostropher Royal comes up, I think I'll apply. [Big Grin]

* Canadian n. someone who apologises when you stand on his toe.

[ 13. January 2012, 02:25: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Originally posted by piglet:

quote:
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You're not Canadian* are you?


* Canadian n. someone who apologises when you stand on his toe.

(edited for the relevant bits)

A thing the British are also often accused of. I think it's a pleasant trait - it's just a nice way of seeking to defuse any possible irritation and help oil the wheels a bit.

M.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
It's the same in South Africa - 'I'm sorry' denotes sympathy, not guilt.

Good morning all - frosty and sunny today, proper winter at last!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
In other news, Waterstone's is going to drop its apostrophe. :shock:

Depressing, but people will probably still continue buying book's.
This made me laugh: apostrophe fallen on hard times.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Excellent, JtL! Thanks. [Smile]

Just about to venture out into the freezing cold for my book group. I chose the book, so I have to go.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
What book are you reading? It's my book group night this evening, it's a new group to me and I am a little nervous...I don't want to seem too thick, plus I've read the book on Kindle, so I won't be able to flip through it ( my uni trick!)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Freezing cold it may be but I haven't seen the stars so clearly for a long time as I did tonight. Normally cloud or light pollution drowns the constellations out, but tonight on the way home they were all out in fine display, and I could see some I hadn't seen for years, bright and clear as anything. Frost is going to have to be scraped off the cars tomorrow, but worth it for that.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Yes, the stars were great. My friends live on a hill above the river with not much in the way of street lighting on the other side, soI got a good look.

The book was Iain Banks' Whit; I was thinking of suggesting it for the ship book group, but I no longer have my own copy.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Very frosty here tonight, and the few stars that can still be seen (because of light pollution) are glittering brilliantly in the inky sky...
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I'll take your word for it, St E. Though it's too cold for me to look for myself.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Slushy, mucky sort of day here - it was snowing quite earnestly when I left for w*rk but by the time I came home it had turned to freezing rain and the water was cascading down the hill in front of our house.

Having been -13° yesterday morning, it's supposed to go up to +8° overnight tonight.

I think the Great Meteorologist™ is having a laugh ...
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Misty now - and not in a particularly picturesque way. The Beeb says only -4, What do they know?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What an utterly beautiful morning. Bright sunshine, not a cloud in the sky, frost everywhere. Leaves in little silver fur coats, benches covered in diamond powder. Mists rising off the river, chimney smoke and steam that looks like chimney smoke. Puddles frozen into cracked ice, dogs chasing each other across the park full of the joy of the morning. Shadows stretching out across the grass, impossibly long. I hadn't realized my fingers had gone numb until I went to change the lens on my camera.

And yes I did have to spend 10 minutes scraping frost off my car, but at that hour and in that weather the trip to the supermarket is hardly busy at all so it was worth it.

[ 14. January 2012, 10:01: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Beautiful sunny & crisp morning here - just right for hacking back the honeysuckle that has taken over a fence - it'll recover in time for the summer when it makes the garden smell wonderful
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Same here - frosty and minus temperatures. I'm at the farm looking after Mum and the views are lovely.

[Smile]
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
Is there a Society for the Promotion of Tasteful Website Design that we can report the Apostrophe Protection Society to?
[Or to whom we can report the APS for grammar pedants.]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Oh dear, that is bad, isn't it! Somehow I would have expected the APS to have a much classier website. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
What an utterly beautiful morning ... I hadn't realized my fingers had gone numb until I went to change the lens on my camera ...

From rose-tinted to normal? [Smile] Love your descriptions.

I quite agree about the APS's web-site - what horrid colours and nasty fonts.

We had enough of a rise in temperature (and some rain) yesterday that quite a lot of the sn*w has gone, which is a Good Thing, as you never know when the next lot'll arrive ...

I've made raisin cake, which should be cooled off by the time you read this - help yourselves.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Warm raisin cake sounds lovely! [Smile]

Another gorgeously sunny morning again, though a heavy frost and still bitterly cold! Better like this than cold grey and damp!

Happy Sunday, everyone!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
Don't you know what the Bible says about raisin cakes? [Big Grin]

Moo
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
[Killing me] [Overused]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
Don't you know what the Bible says about raisin cakes? [Big Grin]

Moo

eeeek! does the same go for Chorley cakes?
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
Allow me to complete the Kerygmaniac invasion [Big Grin]

(after consulting Wiki)

So, Chorley cakes are kinda like Eccles cakes? I still daydream about the Eccles cake I had in Portsmouth.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Big Grin]

Yes - but Chorley cakes are much better.

Eccles cakes are made with thin flaky pastry and have a sugary coating on the top. Chorley cakes are made with short pastry and are dry on top. The filling is raisins or currants.

Chorley is in Lancashire and Eccles is in Greater Manchester.
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
(sigh)

See, the priests knew what they were doing when they forbade raisin cakes. They knew the congregants would get way too distracted by the urge to gobble them up.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
Don't you know what the Bible says about raisin cakes? [Big Grin]

I knew the Old Testament had some barmy dietary rules, but that's A Bit Much. [Eek!]

My Better Half loves my raisin cake, so I don't actually give a stuff what Hosea thought.

It's gone down to -10°C here tonight - **brrrrr**
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
[Big Grin]

Yes - but Chorley cakes are much better.

Better still if bought from the stall in the covered market in Chorley. (Daughter 1 lives in nearby Coppull.)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
The gremlins have got into my TV set - I think they might be cold-weather gremlins, as this happened before during a cold spell. I missed the whole of the last episode of Sherlock last night thanks to no picture and staccato sound. I tried retuning, with the result that this morning I got a news broadcast from a Cubist announcer and the local news for High Wycombe to Chelmsford, which wasn't bad considering I live nowhere near either.

I really don't think digital telly is any kind of improvement - never had so many problems since the changeover.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
When we had Sky and that happened regularly they told me to remove the Sky card and turn everything off for 10 minutes, then reconnect and turn back on. Might be worth you trying the turning off (at the mains) part - maybe disconnecting the aerial cable too (can't remember if that was a part of it).

Good luck!
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by M.:
Originally posted by piglet:

quote:
Originally posted by M.:
... my default option is to say sorry ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You're not Canadian* are you?


* Canadian n. someone who apologises when you stand on his toe.

(edited for the relevant bits)

A thing the British are also often accused of. I think it's a pleasant trait - it's just a nice way of seeking to defuse any possible irritation and help oil the wheels a bit.

M.

I know a woman (British) who apologises to lamp-posts if she bumps into them.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's still bl**dy cold here (-10°C as I type this - **brrrrrr**), although it was a gloriously sunny day.

Due to a 50%-off sale at Canadian Tire (I'm sorry - they really do spell it like that [Hot and Hormonal] ) we've become the proud possessors of a bread-making machine. D. has fancied trying it out for quite a while, and after asking the advice of a couple of friends with experience of them, we decided we'd go for it.

I'm going to mention this in the Recipe thread upstairs to invite advice; I don't want to upset the Hosts by turning this into a more foodie thread than it normally is ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
When we had Sky and that happened regularly they told me to remove the Sky card and turn everything off for 10 minutes, then reconnect and turn back on. Might be worth you trying the turning off (at the mains) part - maybe disconnecting the aerial cable too (can't remember if that was a part of it).

Good luck!

Thanks. I did in fact try that for the best part of half an hour on Sunday with no great success. It took an hour and a half for it to settle down tonight - a combination of factors perhaps - but it got there in the end. In quite cold weather, the key for my car doesn't work well either so it may be something to do with physical location.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
It's still bl**dy cold here (-10°C as I type this - **brrrrrr**), although it was a gloriously sunny day.

And I thought cycling home from w*rk last night at -5° was bad.

If you don't like -10, think of it as +14. Farenheit always sounds warmer. Whisk(e)y helps too.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had some colder nights whilst we were away - probably down to the mid-teens Celsius! [Eek!] Now we are back down near sea level and we are warmer again, I'm glad to say.

Four people away for nearly a week create a deal of laundry - the poor machine has done one load and will probably face several more tomorrow.

...and I did get to drive, although none at all today. Yesterday I drove the bad roads across the plateau and then the good road as far as the ghat road down the hill - my arm is still not fully fit and I didn't fancy 27 hairpin bends in the space of 9 km!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Drifting Star:
When we had Sky and that happened regularly they told me to remove the Sky card and turn everything off for 10 minutes, then reconnect and turn back on. Might be worth you trying the turning off (at the mains) part - maybe disconnecting the aerial cable too (can't remember if that was a part of it).

Good luck!

Thanks. I did in fact try that for the best part of half an hour on Sunday with no great success. It took an hour and a half for it to settle down tonight - a combination of factors perhaps - but it got there in the end. In quite cold weather, the key for my car doesn't work well either so it may be something to do with physical location.
There's a large holly in front of our Sky disk and we have to keep that trimmed. Snow doesn't help either and, as Sky apply schedule changes early in the morning, any channel hopping if you're watching the cricket then can mess things up, much as Ariel (sic) describes.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We had some colder nights whilst we were away - probably down to the mid-teens Celsius! [Eek!]

You poor things. As I cycled into work this morning, the gears on my bike froze. And as for my hands ... [Frown]

eta: but the bit along the river bank was very pretty. [Smile]

[ 17. January 2012, 19:37: Message edited by: QLib ]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Ariel might have TV gremlins; we've got washing machine gremlins. It washed the sheets and (eventually) agreed to spin them after a fashion but has resolutely refused to tumble dry them, so they're hanging over the bath at the moment.

Bah, humbug.

M.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Busy day today: came home from w*rk, made chicken stock, chopped veggies to make soup, took minutes of the committee for which I'm the secretary, came home, typed up minutes (while I could still read my handwriting [Big Grin] ), turned veggies and stock into soup, which is cooking as I type. Should be ready for virtual tasting by the time you read this, along with a couple of virtual slices of freshly-baked bread ...

... as the bread-making machine absolutely rocks! D. met me at the door as I came in from w*rk proudly brandishing a slice of his very first loaf, and it was utterly yummy.

I was so complimentary about it he let me add the yeast to the machine for the second loaf.

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:


... as the bread-making machine absolutely rocks! D. met me at the door as I came in from w*rk proudly brandishing a slice of his very first loaf, and it was utterly yummy.


Yes, ours does too. I make a loaf every day - so we have fresh bread the day it's made, toast the day after and the birds get the leftovers on day three. Lots of different types of loaf too.

I worked out it costs 20p a loaf - brill!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
My garden is the end of the world - a thick mist has come down and there's nothing there. Usually I can see a rather large church in front of me, but I think it has been raptured.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...what? and not taken the choir?
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
They think we're far too worldly, I expect.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... as the bread-making machine absolutely rocks!

Yes, ours does too. I make a loaf every day - so we have fresh bread the day it's made, toast the day after and the birds get the leftovers on day three.
The problem with breadmaker loaves is that they are not stuffed full of the preservatives like commercial bread. This is a GoodThing™, but has the side effect of going stale very quickly.

Don't let it go stale. Time it so that you eat the bread newly cooked and still warm.
#oneofthebestthingsintheworld
 
Posted by angelica37 (# 8478) on :
 
Breadmaker bread makes the best toast. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
... Don't let it go stale ...

I suspect it won't get the chance. [Big Grin]

We had some with the veggie soup for lunch today and it seemed just fine; we put the second loaf into the deep-freeze, so it'll be interesting to see how it does when we de-frost it.

These first two loaves were made with flour called "bread mix" which came with its own little packets of yeast and had quite a list of chemical-sounding ingredients which are presumably there to keep it fresh. So far they seem to have worked; in the unlikely event of it lasting beyond the toast stage, there's a pond with ducks just outside where I w*rk ... [Smile]

I really ought to stop messing about here and go and make potato salad for the pot-luck we're going to tomorrow night.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A breadmaker sounds tempting but with HWMBO and Pete being diabetic I'm not sure it would be a good thing; plus the power here is not hugely reliable; plus we can get really nice 7 grain bread for not a lot of money - about 30 pence a loaf.

All that dust on the trip back on Monday and Tuesday is making us all feel lousy and bunged up - slowly coming out of it but we'll be very glad when they have finished widening that road, not that we intend going that way again for a while.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
If the bread does go stale, slice it and let it dry thoroughly. Then convert it into bread crumbs.

Home-made breadcrumbs taste better than store-bought.

Moo
 
Posted by cheesymarzipan (# 9442) on :
 
much talk about bread which is funny because I've just had some eggy bread for lunch! Now I need more bread. Ah well, I was going shopping today anyway.
(No, we don't have a bread maker - our kitchen is small enough already without filling it with more Stuff)
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cheesymarzipan:
.. we don't have a bread maker - our kitchen is small enough already without filling it with more Stuff

Me too. But I am still tempted.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It rained in the night here, not enough to cool things down too much but just enough to make this morning humid and clammy. It is still grey and overcast but hopefully it will burn off before long and we can have some nice breezes.

Ah well, it's still a little warmer than life over there in UK-land - I don't think topless with the windows open would be on the cards over there, would it?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:

Ah well, it's still a little warmer than life over there in UK-land - I don't think topless with the windows open would be on the cards over there, would it?

We could give it a try. With the light on and curtains open this idea could brighten many a dull evening for passers by!

(On second thoughts - brrrrrrrrrrrrrr - I'll put the onesie back on!)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by cheesymarzipan:
... our kitchen is small enough already without filling it with more Stuff ...

So is ours. [Big Grin]

D's Breadmaking Adventures, Chapter 2: Candlemas Cookies
D. is getting quite brave; we've only had the machine for a few days and already he's adapting recipes ...

We'd had a recipe for these (a sort of cross between a sweet bread and a biscuit) for ages and he'd always wanted to try them. I was more impressed than he was, but he couldn't quite work out what wasn't right about them. We may have to try them out on some friends who know about that sort of thing.

PS Wodders, I doubt you'd be going topless here at the moment; we're supposed to get about 8 inches of sn*w tomorrow ... [Frown]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... we're supposed to get about 8 inches of sn*w ...

I suppose if we average it out ...

The other side of our road has so little you can still see the ******* pavement. We have about a foot and a half.

When I got up I checked the University's web-site and was relieved to discover we had a sn*w-day. A couple of hours later D. dug out the car so I cleared a bit of space for it to go when he gets back.

Then the ******* plough came past, so now we've got a three-foot sn*w-bank in front of the pavement.

******* idiot, ******* sn*w. [Mad] [Mad] [Mad]

Sorry for all the asterisks. [Two face] I've made a beef casserole* - help yourselves.

* Well, what else does one do on a sn*w-day? [Smile]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I love snow. [Razz]

I was the only person who didn't want it to end last winter.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
You can come and dig us out any time you like, DS. [Big Grin]

If I'm honest, I liked snow when I was a kid - a snow-day was fun and the snow rarely lasted longer than a few days*. Here, once we get a real "weather-bomb" (say, about 2 feet of snow in the space of a day) and it freezes, it could be with us until Easter, which is a rather depressing thought.

It could be worse. Last winter I was working in a shop, where snow-days are but a dream; working at the university, when they get a snow-day so do I (and I still get paid for it [Yipee] ).

* except for that time in 1978 when the schools were closed for a week ... [Cool]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
None of the kids here get snow days, they are just not on the agenda - but then snow here is a bit of a rarity.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Finally took the plunge and joined Facebook, I've had enough requests now to make it worthwhile. But what a pain it is to get around and amend things! [brick wall] I suppose, like anything, once you're used to it, it's second nature.

Very windy here today - have had to close the windows because they keep blowing wide open. But so mild that I really feel Spring is on its way. The snowdrops are out now so it's only a matter of a few weeks before colour (a riot of yellow spring flowers everywhere) starts to return to the land.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Hot and Hormonal] I'm confined to the house, having put my coat in the washing machine before checking what the weather was doing. It's raining, lots, and the sky looks ominously slatey-grey.

Not that I really need to go out until tomorrow... so I might just as well enjoy my temporary confinement! There's cake, books, piano...

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Ariel - be warned and don't do what I do, I tend to friend Shipmates on facebook then forget their Shippie names.

I recommended the Ship to a well known Host the other day - said I thought it would suit them well.

Oooops!


[Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Giggles at Boogie.

One of my colleagues said yesterday I seemed to have the most eclectic set of friends on Facebook, and she enjoyed reading some of the bizarre conversations that arose on my status updates. I think it was a compliment..
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Hi all

As it is National Hug Day, I thought I'd nip in and leave a nice cup of something for people (since, being British, we don't often do the hug thing )

I do read...just don't post much...

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks amber., I'm a great hugger so I shall make sure I hug a few people today.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Met up with Lord P at a rather nice pub at Beckhampton today - couldn't resist toffee apple bread and butter pudding -mmm! Passed him more clothes - I didn't realise just how many clothes he has, partly because most of them were in an amorphous layer on his bedroom floor [Eek!] . It was good to catch up and see that he's OK and that he had got his new phone (See Prayers of the faithful)We tried to go into Marlborough, but couldn't find 2 car park spaces, so we went our seperate ways.

I'm signed on to Facebook, Darllenwr isn't. It's the only way we find out what Lord P is doing! I've got a couple of Shipmate friends, mainly people I've met in real life, but there are a few in foreign parts. It can become very addictive. There are no proper instructions, so you just have to muddle through if you want tto do anything in particular.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I quite like Facebook...I like following links other people have posted and catching up with what people are up to.

But I only know people on board by their Ship names, so have No Idea if I "know" anyone on FB as well, if you see what I mean.
And I equally have no clue if I know anyone in RL who is also on The Ship (apart from those special few I met at a Ship Meet last May).

Thank you for the cuppa Amber - hope you have had a nice day too.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I quite enjoy Facebook - it's given me the chance to catch up with people I haven't seen since we all left school thirty-something years ago ... [Hot and Hormonal]

Still in sn*w-plough rant mode - someone was farting about with a plough at the top of the road at three o'clock this morning but despite there being no cars parked on our side of the road he didn't have the wit to shift the bank of sn*w in front of our house. Moron. [Mad]

Amber, I'll have a cup of tea and a virtual hug, and I've still got CAKE. [Smile]
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Ooo, cake! Thanks!! [Smile]

I love Facebook. Very highly visual, which works for me, and it works really well as a fairly safe "circle of friends*" for someone like me for when I need to say something but need it to be amongst people who understand what I mean and can cope with the clumsiness. Wonderful stuff [Smile]

Shall be pondering the garden today. I may build up to actually doing something in it, too. [Biased]

*"Circle of Friends" is a model of a safe group for people with learning disabilities or autism... where people commit in an informal way to being gentle and wise friends, and benefit from a shared friendship and journey through life with the person at its centre too.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I'm finding the interface of Facebook a bit tricky to find my way around. I haven't yet quite got the hang of it - I hadn't expected it to be this complex and am at the stage where I'm still trying to memorize what I have to click on to get various options, as things seem to be not where I thought I'd last seen them.

Anyway - Chinese New Year this weekend! I was thinking about going to Birmingham for the occasion, but the photos of last year suggest I wouldn't get near the Chinese Quarter anyway for the crowds. It's the Year of the Dragon, so it should be a really colourful event.

I'm guessing the London event will be pretty spectacular with lots of colourful dragons snaking through the streets chasing the huge pearl-shaped lanterns on sticks, to the sound of drums and firecrackers...
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
I can't be arsed with FB - I seem to have got myself two different accounts (without knowing how) but can't get to see any of my friends' pages from either account. I also get messages about updates but then can't find them when I look. So most of the time I give up. From time to time I go in, click random buttons, explode with frustration, say a few choice words and come back onboard The Ship.

I think I might go and make some soup.
ETA - anything other than do my quarterly tax return which I need to post off tomorrow!!!

[ 22. January 2012, 09:00: Message edited by: Dormouse ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Dormouse - as it's nearly -10°C here, I think a bowl of tax-return avoidance soup would go down very nicely. Would you like some home-made bread to go with it? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I'm finding the interface of Facebook a bit tricky [...] things seem to be not where I thought I'd last seen them.

They aren't. They are changing it all the time. A major rewrite every two years or so, a couple or more of big changes each year, and minor tinkering almost every week.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
I discovered that my online declaration form was available so I declared in about 30 seconds and it was done! Thanks due to MrD for moral support.
The butternut squash soup was good...but homemade breadwould have added more deliciousness! I had some coconut milk left so I made a coconut cake as well and some honey spice biskits
I tried to make Hugh Fearley-Whittingstall's flatbread tonight. An unmitigated disaster. Sticky unworkable dough which just flobbed about. It went in the bin.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
D's breadmaking adventures continue apace: today he made a raisin and cinnamon loaf, which was v. nice (there's plenty left - help yourselves).

Back to normal after the faux long-weekend created by the sn*w-day on Friday. Why does one's bed (and one's teddy-bear [Smile] ) take on all the properties of super-glue at 7:30 on a Monday morning?

sleepy piglet [Snore]

[ 24. January 2012, 00:51: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
There's nothing like a warm teddy bear. Does yours get even softer and cuddlier when he's warm too?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Which reminds me that Pete's teddy is still up here in the office, Pete hasn't asked to see him at all since he arrived about 5 or 6 weeks ago but I still hug the teddy so he doesn't feel too upset - actually I think he'd rather stay up here with us and I'm not surprised, given the way he has been treated!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
You suffer from selective amnesia, Weasel dear.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
You suffer from selective amnesia, Weasel dear.

He doesn't seem to be suffering. I think he's enjoying it.

Moo
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I could have done with a warm and cuddly teddy bear this weekend. The central heating died on Friday, and we have only just got it fixed now (Monday afternoon)

It has been VERY cold here. [Frown] [Frown] [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm sorry about the heating Nicodemia and am glad it is now repaired.

We have an alienated Canadian Teddy and a small Christmas Koala from Aussie-land who might be looking for a new home after they go through counselling - I think they may prefer to be placed together.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
Isn't there a small well-travelled moose somewhere in South Wales who might appreciate a visit?
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Of course, a teddy can be one of these
which makes WW's statement that Pete's teddy is still up here in the office a little bit [Eek!]

I'm not sure I can get my head round PeteC in one of those!!!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dormouse:
Of course, a teddy can be one of these
which makes WW's statement that Pete's teddy is still up here in the office a little bit [Eek!]

I'm not sure I can get my head round PeteC in one of those!!!

Oh, I don't know, he might look rather chic!

[Projectile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
There are reasons why I always refer to them as teddy-bears. [Big Grin] And yes, the more you hug them the softer and more cuddly they become. [Smile]

For some reason as I was typing this the thread-title crept into my peripheral vision and I read it as Perfidious Albino ...

[Confused]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
In retrospect my response to Dormouse might have been better as:

quote:
To the pure all things are pure
Mind you, I suppose that could be taken as referring to our guest [Eek!]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
[Frown] Glum start to the day as I discover that I have well and truly ****ed up an entertainment booking that everyone has been looking forward to for months. We may have to cancel.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
You have my sympathies, Qlib. Lets hope you can rescue something. [Help] [Votive]

Dull grey day again, and I can look forward this morning to sitting for ages in an overheated hospital in a chair that has seen better days long ago to see the Consultant I should have seen 2 months ago, but clinic was cancelled.

Oh Joys! [Frown]
 
Posted by Pooks (# 11425) on :
 
Hi everybody. I am not a regular visitor to this thread, so I hope you will forgive my intrusion. The reason that I am here is because I saw something beautiful written about this little island of ours - by people who are of foreign origin. I felt pride and joy and thought how fortunate that I can live here. I thought you might enjoy it too.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Just off to choir now. I can't say I like Durufle's Requiem...
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
You have my sympathies, Qlib. Lets hope you can rescue something. [Help] [Votive]

Thanks - not as bad as I feared. It's going ahead and I just feel so [Yipee] All the other troubles suddenly seem very small.

Thanks for the links, Pooks.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Just off to choir now. I can't say I like Durufle's Requiem...

You have my sympathy. I've never sung in it, but D. accompanied it a few times when we lived in Ireland and he says it's the hairiest organ part in the entire repertoire. I can vouch for this; it was even difficult to turn pages for ... [Eek!]

I'm just back from choir practice; among other things for Candlemas we're rehearsing the Nunc Dimittis from the Service for Trebles by Weelkes, which is gloriously Tudor and full of wonderful English cadences. [Big Grin]

Glad you got things sorted, Qlib - hope it goes according to plan.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
My journey home tonight took twice as long as it normally does. I left work a little early, saw it was sleeting and thought "this won't stick" WRONG!!! By the time I got to the Heads of the Valleys road, it was whiteout. I prayed my way home, and thankfully the roads got clearer the further down the valley I came. Darllenwr was quite srprised to see how much snow there was on the car! I'm hoping it'll all melt by the morning - either that, or that we have a good foot of the horrible sruff overnight.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Whoever's in the parking space next to me has just driven in from somewhere where there's snow. We've only had rain, so they're clearly not local.

Stars are as clear as anything again tonight - no sign of the Aurora Borealis though, so I'm giving up and going to watch my new Sherlock DVD instead. [Yipee]

Pooks - do come and post again, you're always welcome on this thread, don't feel like an intruder. I liked your link, thanks for posting it.
 
Posted by Pooks (# 11425) on :
 
Thanks Ariel! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
VICTORY!!!

Between us we have shamed Pete into reclaiming his teddies who, it must be said, were a little reluctant to leave their companions up here and the friendly environment we have created for them.

In other news I am thinking I might start a thread somewhere on unnatural practices - first on the list will be being bright and cheerful first thing in the morning!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Wodders - if you have traumatised teddies, I would recommend hug therapy, which is very beneficial for Small Bears.

St. G. - are you really likely to get a foot of sn*w? That's quite impressive - it would be enough to give us a sn*w-day ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
St Gwladys - there's snow at the Heads of the Valleys?! It's quite mild here and we're not that far further north.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The 'tops' to the north of Newport (1200-1500 feet) were white this morning. There was snow around, but not down our way.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We saw our tenant again today, poking his head out of the hole in the tree. He seems very content.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Blimey, what a day!

So far today I have phoned an employment agency to find that the CV I sent when I "registered" online does not exist in their files... then been called by another, and found that the records they were using for my contact details were four years out of date despite me sending regular updates... then tried to get in touch with HR at a company to discover (in tones of "What a twat for even trying") that I cannot contact anyone without a name... even though there are no names on their website (so I got the bugger going, then rang off in mid-flow).

Got home to discover that some genius had decided that all my freshly-washed and stowed away flowerpots were waste put out for recycling - despite the fact that they were in the boxes the council told residents they could use for their own purposes two years ago as they were being replaced by wheelie bins... and the wheelie bin was out on the pavement... so all my pots are now in a bin lorry and to top it all off I open my credit card bill to discover two fraudulent transactions on it!

Bugger a cup of tea, pass the GIN!

AG
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Todays selection on what Britain is like outside London by those who are not British.

Jengie


[coding amended - WW]

[ 28. January 2012, 01:40: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
...and to top it all off I open my credit card bill to discover two fraudulent transactions on it!

The perfect end to a perfect day - what a horrible surprise! I hope you weren't stung for a lot. [Frown]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Thankfully, no snow today!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I got home from university an hour ago (a good day) - lots of white stuff on top of our hill - but none anywhere else!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Large GIN on its way, Sandemaniac - I think you need it.

D. said it was my turn to use the bread-making machine today [Smile] so there's raisin and cinnamon bread (which really came out rather well though I say it what shouldn't). Help yourselves.

We've got about 6 inches of snow in the forecast for Saturday - what the hell use is snow if you don't get a snow-day?

Hmph. [Frown]

disgruntled piglet
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Fortunately we are not far enough up the moor for snow, though the higher Pennine passes are closed. A good day for staying in with a single malt(the dregs left from Christmas 2010).

It'll soon be time for a new bottle or two. I fancy one of the Orcadian ones, probably Scapa.

(What sort of spell checker is this that doesn't recognise "Orcadian?")
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
We've got about 6 inches of snow in the forecast for Saturday - what the hell use is snow if you don't get a snow-day?

Ah, but if it's Saturday -

Build your own snowman, snowdog and/or snowwoman.

Roll all the snow on your lawn up into one really enormous snowball. Then you will have green grass and a dirty great frozen boulder in one corner, which will melt slowly over the coming weeks.

If you're feeling adventurous, carve the frozen boulder into an interesting sculpture and charge people to come and see it.

Take photos and tease people in milder climates with pictures of what a "real winter" looks like.

More if I can think of it...
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Our church annual panto (like) presentation ended today after 2 performances. Went really very much better than any of us thought it would. Exhausted now - and I only had a minor role - how on earth do the professionals do it? On reflection I guess that's their job which makes it a bit different. Popcorn or chocolate anyone - there's a bit left.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
... What sort of spell checker is this that doesn't recognise "Orcadian?" ...

One with no taste whatsoever. [Big Grin]

The sn*w could have been worse: D. dug out the sn*w-bank that the plough had left so he could get the car out, and I made the space a bit bigger. Then sundry ploughists came past (some from the council, some in their own lorries fitted with ploughs) and it's not too bad now. It really wouldn't have been sculptable - it was very heavy and wet when I was shovelling it.

I've now had my first go at making ordinary bread, which is baking in the machine as I write - once you read this it'll probably be ready for virtual tasting with jam or honey.

Marmite is also available for the clinically insane. [Devil]

Enigma - yes please to chocolate, but definitely no thanks to popcorn - horrid stuff.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Nice cold foggy morning, and fog getting thicker. Not really the weather for a day trip, but at least it isn't icy.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Another glorious day here in paradise - blue sky, sunshine and soft breezes - it's a pity I was awake half the night coughing!

I know I've said this before [with my memory it might have been as recent as yesterday] but one of the things I love about being here is that pretty much everyone takes religion seriously. A gang of lads walking along together could well be heading for temple or mosque or church - and the vast majority of folks respect other people's faith.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
HELP!!!

HWMBO
has just been in here singing to me!!
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
You sound peturbed, WW! [Big Grin] Here, have a cuppa, or would gin be better? Or earplugs? What was he serenading you with?

It's really jolly cold here, but at least it feels like January ought to. It's been far too mild lately. But, oh my, minieggs are on sale. [Two face] I'm really hoping MrJt9 is in soon to save me from myself.
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
I wondered whether I could start a new spiritual discipline of eating mini eggs and creme eggs on alternate Sundays. Some people fast on Fridays all year round, don't they? [Snigger]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Ahhh - thank you for reminding me that I have a 6-pack* tucked away in the cupboard. (V good deal in Waitrose.)

*Creme eggs, that is. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Creme eggs? They're a bit like Marmite - you either love them or loathe 'em - personally, I can't stand them.
 
Posted by Darllenwr (# 14520) on :
 
Creme eggs are an acquired taste - one which I, as a type-1 diabetic, do not propose to acquire!

Disgusting things!

E.T.A. If I wanted to tap-dance my way up one wall, across the ceiling and down the other, eating a creme egg might be a good idea. Otherwise, emphatically not.

[ 29. January 2012, 20:50: Message edited by: Darllenwr ]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Thanks for the GIN, it was a great help!

No, I wasn't stung for much - £40 all told, but it's a PITA filing in all the paperwork. Luckily, I was past getting mad when I opened the statement, and had to laugh.

AG
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I used to like creme eggs (about 30-odd years ago), but I doubt very much if I could eat one now - they're so sweet I can feel my teeth rotting just reading about them.

Jolly good music at the Cathedral today - in the morning Haydn's Missa Sancti Johannis de Deo (hummable tunes, beloved by the punters) and at Evensong lots of Byrd (beloved by me) - Responses, Second Service and Teach me, O Lord with me doing a spot of solo-singing.

Wodders, whether or not you need help may depend on what HWMBO was singing ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I used to like creme eggs (about 30-odd years ago), but I doubt very much if I could eat one now - they're so sweet I can feel my teeth rotting just reading about them.

Same here. Also, aren't they smaller than they used to be?

Bitterly cold tonight - can't get warm and I'm sitting in front of the fan heater. No snow though.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Same here. Also, aren't they smaller than they used to be?

Everything is, everything is [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
I'm not.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Killing me] Me neither, DS.

Mars bars are. I have a recipe for those squares made with melted Mars bars and Rice Krispies that calls for 3 Mars bars to however many ounces of Rice Krispies, but it worked far better with four.

This is a bummer: they come in packets of four, which would have left one for me ... [Razz]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Mars Bars aren't the same either. They made them softer and sweeter about 10 years ago so they'd appeal more to women. A proper Mars Bar is something you could sink your teeth into. On a cold day, you had to basically saw a chunk off it. The current version is more like Milky Way. (Yes, I do know it's supposed to be a take on that.)

Even nostalgia isn't the same as it used to be. [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I agree, I miss the old-style nostalgia so much!

A trip to the city this morning - I got off the bus when I got there, walked up the road from shop to shop then arrived at the next bus stand and caught the bus home having bought all that I required bar the diabetic marmalade* that was out of stock. My actual time in the city was under an hour!

*No, I didn't know that marmalade could be diabetic, either!
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Mars Bars aren't the same either. They made them softer and sweeter about 10 years ago so they'd appeal more to women. A proper Mars Bar is something you could sink your teeth into. On a cold day, you had to basically saw a chunk off it. The current version is more like Milky Way. (Yes, I do know it's supposed to be a take on that.)

Even nostalgia isn't the same as it used to be. [Frown]

Trouble is, the soft version is the only one our teeth can manage these days!
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
A sort of tangent on the Mars Bar - chopped up, melted and with a bit of milk added to keep it soft, it makes a great topping for a chocolate cake.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dormouse:
A sort of tangent on the Mars Bar - chopped up, melted and with a bit of milk added to keep it soft, it makes a great topping for a chocolate cake.

<tamgent two>

If you like Mars Bar good and hard, put it in the fridge for half an hour, then take it out and cut it into slices. Excellent, and it lasts longer!

</tangent two>
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I've not had a Mars Bar for 20 years!

*
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Me too, Boogie!

Have just been into town to try and get money for A Certain Host and the machine didn't want to play - I think it had run out of ink. Hopefully it will give some tomorrow or rent won't be paid then he'll have to move into the woodshed!

As we all know there is always something nasty in a woodshed!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I don't usually post on the Ship at w*rk, but they've closed the University because of Inclement Weather™ (and I should have left half an hour ago anyway), but the weather's so inclement that D. phoned to say would I wait for a bit until it's not a complete white-out.

Me? Feel guilty? [Angel]

Hmph squared. [Mad]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chorister:
Trouble is, the soft version is the only one our teeth can manage these days!

Our teeth? This reminds me of the story of the three witches who shared one eye and one tooth between them.* I'll have you know I'm fine with a Mars Bar - provided it's been allowed to melt for a bit first, of course.

* Unless of course you're referring to the communal Ship of Fools Set of Teeth™.

In other news, still bitterly cold, still no snow.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Reminds me of the old story about the hell-fire preacher who was getting very eloquent on the subject of the wailing and gnashing of teeth in the afterlife...
...one person asked "But what if you haven't got any teeth?"

"Teeth will be provided" - came the response.

It's bitterly cold out there, and there is no cloud cover, so the stars that can be seen (Bethnei is in the middle of a lot of large towns and cities so suffers from light pollution) are twinkling away very frostily.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
... "Teeth will be provided" ...

[Killing me]
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... still no snow.

I've got lots - would you like some? [Big Grin]

D. eventually picked me up from w*rk about an hour later than usual; with the visibility being little more than the end of your nose, the traffic was somewhat mental. When we got home, we had to dig our way into the house - the 6 inches predicted by the Westher Channel turned out to be 2-foot drifts ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I do enjoy reading about everyone's winter travails - such an eloquent reminder of my previous life.

My eldest brother and his new[-ish] wife are thinking of moving from south Manchester down into northern Shropshire - I spent a winter down there once on a placement and that area can get really cold!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I do enjoy reading about everyone's winter travails - such an eloquent reminder of my previous life.

It's why we do it - we're sure you'll appreciate these evocative little reminders of the country of your birth.

Apparently it's warmer in Antarctica today, a fact the papers are making much of, but I remind myself it's summer down there so probably warmer than it usually is. Piglet - yes please, so long as it doesn't hang around and turn to ice on the pavements. A light dusting will be fine.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Hooray for hot water!

Our boiler has been dead (pump u/s)for almost a week but Keith, The Man Who Does Stuff fitted the replacement yesterday so we have hot water and central heating again. Just in time for a cold snap too. The dodgy electric heaters and the kettle on the landing can go away again. Mind you, it took a while to warm the house.

eta: we consoled ourselves by looking up the weather in Winnepeg! How the he** do people manage in -27?

[ 01. February 2012, 09:29: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Ooooh, oooh, yes please Piglet. Can I have about 18 inches please, and can it last for a few weeks, and cling to the trees? I've counted the toilet rolls, and if there's more than 18 inches that will be fine too.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've been shopping today! It was supposed to be shopping for trouser cloth for Pete but then turned into general cloth shopping - Pete has three trouser pieces, already with the tailor, and two hats - HWMBO has four shirt pieces including an amazing bright blue linen, and a I have just a solitary bit of cotton shirting and a new hat.

Compared to the others I am so restrained!

eta: today the ATM courteously deigned to give Pete some money so he is saved from the woodshed at least for a little while.

[ 01. February 2012, 10:59: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Oh frabjous day!! [Yipee] I visited Marks & Spencer on the Champs Elysées this lunchtime. (It opened just before Christmas but you had to queue to get in so I decided to wait.)

They have flipping everything. I went in there to buy some tea, I may have left with one or two extra things [Hot and Hormonal] - they have bacon, crumpets, biscuits, custard, in short everything a little exiled expat Brit could possibly wish for. [Smile] And the stuff is not that expensive - I was pleasantly surprised.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mmmmmmmmmm! Crumpets!!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
There are sometimes advantages is being disabled.
Where I work, there is a leaking gutter just by the main entrance, and it was very icy yesterday - sufficiently so, that when I reported that I had nearly fallen on it, my boss went to get grit. I reported it to the centre manager today, and just before I left on a visit, she was expecting workmen to fix it within an hour. That guttering has been damaged and leaking for at least 18 months!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Piglet - yes please, so long as it doesn't hang around and turn to ice on the pavements ...

Too late. [Frown] We now have Patches of Treachery™ and enormous heaps of snirt.*
quote:
Originally posted by La vie en rouge:
I visited Marks & Spencer on the Champs Elysées this lunchtime ...

I'm so jealous. There was an M&S here which closed shortly before we arrived - in fact we were talking about it in the pub after choir practice this evening - and I can't tell you how much I want one of their prawn and mayonnaise sandwiches. Right now.

deprived piglet

* snirt n. snow + dirt
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
The bit of their range I was most excited about was the bacon and sausages. I cooked a gigantic fry-up last night (when it was minus eight degrees, just the weather for a load of greasy fatty fried pork products). I can feel my arteries hardening as we speak, but I'm going to die really happy. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
What I forgot to say yesterday is that when we got to new posh shop in town the lift was out of service so we had HWMBO, various assistants and me running up and down two flights of stairs bringing stuff for Pete to see and wonder about - I think he quite enjoyed his role as the lord of all he surveyed. One of the salesmen was a little pushy for a while but I think he got the message that that might not be the best way to proceed.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
O the pleasure of a hot meal on a night as cold as this...! Went for a walk at lunchtime, sunny though it was my fingers and nose went numb pretty quickly. One of those days where once you get cold it takes a long time to get warm again. The air is sufficiently cold to smell cleaner than usual, no mean feat on a railway platform.

Here are some pictures of the cold weather across Europe - enjoy.

[ 02. February 2012, 18:21: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We had a dusting of snow on Tuesday - I needed it for the final shot for the January Treasure Hunt on 365, and was far more excited than the teenagers I was supposed to be teaching ICT at that moment, so when we had a break I dived out and got a few photographs.

But it's bitterly cold and I'm really not looking forward to catching a 5:30am tube, that's an outside end of the line tube, on Saturday morning.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We had some more sn*w this morning too; it was generally reckoned that we should have had a sn*w-day but didn't. [Frown]

It's -8°C here at the moment, and we've got some pretty spectacular icicles hanging from the roof chez Piglet.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Big Grin]

It's a lovely morning here.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
It's -8°C here at the moment, and we've got some pretty spectacular icicles hanging from the roof chez Piglet.

None here so far, but I still remember last year's vividly. I don't think I'll forget them in a hurry. They were like taloned goblin fingers that crept slowly over the edge of the roof while I was inside looking out, and then over my windows, forming bars that prevented me from fully opening the window. Most were about 2-3 feet long, but there was one monster by the drainpipe that was 8' long.

The fun part was going out underneath these things, as periodically they would fall off without warning and a long spear of solid ice would shatter noisily as it met the ground. Luckily nobody ever was underneath at exactly the time. The 8-foot-long one worried me a bit - but made a gloriously resounding crash when it finally did come down.
 
Posted by Aelred of Rievaulx (# 16860) on :
 
Lovely, sunny and frosty here. I am tired of being told about "that Siberian weather" that is coming our way - no forecast I can find says we will have worse than -3° at night and nothing under 0° in the day. Now I hardly call that a winter.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
You might. It's 17°F or -8°C here at the time of writing, which means it was colder when I left home this morning.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
In an inversion of the normal run of things, I see Stornoway is being described as a 'hot spot' - at a sweltering 5C. Embro is supposed to be 0C, but I don't believe it - we have cloud cover and no frost (unlike yesterday).
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
-7 to -8 here (the two sides of the max-min disagree by a degree). It felt savagely, finger burningly, cold last night going home, yet was only -2/3 by the same device. Make sense of that...

However it's hard enough underfoot to let me commute up the river again. This morning was cloudy, but the sun poked through the one streak of clear sky on the horizon and a burning dagger flashed down the Thames. I love that as a commuting route! [Yipee]

Hoping it stays cold until sunday - showing someone the joys of Port Meadow, and it'll be much nicer if it's still hard underfoot.

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
-5 overnight and the bloody boiler's acting up again! It seems that once a hot water system starts to misbehave it will never be quite right again.

I expect it will be OK this evening, for a few hours anyway.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Holy COW it's cold. Once again -8° here this morning, and not going to be going over zero for at least the next week on current predictions. Add in the windchill and it apparently feels like -15°. Very bright and dry, so no ice or anything, but if anything does come down from the sky it'll definitely be snow.

In one way, I think it's more bearable than British cold, because it's drier, but when it's this brutal it hurts to breathe (which I feel is somewhat of a problem, what with breathing being a generally rather necessary activity [Roll Eyes] ).
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Hoping it stays cold until sunday - showing someone the joys of Port Meadow, and it'll be much nicer if it's still hard underfoot.

Should do, though someone did mention a possible 4" of snow on Saturday.

I ike the idea of commuting up the river, and sailing into work. Or possibly, given the canal, barging into work.

Though in this weather, one might skate in...
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
It didn't feel quite so cold this morning but that was partly due to the fact that the wind had dropped and partly due to the fact that I was wearing, pretty much, two of everything!

Having been at work long enough to remove several layers of jumpers, the fire alarm went off and we had to evacuate the building. After standing around in the cold for around 20 minutes we were told there was a leak in the basement and they didn't know when we would be allowed back in. Fortunately we could go to the canteen in an adjacent building.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
[QUOTE]
I ike the idea of commuting up the river, and sailing into work. Or possibly, given the canal, barging into work. Though in this weather, one might skate in...

It's getting close - there was ice up the edges anywhere the water was still!

AG
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
A few years ago, someone I knew got their picture in the local paper when they decided to ski to work!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
-8 this morning going to work, -5 coming home. I had to go on a couple of visits, and it actually made it to -0.5 this afternoon - but not for long. I'm glad I'm in a really warm office next to a radiator!
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Though in this weather, one might skate in...

It's getting close - there was ice up the edges anywhere the water was still!
Although I've never yet managed to drag Sandemaniac to an ice rink...

Spent yesterday curled up with a miserable cold. Phoned in to tell work I wasn't fit to come in this morning either, and got told I sounded worse than yesterday so probably shouldn't be trying to come in anyway! Don't you just love bosses sometimes [Roll Eyes]

Feeling somewhat better, so about to put the kettle on. Tea/coffee/hot water/hot Ribena for anyone else?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Poor you, CK. Have some Lem-sip or similar made palatable with lemon juice, Manuka honey and a wee drop of whisky.

We're sort of bracing ourselves at the moment for the blizzard that was supposed to start a couple of hours ago but hasn't. As D. said, it can go on not snowing as long as it likes.

What's the use of a blizzard at the week-end? And anyway, where the **** are we going to put another foot of snow?
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Damned if I know where to put another foot of snow. I haven't had that problem in recent memory.

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Erm, I think the best place is on top of the last lot.

Yup, that's me, always trying to be helpful.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Snow is forecast here this afternoon, but only if we are high enough.

Previous experience has assured me we are High Enough for quite a lot of snow.

Being a weekend, the sledgers will be out in force once there's about a centimeter (half inch for our metrically-challenged friends! [Biased] )

I remember one snowy weekend the (then very small) grandsons came over, but all shops had sold out of sledges. So we dug out two big tins for roasting large turkeys in, and they went down the hill on those!

Ah, happy days!
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Frozen pipes.

Not happy - thought we'd got this problem sorted last winter...

Off to deal with them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
No snow yet here, but I reckon it'll arrive earlier than expected - I'm guessing about lunchtime for this corner of the world.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Mad rush at the local shops this morning, as the snow started coming down at about 10 o'clock. I went out to stock up on milk and fresh fruit. Couldn't resist getting more bread, even though I have a (small) freezer full of the stuff because I'm supposed to be hosting a soup and rolls lunch tomorrow. I was guessing that that wouldn't happen, but it's stopped snowing now.

Not sure whether to be glad or sorry.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
No snow yet here, but I bought a snow shovel this morning so I'm well prepared.

Mr Boogs set off for Mexico today, I'm joining him on Thursday.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Pipes unfrozen, and heating going again. I learnt the defrosting lessons well!

Now off to keep warm, and recover from all this activity on a Saturday. I need to conserve my energy for the Six Nations Rugby later on...
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Snowing here in a half hearted fashion - enough to stop us going out, but not enough to cause major problems yet.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Here we go - I think: we've been getting snow in instalments of 5 flakes a time. Another of the council's cutbacks, I suppose.
 
Posted by Ceannaideach (# 12007) on :
 
The snow has started here, well I say snow it looks more like icing sugar at the moment. But either way I'm sat snug in front of an open fire. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Snowing here in a half hearted fashion - enough to stop us going out, but not enough to cause major problems yet.

Its doing so here, I am below the Sheffield snow line where it does not normally settle, but it seems to be having a go. Question is do I need to be on standby for church. Worship will happen, but if there is snow in the morning a number of people won't make it including some elders. It is Communion Sunday.

Jengie
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Do you need me to report in with the weather from here?

I'll spare you and just say that it is a lovely, moonlit, tropical evening. I don't think there will be any snow delays locally tomorrow.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Now, mind you, it can be just a tad coolish at dawn. Does that count as inclement weather? Those poor paperboys on their bikes all bundled up against the weather!

[Angel]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Do you need me to report in with the weather from here?

What, and spoil the fun of a mug of hot chocolate and a toasted teacake with melted butter soaking into it, while the snow falls gently down outside? The pleasure of mulled wine to come, a rich, satisfying winter casserole and one of those sponge puddings or substantial crumbles that are really best enjoyed on a cold winter's day?

It's not all bad, you know. [Razz]
 
Posted by Darllenwr (# 14520) on :
 
Snow has turned to drizzle here - trouble is, we have been warned that the 'rain' might freeze on impact - not too healthy with the sort of gradients we have round hereabouts.

In consultation with the relevant Wardens, we have decided to cancel Morning Prayer in Brithdir tomorrow - I was due to Officiate and Preach - even if the rain should stay unfrozen and wash the snow away. One of the peculiar ironies of this parish is that St David's church in Brithdir is the most readily accessible of our buildings under ordinary conditions, with level access straight off the pavement. However, if it snows or freezes, St David's promptly becomes the most dangerous of our churches - all approaches involve dropping down steep gradients. Add to this a congregation who are mostly over 60 and nearly all of whom live outside the village and drive to church on Sunday. Cancelling the service tomorrow was a no-brainer.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Just wet where I am - but very cold so if it freezes it won't be pleasant. I chose a very good day to have my hair cut a lot shorter didn't I?? I know I shouldn't have accepted the offer of a lovely head massage which made all sensible thought depart. Methinks my ears will be cold in the coming days.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Erm, I think the best place is on top of the last lot.

Yup, that's me, always trying to be helpful.

Well always trying, anyway ... [Devil]

quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Mr Boogs set off for Mexico today, I'm joining him on Thursday ...

Leave a cold tap dripping in your house while you're away in case your cold snap continues - the last thing you want is to come back to a flood.

The blizzard really didn't add as much to the snow-heaps as we feared - D. did a spot of minor digging round the car and that was about it. Hope we don't get too much more overnight as we've got our Candlemas service tomorrow morning, and we don't want people not to be able to get there.

Domestic Goddess Piglet has been in action today - a couple of loads of laundry done, a pot of veggie soup made and a loaf merrily churning in the bread-machine. D. made a raisin, orange and cardamom loaf yesterday, which is v. nice with a thick layer of butter.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, that was fun - I'd say we have about 5" of so of the stuff. I see 100 vehicles have been stranded on the M40 - glad I didn't risk going out in the car yesterday afternoon. It all seems to be melting now, anyway.

Three very confused young cats next door exploring this winter wonderland: one climbed a fence to see if there was any more snow on the other side, one bolted for the shelter of underneath a car, and one shot into the leeway of a dustbin, a fence, and a tree in extremely rapid succession trying to get away from it, before streaking back to home.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Leave a cold tap dripping in your house while you're away in case your cold snap continues - the last thing you want is to come back to a flood.

Luckily the dog sitter will be around to look after the house.

Mr Boog got away just in time - lots of flights cancelled from Heathrow today. We are taking a team of ten to work with street kids in Ensenada, Mexico. Mr Boog gone ahead to prepare the way as he's the boss. The rest of us fly on Thursday.

My part is staff training for behaviour management.

Of course, we are finishing our trip with a small holiday in California.

[Smile]

[ 05. February 2012, 07:23: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Boogie - I reckon you had more than your fair share of snow up there, judging from the news reports!

How very sensible of you to go to Mexico at this time of the year! [Big Grin] And enjoy your break in California - soun ds a great idea! [Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We've got about 5" here too.

It started snowing in Nottingham properly about 3pm, and I knew I was going to be in trouble getting home, but also I couldn't blag my way onto an earlier train when they didn't see there was a problem. 19:28 train out of Nottingham was fine, but you could see how much snow we'd been through when we arrived in the London snowstorm at 21:15. Tube was fine and running OK when I got on it and I was hoping I'd just make it, but the train I was on got stopped 5 stops from home because there was a derailed tube a couple of stops up. And it took a while for the information to filter through. The trains started shuttling back and forth from where we were and wrote off the final 5 stops! Nothing coming through from further east at all.

No buses, they'd been cancelled as too dangerous earlier, very exciting shared cab drive home from there, with me relaxing gradually and certainly when I reckoned I was now in walking distance from home, 2 miles out and before the last horrible hill up - with the cab driver helping the two cars in front of us to move so he could continue.

One of the couples who was also trying to get to where we are, at the end of the tube line, to collect a car to go on to somewhere on the mainline rail system, looked at the 45 minute queue for cabs and tried to go back in and get a mainline train from central London to find that the tubes weren't running in any more either.

I'll put some photos up later - from yesterday and today on 365 and Flickr
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Thanks Nicodemia! We have a computer there, so I'll be in touch.

[Smile]


Spot the dog!

Spot the car!
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Several inches of snow today so took an executive decision that today was going to be spent in jammies watching Borgen on iplayer. I know Sunday mass is an obligation but...
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Well, Macarius and I had to leave to walk to church at about 7.15 for the 8 am service - Macarius was preaching and the car wasn't going anywhere (he was preaching at the 10.30 too but I came home... and he's meant to be doing evensong but I'm wondering if that will be cancelled).

It is melting just a little but I think it will freeze again as the evening draws in. Perhaps with any luck the trains won't be running tomorrow and I won't be able to get to work?

M.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
As usual in cold weather, TV reception has gone for the duration, no picture and only staccato sound. Hope this weather clears soon, I do resent paying the full whack for a licence fee when I'm only able to see television now and again.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
It's cold here too...we reached -14° on Friday night.Together with two other ladies I feed the Poor Cats(stray cats) of the village. I feel SO sorry for them in this weather and really, really hope they have somewhere relatively warm to hang out. I fed them pasta, mixed with cream, cheese and duck fat, plus two big tins of cat food. Most of the food was eaten, but what wasn't was frozen into a solid lump - this morning I found two of the cats licking the lump, trying to get something to eat!
It's a beautiful day now, all sunshine and blue, cloudless skies - but, of course, it's bitterly cold. I'll be snug in my study making birthday cards, I think.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Boogie, I didn't realise your dog was called Spot!

Pete and I have just got back from a walk in the evening cool down to a riverside temple and back - most enjoyable. There was a marriage halfway there so there was a slight delay whilst a photo of gang of kids was taken - Pete pushed on through giving me a great excuse to leave and follow him!
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
The estimate I heard was six inches here and that is below the snow line, people are snowed in above it but it is melting and main roads are moving. Yes Communion happened, no I was not called on to serve.

Jengie
 
Posted by Darllenwr (# 14520) on :
 
No freezing rain overnight, but the temperature did fall low enough to put an icy crust on everything this morning. Spent quite a lot of time spreading rock salt over the steps down to the church this morning. St G effectively house-bound - it simply isn't viable getting her scooter out in this stuff. As it is, I had to do urgent running repairs to her scooter yesterday morning, when the drive belt broke its internal steel banding and stretched out of shape, leaving her stranded in town. Be thankful for mobile phones.

Temperatures are high enough for there to have been a significant thaw today and are forecast to stay comfortably above freezing overnight. All being well, St G will be able to get to work in the morning.

I hope she does - she rapidly succumbs to cabin fever when she can't get out and I can't cope with coming home to find her climbing the walls!
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
Hope you're all OK and surviving.
It seems somewhat paradoxical to me that north of the border seems to be positively balmy by comparison. No snow here, though we had rain yesterday, and it was a little icy this morning. Didn't stop anything though... (Of course further north may have copped it too - I don't know)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
We're surviving. I went out briefly to the shop at the corner of the road, partly to check what state the pavements were going to be in pre-dawn for the morning trip to work. Bits of them are fine and clear - a lot has melted today - but there are some potential ankle-twisters if it freezes over tonight.

Some kids were playing with the snow in the road this afternoon - "Let's build a snowman!" suggested one, quickly followed by another's, "No, let's make a Hello Kitty!"

Whatever it was they made, it didn't look a lot like either...
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Not a single flake in Stirling either - I took this picture in the garden earlier, it's not tropical or anything but is fairly mild.

Listening to the BBC news is interesting, it keeps talking about "large parts of the UK" being covered in snow, when what it means is "large parts of England". When I first moved here I wasn't convinced of the charge of London/England-centric national BBC, but I do notice it more these days.
 
Posted by angelica37 (# 8478) on :
 
Several inches of snow here, enough to close the container port and delay some trains and also make the garden look really pretty.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We're still freezing here, and no melt of snow except a bit of falling from roofs - not sure what's happening tomorrow - some pictures of Nottingham yesterday and here today.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Great pictures CK - I love the one with the girl in the orange coat [Smile]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I hate my computer! I was trying to watch "Call the Midwife" - actually saw about half of it as my computer wouldn't strem it properly [Mad]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
No change really in the weather here except the icicles are getting longer ... I spoke to my dad in Orkney yesterday and he said they'd just had rain but no snow.

We did a cracker of a Candlemas service this morning - the Dean told D. it was one of the best services we've ever done. [Yipee] Though I say it what shouldn't, I made a not at all bad job of the "mean"* solos in the Nunc dimittis from Weelkes' Service for Trebles.

That's Christmas really over now. [Big Grin]

* mean - a sort of second soprano/first alto line.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm trying to sort out my flights to UK for May but it really is a maze - I may give in and go to a travel agent!

So many airlines, so many choices - it is quite bewildering.

Once I have firm dates and an itinerary I shall consider a possible Shipmeet whilst there - watch this space!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Gentle thaw in operation now, but it has left the paths like ice rinks, so I am housebound until snow clears.

Thank goodness for computers, books, central heating and Tesco deliveries!

All yesterday was really foggy, but didn't stop sledgers. Quite weird seeing ghostly parents watching ghostly sledgers!

But dog did a runner on me and then got lost and disorientated in fog. Luckily Mr.N came to rescue and found him.

Dog was not popular.
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm trying to sort out my flights to UK for May but it really is a maze - I may give in and go to a travel agent!

So many airlines, so many choices - it is quite bewildering.

Once I have firm dates and an itinerary I shall consider a possible Shipmeet whilst there - watch this space!

You're coming to the UK. Yay.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I just informed him that he will be the courier for pure chili powder this year.

[Devil]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Yay, I made it! Been out of communication for some weeks as I made the big move from New Zealand to England.

I'm living with my husband's Aunt and Uncle in Somerset and we're looking for jobs in Bristol/ Bath. Will be looking for a flat once we're closer to getting the job thing sorted.

Was *very* excited by the snow the other day but am also enjoying it being a bit milder so I can walk about without being wrapped up from head to toe. Maybe by next winter I might've toughened up a bit?

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Welcome to Blighty, EJ!
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Welcome, EJ! The snow is going, so make the most of it!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm trying to sort out my flights to UK for May but it really is a maze - I may give in and go to a travel agent!

I know, it's a real headache trying to book anything on the internet - too many provisos and contradictory special offers with attached conditions ("This flight only £2.50 but you must be at the airport for a 3.30am departure. Standing only, no seats. Baggage allowance nil. Sandwiches £10 each on board, please reserve 30 days before travel.")

Eleanor Jane - welcome to England, hope you have a great time here! I'm sure there'll be a bit more snow for you yet.
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
Beautiful photos Curiosity.
I'm very relieved that we just have slush now. Roll on spring.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Ye gods and little fishes. I just checked the weather for tomorrow and the low is going to be somewhere between -12° or if we're lucky merely -9°.

Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

(I played a concert this weekend (Mozart's Requiem [Yipee] ) in a church with rather, ahem, cursory heating. I had on five layers of clothing (yay for thermal running bottoms that fit under trousers) and was not warm. For Saturday's rehearsal I took a thermos because I am English and there is no problem I will not try to solve with tea. People thought this quite hilarious but were still quite happy when I pulled out the extra paper cups [Smile] )
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
All the best for your new life in Bristol, EJ, and good luck with the job-hunting. [Smile]

Wodders, do you have to go to England in May and not April, when we'll be over? [Frown]

It's warmed up to -3° but still feels jolly cold; it's been snowing in a half-hearted fashion all evening, enough to make the clear bits of road white again.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Maybe by next winter I might've toughened up a bit?

Don't try to be tough. Go native. It is British to complain about the winter temperature if it falls below +5°. That it is cold in winter should come as a shock every year.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...Wodders, do you have to go to England in May and not April, when we'll be over? [Frown] ...

Give me your dates and I'll see BUT Pete is still here until mid-April.

Speaking of Pete, one of his favourite expressions is My Goodness - which in his case may be the ultimate oxymoron!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Welcome to the You Kay EJ!

Hope you feel very much at home here.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Telepath (# 3534) on :
 
I have just had an email about further delays to something that is an absolute priority to me. I'm now extremely worried and having trouble not losing my cool. [brick wall]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Thanks for the kind wishes all!

I've already tried tights under my jeans, but thermal running bottoms are a good idea if it gets really severe.

I'm afraid I'm never going to be Bristish enough to like actual tea (sorry!) but I've taken to herbal teas in a big way.

Hugely looking forward to getting settled and being able to join a choir and some other activities... going a bit mad cooped up in a small town in Somerset with not much to do but apply for a job once a day.

Sympathies, Telepath. Hope your messy thing sorts itself out quickly.

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:


I'm afraid I'm never going to be British enough to like actual tea (sorry!)

Give it time, give it time - it's an acquired taste but once acquired, totally addictive!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
There are only two ways to drink tea.

One is in from a china teapot poured into china cups, the tea can be fairly weak, and perfumed (but no perfume for me, thanks). A lace tablecloth helps.

The other is transport cafe tea. (It is pronounced transport KAFF.) Very strong served in a pint pot.

Anything between these two extremes is JustNotBritish™

[i]coding [/b]

[ 07. February 2012, 11:59: Message edited by: Balaam ]
 
Posted by Telepath (# 3534) on :
 
[Hot and Hormonal] I apologize for whacking my prayer request into completely the wrong thread this morning. [Hot and Hormonal]

I found my cool, thanks. But now I seem to have mislaid it again. [Hot and Hormonal]

Just pretend I'm not here.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... thermal running bottoms are a good idea if it gets really severe ...

I can't imagine it being cold enough in Somerset to justify thermal anything, but I'm a very warm-blooded piglet.

If you've conquered herbal tea, it's but a small step to Earl Grey, which is Proper Tea.

Wodders - we should to be over from about 9th April for a couple of weeks, although if I'm honest whether we'd be able to fit in a ship-meet may be doubtful as we've got to do both ends of the country.

We bought a new TV today and I can't imagine anything more frustrating than trying to get the damn thing to work. You'd think that connecting a TV set, a DVD machine and a digital-box wouldn't be rocket science, but all I've managed is a blue screen.

Oh well, it'll match the air ... [Devil]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's not a problem to me, Telepath - don't worry about it.

piglet, I can't make those dates at all, sorry - it's a shame but these things happen.

As we were out late last night at the village frolics we have foregone our walk this morning - it looks like being another lovely day. Spoke to friend in Birkenhead yesterday and Merseyrail had ground to a standstill because of frozen points. Should we send notification to all British transport agencies in early December warning that winter is due to arrive soon - it might remind them to be prepared!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
We bought a new TV today and I can't imagine anything more frustrating than trying to get the damn thing to work. You'd think that connecting a TV set, a DVD machine and a digital-box wouldn't be rocket science, but all I've managed is a blue screen.

Oh dear. Yes. I completely understand this.

You have consulted an almanac, haven't you? You need to find a propitious moment when the celestial forces are in proper alignment, otherwise no matter how often you try plugging in the equipment, it won't work.

After that you need to figure out what order you approach the plugs in and when you turn what device on (see almanac as above). These things are capricious, but you don't need me to tell you that.

Good luck. I've avoided buying any new equipment so far for this reason, the set-top box was hassle enough and I still remember the hours spent tuning the video when I first got it.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
Grandchildren did something to my almost new TV and two channels dropped right out. First set said No Signal, then disappeared altogether. I was assured I would not miss those two channels and I agreed with people. But the set was new. I didn't want to have serviceman out. Eventually, after I had tried everything I knew, #1 son came over and did something with remote control, then did what I'd done before. All now works.

However, I'm in his good books, have managed several sorts of complicated technical manoeuvres and got other stuff going without his aid.

Piglet, don't forget to hold your head just in the right position and have tongue pointing out of mouth. All such things are part of getting TVs etc to work. [Biased]

[ 08. February 2012, 06:43: Message edited by: Lothlorien ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I got so cross when I was waiting for a cab on Saturday night to get home when the queue was moaning about how unable Britain was to cope with the weather. It was bad, those conditions would have taken down countries that are used to snow - we had 6 inches in about 3 hours. I was amazed they kept the trains and tubes running as long as they did - I reckoned the points had frozen on the open section of track and that was everyone else's first thought. Driving conditions were atrocious. I got so fed up I pointed out to the moaning woman, that in Canada in these conditions they'd only be keeping the main roads open and that they'd be having to send a squad of ploughs and gritters down the carriage way every hour - and the Canadian in the room backed me up.

Did you know, that same weather coming through on Thursday took out the Swiss transport system and caused delays?

Did you know that areas in the States had no power for 3 weeks with the snow storms in October / November and real problems for a couple of days?

Countries that are used to these conditions take the snow warnings seriously and stay in, batten down the hatches and aren't out on the roads causing chaos. People don't do what my idiot colleague and various other people I was trying to get home with did - go out for their Saturday night out and expect the tube to still be running. They arrived in London as the snow started falling and didn't have the wit to turn around and go straight home.

And yes, I knew I was probably going to be in trouble on Friday when the forecasts were warning snow chaos, but was stuck with prepaid, prebooked tickets and a need to get stuff up to my daughter.

[ 08. February 2012, 07:04: Message edited by: Curiosity killed ... ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Keith and His Boy spent all day in the house removing the recently repaired old boiler (only five years old mind you) and installing a new one. We therefore have hot water and central heating again!

This coincided with a meter reading: the meter reader was horrified to see the meter out-of-circuit so the work could be done, so there was a bit of a discussion between him, Keith and Mrs Sioni; we'll see what follows.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I got so fed up I pointed out to the moaning woman, that in Canada in these conditions they'd only be keeping the main roads open and that they'd be having to send a squad of ploughs and gritters down the carriage way every hour - and the Canadian in the room backed me up.

Yes, but at least they would be doing that. There wasn't any sign of any gritters round our way, let alone snow ploughs. We just got snowed on, full stop (and look what happened on the M40). Luckily it's almost entirely melted and we haven't had any more to create further problems on top of it, but it's the basic lack of anything being done that annoys people. Every time this happens we get the same response from the powers that be: this isn't typical of our winters so we haven't thought it necessary to prepare for it. Then the country grinds to a halt.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I bet the gritters were out, just it will be one gritter whizzing up and down the roads, not the squads that take over all the carriage ways at once, ploughs followed by gritters, which the PtB do have a point, we don't warrant stocking up with. But it wasn't just the conditions, it's also all the idiots who won't take the snow warnings seriously are out too!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
There is still lying snow outside here, crisp and slippy where it has semi-melted and then frozen over again. And it is cold....

EJ, Im a Brit by birth and Im very particular about my tea...and I drink it extremely weak with no milk...a lemon slice if I'm feeling decadent.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
My brother has solar panels and it's great to see the metre going backwards at mid-day, even in the middle of winter!

Minus 4 here today, I've put warm water in the bird bath and a robin is sitting in it having a nice warm up.

[Smile]
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
I was surprised to see lots of snow, often biggish bits, as I walked up the canal on my way yesterday. It seems to not melt there the way it's melted in most of our area in central London.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I nearly posted this in Hell, but it's not worth it.

Sainsburys is being a smartarse for renaming Tiger Bread. It is now 'Giraffe Bread'. Some customer suggested this, based on the pattern. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I nearly posted this in Hell, but it's not worth it.

Sainsburys is being a smartarse for renaming Tiger Bread. It is now 'Giraffe Bread'. Some customer suggested this, based on the pattern. [Disappointed]

Awww. It's been all over the news, and has been highly acclaimed as formidable reaction to kiddo feedback. [Biased]
 
Posted by frin (# 9) on :
 
It's proper manipulation. They press released a cute reply to a child, were pleased to see the press release forwarded all over the place through social media, then renamed the product and claimed that this was the public's idea.

'frin
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I nearly posted this in Hell, but it's not worth it.

Sainsburys is being a smartarse for renaming Tiger Bread. It is now 'Giraffe Bread'. Some customer suggested this, based on the pattern. [Disappointed]

Awww. It's been all over the news, and has been highly acclaimed as formidable reaction to kiddo feedback. [Biased]
Kiddo feedback my arse. Guardian reading, Radio 4 listening parents more like. I'll bet Lily* goes to Center Parcs (ie, Butlins for the middle-classes) for holiday.

*the name is the giveaway for parent ID.
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I agree. Just teasing. Sorry about that. [Smile]

I'm sure giraffe bread tastes just as lovely as tiger bread. Please carry on.
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
What's wrong with holidays in Centre Parcs?

Oh wait ...

... I'm middle class!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wesley J:
I agree. Just teasing. Sorry about that. [Smile]

I'm sure giraffe bread tastes just as lovely as tiger bread. Please carry on.

It tastes the same 'cos it is the same. I find that the loaf loses its shape when cut so one gets a compacted slice four/five inches long but only an inch high. Pretty nasty really. Traditional bloomers keep their shape better.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
...Traditional bloomers keep their shape better.

Surely that depends on who is wearing them!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
You can still get tiger bread elsewhere and it's a lot nicer at M-------s. You can actually taste the tiger - I mean, sesame on the top, and I found the bread compulsively more-ish when fresh. I had the giraffe bread a while ago and wasn't impressed by it, it seemed fairly ordinary and a bit tasteless so haven't bought it since. Real tiger bread is great with most things - seems to bring out the flavour.

I think I might even get some tonight on the way home, now.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
You can still get tiger bread elsewhere and it's a lot nicer at M-------s.

I'll have to agree with Ariel that -orrison- Tiger bread is better than the S**nsb*ry's equivalent.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I didn't know you could make bread from tigers. Or giraffes for that matter. Do they work in bread-making machines?

Wodders - sorry about duff dates - we'll have to content ourselves with waving across the ether. [Smile]

TV is now sorted - my best friend and her husband (who have every electronic gadget known to man) came round and pointed out that the remote-control that came with it is un fat lot de bon on its own - you have to use the digi-box one as well.

Unfortunately, the new DVD machine will only work in black-and-white unless you connect it with the right sort of cable (which costs more than the machine did), so we're exchanging it for one that has the cable included ...

What a faff. [Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...Unfortunately, the new DVD machine will only work in black-and-white unless you connect it with the right sort of cable (which costs more than the machine did), so we're exchanging it for one that has the cable included ...

What a faff. [Help]

Yes we needed a specific cable to connect the new camcorder to the TV, normally I buy cables two at a time as I always seem to lose them but this time I bought just the one as I didn't want to upset my bank manager too much - how can a little bit of wire cost so much?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I didn't know you could make bread from tigers. Or giraffes for that matter. Do they work in bread-making machines?

If you can put a tiger in your tank, you can put one in your bread-making machine.

Though it could be that the bread is made by tigers - you know, one of those "handmade by members of a tiger community in the wilds of Sumatra" types of bread. I must look more closely at the labels some time.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
<dog/house sitter sorted, sunhat packed, passport and tickets in bag - check>

We're off!

See you in sunny Mexico!

**waves**

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Though it could be that the bread is made by tigers - you know, one of those "handmade by members of a tiger community in the wilds of Sumatra" types of bread.

More likely "Produced in a rehabilitation centre which helps reintegrate disadvantaged tigers into society".

Vaguely apropos of which, I was given a small gift in SA - an item produced by some struggling fraction of society. It is embossed brass, about 3" long, shaped a bit like a teensy-weensy crozier and with a pendant bead on the end. I have absolutely no idea what it is - does anyone else?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Vaguely apropos of which, I was given a small gift in SA - an item produced by some struggling fraction of society. It is embossed brass, about 3" long, shaped a bit like a teensy-weensy crozier and with a pendant bead on the end. I have absolutely no idea what it is - does anyone else?

It's funny you should say that – I was sent something similar once for my birthday years ago, with a rather fancy bit of jade green knotwork at the end and a nice jade (or lookalike) drop hanging from it. To this day I have no idea what it is or does, and was obliged to write a thank-you email that went something like "thank you very much for the lovely jade thing." Mine is about 6" long and silver-coloured, btw. Taking the jade (or more likely, jadeite) into account, I'm guessing it's not from SA.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, I think it is a teensy-weensy crozier thing and with a pendant bead on the end!

I think Canadians must be designed a bit different from other folks - at supper tonight Pete informed us that his legs were aching from his head to his toes! [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
It's funny you should say that – I was sent something similar once for my birthday years ago

It'll be what archaeologists call A Ritual Object.


[coding]

[ 09. February 2012, 13:56: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Are you sure it is not a bookmark?
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by lily pad:
Are you sure it is not a bookmark?

It could be used as a bookmark, but why not straight and tapering, instead of curved and a bit fatter at the end? If I ever come across some old jewellery findings (which I know are somewhere), I'll make it into a brooch.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I did wonder if it was a bookmark but it seems a slightly odd one. I don't think I've ever had a metal one before with - hmm, now that I've managed to get it out of the drawer and look closely - a jade bead, the aforementioned fancy knotwork, a small jade frog (how could I have forgotten that?) and two long tassels.

I should really have asked what it was at the time but am perfectly content to accept the archaeologists' standard interpretation of a cultic object. As is clearly borne out by the frog.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Something like this is what I thought of when I first read your description.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yes - apart from it being blue and frogless - that's it.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
Similar but longer have been sold in $2 Shoppes (TM) for some time. I have two, both gifts, with enamel butterflies on hook. They don't work very well and I don't use bookmarks anyway, I remember page numbers.
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
It's a bookmark--we used to sell them in the place I worked as a teenager. And no, they don't work very well. Though I've never tried to use one as a cultic object.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Just back from dinner with friends to celebrate my birthday (50th [Eek!] ) which is on Friday. Good food, good company and a little drink or two. [Smile]

It started sn*wing about half-way through dinner, and if it carries on like this we might get a sn*w-day, which would be quite nice ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's Friday here so Happy Birthday piglet!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Happy Birthday,piglet.

And happily a no-snow day here, as my car is in dock and the person due to give me a lift to w*rk can't get out of her drive in the event of significant snow.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We have snow, again - it's very pretty! but I want it to go away, I have to move an offspring's goods and chattels to Nottingham next week.

Happy Birthday piglet
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Just back from dinner with friends to celebrate my birthday (50th [Eek!] ) which is on Friday.

You'll find you don't look any older than you did the day before. As with 40, it's the start of another new decade, you're still alive, still able to move around and do all the things you did yesterday. Enjoy your birthday!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Cold, but no snow. Cloud down to the ground, mizzle and general dampness.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
For me I think the best thing about being in my 50s, if I can remember that far back, was feeling even less concerned with what other people thought of me than I had been in my 40s.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Happy Birthday, Piglet! 50 is just so 'in' now! [Big Grin]

Cold, cold, cold here, and anything that was snow/slush/water is now frozen solid. Hard work taking the dog out, I have to keep to the grass as otherwise I am likely to fall over. [Eek!]

Trying hard to think of something sensible/newsworthy to say, but the only "interesting" email I have received is one to say my library books will be overdue in three days time.

There must be more to life somewhere. [Help]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Snow! So pretty but of course it's the day we're hiring a car and driving for an hour or two. It doesn't look like *much* snow so hopefully we'll be okay.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Happy Happy birthday Piglet!

***Waves from sunny Mexico**

Husband not pleased as I'm tapping away on the computer at 6am - body clock not adjusted yet - hehe!

He came over last weekend to prepare stuff (we are doing charity work with street kids followed by a little holiday in Palm Springs, Grand Canyon, Las Vegas and San Diego)

Now I'm going to annoy him further by finding Chris Evans breakfast show on the computer.

[Big Grin]

[ 10. February 2012, 13:08: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Another inch of snow last night so had to dig the car out -- again

come Monday and it will be 33 degrees in Cape Town.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:

come Monday and it will be 33 degrees in Cape Town.

So cooled down a bit since a couple of weeks ago.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
We had about 3-4" of snow here. Most of which melted, so the roads are mostly clear, though what's left of the slush is turning rapidly to ice. TV reception is now virtually non-existent except for fragments of subtitles appearing now and again. I bought a more expensive set-top box today, hoping it would be better, and it completely failed to find any channels at all. Ho hum. Roll on spring.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Hipy papy bthudy Piglit!

Hope you had a great one - as the shoe advert says "Act your shoe size, not your age"...which only works if you take your UK shoe size pre-metric. Although now I come to think of it my continental shoe size would be quite good too!

Still frozen slush here...had enough of it now.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
happy birthday Piglet! Hope you've had a good day. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Happy Birthday, piglet!!

I'm deeply miffed that the snow was as pathetic as it was.

We'd had the usual "What to do in snowy weather" e-mails and reminders, ("Don't even think of thinking you can't make it into work" being the general gist and "Living 30 miles away is no excuse", though my line manager is sympathetic to that one for me, as I've got the best attendance and punctuality record this year!!)and as it was only today left before 9 days mostly off, I'd girded my loins, and psyched myself up to battle through the snow, prepared to be Very Late, or lost in a snow drift, or stuck on a train unable to move anywhere...or even hopeful of no trains at all.

I was 2 minutes later than usual. Snow's almost all gone.

I will now go and love and cherish my outside pipes, though. I do not want to sacrifice a second Saturday morning running to persuading them they do not wish to remain frozen.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... we might get a sn*w-day ...

... then again we might just get some rain which was enough to create four-inch puddles but not really enough to displace much of the accumulated snow. Mind you, they're forecasting up to 45mm (about 1¾ inches in English) of rain on Sunday - that could facilitate some heap-diminution.

Thank you for all the birthday wishes. You're quite right - I don't really feel more than a day older than I did yesterday. D. and I are planning to carry out some research tomorrow at a restaurant we've been meaning to try for ages - will report back. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Glad you had a good day, Piglet. Relax and settle into your new decade.

Another very cold but bright day today. A bright orange sun in the sky this morning, with frost, snow, ice and mist everywhere, plumes of smoke and steam rising up from chimneys to greet the dawn. Everything white, silver, shades of coral and peach, a really pretty winter's morning. The birds have turned up the volume and are shouting away now - what a racket.

Went to Stratford on Avon yesterday hoping for pictures of snow-covered Tudor houses, but most of the snow had melted by the time I got there, so that will have to wait for another occasion.
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
Most of our snow has gone, but on the "roofs" particularly not of homes, there is still lots of snow. I wonder what will be good or bad for the place by us that is being mended indoors and is very snowey on it's "roof"....
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
The heating was off all night and put it on this morning. Then discovered no water coming out of the cold tap!!

But all is well now.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A BIG storm moved in about 23.30 last night - it last a couple of hours but we must have been on the fringe as the pyrotechnics were a lot more visible than audible. We always welcome these storms and could do with some more. I was tempted to get out of bed to go and dance naked on the roof but fell asleep again instead [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and, if I'll permit myself a DP, when we got back from cycling to the village this afternoon, there was a medium sized snake in the front garden - at first we thought it might be a krait but then decided it was probably a young rat snake and thus harmless. Anyway, it made off through the hedge into the empty plot next door, but as that is where a family of mongoose live that might not have been a wise move.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Wow WW - impressive!

Glad your heating is back on Shamwari! - brrrrrrrrrrrr!

It's morning here in Mexico - sunny and bright. We are just about to set off for the project (shanty town on top of the hill) I will be chatting to the staff and getting to know the new members.

Then burritos for lunch!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
WW - hope you are writing a book about your adventures - if not why not!!
Just spent frustrating time trying to tax my car on line. System doesn't like me because my insurance and tax date are close - I bought the car from new so wouldn't that always be the case??? I must seek advice from the people I work with who look after said computer [Disappointed] system
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!

I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.

Anyway, I expect you're hungry enough to eat a horse, so enjoy [Biased]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I was tempted to get out of bed to go and dance naked on the roof but fell asleep ...

I suppose we should be thankful for small mercies. [Big Grin]

Well, the research at the restaurant had to go on "hold" as there was a hockey game in the stadium downtown and we couldn't get parked within miles of the place. So D. said he'd heard that the food at a hotel with a spectacular harbour view (and a car park) had improved in recent months, so we tried that.

It hadn't. They were having a "Valentine's Day buffet" [Help] which was ordinary in the extreme (and that which was meant to be hot wasn't) and they had the worst pianist I've ever heard tinkling away on the ivories. He was so bad he was funny - we were in stitches for much of the time - and we also ran into some friends and ended up having quite an enjoyable evening. As the Terrible Pianist™ had buggered off (and the place was about to close) by the time we were paying our bill, D. sat down at the piano and started to play, and the girl at the desk was so impressed she asked him if he'd be interested in coming back, so he gave her his card.

As he said, three nights a week doing that, and he'd almost double his salary.

One for the book, I think. [Devil]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
On the tightest of schedules today. Two services then home. get changed and immediately off to airport heading for the tip of Africa.

Hope to catch up with the Ship as she sails past Robben Island.
 
Posted by Ann (# 94) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... and they had the worst pianist I've ever heard tinkling away on the ivories. He was so bad he was funny - we were in stitches for much of the time ...

That takes me back. Many years ago, some friends and I would occasionally go to a certain pub whose entertainment was "The Kent Trio". This consisted of a (bad) pianist and a worse singer - I think the third of the trio had died - of advanced age. One of their repertoire was Tom Jones's "Delilah" - complete with dropping weights into the grand piano for no discernible reason apart from making a discordant noise.

All this was background music - not a concert - people carried on with their conversation regardless, pausing to applaud every time the music stopped.

One evening, we were talking about old children's programs and one of our group remembered a song or something from Children's Hour; when he'd got all the way through, we clapped him. The tables around us started clapping as well and the trio stopped what they were playing and took a bow!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Sunday morning here - we are off to Church, which is a very in-your-face Mexican Pentecostal.

[Eek!]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!

I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.

Anyway, I expect you're hungry enough to eat a horse, so enjoy [Biased]

[Big Grin] Couldn't let this gem go without appreciation! Burritos are usually filled with mince, so it could well be minced donkey! (Unlikely, though)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... minced donkey ...

EJ, please tell me that isn't a Kiwi delicacy you've brought over. [Eek!]

Minor embarrassment at the end of the morning service today - it's nine years today since D. took up the post of organist, a fact the Dean announced to the congregation, just after announcing that it had been my 50th birthday on Friday.

Revenge is a dish best served cold - I told him that come his next Significant Birthday™ he should be Very Afraid* ...

[Devil]

* although as he's only a few months older than me, he's got quite a long wait.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Surely at that advanced age EVERY birthday is significant!
 
Posted by daviddrinkell (# 8854) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Then burritos for lunch!

I'm not sure why, if a burro is a donkey, a burrito isn't a smaller donkey.

Anyway, I expect you're hungry enough to eat a horse, so enjoy [Biased]

I, too, had wondered about that.....
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... minced donkey ...

EJ, please tell me that isn't a Kiwi delicacy you've brought over. [Eek!]


No, no... we only mince possums (there are just too many of the buggers, gotta do something with them all!)
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
There were donkeys, on the beach - just like Blackpool!

It's morning here so we are having a quick coffee then off up the hill. We have 4 people building and fencing a playground, 4 people doing kids work and 2 doing staff training.

The temperature has dropped to 17 and it has clouded over.

Mr Boog has borrowed a bike and goes for a 20K ride each morining. He's cycling Seattle to Boston in the summer for the charity.

[Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
... The temperature has dropped to 17 ...

Goodness, that's nearly cool enough to be civilised. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
17C is darned near freezing!!

BRRRRRRR!!!

I think it is in the high 20s here at the moment, so a little cool, but we are managing by sitting watching the cricket.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
posted on wrong thread oops. arrived after long sleepless flight and knackered. Nights sleep helped
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Virtual quiche now available. It's surprising how quick it is to make with ready rolled pastry, ready sliced mushrooms and ready grated cheese!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I missed this:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
minced donkey!

[Runs and hides]
 
Posted by Jabber (# 9668) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
I missed this:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
minced donkey!

[Runs and hides]
Is this linked to this excellent burrito stall?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today I have booked flights to Blighty for May - my stay will be SHORT [just 14 nights] but when I have more idea of itinerary I will see if I have fit in a Shipmeet.

I managed to do it all on my own on the interwebby thing - I brought up pages for all the airlines I could think of that fly out of here and into London - and then remembered one more, Saudi Airlines, and they had the best price so I went for it - all bought and paid for and tickets printed!

I will arrive UK early 4th May and leave afternoon 18th May. The first weekend will be either in Bristol or the Forest of Dean depending where my friends are staying then I shall head north and south again to London/Surrey a day or two before I leave.
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
Just a note in case any Londoners are interested - a documentary called "A City Falls" will be screening somewhere in London on 22/2. It shows footage of the central city area of Christchurch during the large quake on the same date last year.

It doesn't seem like a year, but with over 10,000 aftershocks, some almost as big, but without loss of life, the time has been somewhat akin to being on a very long rollercoaster ride without the certainty of getting off in one piece.

Huia
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - wedon't all live within easy reach of London you know!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Huia:
Just a note in case any Londoners are interested - a documentary called "A City Falls" will be screening somewhere in London on 22/2. It shows footage of the central city area of Christchurch during the large quake on the same date last year.

It's at the Ritzy in Brixton, costs £20 + booking fee and the first showing has sold out - link
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Quiet day in Cape Town. Weather perfect. Already getting browned off
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Quiet day in Cape Town. Weather perfect. Already getting browned off

Have you been to the Botanic Gardens yet? Fantastic setting, and the elevation gives it that bit of freshness.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!

If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
To Kalk Bay and Fish Hoek and perhaps around the peninsular today along Chapmans Peak drive. Fantastic scenery
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
To Kalk Bay and Fish Hoek and perhaps around the peninsular today along Chapmans Peak drive. Fantastic scenery
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Why were you browned off, Shamwari? It sounds wonderful! Hope you're enjoying it more now.

M.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Just sunburn M!!

Had a marvelous Kobbeljou (cod) in Kalk Bay then walked the length of the catwalk in Fish Hoek. Shark warnings out but no sign of dem fish.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Are you going outside of CP? Stellenbosch is charming.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Originally posted by Shamwari:

quote:
Just sunburn M!!

Oh! I've never heard it used like that, only to mean cheesed off! [Hot and Hormonal]

M.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Hey hey all - I am up at the daycare centre waiting for the staff to arrive. The sun is out but a COLD wind is whistling round the hill!

The behaviour management training is being very well recieved, which pleases me a great deal.

[Smile]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!

If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
Taurus would be great - there's a nice restaurant there and some nice shops, also a very good garden centre.It's nice and easy to get to from quite a big area, and also has a big car park. To paraphrase Darllenwr's father, all you want for a tourist attraction is a car park, toilet and tea bar!
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It would be nice if you could fit a western ship meet in Wodders - we don't all live within easy reach of London you know!

If we're in the Forest Taurus might be a [very good] possibility! I'll e-mail my friends and see what is planned.
Taurus would be great - there's a nice restaurant there and some nice shops, also a very good garden centre.It's nice and easy to get to from quite a big area, and also has a big car park. To paraphrase Darllenwr's father, all you want for a tourist attraction is a car park, toilet and tea bar!
Where is that then? Pardon my ignorance!! I only know of it as a sign of the zodiac with which I am not interested. [Confused]
 
Posted by Darllenwr (# 14520) on :
 
"Taurus" would, I think, be "Taurus Crafts" between Aylburton and Lydney on the southern fringe of the Forest of Dean. If you follow the old A48 east from Chepstow heading for Gloucester, you will find that Taurus is on your left just before the roundabout for Lydney / Lydney bypass. Very easily accessible, with a nice cafe, a large (free) car park and some very interesting things for sale (some of the foods are very interesting).

In other words, an excellent meeting place.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Sounds lovely - I would be up for that, date permitting.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
When are you heading north, Wodders?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I will be starting a Meet thread soon so as not to take over this thread. I think Taurus [or Bristol] will be 5th or 6th or 7th May and a northern meet [if it occurs] sometime between after that and before I fly to London about 16th. If there is a southern meet that will be 16th or 17th, probably at The India Club. I fly home here on 18th May - for a rest!

BUT I also have work to do whilst over and other friends to see so nothing is written in stone yet.

I will also be bringing this year's supply of chilli powder as Pete is not travelling via England this year, though he has offered to pay for it - I will start a thread for that somewhere as well.

- - - -

In other news the newly maintained roads round here are proving very quick for Pete on his twice daily perambulations - I think I shall have to plan some tougher routes [Snigger]

14 year old neighbour boy who broke his arm at Christmas and is only recently plaster free was trying to elicit sympathy last night as he now has a dressing on the big toe of his right foot - he still seemed to be able to run and cycle as well as ever!

[ 17. February 2012, 02:30: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Starting travels tomorrow. First to Cape winelands to visit friends who live in the middle of a vineyard near Robertson. Then along garden route to Sedgefield near Knysna. My sister has a house on the lagoon
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Ooh, India Club sounds great - look forward to meeting you then!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
All this talk of travels makes me yearn for somewhere warmer, sunnier, nicer, or just different! [Help]

Dank, grey, foggy here - you are not missing a thing, Boogie!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Hope not 5th May, Wodders, as I have a wedding to go to.
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
17th May is my birthday. A shipment with Wodders at the India Club would be a mighty fine way to celebrate it.
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Would love a meet at the India Club too. My birthday is 16 May*, Yangtze!

M.

*One day and several years before yours...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Dates should be settled within the week - I doubt if a choice of dates will exist for most meets, sorry about that. London will be 16th or 17th May. I am told that whether or not we go to The Forest will be open to a democratic vote of those present so am hoping to subvert the process and canvass to ensure we do go as Taurus Crafts sounds better to me as a venue than the Watershed or the Arnolfini. I'll open the threads as soon as I have the dates.


[spelling - again! Of a two letter word!]

[ 18. February 2012, 02:18: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's just possible that our UK dates will be changed as well - we might be postponing our holiday until May, but I'm not sure exactly when. This may be just as well, as I've got application forms ready for a new passport which really need to be posted, or we won't be going anywhere ...

Just back from a v. jolly dinner party in the company of the church-wardens, the Dean (and their spouses) and a couple from the choir - good (if plain) food and good company.

I'm going to have to negotiate some time off on Monday as we've got the funeral of a much-loved retired archdeacon (lovely man, tended to preach for too long) which will require all the resources we can muster.

May he rest in peace and rise in glory. [Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Reported conversation [in translation] between HWMBO and a local 7 year old:

HWMBO: How are things going?

7 year old: Ok but I prefer it at school.

HWMBO: Why is that?

7 year old: School is peaceful but as soon as I come home mum starts shouting at me!

Rather young to be so wise!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm not sure who that says more about - the wee boy or his mum. [Big Grin]

We were given a huge piece of baked ham (about 4½lbs) by my boss (she had more than she could use), and after dividing it up into bits and putting them in the freezer we've got enough to keep us in Piglet's Pancetta Pasta for a very long time indeed.

Our freezer's ridiculously well-stocked at the moment - she also gave us some smoked haddock (which is very hard to find here) for making kedgeree, and someone else gave us sundry bits of moose (which makes a very nice beef casserole, if you see what I mean) and some smoked salmon, so I'm going to be quite a busy piglet, culinarily speaking ... [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Why do you need a freezer? I thought you hardy folks just dug a hole down into the permafrost!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Killing me]

Not at all - they're forecasting the dizzying heights of +3° on Thursday.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Arrived in Sedgefield and housed opposite the lagoon. Great

If you want an unexpected story check Purgatory
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Huge funeral today went off very much according to plan - they all thought the music was wonderful. [Smile] The Archdeacon's widow even made a point of coming and thanking D. and saying how much he would have loved it.

The Fauré Requiem isn't my absolutely favourite thing, but the punters love it ...
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:


If you want an unexpected story check Purgatory

Or not, as the case may be.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Huge funeral today went off very much according to plan - they all thought the music was wonderful. [Smile] The Archdeacon's widow even made a point of coming and thanking D. and saying how much he would have loved it.

The Fauré Requiem isn't my absolutely favourite thing, but the punters love it ...

Ooh, I'm a punter and I love it too!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Friend e-mails and says "if you are online let's Skype" so I go to Skype and no sign of the blighter! I haven't got him down as a friend in Skype so I remedy that and send him a message and so on - nothing! He may be a Senior Police Officer but that doesn't preclude him being a plonker!

[Mad]

My plans for UK are moving apace, everything is falling into line and I have all accommodation arranged except a choice of two places on Merseyside - and they are friends with one another as well as friends with me - who do I disappoint by staying with them? Who do I delight by staying elsewhere?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
How long are you going to be there? Maybe you could spread yourself out a bit - one night with one, one with the other ... [Big Grin]

I'm doing something I don't usually do - Shipping from my w*rk computer (I've already done an extra 2 hours), as D. has got stuck waiting for things to happen at the music festival where he's acting as an accompanist for some of the pupils of a friend, and they're running late. I hope it doesn't get too silly, as I've got to go to a meeting this evening and I'd like a bit of breathing time in between.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
<Boogie waves from Las Vegas>


[Smile]

Long Drive to San Diego today then flight home tomorrow - see you all soooon!
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Went to Knysna and Plettenberg Bay today. Friends have a super wooden house right on the beach. The waves were huge.

Back to Cape Town tomorrow (6 hour drive) and home early next Sat morning.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
My parents honeymoon was at Knysna.

Jengie
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Today I had bare arms. T-shirt weather in February, and its only a few days since the canal was frozen solid.

So that's summer 2012 over.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
In the 1970s in one of the kids' homes I worked in we had a boy from the town where my parents lived - a really nice lad who should not really have been there at all. After he and I had both left we became friends and stayed friends for a long time then we lost touch - a few years ago we got in touch again and then I lost his e-mail address in a crash and had no back up. This morning I got a message from him on Facebook - now married, 2 kids, well settled - I am ridiculously happy about this, he is such a nice guy. Being a friend on Facebook even a crash won't lose me his address.

The shock is that the photos show a guy in his early 50s - but then I was in my 20s back in the 70s and am in my 60s now! I doubt I've seen him since he passed 30.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's all relative, Wodders - yesterday I sent 40th birthday greetings to a Facebook friend who was David's head chorister when we moved to Belfast. We're none of us getting any younger ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Anybody in? /waves/

No...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I am now (**waves back**).

Messing about on the Ship while waiting for the chicken stock to cook; veggies are chopped up and in the fridge, so soup should materialise in the morning.

We've got a big music festival going on here at the moment and D. is playing for several of the competitors*, including my boss's daughter, who's in a class at some godless hour (for a Saturday), so it would be a Kind Gesture if there was a nice pot of soup waiting for him when he comes back, wouldn't it?

* This is a Good Thing, as it involves Remuneration. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I know this question has been asked before but why does anybody BUY soup, either tinned or in powder form - home made soup is so easy and needn't take much time - and it is so much tastier than the bought stuff!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I grew up with canned tomato soup and buttered toast as comfort food when I'm sick. So I'm still partial to it.

I get pretty fussy about soup (probably gone off it after eating it too much for lunch at work) and there's nothing like the smell of a boiling carcass to put me off the soup it's been made into. But then again, many canned or even fresh packaged soups are pretty revolting too. It's a pest 'cos soup is so very good for you!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
For supper tonight we had pakoda/pakora [vegetables in batter and deep fried] - mainly mushroom but HWMBO and Mrs E also peeled some large cloves of garlic and battered and fried them - YUMMY!!

Piglet, you have to give these a go some time - a simple and fairly thick gram flour and rice flour batter with a few pinches of spice. Were we to do them again I might add a few finely chopped herbs to the batter too.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
For supper tonight we had pakoda/pakora [vegetables in batter and deep fried] - mainly mushroom but HWMBO and Mrs E also peeled some large cloves of garlic and battered and fried them - YUMMY!!

Piglet, you have to give these a go some time - a simple and fairly thick gram flour and rice flour batter with a few pinches of spice. Were we to do them again I might add a few finely chopped herbs to the batter too.

Sounds good. Broccoli makes a good pakora, don't know what other spices go into it, but there are visible flakes of red chilli in the good ones.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Additional:

They were fried in a wok, but I don't know how authentic to Indian cooking that was.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I made soup for lunch today - lentil with vegetables and a bit of bacon. Delicious. Thought there was enough for two days, but we were rather greedy......
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
Additional:

They were fried in a wok, but I don't know how authentic to Indian cooking that was.

The thing we use is like a wok in shape, can't remember it's name here, so probably pretty authentic.

That soup sounds good, Nicodemia, except, being non-meat eaters, we'd leave out the bacon but when we make tomato fry [with onions and garlic and stuff] we make too much and whizz the excess to form a base for soup.


[wherever did I learn to spell so badly?]

[ 25. February 2012, 14:41: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Thali, isn't it? As far as I know, the nearest you can buy to a thali in most of the UK is a wok. (But there are areas where they are available)
 
Posted by Spike (# 36) on :
 
Sounds like a karahi to me
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Do deep-fried garlic cloves have the same sort of sweetness you get when you roast them (as in chicken with 40 cloves)? I don't think I've ever actually deep-fried anything - we used to have an electric deep-fryer, but D. was always the one to operate it as I'm a wimp. [Hot and Hormonal]

EJ, I rather wish you hadn't mentioned tinned tomato soup - I think you might have given me a craving. In a general way, I much prefer home-made, but Heinz tomato soup ... mmmmm ... [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No, definitely not a thali as that is basically a plate.

In North India it is indeed a karahi/karai/kadai but, and I have just consulted the kitchen staff about this [i.e. HWMBO and Mrs E], in Kerala it is called a cheena chutty - which means only that it is a Chinese pan! There has been trade between here and China for at least two thousand years, probably closer to three thousand, so there are a lot of Chinese influences in things, e.g. the famous fishing nets all over the place.


eta: yes, piglet, the garlic was wonderfully sweet and so flavoursome!

[ 26. February 2012, 03:35: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Back home to a proper cup of tea.

And a game of hunt-the-laptop!

Anyone else hide things when they go away and completely forget where? I remembered where the car keys were quite quickly - phew!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Anyone else hide things when they go away and completely forget where?
Oh yes! Once put a whole lot of stuff (very non-edible) in the oven! Luckily I found it before I turned the oven on!

Welcome back, Boogie! [Smile] Have you found the lap top?
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Went to watch a Super 15 rugby match yesterday evening.

Sat high up in the gods. 50000 people there. We were too far away from the action.

Last week in Cape Town then home. Will be good to get back.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Ah well, my bad, a karahi it is. But the cheena for China is interesting, just because it's so similar to the English China.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Went to watch a Super 15 rugby match yesterday evening.

Would you not mention rugby - we got stuffed again ... [Waterworks]

Welcome home Boogie - hope you had a good trip! When it comes to hiding things in Silly Places, my mum's strategy for stopping me and my dad from eating the grapes she'd bought for the cheese-board at a dinner party takes some beating - she put them in the tumble-dryer.

[Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
When it comes to hiding things in Silly Places, my mum's strategy for stopping me and my dad from eating the grapes she'd bought for the cheese-board at a dinner party takes some beating - she put them in the tumble-dryer.

[Ultra confused]

My mother once lost her pearls for about 10 years by hiding them in the chest freezer! Not sure if it would have done them any good...

I'm the 'finding things' genuis in my house. My lovely husband couldn't find the cheese on a cheeseboard labelled 'cheese' but I tend to have inklings where things might be.

On another note, I was extrememly excited to find the park where all the squirrels hang out yesterday. I guess they're not a big deal to you native Britons, but gosh I love their furry little selves! [Yipee]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Grey squirrels? Vermin...they have driven the native red squirrels almost to the point of distinction. Tree rats - shoot 'em, I say...

...but I'm glad you are entranced with them, EJ!

Where has the sun gone today?
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Went to the Waterfront this morning. Fascinating place.

A bit of advice to all travellers. Check your times and dates. I thought I was leaving Fri pm for overnight flight. Turns out the flight is a day time one and we get back to London 17.45 on Fridaay. About the time I thought I was going to leave CapeTown.!!!!

So check dates.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Grey squirrels? Vermin...they have driven the native red squirrels almost to the point of distinction. Tree rats - shoot 'em, I say...

...but I'm glad you are entranced with them, EJ!

It wasn't my grey squirrels that did it, so I'm not going to blame them for the sins of their ancestors... [Biased] I'm just going to enjoy them chasing one another up and down the trees at breakneck speed and doing the odd back-flip. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
almost to the point of distinction.

Would that be A- or B++? Or are such distinctions extinct?

[Biased]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:

On another note, I was extrememly excited to find the park where all the squirrels hang out yesterday. I guess they're not a big deal to you native Britons, but gosh I love their furry little selves!

I like them too.

Get a 'squirrel proof' nut feeder for the birds and watch them squirrels work it out - they are very clever and great to watch.

[Smile]

I've just taken the pooches for a walk - damp and drizzly out there. One of them has overeaten at the dogsitters, so he'll be on a strict diet (like me!)

quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:

A bit of advice to all travellers. Check your times and dates. I thought I was leaving Fri pm for overnight flight. Turns out the flight is a day time one and we get back to London 17.45 on Fridaay.

Phew! That would have been an annoying and wasted trip. Hope you have a good journey home.

I still have a touch of jet-lag today, snoozed most of the afternoon away. It's days like today which make me VERY pleased I'm a supply teacher and can pick and choose when I work.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
almost to the point of distinction.

Would that be A- or B++? Or are such distinctions extinct?

[Biased]

Oh dear - preview post clearly NOT my friend on this occasion...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
... I still have a touch of jet-lag today, snoozed most of the afternoon away ...

I always find jet-lag's much worse after travelling west-east. The flights from here are quite often overnight (leaving around midnight Canadian time and arriving early in the morning London time) and if I'm still awake when we hit the M25 it's a minor miracle. Then we get to D's parents' place in Essex and I wake up long enough to say hello and have a cup of tea, and the eyelids start to stick together ... I know you're supposed to stay up until the time you'd normally go to bed, but bugger that ...

... zzzzzz

... [Snore]

Regarding squirrels - my brain tells me they're vermin, but my eyes (and my heart) tell me they're cute. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
I think there in something funny in the tap water. This morning I saw Darth Vader marching into the local primary school as I cycled past.

Any other shipmates in Oxford seen weird things? No, I'll rephrase that - anyone seen anything weirder than usual?

AG
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
We had a cat whose life's ambition was to catch a squirrel. One day there was a particularly stupid squirrel sitting right in the middle of our lawn munching on a nut and completely oblivious to anything going on round it. Enter the cat, who snuck silently up, right within pouncing distance - and suddenly realised just how big a squirrel is (he'd never actually got that close before). The cat stalked away again, wearing an expression that said "I never really wanted to catch one anyway". [Smile]

The only place I have ever seen a red squirrel is at Taizé - it was very early in the morning (I was up at 6:15, mark you, to go running) and I think they hide away once there's more people around.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The Best Dog In The World&trade, now long departed, nearly met his end chasing a squirrel in Arrowe Park many years ago. Squirrel sitting in the middle of the field fails to spot the approach of big lolloping German Shephard/Collie mix until nearly too late and then takes off for the trees - when it realised it wasn't going to make it it turned to fight and bit the offending pooch hard on the lip. Pooch then backed off and came back to me, bleeding quite nastily. I got him in the car and to the vet for a BIG jab of antibiotic but still he had a VERY sickly weekend and took a couple of weeks before he was back to his usual self - my mate the vet said squirrel bites are always dodgy as they are infected with all sorts.

- - - -

On a happier note, yesterday I was in charge of feeding Pete for both breakfast and lunch. For the latter HWMBO had left prepped around 20 - 30 cloves of garlic! I was making a Spanish style omelette so I thought "what the heck" and used all of them as well as potato and onion and mushrooms and all sorts.

It was okay!

As piglet says, you can never have too much garlic.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
I think there in something funny in the tap water. This morning I saw Darth Vader marching into the local primary school as I cycled past.

Phew! Apparently it's book week in school this week (we were talking to a very small and female Shrek in the queue for the pizza van). Obviously Darth was returning his copy of "How to Win Friends and Execute People".

AG
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
He gets about a bit, does Darth. (I know it's old news, but Sandemaniac's story reminded me of this, always worth a rerun).
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
We had a cat whose life's ambition was to catch a squirrel.

Our moggy stalked a squirrel up a tree. Cat gets on a thick branch, squirrel gets on thin branch. Cat goes to thin branch, squirrel goes to thinner branch. Eventually cat gets onto a very thin branch, squirrel jumps to another tree. Cat and squirrel stare at each other for a long time. Cat gives up.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... potato and onion and mushrooms and all sorts.

Presumably not liquorice ones. [Eek!]
quote:
As piglet says, you can never have too much garlic.
Did I say that? I thought it was you ... [Big Grin] I mostly agree though. [Smile]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Damn and blast. My e mail address book was hacked into and all manner of people got spam.

Hope to have sorted it now.

One day of the holiday left. Not looking forwad to arriving at the same time as M25 Friday rush hour
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
By shamwari
Damn and blast. My e mail address book was hacked into and all manner of people got spam.

Never post your email address online where a web robot can read it. And never use the same password for your email as you do for the rest of the web (I know this from having my email used for distributing hardcore gay porn [Hot and Hormonal] ).

If you pubicise you email address a form similar to shamwari AT emailprovider DOT com works as web robots ignore it.

[ 29. February 2012, 11:34: Message edited by: Balaam ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Happy St. David's Day - Dydd Dewi Sant - tomorrow
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Further evidence surfaces of the distorting effect this place has on reality.

Today, while a hole in the ground was being dug in our road, they had temporary traffic lights put up. Leading up to some more temporary traffic lights... which are replacing the original set of temporary traffic lights on the bridge as wot have blown up!

Recursive temporary traffic lights... whatever next?

AG
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Happy St. David's Day - Dydd Dewi Sant - tomorrow

Same to you, St. G., and all our other Welsh chums. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Happy St David's Day indeed!

I have a cold, I am a lousy patient, I feel absolutely crap! It is all the fault of 14 year old neighbour boy who had a cold last week and has obviously passed it on with malicious intent - when I blamed him yesterday he just giggled. We were going out for the day today but I have managed to b****r up everybody's plans. I shall now go back to bed and feel magnificently sorry for myself - I'm very practiced at that.

Happily it promises to be a shortlived event and I should be back to being my usual sweet and lovely self in a day or two.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:

I have a cold, I am a lousy patient, I feel absolutely crap! ...

Happily it promises to be a shortlived event and I should be back to being my usual sweet and lovely self in a day or two.

I hope you're right about the short-lived thing! Husband and I have had nasty colds for a week now - mine turned into a sticky cough and his turned into a gummy nose. It's been quite a pest as we should be job hunting, flat hunting and exploring Bristol...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Lots of red shirts etc and our team leader made about four dozen Welsh Cakes to mark St Davids day.

Praise be though, that the canteen isn't trying to make a big deal of it, as they usually do so badly that true Welshmen and women cry.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Further evidence surfaces of the distorting effect this place has on reality.

Today, while a hole in the ground was being dug in our road, they had temporary traffic lights put up.

You have temporary lights? Luxury!

New lights are being put in near here. This means that both roads meeting the major road are closed. And there's no holes been made, just the old lights removed and the kerb lowered - no sign of any poles for new lights yet, but they've only been there four weeks.

So roads are closed with no work being done to the road surface at all.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Lots of red shirts etc and our team leader made about four dozen Welsh Cakes to mark St Davids day.


Just to prove that social workers aren't quite thoroughly hard bitten and cynical, one of my colleagues brought in a couple of packs of welshcakes and a bunch of daffodils.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Lots of sympathy to those of you with colds - I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle kept in check by Piglet's Patent Cold Remedy™ (lem-sip or similar made palatable with Manuka honey, lemon juice and a wee drop of whisky).

EJ, if you're anything like me, you'll probably pick up more colds than usual in the first wee while after moving to a new place with new bugs. I had several just after we moved to Belfast (and hardly any for the next 14 years) and another several when we moved to Newfoundland; I now seem to be down to about 1½ a year.

I made some red-pepper jelly yesterday; do help yourselves (there's some Philly cheese in the fridge and crackers in the box).
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A full day of rest and lazing about and sleeping [a lot] yesterday and today I am loads better - but it looks like Pete is getting it now!

Off for haircuts soon.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Thanks Piglet - a good thought as I'm normally proudly resistant to colds. It's just your wretched new British bugs!

And on another matter... how come they're allowed to close the M5?! We were flabbergasted and appalled last night to be toddling off slowly down an A road (with lorries parked up all each side) 'cos they'd gone and closed the M5! We were sick and tired and it was late... just wanted to blat home down the motorway, but no.

(Normally English roads are much better than NZ roads. It is a bit disconcerting that they're not really lit at all, but otherwise...)
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It takes me about 18 months to acclimatise to the germs in a new place - but I'm a pathetic asthmatic who works with children / teenagers. And for the first 18 months after I've moved I'm hanging on to that thought.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
After our trip to the village this morning both Pete and I answer to the name Shaun! It feels so much nicer when it is all lopped off - I'll probably have it done again just before I head for Blighty in May; I treated myself to the luxury of a professional shave at the same time - BLISS!

How much is a trim in a barber over there these days? Go on, let me know just so I can feel smug about paying less than a quid for a haircut AND a shave!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:


(Normally English roads are much better than NZ roads. It is a bit disconcerting that they're not really lit at all, but otherwise...)

There is nothing wrong with British roads, it's the volume of traffic that causes the chaos - one little bump and major disruption ensues. Our town was totally gridlocked yesterday, many journeys abandoned. My husband teaches piano on the other side of town - he had to cancel.

The disruption was due to a bump on the motorway, traffic was diverted, it was rush hour - so that was it, nothing moved!
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
So why was it called rush hour? - there wasn't much rushing going on, it seems!

[ 02. March 2012, 13:20: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That's a good point, BT - I never really thought about it before, but the slowest driving one ever does is during rush-hour, isn't it?

For those of you in need of comfort, there's cherry CAKE ready for virtual tasting - help yourselves. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I rarely seem to make cake these days since HWMBO became diabetic so a sample of yours is most welcome!

End of school year exams start on Monday, with the big ones, for Standards X, XI & XII a week later - lots of kids heading off to the temple this morning as we did our walk, hoping for Divine intervention, perhaps.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I love cherry cake, so thank you kindly Piglet!

I don't make cakes now, as Mr. N is diabetic. But my cherry cakes used to turn out more cherry layer cakes, with the cherries all lying on the bottom, leaving plain cake above!

It was amusing to see how various family members ate it a) neatly sliced with a bit of plain and a bit of cherry in each slice, b) eating cherries first and fiddling with plain cake afterwards or c) eating plain cake and saving cherries till last.

I'm sure it was all psychologically significant! [Eek!]
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Ah yes, my cherry cakes have all the cherries at the bottom, even if I flour them first. That, and the jaunty angle of the cake, make them quite, er, distinctive.

Morning all. I have been very absent. I'm sort of here, but in a lurking way. All this ongoing folderol with the medical stuff means my brain is coping best with being vaguely intelligible in just one place, rather than lots of message boards at once, IFYSWIM. But reatment is still working, so I'm not complaining.

Been rushing about like a mad thing this week, with visits to Parliament, English Heritage, Riding for the Disabled and Dogs for the Disabled to set up autism guidance and training etc. Brilliant fun! [Yipee] but probably not quite what my specialists had in mind when suggesting I take life a bit easy... [Roll Eyes] (Can't do a thing with me...!)
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Lots of sympathy to those of you with colds - I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle kept in check by Piglet's Patent Cold Remedy™ (lem-sip or similar made palatable with Manuka honey, lemon juice and a wee drop of whisky).

I'd say that's three ingredients too many. Only the last one is essential.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I've been taking zinc diligently for two years now - NO colds NONE!, and I work with primary aged children who cough and sneeze all over the place.

I often get a 'tickle' - then it goes away after a few hours - another one fought off.

Go zinc!

[Smile]

[ 03. March 2012, 13:12: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Hi Amber - great to see you here, even if you cherry cakes are a little short of vertical!! [Biased]

You do seem to have been rather busy for someone who has been told to take it easy! When I read your post I thought at first that the dogs had autism. [Hot and Hormonal]

But, on the other hand, that could explain the way our dog is! [Smile]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I've never actually had cherry cake, but it sounds good. Maybe I can have a go at making one when we've got a proper kitchen etc...

Also, British weather rocks! They keep saying it's going to rain then it doesn't. It's only rained about twice in the last month. In New Zealand it pretty much rains for about three months in winter/spring (at least it did in my part of it).

But your cold bugs suck. *Still* resting and getting ever so slowly better...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by amber:
Ah yes, my cherry cakes have all the cherries at the bottom, even if I flour them first.

I'd turn the cake out of the cake tin when done, apply icing over what would normally be the bottom side of it, stick some extra large glace cherries on top in a pleasing pattern and tell people it's a cherry-upside-down cake.

There is actually a dodge for getting the cherries to distribute themselves throughout the cake mix so they don't all sink, but I can't remember what it is. It might be taking the cake tin out of the oven a few minutes after it's gone in and stirring the mixture, but I can't swear to it.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
How nice to hear from you, Amber!

Cherry cake = good, wherever the cherries are in the mixture!
Is there any left? I've just come back in from singing (among other things) Durufle's Requiem, and I'm Quite Pickish...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hello Amber! **waves** [Smile] Good to see you back!

There's plenty of CAKE left, and the cherries are actually not too badly distributed - coating them in flour certainly helps. I used glacé cherries this time (the recipe calls for maraschino) but D. had been shopping at the Bulk Barn and brought a tub - his way of saying "it's time you made some CAKE".

There's also a pot of chilli con carne bubbling away on the stove, if anyone wants something a bit more savoury.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Oh dear - my pooch Callum has had a stroke in the night. He is OK, but it's another sign of how old they both are and that they're not far from the rainbow bridge :-(

When we got him the breeder said 'I want you to have this one' - I replied 'I can't afford another' She said 'No, I want you to HAVE him, he's got serious heart problems and will only live 18 months at the most' That was 12 years ago.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Poor little dog, glad he's OK, but hope he feels better very soon [Frown]

Snowing here, in amidst the heavy rain, but not settling. Bitterly cold, yet another Sunday when the weather puts you off going anywhere.
 
Posted by Qoheleth. (# 9265) on :
 
Snowing here too! [Cool]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No sign of snow here [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
No snow here either [Smile]

Yesterday I was chatting with my father-in-law who was telling me that they were having a beautiful day (in Herefordshire), whilst we were stuck with grey and wet mizzly yuckiness. Today we have blue skies and sunshine, and on fb and here I am reading of snow down south. I am beginning to wonder if the UK has turned itself upside down overnight.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, the weather has prompted me to open a bottle of wine, have some hot buttered fruit scones with jam, and spend a very pleasant afternoon in the kitchen cooking a few things that will mean I don't have to cook anything for the next 2-3 days.

I wouldn't have done any of that if it had been warm and sunny, I'd have felt obliged to go out somewhere instead. The sky looks quite ominous in the east at the moment, so it might be time for another scone.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Votive] for Callum - poor wee dog.

It's been quite a nice day here - it was 5° and really quite spring-like at lunch-time. D. and I went to a downtown restaurant for lunch and had a nice walk along the street on the way to and from where we'd parked, which is something we haven't really done for a while.

Mind you., they're forecasting sn*w ane then freezing rain overnight - probably not quite enough to justify a sn*w-day.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I don't know where all this snow is coming from... it's a bit chillier here but fine and certainly nowhere near snow (as far as I can tell from my limited experience).

I think we chose a good bit of England to live in, weather-wise. It was one of the key factors as I get a bit down with overcast grey skies.

Boogie... my sympathies for the dog situation. It's hard when they get older...
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Bright sunny day here...bit breezy, but as long as the sun is shining, I don't mind.

One of our Elderly cats who has been being treated for kidney disease is looking very sad and withdrawn. I love my cats, but don't enjoy this stage of their lives...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Votive] St Everild for your poor old cat.

Thanks all, for your sympathy for Callum. He was unable to walk for a while, but he seems to be back to normal now. Apparently strokes are nothing like as serious in dogs as in humans (Because they don't have a Cortex?)

Sunny and chilly here. Coffee/tea and newly baked bread on offer.

[Smile]

<edited for spelling - can't spell, never could!>

[ 05. March 2012, 13:48: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle ...

Unfortunately said minor sniffle has found a boomerang and come back with a vengeance. Is a computer virus when you communicate with people on the interweb and then get their colds (MENTIONING NO NAMES [Devil] )?

Tea, sympathy and GIN will all be appreciated.

snuffly piglet
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry about your cold, piglet - everybody else here now has, or has had, the one I had last week!

A great day yesterday, we were whisked off to see the new Church of St Thomas at Malayatoor - a splendid Syro-Malabar Catholic church on the banks of the Periyar river. It is quite stunning inside. During Holy Week it will be packed out with pilgrims who will then head off to climb to the other church on top of the mountain and past the 12 Stations of the Cross.

We had lunch on the way back then I slept most of the afternoon [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... I'm at the tail-end of a minor sniffle ...

Unfortunately said minor sniffle has found a boomerang and come back with a vengeance. Is a computer virus when you communicate with people on the interweb and then get their colds (MENTIONING NO NAMES [Devil] )?

Tea, sympathy and GIN will all be appreciated.

snuffly piglet

Ooops, hope that wasn't me! I'm still sinus-y but SO pleased to able to get out of the house and walk about without being too exhausted and sick.

Anyhoo, seeing as it's virtual, have some tea with a chaser of GIN from me! The sympathy is real. [Smile]

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Not sure I like the sound of tea with a gin chaser...gin goes better with tonic and a dash of bitters...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Plenty of tonic, ice and a slice of lemon in the GIN for me - thanks EJ. [Smile]

If the weather forecasters are right, I may well get the chance to sleep off some of my cold, as we're due to have a blizzard overnight and in the morning, which is expected to dump about a foot of sn*w on us; that should be enough to justify a sn*w-day. [Yipee]

It's now 10:45 p.m. and nothing's happened yet though ...
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Dear Piglet

Given that Canada is pretty near the Arctic, which means snow, ice etc. for quite a few months, do they actually go to work in the winter??

Just wondering!

A faithful reader.

[Two face]

[ 07. March 2012, 08:22: Message edited by: Nicodemia ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
amber - you inspired me to make a cherry cake! The cherries are evenly spaced, I used Delia'sadvice. (But didn't cook it as long - more like 40 mins)

[Smile]

I also have choc chip cake - I'll leave both on the side for you to help yourselves.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Could I have a bit of each, Boogie???

Lucky its virtual cake! But they sound delicious. Do the choc chips stay where they are supposed to?? [Biased]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Hehe - yes they did! Here is a photo of it - the cake tin liner didn't fit so the cake has frilly edges, I've glazed it with orangy stuff.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Hehe - yes they did! Here is a photo of it - the cake tin liner didn't fit so the cake has frilly edges, I've glazed it with orangy stuff.

[Smile]

Yum! That looks delicious! I propose a shipmeet at Boogie's house (though I guess it'd be prohibitively expensive to get there...)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Dear Piglet

Given that Canada is pretty near the Arctic, which means snow, ice etc. for quite a few months, do they actually go to work in the winter?? ...

Dear Nicodemia,

Latitude of St. John's, Newfoundland: 47°N
Latitude of Manchester: 53°N

Who's close to the Arctic now? [Big Grin]

It's true that there are bits of Canada that are very close to the Arctic, but St. John's isn't one of them; we're actually about the same latitude as the north of France. The reason we don't get their weather is they've got the Gulf Stream and we've got the Labrador Current. We got about a foot of snow last night and yes, I did get a snow-day.

Was v. sad today to learn that a former choral scholar had taken his own life. May he rest in peace and rise in glory. [Votive]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Piglet, sorry to hear about your friend - may he rest in peace. [Votive]

On a lighter note, it's International Women's Day today. Some of us are wearing pink, and some have brought in pink cakes, to help us celebrate our inner (and outer) femininity. Enjoy the day, however you spend it - hope it's a good one for you!

Cake (OK, it's not particularly pink but it's one of our office favourites.)
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
quote:Eleanor Jane posted:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Hehe - yes they did! Here is a photo of it - the cake tin liner didn't fit so the cake has frilly edges, I've glazed it with orangy stuff.


Yum! That looks delicious! I propose a shipmeet at Boogie's house (though I guess it'd be prohibitively expensive to get there...)

I could get there - take a while, but I am sure there is a bus/tram/train or all three that would do it!!

Looks scrumptious, Boogie. Wish Mr. N could eat cake (he's diabetic) I love baking.
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books. I should have more days off. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books.

Marvellous!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Opposite of a day off here - only just got back home.

Someone's given me Herman the German sourdough soul/friendship cake - we're on day 4(ish) now and he seems quite happy, but he didn't like travelling to me in a glass jar on day 1, and nearly exploded. I'm wondering how best to pass him on.

Does anyone else have Herman experience? I'm skeptical about his claim that he'll die if I put him in the fridge - are fridges usually fatal to sourdough? I'm guessing not.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Gracious, I can't believe I can answer this, but yes, it needs to rest at room temperature and it doesn't like being shaken.

When you get to day ten, if you don't feel like bestowing your friends with all that pressure, you can divide it up and freeze in portions.

A quick search of the internet will give you tons of recipes. As I kept all five of my portions, I have tried out a variety of recipes - some great, some not so great.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I had to look up Herman the German on the interweb, but it seems to me that if putting him in the fridge is going to kill him, freezing him might not do him much good either.

Does anyone actually get to eat him? [Confused]

I think I'll stick with cherry-cake - much less responsibility.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Yes - you quarter him and then cook him (with added ingredients) on day 10 - then he gets eaten. Yeast doughs can be both fridged and frozen, so I don't see why sourdough can't be. It also seems odd that my recipe doesn't give him time to ferment after adding the final lot of flour, sugar and milk. I'm going to experiment on Herman. [Snigger]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Oh Gosh! I remember Hermann from my daughter's school days - probably the same Hermann!

We seemed to have an awful lot, and everybody around us had Hermann as well, so it was very difficult getting rid of him.

Though he's nice eaten - but not everyday for two or three weeks!

And then there was the ginger beer plant.........
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
I kept my sourdough San Francsico culture in the fridge for months. It just slows them down. Take out and feed and it will spring back to life.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
I kept my sourdough San Francsico culture in the fridge for months. It just slows them down. Take out and feed and it will spring back to life.

Just like worms! [Biased]

(I keep worms for the birds in the 'fridge)
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Herman the German is quite plesant. Ours lived on a window box in our front room, but wasn't easy to clean it off it when it erupted! The problem with these sorts of things is that you run out of people to give them to - it's a wonder that the planet hasn't been taken over by friendship cakes and ginger beer plants. In fact, it would be very inteesting to trace the ancestry of any particular batch. Is it like human ancestry, where we're all supposed to be connected within - is it 7? - a small number of relationships.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had a lovely couple of nights in the mountains followed by a difficult journey back but we made it. I was put on breakfast duty this morning to make porage! I added some raisins and had mine with honey - the diabetics had an artificial substitute. Lucky them!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Welcome back, Wodders. I'll have a substitute for the porridge - any substitute ... [Eek!]

I know you're not going to believe this, but the temperature here reached +12°C this afternoon - beating the previous record high for this date by more than a degree.

Hasn't lasted though - it's now back to 0°. [Frown]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books. I should have more days off. [Big Grin]

I am aiming for the same kind of thing today - not quite 11 and so far apart from getting drinks and being on the ship and Saturday Kitchen nothing much has happened. Lovely (though I will need to go shopping later to get provisions for the week).
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Welcome to retirement, where every day can be like that...

Though today I am up, showered, dressed and breakfasted and I have bought a new vacuum cleaner online (that counts as housework, doesn't it?)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
...and I have bought a new vacuum cleaner online (that counts as housework, doesn't it?)

At least a week's worth!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
Day off today. Stayed in bed til eleven then since then I've been curled up on the sofa reading books.

Day off for me today - I'm avoiding all marking and uni work.

(Can't stay in bed 'till 11 - my body bounces out of bed at 8am without my permission [Roll Eyes] )

So far I have bathed one dog and chopped the worst of his matts off - the groomers are booked up for two weeks! Anyone needing work, set up as a dog groomer. Business is booming!

Fresh bread and Lancashire creamy cheese here for all who would like a little lunch.

[Smile]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I'll add stilton and celery. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No celery here, sadly - I hope to get some nice braised celery hearts somewhere whilst I am over in May.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Herman done good. Very tasty.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Lovely mild spring day. Also the National Trust places that closed for the winter have mostly reopened this weekend.

I was greeted at the gate of one place this morning by a friendly black cat, who led me along a steep woodland path. We paused at intervals to admire the view, then without warning he quite suddenly shot up a tree at about 80mph in pursuit of an equally speedy squirrel. Half a second later the squirrel had easily reached the topmost branches, with the closest thing to a grin on its face, while the cat philosophically shrugged, dived headfirst back off the tree to earth and rejoined me for a sedate walk as if nothing had happened.

I suppose cat owners are used to this kind of thing.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely mild spring day. Also the National Trust places that closed for the winter have mostly reopened this weekend.

I was greeted at the gate of one place this morning by a friendly black cat, who led me along a steep woodland path. We paused at intervals to admire the view, then without warning he quite suddenly shot up a tree at about 80mph in pursuit of an equally speedy squirrel. Half a second later the squirrel had easily reached the topmost branches, with the closest thing to a grin on its face, while the cat philosophically shrugged, dived headfirst back off the tree to earth and rejoined me for a sedate walk as if nothing had happened.

I suppose cat owners are used to this kind of thing.

Nope. I think it depends on your cat, but ours never walked anywhere with us. She mostly lay about in sunbeams and occasionally rolled over displaying her tummy enticingly (but more fool you if you stroked it, 'cos then she'd pounce!).

Also, we didn't have squirrels in NZ and possums are far too much for any sane cat to tackle!

Sounds like a jolly nice day anyway.

We drove up to the Midlands to visit a sick relative. My first time driving in the UK - went just fine. We're heading out to a wildlife park tomorrow which should be a treat. [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Lovely day. Did nothing much all morning, cheered the Welsh rugby team to victory this afternoon!! Grand Slam anyone??? Then a bit of food shopping, visit to the parents and home to put not quite finishing touches to a talk for next Thursday to Ladies Meeting at church. There are 4 days left for final polishing yet, right??? Procrastination are us (or could it be waiting for a further word of revelation). Think it's the former to be honest - I know what I have to say - it's just concentrating to find the right words is the hard thing. How all you who do this week in week out manage I know not. [Overused]
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
Nice enough to put washing out on the line [Smile] Found my rubber resistance band - well pleased*


*easily pleased
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
... I have bought a new vacuum cleaner online (that counts as housework, doesn't it?)

Only if you actually use it ... [Big Grin]

We had such a lazy day today that we were woken at about quarter to lunchtime when my dad phoned, and pretended to be apologetic about getting us out of bed. Went for a spot of (not really successful) retail therapy in the afternoon.

EJ. did your driving experience include changing gear with the door-handle and going the wrong way around roundabouts, or do they drive on the correct (i.e. left) side in NZ?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Don't worry, piglet, NZ is a truly civilised country thus they drive on the left, as God intended and as we do here [at least vaguely].

We took sweets to church this morning as it is my burfday, not a significant but everyone seems to be making a bit of/far too much of a fuss. One little girl came back several times for more! I must brave the neighbourhood soon to dole out more sweets!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We took sweets to church this morning as it is my burfday, not a significant but everyone seems to be making a bit of/far too much of a fuss.

Happy birthday! Hope the day is a good one. Lovely sunny morning here.

(And apparently I'm spending it defrosting the fridge. Great.)
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Happy Birthday, WW!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks, folks.

Ariel, one of the best inventions ever was frost free fridges and freezers!

Just had lunch which included both Garlic curry [with spinach, green coriander and carrot top] and Garlic and carrot pickle. I think I'd better avoid breathing over anybody for the rest of the day!
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Just bought train tickets to Scotland for May. Can anyone explain why standard class was £72 each way and first class £65? Ah well that will be free wine and food for me [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Happy Garlicky Birthday! WW [Big Grin]

Train fares are a total mystery, but maybe the Second class return is an open return, ie come back when you like, but the 1st class specifies a date and train??

Just a thought, but enjoy the free wine! [Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Happy Birthday Welease Woderick
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
Happy Birthday, hope you had a lovely day.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I think it depends on your cat, but ours never walked anywhere with us.

One of our past cats wouold follow us considerable distances - he once followed us up to my Dad's, so at least half a mile. Others have followed us along the back lane and had to be shoo'd home. As you say, depends on the cat.
We've also had retriever cats - they would bring back anything thrown for them.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Happy birthday Wodders - looking forward to meeting you at Taurus!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Happy Birthday, Wodders.

A good gardening day. Planted strawberries and outed the Christmas hyacinths.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Happy birthday Wodders, sounds like it was a good day.

We went out to Doune Castle today, location for lots of scenes from 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail'. It was a really nice day, not especially warm but dry and not freezing, so we had a good wander about the place, lots to see there both in the castle and the grounds. I should award myself a proper day off more often!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Happy B-day, WW! [Angel]
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
Happy Birthday, Wodders.

A good gardening day. Planted strawberries and outed the Christmas hyacinths.

I'd have thought with hyacinths it was pretty obvious, and I have NO gaydar! [Biased]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Happy Birthday WW - just got in before the (UK) deadline I hope. Sounds like you had a great day!

On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!

P.S. I'm better now.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Many happy returns, Wodders - 29 is it? [Big Grin]

Enigma - glad to hear you're feeling better.

As it's Commonwealth Sunday, and to mark the 60th anniversary of Brenda's accession, we had a cracker of a Matins this morning. Te Deum by Howells, Zadok the Priest (OK, I know Handel was German, but he wrote it for the coronation of a British king), responses for the Accession of a Monarch by William McKie and wonderfully jingoistic hymns: Vaughan Williams' arrangement of the Old Hundredth, I vow to thee, my country, Cwm Rhondda with James O'Donnell's magic descant and Jerusalem. And, of course, God Save the Queen, O Canada and the Ode to Newfoundland.

And, as we were v. short of sopranos, I got temporarily promoted which was fun, especially in Zadok - it must be nearly 25 years since I last sang first soprano in that. [Eek!]

As might have been expected, there was much Decanal Grinning™.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
29?

OMG, NO!! I'd hate to be that age again! Fancy having all those years to go before Blessed Retirement?

No thanks, I'm quite happily 31 - or possibly even 31+ - reality has me at [31 x 2 +] - and I love every minute of it!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
29?

OMG, NO!! I'd hate to be that age again! Fancy having all those years to go before Blessed Retirement?

Hope you had a great birthday.

I'd like to be 39 and retired.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:

On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!

P.S. I'm better now.

A cat sounds like a valuable evanglism tool to me- I'd actually talk to a door knocker who brought a cat along, instead of a quick 'no thanks' and shut the door as usual.

In other news, I patted a policeman's horse today. He (the horse) was huge- probably at least 18 hands. The policeman was fairly small, I'd've thought. [Smile]

And we had an amazing day at Slimbridge Wetlands yesterday - I think I've seen about a year's supply of ducks! (But that doesn't mean I'm not tempted to try out some of their other centres around the British isles).

Just bought some hot cross buns if anyone wants one...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Yes please, I'd love a HCB [Smile]


朋友家的小孩在塗鴉上色用的畫冊...

I just read this on 365 and Google translate translated it for me - amazing world we live in! (It means 'The children of a friend's house with graffiti colouring book ...' )
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!

I read this rather too early this morning and was mystified by the idea of an evangelical cat going round knocking on doors (then - presumably if the message wasn't well received - weeing on the lawn before walking off).

I wonder what the cat's favourite Scripture passages might have been - perhaps a few quotes from Paw-l?
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
On the subject of cats following you around in embarassing fashion -- I had a cat that followed me round when I was younger and trying out the knocking on doors evangelism route. She was very cute but when she started weeing on front lawns I felt the gospel was being compromised!!

I read this rather too early this morning and was mystified by the idea of an evangelical cat going round knocking on doors (then - presumably if the message wasn't well received - weeing on the lawn before walking off).

[Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me] Unfortunately it was the other way round - she was walking off while I was apologising for the behaviour!! Sorry for my cat and by the way can we talk about faith/Jesus etc -- not the best!!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... I think I've seen about a year's supply of ducks ...

I see quite a few ducks every morning on my way in to w*rk - there's a pond just beside the car-park where D. drops me off, and we sometimes bring left-over bread for them and say hello.

Ducks rock. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I love ducks, I reckon it is pretty near impossible to see a duck on land and not smile.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I used to work in a special school which kept chickens, ducks and goats. If the boys were 'acting out' outside the classroom block, the ducks would waddle over to watch, from what they judged to be a safe distance. Sometimes,they would seem to be discussing it amongst themselves: "Well, I never did in all my days..." etc. When the show was over, they waddled off again.

Pity they're so delicious.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
I used to work in a special school which kept chickens, ducks and goats. If the boys were 'acting out' outside the classroom block, the ducks would waddle over to watch, from what they judged to be a safe distance. Sometimes,they would seem to be discussing it amongst themselves: "Well, I never did in all my days..." etc. When the show was over, they waddled off again.

Pity they're so delicious.

I'm quite happy admiring animals *and* eating them (grew up on a farm). There is a clear line in my mind, though, between animals that are food and animals that are pets.

For those wondering, it's about naming them, and how you treat them and how many of them there are. I could have pet ducks, or I could farm ducks for eating but I'd have to treat them and think about them differently from the start.

I still haven't forgiven my parents for killing our pet cow Mooseli and trying to make us eat her! We used to ride on her, there was only one of her and there was never any hint that she'd end up on the dinner table. Silly of them to think we wouldn't notice!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
There is a clear line in my mind, though, between animals that are food and animals that are pets.

For those wondering, it's about naming them, and how you treat them and how many of them there are. I could have pet ducks, or I could farm ducks for eating but I'd have to treat them and think about them differently from the start.

I heard of a family that bought three piglets to raise for meat. Just to make sure the kids remembered what they were for, the parents named them Breakfast, Lunch, and Supper. [Big Grin]

Moo
 
Posted by Darllenwr (# 14520) on :
 
There was a major upset in our church about 18 months ago when, over tea, one of our teenagers (who keeps pet guinea pigs) learned that our Peruvian Lay Worker (who was at tea with them) had frequently eaten guinea pig and considered it good eating. Our teenager, who very much liked our Lay Worker, was severly torn about her feelings regarding said Lay Worker for several days.

Lord Pontivilian got to hear about this and promptly remarked (in said teenager's hearing) that he was going to keep guinea pigs when he had the opportunity and give them suitable names - yes, you've guessed it - "Breakfast, Lunch and Supper." For some reason, he failed to tell me what was the reaction to this ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
... three piglets ... named Breakfast, Lunch, and Supper ...

[Eek!]

D. has just brought me a cup of tea and a piece of cherry CAKE. I was going to offer some round, but if you're going to talk like that about me, I won't.

**flounce ... oink**

I've been Domestic Goddess Piglet today - I made a pot of veggie soup and a loaf.

[Cool]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Well done Dormouse - you goddess!!
I have cooked nothing at all - it being Tuesday (or it was when I was eating anyway). I have the pleasure still of my mother's cooking on a Tuesday evening.
It's lovely - but today was interesting because very green spinach which I really enjoyed was proclaimed by my Dad to be kind of black looking and strange and he'd never had it before and why was it a bit wet? He bought it apparently!! He's 85 and a little more (cough) discerning than he used to be.
I enjoyed the meal - so did he to be fair but I don't think he'll be hastening to the spinach department any time soon. [Biased]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
won't.

**flounce ... oink**


[Killing me]

That forms a great mental image [Smile]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
**flounce ... oink**

[Killing me]
That forms a great mental image [Smile]

Yes, and reminds me of the saying that one can eat every point of a pig except the squeak. Or, indeed, the oink.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Being a non-meat-eater of 30 years standing I find that a rather disturbing image!
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
You need to sit down, Wodders. [Biased]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
**flounce ... oink**

[Killing me]
That forms a great mental image [Smile]

Yes, and reminds me of the saying that one can eat every point of a pig except the squeak. Or, indeed, the oink.
Or as the sign in Yorkshire says

We sell owt baht squeak! (we sell all but the squeak).

Jengie
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
Well done Dormouse - you goddess! ...

I'm sure she is, but I'm not Dormouse, I'm Piglet. [Big Grin]
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderick:
I find that a rather disturbing image!

And we haven't even met ... [Biased]

It's been the sort of beautiful, v. sunny but v. cold (high of -4°) day here today, just the sort of weather I like (mainly because you don't have to shovel it).
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
Well done Dormouse - you goddess! ...

I'm sure she is, but I'm not Dormouse, I'm Piglet. [Big Grin]
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderick:
I find that a rather disturbing image!

And we haven't even met ... [Biased]

It's been the sort of beautiful, v. sunny but v. cold (high of -4°) day here today, just the sort of weather I like (mainly because you don't have to shovel it).


 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Oops - got myself stuck in a quotes loop! Piglet, you're quite right you're not Dormouse - sorry - multi-tasking at my strange age I shouldn't try. But you are a goddess, as is she! [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Cool]

D. has just brought me a carton of blackberries - anyone want one? With ice-cream?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
How about Blackberry and Apple Crumble?
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Blackberries, in March [Disappointed] The blackberry is one of natures free gifts. They always taste better if you have foraged for them yourself. I'm looking forwards to this year's foraging season.

But today I'm tired. I had to be at the dentists at 9, which is too early when you work the 2 to 10 afternoon shift. I'm not used to being up before 10 (except in Sundays.)
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Hi All,

Some British- specific advice if you would...

What is considered a reasonable amount of work/ hoops to jump through when applying for a job?

I had no problem with a 30-40 min online personality test or with doing a 10 min presentation on a general topic.

I'm struggling with having to come up with a hypothetical project for the organisation and do a hypothetical trust application to a specific trust. To me that seems like a bit much to ask an applicant. (And I've only got three days to do it...)

Thoughts?

Cheers
EJ
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Qlib - Herman the German arrived in our office this week. I declined the honour.

quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm struggling with having to come up with a hypothetical project for the organisation and do a hypothetical trust application to a specific trust. To me that seems like a bit much to ask an applicant. (And I've only got three days to do it...)

Three days is not enough time. I'd expect at least a week, more likely 10-14 days, and I think the short notice says something about the company you've applied to.

As for the hypothetical project and proposal - employers seem to ask for all sorts these days. In my time I've had to research and write marketing copy, do a detailed critical review of a project proposal including an assessment of usability and markets, write various damage-limitation letters for hypothetical scenarios, and draw up a tactful memo implementing unpopular personnel measures, all before the interview. I've always had at least a week to a fortnight to do it, though.

Interviewers here are faced with a lot more applicants than they used to be, so I guess it's one way of winnowing out the pool - see how people approach a particular task. I suspect they're not necessarily looking for all the right answers so much as the right frame of mind and approach. Good luck!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That makes me feel quite glad to be as far down the food-chain as I am; I've never had to do anything scarier than a typing test.

This evening we sang Evensong at the old people's home where we do a carol service at Christmas. They're inundated with people wanting to sing at them in December, but no-one thinks to do anything any other time, so we thought it would be nice to go up there and do a proper choral evensong, and I think they enjoyed it. We certainly did. Afterwards it was back to the house of a couple in the choir for seriously good Irish stew and soda bread and equally good craic.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
That makes me feel quite glad to be as far down the food-chain as I am; I've never had to do anything scarier than a typing test.

Wot no role play, no "live" phone conversations with someone posing as a particularly difficult caller? (Luckily I wasn't involved in that last.)

St Patrick's Day today. Apparently the parade in Birmingham took place last week - no idea if anything is happening within reasonable travelling distance locally, but have a great day anyway, everyone.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
That makes me feel quite glad to be as far down the food-chain as I am; I've never had to do anything scarier than a typing test.

Wot no role play, no "live" phone conversations with someone posing as a particularly difficult caller? (Luckily I wasn't involved in that last.)

[Killing me] I've done the role play! I had the whole board take on crazy personas for me to try and convince to do a certain thing within about 15 -20 min! It was actually quite fun, in a silly kind of way.

Struggling with this damn application, but at least now I've found a trust and invented a project. Just trying to fill in convincing yet concise details...

I don't have much time tomorrow due to church in the morning and my lovely (yes, really) mother in law coming to visit for Mothering Sunday.

Piglet - good idea about singing during the year. I expect those of them 'with it' enough to notice enjoyed it a great deal.

In other news, my mood was improved a great deal this morning by hearing that we got the flat we were going for! I love and love the location (on the river in Bristol, 10 min walk from town, in a quiet development with trees and cats). Hugely looking forward to having our own space again after about two+ months toddling about various places. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Congrats on the flat, EJ!

St Patrick is not much celebrated over here but Monday will be St Joseph and we will heading off to eat too much at one of the churches we attend regularly - they both have Alms Feasts, but not on the same day - tomorrow we got to the other church to check when their feast will be!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... I expect those of them 'with it' enough to notice enjoyed it a great deal ...

Absolutely - while the Curate was intoning the final Collects (they were printed in the order of service) we realised that someone was saying them along with him. Nice to imagine that they were hearing something familiar that they may not have heard for a long time.

Health to enjoy your new flat - Bristol riverside is beyond cool.

[Cool]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What a glorious morning! A flood of bright sunshine lighting up the world, a light gold mist layering the view with the silhouettes of hills, trees and even streetlamps looking pretty good. We've had frost overnight, which has left some pale fern-like patterns on car roofs, now glinting in the sun, and where it's evaporating in the sunlight, steam coming up around the cars as if they're all about to start off at once into the spring morning.

A good day for going somewhere, though rain is forecast. Is anyone going to see the parade in London this afternoon? If I lived nearer I'd like to go.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Ariel, you must live somewhere very North!

The raindrops glistened prettily along my clothes line this morning, but it is clearing up now, although showers are forecast. Will probably try to do more gardening later, as we still have shrubs to plant which we bought yesterday.

Spent some time rigging up a chicken wire "fence" of a very wobbly nature to try and keep the dog off the garden where said shrubs are planted. When he found it last night he retreated in a very puzzled huff.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Sunny and showers here but warm enough to have the heating off. I'm off to Mum's later with lots of lovely cup cakes - plenty spare if anyone fancies?

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've been to a wedding today - we went to mass first, of course.

It was a Hindu wedding at a temple I've never been to before - not far away, perhaps 5 or 6 kms. Lovely to see some of the relatives one only sees at such events, less lovely to see some of the others but that's life. I am now in the embarrassing position of having completely forgotten the bride's name so will have to hunt for the invitation [Hot and Hormonal]

Anyway, the food was quite good so that's okay; it is, after all, the main thing most people remember.

Nephew person's mum was there so I suggested I talk to her about it being about time for her to start looking around for a bride for him, he is 24, but he didn't seem too keen on the idea yet. I assured him I was only trying to help but he didn't seem to believe me very much.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Wodders Matchmaking Services Ltd. not quite taking off then? [Big Grin]

Service for Young People this morning, so the choir didn't really have much to do except half a set of responses and the Britten Jubilate in C. Simnel CAKE afterwards.

Was a wee bit sad to learn that our oldest parishioner, a retired surgeon (he was really the father of surgery in Newfoundland) died this evening at the grand old age of 104. He was an amazing old boy; when he was 99 he had D. and me round to his house for the best roast beef I've ever tasted.

May he rest in peace and rise in glory. [Votive]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
104 - Wow! [Votive] for all who will miss him.

Today is one of those days with lots to do and little motivation to do it. Kick up the backside needed!

My dog Callum has been poorly over the weekend, making me very concerned. But he's bucked up today, so much so that I think he's fit to go to the groomers for a gentle wash and brush up.

My new job didn't work out [Frown] The school, and the way they dealt with behaviour just didn't wash with me. They were completely inconsistent, confusing children and staff alike. I have trained whole schools in behaviour management in my time and just couldn't stand to see it done so badly. Luckily they were very dilatory in drawing up my contract so I was able to leave with no problems.

I have another job now [Yipee] just two days a week at the wonderful school where I do my research.

What a relief! But now I MUST get down to that marking!

Coffee, tea, orange+lemon cake and croissants are all just there on the table for all in need.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Congratulations on the new job, Boogie! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Great about the new job, Boogie! [Smile]

And croissants would be very nice, thank you.

And now < sigh > I have to try and sort out the mess of notes and doodles I took at the rather trying and very argumentative committee meeting I went to yesterday.

There must be a better way of running organisations. And the fact that "we are all volunteers" doesn't wash with me as an excuse for doing a job in a sloppy, half-hearted manner. Am I the only one who thinks that if you take on a job, paid or unpaid, you do it as well as you can, and when you need to ( not tomorrow, or the next week)?

[Mad]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Yay for the job Boogie! I totally understand about the behaviour management and you were definitely right to leave.

Ah, volunteers, Nicodemia... great fun, eh? I try to look at it as character developing as we all get rubbed against each other and maybe rub off a few rough edges (or maybe just get irritated and rubbed raw!).

I had a good job interview yesterday, so I'm quite excited and hopeful...

It *was* a lovely day yesterday, wasn't it? So warm, I had one layer of clothing and a light coat and was even a bit too warm in the sun.

I'm all kind of in limbo waiting to be able to move into the flat and waiting to hear about the job. I should make a wee To Do list and do something today... Will start with a shower.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:


I had a good job interview yesterday, so I'm quite excited and hopeful...


Well done - fingers crossed for a good result.


[Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
So glad about the job, Boogie - I'll have a croissant, please, filled with cheese and reheated so the cheese melts into the bread.

Our young friend working in UAE, or one of them, is fed up - he has chicken pox so is feeling terrible, is on his own in the hostel all day so is bored and can only eat bland food so is even more bored! I tried to reassure him on the phone that he will feel better in a week but it is a bit hollow under the circumstances.

Sleepy day today, I think I'm still reacting to eating so much yesterday!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Our young friend ... is fed up ... and can only eat bland food so is even more bored!

When on a bland diet due to sickness I find a variety of fruit juices — orange, grapefruit, apple etc. — adds some variety to the blandness. You could suggest this to your young friend.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... I have to try and sort out the mess of notes and doodles I took at the rather trying and very argumentative committee meeting I went to yesterday ...

Virtuous Piglet checking in ... [Angel]

I'm just home from a meeting of the committee for which I take the minutes and did them before I came on to the Ship.

Mind you, they pay me an honorarium, so I suppose I'm only doing my duty ...

quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... So warm, I had one layer of clothing and a light coat and was even a bit too warm in the sun ...

Not here it bloody isn't. It sn*wed this afternoon - the phenomenon known locally as Sheila's Brush - a snowfall just after St. Patrick's Day. Mind you, it wasn't really that much, and if we get the 6° and rain they're offering us on Thursday maybe it won't last.

PS Hurrah for good job interview - hope the result is good too. [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I seem to have a faster internet connection as promised by BT after a couple of re-boots of my hub. Now I am worried that I cannot keep up.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Sorry Piglet, it was another gorgeous day today! About 17 degrees C. I spent the day driving all over the South of England (from west to east then north a bit and back). Lovely countryside!

Also, I saw the whole bum of a uni student wearing semi-opaque wool tights with nothing over them, not even a gesture towards a tunic (and obviously nothing under them)! Call me old if you will, but what is the world coming to?! [Eek!]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
I think it's been a good day. First thing I heard when I put the radio on this morning was Nellie the Elephant, and then as I stopped on my way in to work to take a photo of the haze over the river a kingfisher went rocketing past. Hard to make a day that starts like that bad! After work I went for a wander with the camera, and met up with the Knotweed for a meal.

Now I'm (metaphorically...) buggered, and going to bed!

AG
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Night-night Sandemaniac! **waves**

I had quite a busy day too, although not a work day; I took the day off for the funeral of the late surgeon I mentioned further up the page. Very well attended (the nave was full), and we gave rousing renditions of the Old Hundredth, Jerusalem, He who would valiant be and Guide me, O thou great Jehovah (with the magic descant of course) and the Nunc dimittis from Sumsion in G.

Afterwards D. and I went for lunch to a restaurant called Aqua which we've been meaning to research for ages, and we think more research is needed. [Big Grin] We really couldn't fault it in any way at all - the food was v.v. good and the service attentive without being fawning.

And they do a cheeseboard! You may not think this so remarkable, but they're only the second restaurant we've been to here that does. We didn't sample it, because we were running out of time on the parking-meter, but we certainly will next time.

At least 9.999/10. [Yipee]

EJ, I don't blame you bragging about the weather. I've come to the conclusion that the only place on the planet that isn't having a heatwave at the moment is Newfoundland. It's apparently been in the high 20s Centigrade in Halifax, Fredericton, Ottawa and even Winnipeg in the last few days, which is Just Silly.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No heatwave here, just the standard high 20s and low 30s Celsius.

Pete decided to turn our morning walk into a route march this morning, storming off ahead - neighbour boy [who walks with us] and I had to try and keep up - but Pete slowed a bit on the gradients, though he declined help.

HWMBO and I are off to the city again today - it's all go, innit?


edited to make sense

[ 23. March 2012, 02:15: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
No heatwave here, just the standard high 20s and low 30s Celsius.


Yer - right! <whispers to WW, remember - that temperature is what constitutes a heatwave over here in the Isles of Albion!>

Very pleasant day here - not sure what to do with it. I'm having Saturdays off university and school work. Should have made a plan!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
It sure is all go WW! We're moving out of our lodge/hotel thing into our lovely flat today! [Yipee] And, I got a job! [Yipee]

So we're going to hand over huge wodges of cash to the property manager and I won't get paid for at least another month so it's trying to set up a flat on a zero budget, but hey... Another beautiful day here and we're meeting our only local NZ aquaintance for lunch.

Hope everyone has a lovely weekend.

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Congratulations EJ - very well done!! [Smile]

And I hope your into-flat-move goes well - its a lovely day for it!

Weather wise, that is!

[ 24. March 2012, 09:01: Message edited by: Nicodemia ]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Yipee] Congratulations, EJ! Hope all goes well.

And, good morning all!! I don't seem to have been here much lately, but this has been the most manic half-term, ever, and this is my first weekend free of observation/inspection spectres haunting it. So, I shoved the work bag into the cupboard under the stairs and am determined not to think about work until Monday morning.

I had been intending to sleep as long as I could this morning but small next door neighbours are suddenly both very verbal and vocal in the early morning now, and two loud screams from them woke me at my normal weekday time.

Might well poddle off somewhere interesting later, but for now am just enjoying re-acquainting myself with my sofa, my own home, and a whole day with nothing to do!!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Congratulations EJ! What a relief for you.

What a beautiful morning - went out early before the shops had opened. Sunlight everywhere. The normally busy town car park had only one car in it, the birds were incredibly vocal in a way you don't hear later when it's normally busy.

The grass by the canal sparkled with dew. It seems to be the violet season: lots of little violets in the shadier grass, small purple ones and tiny white ones; daffodils also covered in drops of morning dew. Hedges full of life with blackbirds, sparrows, robins, bluetits and so on scampering everywhere, watching humans with curiosity, and trying to find breakfast. The water as still as a mirror, reflecting the boats beautifully, and hardly a soul to be seen.

Staying put for the moment - a whole day with nothing in particular to do - wonderful.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And, I got a job! [Yipee]


Fantastic news - well done!


[Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Great news, EJ.

My garden is starting to look like a garden, and I have found a well-recommended builder who is cheap and honest. He quoted me £80 for a couple of jobs, which I was already quite pleased about, and then knocked it down £50 because it didn't take as long as he thought. The money situation is easing up a bit and so I am finally able to start ticking off items on my 'to do' list. Small steps, but it makes me feel more settled. Just hope I don't have to start job hunting - ominous noises at work.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
EJ - fantastic news - well done!!
This morning was spent cleaning and dossing around reading. This afternoon I concentrated my attention on how to engage a class of 11 year olds in Sunday School on John 12 where Jesus talks about Dying in order to Grow. Usual teacher is away! I have bought seeds and popcorn!!
Looking forward to a relaxing evening in front of TV - The Voice versus Britain's Got Talent. Who will get more viewers I wonder - I am aiming for both!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
EJ - bazillions of congratulations, and good luck with the flitting. [Yipee]

I'm just back in from belatedly celebrating a friend's birthday - dinner at the Peppermill, another v. nice St. John's eatery. Portobello mushroom salad to start, scallop and prawn fettucine and a berry-crumble sort of thing with ice-cream shared with D. for pudding, and the company of good friends. Couldn't beat it with a big stick.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Congratulations EJ! That's wonderful news. Hoorah!

Weather is lovely here. Sunny & fairly warm, the daffodils are out and we have acquired a pair of very friendly sparrows in the back garden. They keep hopping down to sit on the windowsill & door handle. We've put food out which they don't want, so I can only assume they're coming to say hello.

I really must do some homework for my evening class and then potter into the garden to cut back dead stuff. Any minute now....
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Weather still lovely. Daffodils, blossom and tulips are everywhere now, sheep are in the fields, there are blue skies, fluffy white clouds and warmth. The boats are out on the river after the long winter - all sorts from little rowing boats and kayaks to narrowboats; and the ice cream vans have emerged from hibernation.

I don't know what it is about the sort of ice cream they sell - the sort straight out of a machine that swirls into a cone, with the option of half a stale Flake stuck into it - but it always seems so much more delicious than the shop-bought kind.
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
I have heard 2 ice cream vans this afternoon, but neither has turned into our road! [Waterworks] Despite the kids playing really noisily. They could make a packet from us.

It's a real shame, it's a good 30 seconds since I last ate anything unhealthy.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Our "other" church had its Alms Feast today so we went along and ate too much but all in a good cause, of course. They can feed about 200 people at a time in the parish hall and I think there were probably 5 or 6 sittings - that is a lot of people! It is also a heck of a lot of [fairly healthy] food.

I might treat myself to an ice cream tomorrow, I haven't eaten anything properly unhealthy for ages!
 
Posted by Nanny Ogg (# 1176) on :
 
It must be Spring [Smile]

The sun has been shining, the clocks have gone forward and the cat has brought me a dead robin.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Poor robin. Nasty cat. [Frown]

It's not exactly spring here yet (I believe it's scheduled for the third Tuesday in June at 2:30 in the afternoon) but it was a lovely bright, sunny but cold day. There's a small, flat iceberg in the Narrows (the entrance to the fjord that is St. John's harbour), so we went up Signal Hill to have a look after lunch. When we looked out to the ocean, almost the entire horizon was occupied by a huge sheet of ice - no wonder it felt cold.

It's very early for icebergs - we don't usually get them this far south until at least May or even June.

[Confused]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
It's very early for icebergs - we don't usually get them this far south until at least May or even June.
That's Global Warming for you! They say the Arctic will be free of ice in the summer in a few years. Can't remember what number the few was - but it didn't seem very far away. [Frown]

Lovely warm days here - we sat out on the patio for lunch yesterday - and it seemed funny to be doing that with no leaves on the trees!

Still, plenty of time for March to surprise us yet! [Cool]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
I have heard 2 ice cream vans this afternoon, but neither has turned into our road! [Waterworks] Despite the kids playing really noisily. They could make a packet from us.

It's a real shame, it's a good 30 seconds since I last ate anything unhealthy.

They are butcher's vans, not ice-cream vans. That's what my parents told me anyway.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
They are butcher's vans, not ice-cream vans. That's what my parents told me anyway.

Cue to jump up and down clamouring "Can we have sausages for tonight??"

Still sunny. Curiously, although the crack of dawn commute was an hour earlier today, no problem getting out of bed. Though there were rather fewer people at the station this morning. I expect by Friday we will all feel a bit shattered.
 
Posted by Nanny Ogg (# 1176) on :
 
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting [Smile] Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.

[ 26. March 2012, 12:02: Message edited by: Nanny Ogg ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting [Smile] Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.

And teaspoons. Where do our teaspoons go??
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting [Smile] Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.

And teaspoons. Where do our teaspoons go??
If you ever find the answer please post it as we have the same problem.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Silly boys! Teaspoons are in the same location as sock singletons.

Seriously though, I expect a lot of spoons end up in the rubbish with plate scrapings.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Silly boys! Teaspoons are in the same location as sock singletons.

I can assure you that is not the case. As sock singletons sometimes turn up in my washing machine (sans mate and doing a good impression of being one of my socks but I was only washing sheets at the time when I detected it, and the wash previous to it was towels). I just put them in the sock draw, where they await the next sort out, when they get paired with one of my left behind ones, whose true mate has gone off wandering.

No extra teaspoons have ever turned up.

Jengie
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Ballpoint pen lids, umbrellas, hats, gloves (especially left-hand gloves) and scarves will be in the same place. Along with a surprising number of seven-of-spades cards, unused sticking plasters, the password to your old Yahoo account you never use any more, and that money you were sure you loaded onto the Oyster card.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No extra teaspoons have ever turned up.

Well, just recently the teaspoon with the pretty silver pattern on the handle, which I'd bought as a teenager, and used as my "default" teaspoon for years (through university and every job) turned up in the office kitchenette. I'd lost it seven years ago - never expected to see it again.
 
Posted by Nanny Ogg (# 1176) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting [Smile] Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.

It's been a good afternoon - 3 fishing weight (one broken) and 2p. [Smile]

Fisherman are real litter bugs though, lots of carrier bags, bottle tops and food wrapping around. Why can't they look after the countryside?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
This morning I went to take more photos of neighbours' cows so they can be registered and insured and whilst doing that another neighbour appeared with his pet mongoose so I got to take some photos of that, too. They are cute little things but with ferociously sharp teeth - I made sure I was well out of biting range.

Tenth Standard exams all finished today, these are the equivalent of GCSE but taken at the end of Year 10, not 11 - the 15 year olds I saw later are all relieved it is over but the 9th Standard ones have more exams, starting tomorrow morning. The long vacation starts next weekend.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... No extra teaspoons have ever turned up ...

A couple of years ago when the Choir was doing its turn running the Cathedral tea-room, it was suggested we take in posh teaspoons for serving the jam and cream with the scones. I brought in a set of little coffee-spoons that had belonged to my granny and one of them got lost - if they want them again they can whistle for them. [Frown]

On a happier note, I've been baking - help yourselves to CAKE. [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Ballpoint pen lids, umbrellas, hats, gloves (especially left-hand gloves) and scarves will be in the same place. Along with a surprising number of seven-of-spades cards, unused sticking plasters, the password to your old Yahoo account you never use any more, and that money you were sure you loaded onto the Oyster card.

They are all in the mini dresser thing with a drawer in the back of the chapel I attend - together with several pairs of spectacles. All with a claim contact me - if you can name you can claim!!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
If anyone in the UK has been watching "The Tube" on BBC2 - were you, like me, absolutely astounded at the amount and gobsmacking variety of the lost property there???

Feel sure your teaspoons have mysteriously migrated there.

Though we did once find my favourite knife, long and tearfully lost, in the compost when we spread it on the garden. [Eek!]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
If anyone in the UK has been watching "The Tube" on BBC2 - were you, like me, absolutely astounded at the amount and gobsmacking variety of the lost property there???

I missed the first 15 minutes but what a fascinating programme it was. Bringing a human face to the workers behind the scenes. Really interesting.

(The Down St tube station was very creepy, though.)
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
quote:
Originally posted by Nanny Ogg:
It's another sunny day and the man has come round to take me metal detecting [Smile] Probably only find fish hooks and ring pulls.

It's been a good afternoon - 3 fishing weight (one broken) and 2p. [Smile]

Fisherman are real litter bugs though, lots of carrier bags, bottle tops and food wrapping around. Why can't they look after the countryside?

Every now & then I help with a beach litter clean where we make a note of what we collect so that the organisation that runs it can use the information when lobbying. And yes, on the beach too the shore-based fishermen are responsible for most of what we pick up, with boat-based ones and whoever leaves 1" lengths of rope coming a close second.
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
After a lovely, warm, sunny day, the temperature dropped considerably last night so Maggi-Mittens came and slept on my head (taking up most of the pillow). This made her happy. When Maggi-Mittens is happy, she dribbles. Last night, she was so happy, she dribbled up my nose.

[Disappointed]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
We accidently invented a teaspoon finding machine - our cat had a magnetic cat door and she had a fairly large, strong magnet on her collar. Not only did she drag teaspoons about, but nails, chunks of rust and anything else small and metallic that she'd come across in her travels. [Smile]

Piglet - what kind of cake? We've just had sumptuous roast chicken so a bit of cake would round it off nicely.

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Raisin - there's plenty left, so help yourselves. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
ATMs here are all inside, rather than just a hole in the wall, and they are all air conditioned - it is a real shock to walk in somewhere and suddenly be faced with a rather chilly 22˚C! Thankfully I wasn't in there long.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Blazing sunlight down by the river, bouncing back up off the path, bringing the heat of midsummer with it. You'd hardly think it March, except that leaves are still in short supply and the ducklings and new waterfowl haven't emerged into the world yet. Blossom everywhere, the drone of a hundred bees at once working on it, people in shirtsleeves out in rowing boats and punts, tourists drifting around in summer clothes. Cows resting quietly in the shade of trees. This is as good as last spring, except that it's earlier this year - I wonder if that means a wet summer again?

What a contrast to only a couple of weeks ago - or indeed even the frost of this morning. Drought it may be but it's just lovely right now.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's been a nice day here today, and feels almost spring-like at +2°C.

However, the Weather Channel is promising nearly a foot of sn*w on Saturday. [Waterworks]

On a Saturday, when we won't even get a sn*w-day. [Mad]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
When my dad died in 2006 my brothers and I went through his books and I chose some to keep with the view of eventually shipping them over here. This year was the intended get them shipped year, they currently reside in the basement of the house of some friends. I have just received a quote for their shipment which is approximately a thousand quid more than I have any thought of spending!

I have a 30 kg weight allowance to and from UK this time and I usually travel pretty light so I think I will have room for about 20 kg of books so I reckon I'll sort my favourite 20 kg from the boxes and then take the rest to the Oxfam Bookshop just down the road from the house in Manchester. I can't remember exactly what is there but I really can't think there is anything beyond 20 kg for which I am absolutely desperate - or not £1000 desperate!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Oh dear, I hate getting rid of books, though I usually only have to do so in small quantities - and family books are often hard to part with. If I have anything that I think might have special value I tend to take it either to Oxfam or to another local charity bookshop that has the necessary specialist knowledge.

Got to get rid of all my kids' old books over the summer - I don't have house room, and they say they're not bothered. It's not that I'm in a hurry to have grandchildren, but I'm just not looking forward to parting with so many old favourites.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Shipping things around the world is ridiculously expensive... it tends to be cheaper to buy more when you get there, but it is hard to give up one's favourite old things. We managed to get rid of about an eighth of our books - the rest are stored. And I bought four more for the flight over and now we have a shelf full.

I'm conscious now that everything we buy we may have to either abandon or pay the earth to shift back to NZ one day... or we may just stay. I am liking it so far! We'll see how I do in mid-late winter.

Ariel - your description sounds a lot like Bristol, but we don't have punts. Still, stunning weather and very pretty by the harbour here with ferries and barges toddling about, people cycling and ringing their bells, tourists looking at maps and taking photos etc. In fact there were decorative half-naked tourists today! Senior high school or Uni aged boys in their boxers playing in the fountain. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
This weather won't last much longer, though - there's already a drop in temperature.

How are people doing for fuel - our local garage has run out of diesel and the other one has queues to fill up with petrol. I've postponed filling up the car until the weekend, when hopefully it should be a bit quieter.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
...How are people doing for fuel - our local garage has run out of diesel and the other one has queues to fill up with petrol. I've postponed filling up the car until the weekend, when hopefully it should be a bit quieter.

I'm hoping to do the same, Ariel - on the way to work this morning, the motorway overhead signs were informing which of the services had run out of diesel. Hopefully I have enough unleaded to get me home [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Good luck. By the time I left for work this morning, our local garage had run out of everything (except air).

And we're not even having a fuel strike. [brick wall]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
My son is due to drive home for the weekend from Oxford today. When he phoned he was running low on fuel and decided to fill up on the way.

Hope he manages it!

[Eek!]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Gggrrr - trying to connect my new navigation device to my Mac = apparently impossible.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I filled up yesterday, even though all my local garage had by then was 'Super' diesel at 5p per litre extra. I should have filled up on Wednesday before things really got going, but the people who serviced (& MOT'd) my car stuck a locking fuel cap on it and didn't tell me where they'd left the keys and the instructions, because they thought they were in an 'obvious' place. [Roll Eyes]

Anyway, I don't use it all that often, so what I've got now should see me through the family visit at Easter. Then I'm lending it to friends who are off on honeymoon and will hopefully get it back (full) in time for the first weekend in May.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
No car at the moment - my feet have as much fuel as usual (i.e. not a great deal, but I need to get places so I walk there and back).

Gosh, imagine being so powerful that if you mention 'go and do this thing' everyone crowds around to do it! What if the PM said 'go and buy a pasty'? Greggs would stop complaining for a bit, I guess! (Being a bit facetious...)
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I shall be (virtually sight) singing (at very short notice) the St John Passion tonight in Ashbourne.
Small choir, one of their sopranos has gone sick...someone who calls themselves a friend mentioned that I might be available.
Prayers - please! But I am quite excited really... [Yipee]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
No car at the moment - my feet have as much fuel as usual (i.e. not a great deal, but I need to get places so I walk there and back).

Gosh, imagine being so powerful that if you mention 'go and do this thing' everyone crowds around to do it! What if the PM said 'go and buy a pasty'? Greggs would stop complaining for a bit, I guess! (Being a bit facetious...)

Brilliant thought EJ!
I ignored PM and waited until I really needed petrol yesterday. The quiet garage I frequent was busy and only had the expensive petrol which I had to buy cos otherwise I wouldn't have got to work today. I checked the pasties - none left!! Dunno what that tells me.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
I shall be (virtually sight) singing (at very short notice) the St John Passion tonight in Ashbourne.
Small choir, one of their sopranos has gone sick...someone who calls themselves a friend mentioned that I might be available.
Prayers - please! But I am quite excited really... [Yipee]

All the best. I was singing alto in the Messiah one year when the conductor realised his bass section seemed to have fallen apart. My son who is a very good bass singer was called in like you, at last moment. We had score and tape given to us. Car trip in saw cassette being played over and over and score being perused at red traffic lights. Fortunately he is very good at sight singing and also playing a keyboard instrument the same way. he frequently while still at school found himself called in to play at a funeral where he could do old hymns by sight which no one else could do.

Enjoy the experience.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hope it went well, St. E. [Smile]

I can't quite get my head round the fuel crisis - are the tanker-drivers on strike or aren't they? And considering that they're paid £47,000 a year, if they are on strike, then why?

[Confused]

In other news, the sn*w that they've been giving us Weather Warnings about so far hasn't amounted to much - long may that continue.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Birthday cake with butter icing at 7 a.m. is not good for my system!

Little boy in the village was 5 earlier in the week but his mum translated the birthday to Saturday and we stopped in for cake and sweets on our morning walk. I think I may well have a nap soon.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
You also?

Two inch icing with glacé cherries [Eek!] My poor blood sugar!

I got a handshake when I gave him two cards. Then I said and and presented him with a seriously big tourist jeep. Now he was paying attention. When I said and again, I gave him a KinderJoy® Then I said and again and gave another to his mummy. His eyes followed that one too!

I do so love little VK! [Axe murder]

[ 31. March 2012, 04:57: Message edited by: PeteC ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I can't quite get my head round the fuel crisis - are the tanker-drivers on strike or aren't they?

No. They're only thinking about it. It hasn't even got beyond that, yet my garage has now been out of everything for two days.

quote:
And considering that they're paid £47,000 a year, if they are on strike, then why?
Terms and conditions.

Anyway, it looks like drivers from the Armed Forces will be starting training next week to learn how to drive tankers if needs be. Meanwhile, I'm rethinking my travel plans for the weekend.

Incidentally, speaking of snow, the papers are saying Easter will bring an Arctic Freeze - that'll be something to look forward to. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
...Incidentally, speaking of snow, the papers are saying Easter will bring an Arctic Freeze - that'll be something to look forward to. [Roll Eyes]

I'm so sorry [Two face]
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
I'm so sorry
So am I, WW. Perfect early autumn day down here. 27° max in Sydney. Mornings and evenings are getting cooler and the air feels different. Autumn is on its way.

The downside is that rain is forecast or at least showers for next week. I think we have had enough for a while.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
An irrelevant aside:

It is Vishu, the big spring feast here, two weeks today so we have just been to buy some fireworks, an essential part of the feast, including one string of one thousand firecrackers! We thought we could string them round a certain wheelchair but someone, naming no names, isn't too keen on the idea.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:

Incidentally, speaking of snow, the papers are saying Easter will bring an Arctic Freeze - that'll be something to look forward to.

Yes - I hope it doesn't confuse the plants too much - my lettuce is growing nicely!

Bit of a lazy day here at BoogievilleMansions - or is that BoogievilleHovels since Mr Boogs has just said 'Don't spend anything until next Thursday'?


[Paranoid]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:


Bit of a lazy day here at BoogievilleMansions - or is that BoogievilleHovels since Mr Boogs has just said 'Don't spend anything until next Thursday'?


[Paranoid]

Yes, things are a bit like that around here - husband finally got paid, but it's only one medium income for the two of us, so it's down to essentials only until I finally start work then get paid!

Also, I saw a spotty little fawn in the bushes by the motorway today. It was amazing! [Eek!]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I'm so sorry [Two face]

You lie beautifully.

The sn*w did come to something after all - there was about 8" of the damn stuff on the steps outside the house today.

Spring? Yeah, right. [Disappointed]

On the bright side, I made Sandy's Spiced Winter Soup today and there's some left, and home-made bread. And CAKE - help yourselves. [Smile]

EJ, I know exactly how you feel. When I started my present job, I hoped to get my first salary two weeks later (they pay fortnightly over here, which seemed strange at first, but is actually quite nice). Unfortunately, they had forgotten to ask me for my SIN number (the equivalent of National Insurance) and being a brainless foreigner I hadn't realised, so I had to wait another two weeks before getting paid, which seemed like an eternity, especially as we'd started spending it ...

[Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've always thought that having a SIN number suits some people better than others.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Palm Sunday today so the priest was wearing a gorgeous red chasuble complete with sequins! I thought of posting that in Eccles but decided I'd rather not!

Or perhaps I shall.

An e-mail from a close friend in UK this morning to say a mutual friend has "a highly suspect lymphoma" with consultant's appointment tomorrow so a bit of prayer and upholding for Sean wouldn't go amiss - I reckon he is probably late 40s, he may just be 50.

Off to take family photos this afternoon at a neighbour's place - it may end up being more than one family, who knows?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I meant to use the morning productively, as it was full of sunshine, although chilly.

Instead I ended up at a sunny table in the window of a cafe, with a cup of hot chocolate with whipped cream and Belgian chocolate sprinkles, and an Italian palmine biscuit, watching the world go by and listening idly to the sounds of cheerful chatter and classical music.

Life is hard sometimes.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Making the most of the last few hours of fine weather. I spent the first half of the afternoon reading in the garden (though wrapped up warm) and then a two-hour walk along the river banks.

Left hot cross buns to rise all day (my final experiment with Herman the sourdough) and have just put them in the oven.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I meant to use the morning productively, as it was full of sunshine, although chilly.

Instead I ended up at a sunny table in the window of a cafe, with a cup of hot chocolate with whipped cream and Belgian chocolate sprinkles, and an Italian palmine biscuit, watching the world go by and listening idly to the sounds of cheerful chatter and classical music.

Life is hard sometimes.

And that's not productive of serenity, relaxation, a feeling being at ease?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I've always thought that having a SIN number suits some people better than others.

[Devil]
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... a cup of hot chocolate with whipped cream and Belgian chocolate sprinkles ...

Not off it for Lent then, eh? [Big Grin]

It being Palm Sunday, we sang Hosanna to the son of David by Weelkes and the Passion of our Lord according to Matthew by Victoria this morning, and at Evensong instead of a sermon we had a meditation in readings and music (Farrant, Gibbons, Sheppard, Croce and sundry others).

Very nice too. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Not off it for Lent then, eh? [Big Grin]

No, I opted for going low-carb vegetarian-with-fish instead. It's a great way of forcing yourself to eat healthily.

Beautiful morning here today if chilly - snow forecast for Wednesday [Ultra confused] but I don't imagine what we get will be anything on the Piglet Scale.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Raining here at the moment, though not hard enough to fill our water butt up. Tomorrow though promises a downpour. [Frown]

And snow on Wednesday.

Can't wait to see all my plants shrivelled up in the east winds........ [Frown] [Frown] [Frown]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
snow on Wednesday.

Can't wait to see all my plants shrivelled up in the east winds........

Yep - very odd weather - the plants must be completely confused!

I've had two days off studying and am really struggling to wind up again.

MustgetofftheshipMustgetofftheshipMustgetofftheshipMustgetofftheshipMustgetofftheship ....
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
A white Easter isn't really news here, but over your side of the big pond ... [Confused]

Holy Week, which is usually our busiest time of the whole year, started in a very low-key sort of way tonight. We sing Compline with a couple of hymns but no sermon on the Monday, but when D. and I turned up the only other people there were the Dean, the Curate, one of the sopranos and the Dean's verger, who used to sing soprano in the choir before we came here. So we abandoned the hymns, the Curate sang the office and the rest of us provided the choral responses. It was really rather nice.

Who needs a congregation? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Morning All,

A greyish morning (might burn off later) with cute little birds tweeting in the trees. I can't see them well enought to tell, but I'd guess robins, goldfinches and tits of various sorts. I love little British birds. So CUTE! (NZ has lovely birds too, and a wider variety of types of bird, but less pretty colours, usually).

I'm all alone today as my husband is hanging out with family. His grandfather died overnight. Sad for the family (especially his wife who has been with him for around 50- 60 years), but he was in his mid-late 80s and had cancer so he was probably somewhat relieved to go. It'll be an odd week of limbo as they'll wait for my mother-in-law to fly back from NZ to have the funeral. (She can't get an earlier flight due to the holidays.)

Anyhoo, time for porridge, I guess, then finding an excuse to go for a longish walk around the city (while not spending money!) All this walking round the shops is very tempting, but we're still down to essentials only this month.

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
Just on my way out to here to discuss my next two tattoos. I want the date of my reception into the Catholic church on my wrist and a picture of Our Lady of Walsingham on my leg. I'm just hoping the artist can draw Our Lady from the statue I'm taking with me because I don't have a printer to print out any photos.

Exciting. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks, chive, now I know where to get a Prince Albert, if I ever want one - unlikely, I think. Enjoy your new adornments.

A visit to the Registration of Foreigners office this morning to discuss requesting permission to leave the country - in my case, as I am a Good Boyit's only a matter of asking and getting a stamp in my passport. Then this afternoon another orgy of shopping!
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
Had a couple of lovely BT engineers round today to instal BT Infinity™ *- and beyond! [Smile] The reason my net connection kept dropping when the phone rang (which rather negates an important principle of BB) is that there had been a *short* in the junction box, the wiring housing was a bit burnt and some contacts were corroded. All sorted - so I gave them the last of my birthday cake and a nice cup of TEA [Smile]

* which actually works out cheaper than the previous package I had with them.

[ 03. April 2012, 16:59: Message edited by: Jahlove ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Belatedly happy birthday, Jahlove! [Smile]

Domestic Goddess Piglet has been in action again - laundry (mostly) sorted, and beef casserole for tomorrow's lunch* in the slow-cooker ready to cook overnight.

* There will be left-overs, so help yourselves.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Off to the airport in a little while so ensure the airline A Certain Guest will be using as far as Bangalore are wheelchair aware and competent! As they are the national carrier they better had be!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Dilemma - do I leave my tulips out to the elements (freezing wind and snow) or pick them and put them in a vase?

[Confused]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Boogie posted:

Dilemma - do I leave my tulips out to the elements (freezing wind and snow) or pick them and put them in a vase?

Pick them Boogie - mine have been ruined! It didn't help that the dustbin was blown over, across the patio, to rest gracefully squashing tulips, pansies and lots of grape hyacinths! [Frown]

Snow on the tops, but sleet here. Have you got snow Boogie?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I agree, pick them, they will brighten up your kitchen.

With all the snow about I wrote to my brothers, one in process of moving from Manchester to Shropshire and one just west of Glasgow, to say that they needn't concern themselves about us, we were okay. They seemed curiously unappreciative for the information! But then they say you can choose your friends but you can't your family.

Trip to the airport successfully accomplished, it was very busy there today, or perhaps it was just the time of day.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Yes - we have snow (snuggled next to the Pennines we get plenty of weather!)

I compromised and picked the ones which were bent right over - I'm keeping an eye on the others. They have been such good tulips, flowering year after year.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What is this "snow" of which you speak? It's grey here, but not even particularly cold.

We (that's our allotment people) have lost our newly-planted-out runner beans to the frost though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Perhaps as a judgement upon me we had a rainstorm about 5 p.m. which has knocked the temperatures down a bit and also prevented Pete and me having our usual early evening walk to the temple gates and back - oh well, hopefully we will get a walk in the morning.

I realised that this year is the centenary of my old school so I sent them a quick note of congratulations and have had a lovely note back from the Bursar - it's been snowing in Altrincham, poor things!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
No snow of course, but man, it's freezing cold outside! I've gotten all un-acclimatised again (is that a word?) after arriving to literally freezing temperatures then it getting warmer over the past couple of months.

I spent the day buying a car today - just a cheap old one, but it was from a reliable guy and it goes well.

Am trying to decide whether to bravely venture out to sit in on a choir rehersal tonight to see if I'd like to join the choir or not. The cold is a factor... They're doing Handel next and I was in a choir that did pretty much exclusively Handel in NZ, so it bodes well in that respect.

Anyhoo, keep warm all (except WW who can continue boasting if he likes! [Smile] )
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Pretty cold in the Valleys - I had a visit to make on the Gurnos mid morning, and there was quite a blizzard happening. Thankfully, it didn't stick.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
... except WW who can continue boasting ...

Don't encourage him, EJ. [Devil]

We still have snow lying about, but we had quite heavy rain last night and into today, which didn't freeze as predicted, so now it's flowing merrily down the hill. However, we've also got big chunks of ice in the harbour, which are making it feel somewhat brrrrr.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Vishu, the big Spring festival, is still 9 days away but already we are getting sporadic attacks of firecrackers at odd hours - we are trying to hold ours back for the actual day though we may have our arms twisted to set some off on Easter Day - but not at 3 a.m. as one of the churches we go to will do it! They will be loud enough to wake us some 3 kms away! [Fr] Paul, the parish priest is a real firework fiend!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I vote for the 1000 string of firecrackers. Heck, I'll even buy you another set for Vishu!

HWMBO and I will set them off at midnight. No need for you to get out of bed, Wodders.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
double post to add:

Of course, he may very well be a little startled - Perhaps I will just sing a little song I learnt in my youth.

Spirit of God in the still running Wodders
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think we may store that big box of fireworks under your bed after all!

Sleep well, Pete.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... Spirit of God in the still running Wodders

[Killing me] [Killing me]

Maundy Thursday service (foot-washing, Eucharist and stripping of the altars while we sang the Allegri Miserere) dispatched without mishap.

No work tomorrow except ecclesiastical laundry (surplices) and some pre-Easter cooking; a couple in the choir has everyone round for breakfast on Easter morning and my contribution will be a pot of kedgeree.

If I had the choice, I'd rather have Easter Monday as a holiday than Good Friday, as it would allow recovery from having had a service at 6 in the morning on Easter Sunday ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I found the foot washing last night quite moving - but the sermon/homily/whatever was FAR too long!

We have canvassed the local churches, both Latin Catholic and Syro-Malabar, and found one that has an 8 a.m. mass on Sunday morning so will be heading to St Joseph Cottolengo on Easter morning for a Latin rite service - I have only been there once before, last year when some guy in purple was visiting - it is the only church in the area that actually has a RAMP for wheelchairs! Sadly we have to cross quite a lot of gravel to get to the ramp so will probably drag Pete backwards as that's the best way with gravel.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A Quiz:

Who is daft enough to be leaning over a bucket, hand washing a brand new shirt to get the starch out, and turn the shower/tap control the wrong way and thus soak their own back with cold water?

Answers on a postcard, please, to the usual address.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A Quiz:

Who is daft enough to be leaning over a bucket, hand washing a brand new shirt to get the starch out, and turn the shower/tap control the wrong way and thus soak their own back with cold water?

Answers on a postcard, please, to the usual address.

Haha! _ Now go sit on the porch to dry out!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Good Friday greetings to you all. What are you plans?

Hopefully I'll get to Faure's Requim tonight at the Cathedral.

Amazingly, it's a beautiful sunny day today, after a freezy cold rainy week. And I'm now insured to drive my new (old) car. Time for an outing!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, my plan to get to Oxford for Tenebrae has fallen through. I could either get there an hour early, well before the shops opened, or else arrive slightly late. It's not available locally.

I should probably do some practical things like sending Easter cards instead. It's a beautiful sunny day - hadn't expected that.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Your mention of Tenebrae made me think of Tannochbrae and I thought you were channeling Barbara Mullen for a minute.

Actually most people reading this will be far too young to remember and will dismiss this post as the ravings of an old fogey - they might not be far wrong!
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, my plan to get to Oxford for Tenebrae has fallen through. I could either get there an hour early, well before the shops opened, or else arrive slightly late. It's not available locally.

I should probably do some practical things like sending Easter cards instead. It's a beautiful sunny day - hadn't expected that.

Can you get to Neath by 7:00? We've got one! It's been a very thought provoking and moving week - worship inter-denominationally (is that a word?).
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Now go sit on the porch to dry out!

Porch? Surely not being an American you mean veranda. A porch is something you you sit IN not on.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes indeed, Balaam, we call it the verandah, though we add an "h" at the end. Our Canadian guest calls it a porch but then he probably doesn't know any better.


eta: in architectural drawings here such things are referred to as Sit Outs - but ours is a verandah.

[ 06. April 2012, 16:05: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Mother-in-law is over for Easter, bearing Caramelised Onion Chutney [Big Grin]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Actually most people reading this will be far too young to remember and will dismiss this post as the ravings of an old fogey ...

Sadly not. [pan-loaf accent ON]
quote:
"Dr. Cameron, I've got the most terrible heartburn"
"Stop your havering, woman, and get your t*ts out o' ma porridge!"

[/pan-loaf accent OFF]

Having had plans that involved banking some sleep (wouldn't that be nice?) I ended up being Domestic Goddess Piglet again today. Surplices washed, bed-linen changed, chicken carcass turned into stock, chicken stock turned into soup and a loaf whirring away merrily in the bread-making machine. Kedgeree and smoked-salmon pâté on hold until tomorrow as shops closed and vital ingredients like rice and curry powder* absent from larder.

EJ, health to drive your new/old car. What sort did you get?

* sorry, WW - you probably don't approve of curry-powder ... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
oooh! they never used such language in Dr Finlay's Bookcase, i'll have you know, Madame Porcelet!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm not sure that quote really came from the show ... [Devil]

Loaf just out of bread-machine, and it looks like my best effort yet, with no sunken top. As D. put it, [cue King of Swamp Castle voice] "but the third one ... STAYED OOP!"

[Big Grin]

[ 07. April 2012, 02:27: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...* sorry, WW - you probably don't approve of curry-powder ... [Hot and Hormonal]

One of the big companies hereabouts is actually called Eastern Curry Powders so I suppose I can't complain - what they sell, however, is a variety of Masala Powders - and masala just means mixture so I suppose they are, really.

Did you know Barbara Mullen was actually born in Boston, Massachusetts?

Balaam, Caramelised Onion Chutney sounds to be of the Gods! Yummy!
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I've spent the afternoon making Coronation Chicken for a family get together next week. If I never post again it might be the cooking. [Biased]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Did you know Barbara Mullen was actually born in Boston, Massachusetts? ...

Not Morningside then? Say it isn't so! [Confused]

Kedgeree now made but I'm not very convinced about it. The fish I used was some that was given to my boss (and passed on to me) as "smoked haddock" which rather surprised me, as I've never been able to find smoked haddock here. Having cooked it, I think it's kippers, which are quite a different breed. I added some smoked salmon as well, and it's edible, but not exactly delectable.

[Disappointed]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Hope you're all enjoying your Easter weekends despite the weather! What is everybody up to?

Went to see the Dickens exhibition at the Museum of London yesterday. On later to the Faberge Egg Hunt - the eggs are large artworks, each individually painted by a famous artist or designer, and were to be found all over London, but are now gathered together on display in Covent Garden this weekend before being sold for charity. The styles are very diverse and interesting - I just wish they did "mini-eggs" that you could buy, some are so pretty it'd be lovely to have a souvenir.

Other than that, watching "Cranford" on DVD, which I missed the first time round. Haven't enjoyed a costume drama so much in a long time - delightful.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I lived in Knutsford, on which Cranford is based, from age 17 to leaving home to follow my career and my parents lived there until the early 80s - it hadn't changed much then! Many locals raved about Cranford but I am ashamed to say I have never read it.

Mass at a slightly unfamiliar church this morning - the other day they told us mass was at 8 so we got there at 7.34 and it had already started [Mad] - but it was a good service and it is a lovely, modern church - very spacious and airy - and I was sitting right under a fan, which was wonderful!

Next door to the outlaws for [far too much] lunch and then a relaxing afternoon watching the cricket. There is thunder about so I think they'll be rain before morning.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I've just woken up from the effects off too much lunch. The Malbec that accompanied it didn't help with the soporific effects, neither did the single malt.

But if you are going to break the Lenten fast you might as well do it in style.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think they'll be rain before morning.

Here too. The skies are greying up. I'm glad I'm on the right side of the Pennines though, the wrong side is going to get the brunt of it.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No rain yet but quite a few fire crackers going off - they are for sale everywhere ready for Vishu next Saturday. True to form [Fr] Paul, the priest at the very old church we sometimes go to, set loads off during Vigil Mass during the night - they woke me at 03.15 and we live 3 kms away!

We have set off a few today and scared the cat away for a while but she has returned to tend to her kittens.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
It's been damp or dampish most of the morning here, and grey and overcast all afternoon.

But, it stayed dry (if a little windy) last night for the Lighting of the New Fire, and all went off well then (i.e. I didn't set myself or anything else on fire exempt the Paschal Candle, which not only lit but stayed lit) so that was a success...

And now I am very tired, awaiting my Dear One to come home so that we can Eat Chocolate and drink wine together!

We have so much chocolate that you are welcome to some, if anyone is feeling deprived? Might find some wine and a spare glass too...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
The skies are greying up. I'm glad I'm on the right side of the Pennines though, the wrong side is going to get the brunt of it.

As usual! [Biased]
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
We went to Kew Gardens today and just twice it showered only a tiny bit being wettish. It was lovely there, and the whole family enjoyed it. It's always beautiful there, and plenty of walking as well as going into special places/buildings.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
When we left the house at 5:30 [Eek!] for the First Eucharist and New Fire, the weather was typical St. John's - you couldn't see the end of your nose - but by the time we were coming home after Evensong there was the remains of a cracking sunset.

Though I say it what shouldn't, we did ourselves proud with the music today. Schubert in G, Rise up, my love, my fair one by Healey Willan, This joyful Eastertide and the Hallelujah Chorus as the Gospel acclamation resulted not only in much Decanal Grinning™ but a fair bit of Episcopal Grinning™ too.* [Yipee]

Having got up at such a Godless hour, I spent the afternoon stretched on the sofa in the company of Quite Large Bear.

[Snore]

PS Has anything odd happened to the area telephone codes in the UK? We couldn't get through to phone home this afternoon and the automated voice said "check your area code", although we were using the same codes we've been using for the last 8 years.

[Confused]

* The Bishop (BLESS HIM) always starts his Easter sermon by saying how wonderful the music, and particularly the Hallelujah Chorus, is.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I sometimes have a problem getting connections to UK and get funny messages like that then try again a while later and everything is fine.

- - - -

I can't keep on staying up to watch the end of the cricket - going to bed at nearly midnight and getting up at 05.50 does not agree with me - I think I may go and have a little nap now.

[Snore]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...that little 2 hours did me the world of good - and now Mrs E is back and its her birthday today! Happy Birthday Mrs E!

Yesterday at Mass the priest went around doing the Asperges - those sprinklers send out quite a bit, don't they?
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Yesterday at Mass the priest went around doing the Asperges - those sprinklers send out quite a bit, don't they?

Funnily enough, I've just started a thread about this in Ecclesiantics.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Well, its now Bank Holiday Monday, and its pouring with rain and doesn't look like stopping, at least this side of noon!

At least we don't get hosepipe bans up here!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
That's a shame as we are about to venture to your side of the hills to visit our daughter. (We see her as taking culture to the dark side [Biased] )

At least the caramelised onion chutney tasted as good as it sounds.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Happy Birthday, Mrs E!

I am finally in holiday mode. I've been off work since 30th March, and don't go back until 16th April, but what with decorating the sitting room, and Holy Week, the last nine days have felt very full and busy.

[Yipee] for a lazy week!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Well, its now Bank Holiday Monday, and its pouring with rain and doesn't look like stopping, at least this side of noon!

At least we don't get hosepipe bans up here!

I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday? Everything is shut, as far as I can tell, and I don't fancy wandering about a wood or some standing stones in the rain (although otherwise that'd be lovely).

(PS, Piglet, my car's an old Vauxhall Corsa. So far so good...)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
...I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday?...

My choice would be sleep!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
...I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday?...

My choice would be sleep!
I need to get out of the house for a few hours every day or I'll go stir crazy... you wouldn't like me when I'm crazy! [Ultra confused]

I think I might just have to rug up and trudge about in the rain a bit (then maybe reward myself with a warm dry pub (if they're open today... I assume they are...).
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The Watershed or the Arnolfini with the papers and order a coffee will be nice if they're not too crowded.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm just wondering what one does on a wet Bank Holiday? Everything is shut, as far as I can tell, and I don't fancy wandering about a wood or some standing stones in the rain (although otherwise that'd be lovely).

Not sure where you are but the main shops and restaurants are open round here. Otherwise I'm afraid it's probably going to have to be indoor pursuits like TV or a good book.

(Though on a day like today you can usually be pretty sure tourist attractions won't be crowded...)
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I'm surprised that National Trust properties are closed today EJ. Perhaps you could find a tea room and take the papers or read a book?
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Happy birthday Mrs E - I hope you are being spoiled.

A good day for painting today - nothing arty, just a door. I'm glad I was depending on some non-gardening weather to get this done.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Happy birthday Mrs E - I hope you are being spoiled...

She came back for the weekend with her family this morning, despite being told she didn't have to - and she wouldn't let me wash up or anything - but then you know what she is like! We told a neighbour's daughter she was 105 today and she just laughed!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Fancy that - no respect for the aged these days. I hope she has a good day.

Have spent the afternoon making the chocolate cake from Hell. Not because it's difficult, but because it requires (among other things) 2 large bars of melted dark chocolate, plus cocoa powder, plus several ounces of brown sugar and golden caster sugar, plus half a pound of butter. That's before the icing goes on, which will involve double cream and another large bar of melted dark chocolate...

Sometimes you just have to, you know?

It'd better work because I'm taking it to the office tomorrow.

Incidentally, has anyone ever made a chocolate cake with beer or Guinness? I don't want the recipe, but I do want to know what people thought of it if they did. I'm in two minds about making one next time, but don't know how beery it might taste.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Sounds gorgeous!

I ended my sugar fast yesterday - so you are welcome to send a piece over.

Post haste!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:

I didn't set myself or anything else on fire exempt the Paschal Candle, which not only lit but stayed lit) so that was a success...


Darllenwr led the Lighting of the Paschal candle service on Saturday. He now realises it's not a good idea to say "damn" when the alter candles won't light when wearing a radio mike.

Easter Sunday was bright, it wasn't too cold up on the mountain at 7am. Unfortunately, it's hammered it down today.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Have spent the afternoon making the chocolate cake from Hell.... .

Death by chocolate is nothing compared to that, Ariel
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Spent the day at our daughters over the hills in hotpot-land, the rain never abated. What's more, Chorley market was closed, so no Chorley cakes to bring back across to the civilised side.

But they do have a miniature schnauzer pup which has a shoelace fetish. Here he is.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
What a cute wee dog. [Smile]

Just back from supper with friends from the choir - thought it was going to be roast lamb but it turned out to be roast beef. Very rare - a good vet could have brought it back to life - but v. nice all the same.

Beautiful day here - it got up to 9°C and sunny. Socks have been shed, toenails have been painted.

Cue late winter storm ...

Happy birthday, Mrs. E. - and I don't believe WW when he says you're 105 ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Cute dog indeed!

I phoned my bank a little while ago, so about 4 a.m. in Skelmersdale, and the person on the end of the phone said it was raining and cold there so when I tried to brighten her day by telling of the weather here she didn't seem cheered at all. There is no pleasing some people.

The reality is that if Mrs E were 105 then I would be, erm, a hundred and, erm, mumble mumble - and she finds being here infinitely more restful than being at home with her loopy sister.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Love the pup! Did he get his shoelace, or was he just being intelligent and wanted to undo the lace to get to the shoe???

Hope the cake was successful, sounds absolutely wonderful!

Ceaseless rain yesterday means we are well wetted [Smile] in the garden, rainwater butts overflowing, all ponds filled.

Sorry about you drought-ridden folk in the South East [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
It just hailed! And no-one made me any chocolate cake (sounds delicious though) or brought me any adorable schnauzers to play with. Instead I have my husband's cold to entertain me. Thankfully our massive bouts of a few weeks ago seem to have innoculated us to British bugs (touch wood) so I've only got it mildly.

A surprising amount of things were open on a Bank Holiday (inluding the National Trust places, but we thought the insidey ones would be swarmed). I love the cafe at Arnolfini (mmm... rubarb crumble slice!) but we ended up at the movies. The new Aardman thing about pirates - quite cute and very entertaining (I didn't get bored in the middle which I quite often do). As the Aardman folk are just down the road, I feel we should be supporting them. [Smile]

PS- I'm in Bristol, Ariel. And very nice it is too.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Rhubarb Crumble - yum-yum!! I think I prefer it with custard but will have cream or ice cream as well or instead of if necessary.

Bit of a panic this afternoon when I realised I hadn't paid a bill due on Thursday but I managed to pay over the internetty thing so that's okay.

My hands were really throbbing a bit earlier after we bagged just over a kilo of chilli powder and, inevitably, got some on my skin - a bit of coconut oil got it off and calmed things down a bit - now I just hope folks turn up to take it off my hands!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
The dog/house sitter is sorted, we're off to visit our eldest son in Heidelberg.

[Big Grin]

(eta - see you when I get there, I'm taking the notebook, of course!)

[ 10. April 2012, 14:49: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
The cake looks and tastes as it should - an intense, rich dark chocolate experience. I thought for a while it was going to be a non-starter as most people prefer milk chocolate and it sat there untouched almost all day - but shortly before I went home a couple of slices went, which was reassuring.

Funny old day with sudden heavy April showers and warm sunshine. On the way home, some beautiful scenes as we were caught between downpours and strong sunshine, with a double rainbow, and a single one nearby. If you can imagine green fields with a few trees in blossom, some old farm buildings, the deep dark rainclouds behind, golden light and the rainbow configuration in front, you will have it.

[ 10. April 2012, 18:35: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
It's been lovely and sunny today. Why couldn't it have been like this yesterday???

Incidently, we have a cat with a shoelace fetish.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
It's been lovely and sunny today. Why couldn't it have been like this yesterday???

Because it was a Bank Holiday and it's traditional.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Big Grin]

I'm reminded of an episode of the excellent Chelmsford 123 where they were having a drought and the Roman governor tried everything including rain-dances, and finally brought the rain by declaring it to be a Bank Holiday.

It was another lovely day here today, and got up to 14°C (the average at this time of year is 5°). [Yipee]

Didn't take advantage though - I think the early start on Sunday has caught up with me and all I wanted to do when I got home from w*rk was sleep ...

[Snore]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sleep is good, I am a great fan.

A quiet day today, we have decided not to go into town at all but I may stroll to a local supermarket later for a few things - nothing too strenuous, you understand.

We tried a new recipe at lunch for cauliflower cooked with garlic - it was nice but we think it can be improved so will be experimenting a bit to see if our ideas work, if they do I'll post it on the recipe thread in Heaven.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We tried a new recipe at lunch for cauliflower cooked with garlic - it was nice but we think it can be improved so will be experimenting a bit

Do your experiments include paprika? Paprika works with cauliflower if you don't overdo it.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We tried a new recipe at lunch for cauliflower cooked with garlic - it was nice but we think it can be improved so will be experimenting a bit

Do your experiments include paprika? Paprika works with cauliflower if you don't overdo it.
Paprika works period. Mrs S rarely uses chili without a little paprika. It 'rounds out' a lot of things.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I agree, I love paprika but the only time I brought any back here it went mouldy! I was most offended as it was expensive smoked paprika from, strangely enough, Taurus Crafts, where we are having my first Shipmeet.

If I bring some back this time I shall keep it in the fridge.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
<waves> from Heidelberg - we had a nice walk by the river and a Weisbeer (of course!) Great to see my eldest again [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
IMHO the nicest way to cook cauliflower is as per the blessèd Delia in the original Cookery Course: sautéed with onion, garlic and crushed coriander seeds and finished off with butter - it keeps its texture and is about as yummy as cauliflower can be.
 
Posted by FooloftheShip (# 15579) on :
 
I heard this, and I thought of you, Piglet:

"the warmest and driest place in the UK today will be Norn Irn".

Not every day you hear that......
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
<waves> to Boogie [Smile] Heidelberg is a lovely city - have a great time!

Did you feel anything of the earthquake, WW?

If you have a really young, tight cauliflower, I feel that a good bit of the best butter is the finest accompaniment!
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
I'm new here and there doesn't seem to be a thread for those from Africa and in fact nobody else from my corner of the world. Although my climate has more in common with the Antipodes, I've spent more time in the UK so if nobody minds I will just hang out here as an honorary Brit.

Bright hot autumn morning here in the mountains of the Overberg, South Africa, just back from the local market with a large yellow Strandveld pumpkin and some organic butternut. The church bells of the local Dutch Reformed Church have been 'fixed' and now only toll an hour late.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Mary LA

have friends living in the shadow of the Overberg and we were there 4 weeks ago.

Near Robertson? In a vineyard?

Great part of the world.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Hi Shamwari -- I'm closer to Grabouw than the Breede River, but know Robertson well.

Wine-growing country and the grapes have just been picked, apples and pears also in abundance.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mary, I'm an ex-pat Brit and there is at least one other so we are used to non-residents joining in and I even dare to say welcome on behalf of the group! And if you want to talk about food this is a pretty good place - although recipes belong in Heaven.

We've just had lunch and whilst we were out this morning Mrs E experimented further with the other half on the cauliflower - she used garlic paste AND whole garlic and some peas that were lurking in the fridge and a tad more water and cooked it a little longer and it was SUPERB!!!!! Really, really YUMMY!! If we can replicate it then I'll post it.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Waves at Mary from the east side of the Arabian Sea

Did you see me?

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Thanks for the welcome WW and Pete C east of the Arabian Sea! India, she asked tentatively? The Maldives are West...

I am not a Brit expat (just for clarification), was born in Zimbabwe and now travel for work between Angola, Namibia and Mozambique, though I call the Overberg in South Africa home, for now.

My recipes might belong in Heaven but I'm less sure about my cooking, though Purgatory may not be ready for unspiritual indigestion.
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Great.

Another Zimbabwean.

We are destined to take over the world.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
You first, Shamwari.

I seem to have spent decades living down and unlearning our jolly headmistress's expectations and hopes for us. No glass ceilings girls! You just smash through them with your hockey stick and keep going. Onwards and upwards!

Maimed us for life.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by shamwari:
Great.

Another Zimbabwean.

We are destined to take over the world.

Your cricketers may have a little way to go yet [Big Grin]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
They have already taken over the England team (Flower), and the Indian team (Fletcher)

Matter of time before they take over the rest
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
A bit of local news:

The Big Bang

I was just on my way to get a takeaway when I heard this - a couple of quick, massive explosions. Like those (now banned) mortar fireworks going off. No idea what it was, no smoke, no police sirens on the trail any time shortly after either so I'm guessing it wasn't local after all. Did anyone else hear it?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hello Mary LA! **waves** I may well be the Other Expat that Wodders was talking about - I'm Scottish, lived in Northern Ireland for 15 years and now live in Newfoundland. We get about, us lot! I've never been to South Africa, but I appreciate it regularly through the excellent medium that is Two Oceans Sauvignon Blanc ... [Biased]

Fool of the Ship - did you seriously put the words "driest" and "Norn Irn" in the same sentence? Shum mishtake shurely?

I'm playing hookey at the moment - I ought to be at the Cathedral AGM, but after w*rk in the morning, my regular stint volunteering in the Cathedral office in the afternoon and early supper with friends at a Chinese restaurant I thought "bugger it". I haven't been entirely idle - I'm actually taking a break from some light envelope-stuffing for the Cemetery Committee ...
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
A bit of local news:

The Big Bang

I was just on my way to get a takeaway when I heard this - a couple of quick, massive explosions. Like those (now banned) mortar fireworks going off. No idea what it was, no smoke, no police sirens on the trail any time shortly after either so I'm guessing it wasn't local after all. Did anyone else hear it?

Here that would be called a lead=up to Vishu, celebrated tomorrow, but some kids (5-99) just can't wait to let off their fireworks! [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
He is only a bit disgruntled because he nearly spilt his tea this morning when we let off a megabomb - it was only a little bit loud.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Hi Elspeth/piglet, some good Cape wines making their way overseas.

Bright and breezy Friday 13th here, no loud bangs or fireworks but my Great Dane puppy caught a turtledove. He was persuaded to release it, no harm done except for a few lost tail feathers. Very gentle mouth for a Great Dane. I wonder if he has some kind of bird dog in him, lurcher perhaps.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Sonic boom from RAF jets, apparently. Interesting that it was heard all the way from Birmingham to Swindon at the same time, when the jets started in Lincolnshire.

Though I suppose they might have broken the sound barrier over our area...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I wonder what the cost to the taxpayer [and I still pay UK tax] was for that little sortie of two fighter jets?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Sonic boom from RAF jets, apparently. Interesting that it was heard all the way from Birmingham to Swindon at the same time, when the jets started in Lincolnshire.

Though I suppose they might have broken the sound barrier over our area...

Yes, it isn't just a matter of 'breaking the sound barrier', but one of travelling at a speed above that of sound. If the plane travels 80 miles at Mach 1+, people along the whole flight path will hear the boom.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I wonder what the cost to the taxpayer [and I still pay UK tax] was for that little sortie of two fighter jets?

Well, yes. Especially as the helicopter pilot had accidentally broadcast a distress signal on the "help, I'm being hijacked" frequency instead of the normal one. He must be so embarrassed, poor man.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Morning All,

How are we doing? I've got a lurking cold/cough which is a nusiance, stealing my energy. I had some nice (thawed) frozen berries on my porridge this morning to give me vitamin C. I do love how cheap and available berries of various sorts are in the UK. Especially rasberries in summer, nom!

Another thought... I wonder if I'm going to manage to adjust to the more polite/ communicative style of the Brits in public areas. People say 'sorry', 'excuse me' etc. a lot more in places like supermarkets and are a lot more chatty with strangers. I still get a bit taken aback when a perfectly nice stranger passes a comment on something. It's nice, but odd to my self-contained NZ soul.

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I arrived early in work this morning, and at 8:15 there were but two of us rattling around an office for 25 people. I thought for a moment that it was Saturday but no, it is Friday 13th, so I'm going to be careful not to walk under any black cats today.

Cool but fine today.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Another thought... I wonder if I'm going to manage to adjust to the more polite/ communicative style of the Brits in public areas. People say 'sorry', 'excuse me' etc. a lot more in places like supermarkets and are a lot more chatty with strangers. I still get a bit taken aback when a perfectly nice stranger passes a comment on something. It's nice, but odd to my self-contained NZ soul.

That really varies depending on which part of the country you're in. I was quite taken aback by someone saying "Good morning to me" after I'd moved out of Oxford. (Yes, I was lost for a response.) Not what I was used to at all.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
On the saying good morning thing I embarrassed myself this morning by saying Namaskaram [Hindu and Christian greeting] to the 14 year old neighbour who walks with us - I quickly recovered myself, remembering he is Muslim, and said Salaam Aleikum instead. One of the few drawbacks of living in a multifaith society!

The good news of the day is that our friend M will be back from Dubai on leave in less than 2 weeks, it will be so good to see him.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Another thought... I wonder if I'm going to manage to adjust to the more polite/ communicative style of the Brits in public areas. People say 'sorry', 'excuse me' etc. a lot more in places like supermarkets and are a lot more chatty with strangers. I still get a bit taken aback when a perfectly nice stranger passes a comment on something. It's nice, but odd to my self-contained NZ soul.

That really varies depending on which part of the country you're in. I was quite taken aback by someone saying "Good morning to me" after I'd moved out of Oxford. (Yes, I was lost for a response.) Not what I was used to at all.
True, that. One reason I didn't want to move to London is that people are more likely to swear at you than say hello. (Exaggerating, but they're not friendly. I didn't feel safe/ relaxed/ comfortable, especially as a 'foreigner' who was probably a damntourist. I've stayed in London four times over 10+ years, in case anyone was wondering.)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I quickly recovered myself, remembering he is Muslim, and said Salaam Aleikum instead ...

Would "hello" and a friendly wave have done? Or, presuming he knows you're English, "toodle-pip, old chap!"

[Devil]
 
Posted by daisymay (# 1480) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
On the saying good morning thing I embarrassed myself this morning by saying Namaskaram

We say "Namaste" to each other, bending with our hands together. Some of our family used to have our head down and placed their hand on it.
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
Speaking to strangers also depends on context. There's a protocol in trains, particularly commuter trains.

At one period I was commuting on the 1720 Waterloo - Guildford. We, that is our group of middle aged (not me, I was 28 or so) sat in the same four-each side compartment. We had a convention that noone spoke, not even "good evening". When the group was six, we could inflict that discipline on the two interlopers (train was always full) by coughing over any attempt at conversation, holding a broadsheet newspaper in front of an offender. But one Friday evening on arrival in Guildford, one of the group SAID "I shalln't be with you on Monday, I retire today. Goodbye." We were too surprised to even wish him all the best. After that the group couldn't inflict its will on *three* interlopers and it broke up.

So, you actually need to read the signs carefully.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Morlader:
...But one Friday evening on arrival in Guildford, one of the group SAID "I shalln't be with you on Monday, I retire today. Goodbye." ...

I hope he giggled all the way home haven't created such a disturbance.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today is the big Spring festival here, it's called Vishu - Pete always stays at least this long as there is so much food available.

Anyway, lots of people out and about going to the temple this morning as we were doing our morning walk including lots of kids going there in little groups. One lad, now 11 years old, possibly thinks himself too big to just come up and hug me as he always used to do so he resorted to subterfuge and had a mock fight with me and at one point had his arms round me and picked his feet off the floor so I had no choice but to hold on to him - so he got his hug! All this completely unacceptable in modern day Britain where kids don't get touched but quite normal behaviour here - and the society is the better for it.

Vishu asamsakal - Happy Vishu

[ 14. April 2012, 03:26: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Quite right Wodders - hugs should be the norm rather than the exception. And happy Vishu to you too.

The head of the theological college where D. does a bit of teaching was retiring today, and we were invited to the celebrations. As our car was in being serviced I walked along from w*rk (it's about half a mile along the road) and met up with D. just as I got there. It was a nice do; it's a tiny faculty, but being Anglicans, of course there was lots of food. [Big Grin]

My contribution (crackers with cream cheese and red pepper jelly) went down very well once people realised what it was.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Talking of crackers, did you know that a 1,000 cracker string of firecrackers is about 3 metres long? Well, it is because we measured it just before we set it off.

It made a LOT of noise.

Fireworks here are openly on sale all over the place with no age limit on purchase apart from common sense The little Mega Bombs are quite fun, too - and VERY loud. We'll let off a load more after dark.

We were a bit worried on Thursday when we passed some lads selling some firecrackers from a wayside stall with a leaf fire burning only a couple of metres away!

[Eek!]

Needless to say we all ate far too much at lunch and I, for one, will not be needing any supper - I may still have a little but I won't need it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Super-looking spread in your picture - couldn't identify anything other than the rice and what looked like a poppadom, though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Gosh, let me see if I can remember:

There were three different sorts of banana chip - plain, salted and cooked with raw sugar.

There was chick pea and potato in a fried coconut sauce.

There was bottle gourd with yoghurt.

There was a variety of green bean.

There was bittergourd with onion.

There were two shallot dishes, one raw and one cooked.

There was fresh garlic pickle and fresh ginger pickle.

There was mango cooked in yoghurt.

There was sambar [in the thing with the lid] and rasam, the red stuff in little bowls, a sort of peppery tomato soup drunk with the meal.

There was a cabbage dish and another greens dish - and that is about all I remember.

Apart from the payasam we had for pudding which was a special dal payasam made with jaggery [raw sugar] but no milk.

We like food.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Gosh, let me see if I can remember:

There were three different sorts of banana chip - plain, salted and cooked with raw sugar.

There was chick pea and potato in a fried coconut sauce.

There was bottle gourd with yoghurt.

There was a variety of green bean.

There was bittergourd with onion.

There were two shallot dishes, one raw and one cooked.

There was fresh garlic pickle and fresh ginger pickle.

There was mango cooked in yoghurt.

There was sambar [in the thing with the lid] and rasam, the red stuff in little bowls, a sort of peppery tomato soup drunk with the meal.

There was a cabbage dish and another greens dish - and that is about all I remember.

Apart from the payasam we had for pudding which was a special dal payasam made with jaggery [raw sugar] but no milk.

We like food.

And a Parti----.....dge in a Pear Tree!!!!!!!! Glad you didn't go hungry. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I don't think he'll be going hungry for quite a while...

It sounds like a delicious feast and all good stuff. I wouldn't mind trying the chickpea and potato in fried coconut, in particular.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That sounds like quite a feast, Wodders.

It was a really nice day here today - not hugely warm, but not really cold either, so we took a run down to Witless Bay and had lunch in the Irish Loop Coffee House - first time this year (it's open from St. Patrick's Day to some time in the autumn). V. good turkey soup, a cheese sandwich between us and some cinnamon-and-raisin bread pudding.

Yum²
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I don't think he'll be going hungry for quite a while...

It sounds like a delicious feast and all good stuff. I wouldn't mind trying the chickpea and potato in fried coconut, in particular.

Make your booking now!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yeah, if enough people get their bookings for next winter soon enough then we won't have room for Pete!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
That Vishnu feast sounds delicious - we get raw jaggery out here, inexpensive and good quality, great for SE Asian dishes.

Autumn settling in here, the pin oaks' foliage turning red and the local wild pear (Dombeya) trees in flower. Wild guinea fowl pecking in the back garden.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
It is currently sunny and warm(ish) in the Lake District, with my brother's partner having eaten her breakfast on the patio! Brother and I sat inside, which was warmer [Razz] A great improvement on yesterday, when Sandemaniac and I were snowed on when out walking. (OK, we were around 450m / 1485 feet at the time...)

Wodders - 3 metres of firecrackers [Eek!] When I think of the problems in just getting a few for November 5th round here...

Must get round to doing something today besides going online.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
All this Titanic stuff is getting a bit out of hand. Television, news, radio, films, magazines, memorial voyages, special exhibitions at sea-life centres, commemorations around the world, and a whole range of merchandise, and now even the National Trust have started sending notifications asking if people are remembering it.

The National Gallery, on the other hand, have just sent me a notification that it's Leonardo da Vinci's birthday. A quick search reveals that he's on Facebook, and is now 520...

quote:
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Must get round to doing something today besides going online.

Me too.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Big spread about Newfoundland in the Guardian Travel Section yesterday (only got around to reading it today (Sunday))

I tried to imagine our Piglet living there - no problem in the pic of clapboard houses in vibrant colours, but by golly, it looked a big bleak up the by the cliffs. [Eek!]

Especially as the Guardian Man was trying to find icebergs. [Help]

(All to do with the Titanic, with which I am getting heartily fed up)

Are you sure you are OK there, Piglet??
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
My lovely dog Callum died suddenly but not unexpectedly yesterday evening at 8pm. he was twelve - a good age considering his lifelong heart condition.

He will be sorely missed by us all, not least his brother who is refusing food and wandering round the house looking confused.

Play well at the Rainbow bridge my boy.

[Tear]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Must get round to doing something today besides going online.

Me too.
I have finished a 4,000 word assignment, got rid of (nearly) all my dandelions and cleared a couple of eyesores (dead shrubs). Where's a smug smilie when you need one?

Sorry to hear about your dog, Boogie. 12 is a good age, but it's still a heartbreak, I know.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Boogie, I'm so sorry to hear about Callum - what a cute wee dog. RIP in doggy-heaven. [Tear]

quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
...Are you sure you are OK there, Piglet??

I am indeed, Nicodemia. We live in a "jelly-bean-row" house - we have a picture of it on the computer but because I'm a technopeasant I don't know how to reproduce it here. I must have a look at the Grauniad web-site to see what they said.

It was a beautiful day today, and we went for a drive up Signal Hill between church and lunch to see if there was any ice; there was a flat iceberg out beyond the Narrows and a more conventional-shaped one off Cape Spear, and quite a few "bergy bits" (smaller lumps of ice). They've been very early this year - we wouldn't normally expect any until at least May or even June - maybe they put in an appearance to coincide with the Titanic memorials. If it's any consolation, our airwaves have been clogged up with them as well. Just be glad you don't live in Belfast - I understand from friends there that they've had it up to here ...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've had some Titanic-y stuff out here as well but not too much - mind you I rarely watch the television machine except for cricket so I may be misjudging horribly.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Murray Rose, archetypal Australian swimmer and all round good guy, just died.

He was, I find, born in Nairn, which is a long, long way from Bondi.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray_Rose

Great Scot!
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Sympathy Boogie, a lovely pic of Callum.

Monday and endless editing ahead -- Feast of St Bernadette Soubirous of Lourdes, a date I remember because I read Franz Werfel's Song of Bernadette at an impressionable age.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sorry about wee Callum, Boogie - I know how it is when a four-footed family member dies.

I've got all tearful now! [Hot and Hormonal]

Nice sunny day here, but how long for - or should that be for how long?

Dreaded committee meeting this morning - there's always one person (usually the same one) who says "yes, but....." just as you think you've got it all wrapped up! [Frown]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Thank you all.

Pets are so much part of the family aren't they?

Gavin is doing better this morning, but he howls whenever we leave him alone.

[Frown]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
My apologies and sympathy, Boogie. I had not read your post about your dog.

We would miss our cat Gigi.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
...Dreaded committee meeting this morning - there's always one person (usually the same one) who says "yes, but....." just as you think you've got it all wrapped up! [Frown]

An elderly Friend once said to me that the ideal committee, Quaker or otherwise, has just three members with one off sick and one away on holiday. [Bitter] experience has shown that he definitely had a point!

Pete is now in an hotel in Bangalore for a few hours awaiting his flight to Frankfurt and then on into the wide blue yonder.

Now that he has gone I thought I'd get some chance to sleep in but a couple of local lads want me to cycle with them in the morning so they can practice their English!
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Boogie, heck re the loss of your dog [Frown] Sad news indeed.

Committees - ah yes, to be avoided at all costs wherever possible.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It looks as if we may be heading to Blighty sooner than we thought. My mum (who's 84) has developed pneumonia and is being treated with diamorphine, and isn't expected to live much longer, so we're kind of waiting for a phone call.

I don't really know what my emotions are at the moment; she's been suffering a form of dementia that started almost 20 years ago and for the last 10 years she's been in the geriatric ward of the local hospital, where she's completely bed-ridden. As far as we can tell, she hasn't really known any of us for many years, so in a sense we've already lost her, and she hasn't really had what you'd call "quality of life" for all that time.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and it is still a difficult time, piglet, with all sorts of conflicting emotions. I pray that you all weather the storm and come out with good memories of how she used to be.

A cycle ride first thing this morning with the two lads for whom I was a good excuse to stop and rest their legs. In the process I was telling them some of the history of the area and explaining some of the enormous global significance of the area - something they hadn't been taught in schools at all! I sometimes wonder what they do teach them.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
[Votive] Piglet and mommy piglet.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
Prayers for you all Piglet. I had something very similar with my Dad who hadn't known me for many years. He too was bedridden after being a very active walker most of his life I mean around 10 miles every day, often more.

He had Alzheimers, but dementia of any sort is very hard on the family. In many ways it was a release and to me, he was not the father I had known but a quite different person altogether.

Again, prayers for you all.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
[Votive] For Piglet and her mother
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Piglet, I'm so sorry to hear your news. Take care. [Votive]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Piglet - Thinking of you at this difficult time. [Votive]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
[Votive] For you and your mother, Piglet
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I am so sorry to hear this, Piglet. It is difficult when you are far away. (I have the tee-shirt...)

Take care and travel safely when you need to.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
If we are in UK at the same time, piglet, possibly we can meet up.

- - - -

These local lads are either going to get me fit or completely wear me out! Cycling with them twice a day is probably, on balance, good for me but at the moment I am a bit sore - I have hardly sat on a bike saddle since my accident 8 months ago; I think a quick application of arnica cream to my nether regions might help.

What I particularly like is that the mum of one of them, he is 13 next month, is quite strict about where he can go and about not going on main roads, even if accompanied by a mad foreigner - very wise given the way folks drive around here. They only have two more weeks of it then I will be off on my travels for 16 days or so and shortly after that they will be back to school.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Frown] [Votive] Piglet
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Votive] For piglet and piglet's mum.

I've got some banana and apricot loaf in the oven, it'll be ready in about half an hour? Anyone interested?

It's so much quicker cooking on my own, with decent equipment... it's fun doing it at work with the students, but somewhat slow.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Mmmm.... banana and apricot loaf sound yummy. Yes please.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I think a piece of virtual banana and apricot loaf sounds just right. Anyone want a cup of tea with that?

Thank you all for your kind thoughts and prayers. I spoke to my sister again today - she's going up to Orkney tomorrow (possibly with my brother as well) to be there for my dad.

It was the most glorious day here today; 20°* [Yipee]

* that's plus 20° Celsius, Wodders ...
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Cold, wet and miserable here today. Could do with a bit of 20C. (Can't seem to get the little degree sign in these message boxes, how do you do it Piglet?)

Anything left from the Apricot and Banana cake?? Would cheer up the morning nicely! [Smile]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Banana and apricot loaf sounds great, even the virtual kind.

Windy autumn weather here in the Overberg mountains and I must unpack winter clothes -- all I have is the clothing I wear in Angola on the steamy tropical coast there. It reminds me of travelling down from Nairobi to Mombasa in Kenya with family when I was young. We would stop halfway and take off sweaters, cardigans, socks etc and put on sandals, T-shirts and shorts.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
20˚C is just about bearable without a fleece and gloves - anything below that is regarded as cold here.

Nicodemia, I cheat on the ˚ sign by copying and pasting from MSWord.

We have just spent the morning shopping in the city but we resisted buying anything at all clothing related - HWMBO saw some shirting that he liked but it was 67% polyester so would be very hot - we try to get only pure cotton, if we can.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
Nicodemia, here is how you do the degree sign. I have left spaces so you can see how to do it. Close the spaces and you will have the degree sign.

& deg ;

Moo
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
° ° ° ° °

So it does!

13°C here - and that's indoors!

Cup of tea, yes please!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
°

Wonderful! You learn something every day!

Rain seems to have stopped and I have hung my washing out. I am probably being over optimistic!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks° Moo°, you're° a° star°!!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
We're getting several °s of weather all together at the moment. It said in the Metro this morning to expect torrential rain, thunderstorms and hail the size of marbles. I'm actually still expecting them – only had the torrential rain so far, and at this rate some localized flooding looks a possibility.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and we are keenly waiting for the rain here - not long now.

The find of the day on our trip to the city today was Paprika! - it is not usually available down here but in the catering suppliers we found a 1lb jar of it - that is quite a lot of paprika! Anyway it cost less than 3 quid so we went for it and we are keeping it in the fridge so it doesn't go mouldy - one less thing for me to look for in UK.

A teaspoon of paprika in mushroom fry is exceedingly good!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... A teaspoon of paprika in mushroom fry is exceedingly good!

At that rate it's going to take you quite a while to use up your lb!

Mum died peacefully last night - Dad phoned at about 4 a.m. our time to let us know. Heaven will be improved as a result. May she rest in peace and rise in glory.

David's just off to the travel agents' to see what we can do about flights - we're hoping to be able to get away on Thursday night.

I may need some virtual GIN, although we usually have real GIN on aeroplanes ...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Holding you all in the Light, piglet [Votive]

As for the paprika, I'm sure that once Mrs E and HWMBO get a taste for it then it will go remarkably quickly.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Oh Piglet, so sad - I'm thinking of you
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Piglet, may she rest in peace and rise in glory.


[Votive] prayers for you
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I am sorry to hear this news, Piglet.

Look after yourself.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Piglet, thinking of you at this time. (hug)
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Holding you in the light, piglet, and handing you a virtual gin and tonic. Not sure that real alcohol and air travel go well together.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Piglet, heck hecky heck heck...much love and prayers...
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Just caught up on the news... sympathy and every blessing to you and your family Piglet.

Sympathy to Boogie and her family too (pets are people too).

I've been chockablock with a family funeral on Monday (my husband's grandfather, sad for him but I didn't really know him) then starting my new job. I'm currently driving 2 1/2 hours there and 2 1/2 hours back 'cos I happen to live ages away from the office that's managing me. Once I'm suitably inducted I can work from home and from a couple of more local counties, which will be much more managable. I'm seriously sleep deprived after getting up before six and getting home around eight...

AND it damnwell POUNDED with rain for almost all the time I've been driving over the past couple of days. [Roll Eyes]

Anyhoo, pass the GIN over here!

[ 18. April 2012, 20:12: Message edited by: Eleanor Jane ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Best of luck with the new job, EJ.

D. managed to get an almost incredibly good price for the transatlantic bit, so we're heading over (via Toronto - no matter that it's about 2000 miles in the wrong feckin' direction [Mad] ) on Friday, arriving at Heathrow at silly o'clock on Saturday morning, then hopefully get a cheapie flight from Stansted to Edinburgh on Saturday night and drive up to the ferry on Sunday. The funeral's expected to be on Tuesday and we'll be back in Newfoundland on Friday evening ...

Jet-lag here we come. [Eek!]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
[Votive] For the travel piglet, that looks a tough journey at any time, let alone one for a funeral.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
[Votive] for piglet - especially for the jet lag coming the wrong way.

I only get jet lag travelling east.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Absolutely, Balaam. I find jet-lag is far worse going east, but because we're over there for such a short time, the old body-clocks won't really have time to adjust. We'll almost be meeting ourselves going the other way ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Wishing you safe and restful travelling, piglet and DD - I use an OTC travel med. that induces drowsiness and I sleep most of the way wherever and it makes a HUGE difference - and no hangover [Biased]

I am sure these early morning cycle rides are doing me good but I do hate getting up that early! Once I have been up a little while I am fine, it is the initial getting out of bed that is the problem.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I am sure these early morning cycle rides are doing me good but I do hate getting up that early! Once I have been up a little while I am fine, it is the initial getting out of bed that is the problem.

I guess we can all relate to that.
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Absolutely, Balaam. I find jet-lag is far worse going east, but because we're over there for such a short time, the old body-clocks won't really have time to adjust. We'll almost be meeting ourselves going the other way ... [Big Grin]

Really sorry for your loss piglet - hope your travels are not as bad as you fear.

Interestingly, I find my Jet lag much worse when going west, so my trip to Austin for 3 nights might be a bit of a challenge...

WW - could you PM me with the name of the OTC med you use? I'm aiming to sleep my way around the world and back.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Just caught up with all this this.

[Votive] for you and your family, Piglet, and for a safe and easy journey.

Though easy doesn't seem the word for travelling from Newfoundland to Orkney!

It might be quicker to do as the Vikings did and go by boat like this [Biased]
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Oh piglet [Votive] [Votive] One for the funeral, one for the amount of travelling to get there.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
[Votive] Piglet [Votive]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I don't fancy the North Atlantic in one of those, Nicodemia - but the Vikings obviously braved it - they somehow made it from Norway - Orkney - Shetland - the Faroes - Iceland - Greenland - Newfoundland. [Eek!]

Now that's a cruise I wouldn't mind doing ... [Big Grin]

Bookings all sorted now - I should be packing at the moment but I'm messing about on here. Probably won't be posting much over the next week or so, so I'll see you when I get back.

Thank you all again for your prayers and support - I'm quite overwhelmed with all the good-will flying around in the ether.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
[Votive] from here as well piglet.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Prayers for piglet and David. [Votive]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Travelling mercies for Piglet and David - and warm hugs and prayers at this sad time.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My current not-so-little shadow amongst the local kids is a bit of a computer wizard - yesterday he took part in a quiz type thing locally, which he won. Tomorrow is the District Competition in the city so he is off there early in the morning with his dad to have a go at the next level up.

Go Ashiq!

Still no news on the elderly neighbour run over earlier in the week - I saw B, his grandson, tonight and they are still waiting for word but I reckon at the moment no news might well be good news.

Lots of thunder rumbling about locally but not much rain as yet - perhaps 5 minutes earlier this evening. It is nice to know it's on the way but we'd appreciate some now, please.


eta: Ashiq heading to the city means I get a lie in until 06.30 instead of my alarm going off at 05.50!

[ 20. April 2012, 15:10: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, we did get some rain last night but not enough to move me to go and dance naked on the roof - something I only ever do in the dark of night, in case you are of a nervous disposition!

I have to absent myself today as we have some bureaucrats coming and it is better for HWMBO to see them alone. I shall go off to the city to see if I can get something we forgot the other day.

I will NOT buy a new camera,
I will NOT buy a new camera,
I will NOT buy a new camera,
I will NOT buy a new camera,
I will NOT buy a new camera,
etc.

HWMBO says I have enough and in the current personal financial climate I think he is probably right.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Those bureaucrats? [Yipee]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
[Votive] safe travel for piglet and David

Hoping Wodders' elderly neighbour is on the way to recovery.

We're also waiting for rain out here, plenty of black clouds that keep blowing over the valley. Off to join a smallish protest march against fracking in the Karoo, then to taste local goats cheeses in the wine-growing valley of Franschhoek and lunch with friends.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Speaking of cameras, I've just remembered it's Shakespeare's Birthday Celebrations this weekend, which means Stratford (upon Avon) will be photogenic, but even more crowded than usual, and it'll probably be too late to sneak in to a parking space anywhere by the time I arrive.

On the other hand, it's supposed to rain heavily at intervals. Now I know from past experience of going anywhere locally that if I don't go, it'll be sunny and I'll regret it, but if I do go, it won't be and I'll regret it.

Decision postponed until tomorrow. I have quite a lot of other things I need to be indecisive about.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
We've had rain and hailstones today - together with bright sunlight!! Is it only in Britain that it is normal to wear a heavy duty raincoat, a scarf and sunglasses??
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
We've had rain and hailstones today - together with bright sunlight!! Is it only in Britain that it is normal to wear a heavy duty raincoat, a scarf and sunglasses??

I'm afraid to disappoint - we've had the same sort of weird weather over on the Continent since about Easter. Similar gear is not unknown at the moment here either!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
then to taste local goats cheeses in the wine-growing valley of Franschhoek and lunch with friends.

Just discovered one of our local wine merchants is stocking wines from Chamonix. Had a very memorable lunch there on my birthday earlier this year, complete with parrot and thunderstorm.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Just trying to catch up after a week spent near Tunbridge Wells. Lord P slept over for the week as he could get to work in not very much more time than from Horsham, and that was good. Caught up with family, went to Brighton, Canterbury and some very nice NT properties. Pity about the weather! It seemed strange to think that we'd had breakfast near the Kent/Sussex border and lunch in Caerphilly!
Thankfully, the cats haven't learned too many new swear words whilst they've been in the cattery.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Just spent most of evening on the phone catching up with people going through hard times. [Tear]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The bureaucrats didn't appear yesterday so I spent a day out quite unnecessarily and will probably have to be out for the day again tomorrow!

unprintable words, unprintable words

What is wrong with a little basic courtesy and a phone call to say "we are running late, etc."?

Later this coming week I have to go and request permission to leave the country for my trip to UK - this is merely a formality, I hope, but a time-consuming one as it will take at least one, and possibly two, half-days.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Heck, Wodders, they'll be so pleased they'll probably drive you to the airport then and there!

[Big Grin]

In other news: ARRRRGGGGGGH [Mad] [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
...In other news: ARRRRGGGGGGH [Mad] [Waterworks]

[Killing me]

Pete, I am so sorry.

[Killing me]


It is getting a tad warm here but then a storm* brews up and we get a little bitty downpour and the temperature drops again. It is all rather good.

*NOT a snowstorm!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Just discovered one of our local wine merchants is stocking wines from Chamonix. Had a very memorable lunch there on my birthday earlier this year, complete with parrot and thunderstorm.
Firenze - what did the parrot taste like? I'd have thought a bit stringy unless braised for a very long time! [Big Grin]

Heavy rain here but no hail and no thunder - so far! We really don't need all this rain - surely it can't be too difficult to send some dahn sarf via the canal system. Or something?
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
You have it in the form of parrot cake.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Chamonix plus parrot!

It was autumnal and rainy in Franschhoek, mountains hidden behind cloud and oak trees losing their leaves, vineyards ditto. I often eat at Mon Plaisir at Chamonix, good provincial French food such as navarin of lamb, boeuf bourgignon, coq au vin, but yesterday we went off to Moreson's Bread & Wine, mostly known for charcuterie, tried boerenkaas (hard farm cheeses) and various goats cheeses wrapped in vineleaves or ashes.

The Overberg, like the Drakenstein valley, is a mix of First and Third World, so drove back behind an unroadworthy and overloaded bus carrying mourners to an Aids funeral in Worcester.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Just back from a friend's wedding in Shropshire, with our overnight stay, in the very nice hotel hosting the wedding and reception, paid for by the cake Mrs Sioni produced.

Very good do. Civil ceremony so the absence of hymns was noticeable. God Bless E & H for their marriage.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Dammit! Just watching the weather and it's going to rain tomorrow again. I am so sick of driving in the rain! I'm off to the coast of Hamshire tomorrow which will probably take about 3 hours in the morning. The rest of the week will be a bit more humane, thankfully. Looking forward to more working from home.

I can offer some delicious baked macaroni cheese with chunks of chicken in it. My lovely husband is very good at cheese sauce!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Hailstones this afternoon - and so much rain that the drains couldn't cope with it...not nice driving in it.
Now north of Derby on a clergy conference which starts tomorrow.
There must be a collective noun for a gathering of clergy, but I can't think of one just now...

Have as good a week as possible, people.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
...There must be a collective noun for a gathering of clergy, but I can't think of one just now...

...and if you could, would it be printable?
 
Posted by kiwimacahau (# 12142) on :
 
Surely a communion of vicars and a fulmination of bishops?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
As clergy are members of the cloth wouldn't Bale be appropriate?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kiwimacahau:
Surely a communion of vicars and a fulmination of bishops?

It's a bunch. Everyone on the radio seems to have one collective noun only - 'bunch'

[Mad]

I'm getting all GOW over it!
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
As clergy are members of the cloth wouldn't Bale be appropriate?

And a synod a baleful ? Yep, seems right.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Another day without the bureaucrats - I imagine they will come Thursday afternoon when we are out at a temple festival!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another day without the bureaucrats - I imagine they will come Thursday afternoon when we are out at a temple festival!

Deja vu all over again?
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
...There must be a collective noun for a gathering of clergy, but I can't think of one just now...

...and if you could, would it be printable?
No. [Mad]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
A justification of clergy??
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
An Oversight of Bishops?

- - - -

BIG and beautiful storm last night knocked out the power until this morning - in the dry season dust accumulates in the transformers and when it rains it causes shorts. The electricity line men do an amazing job to get everything back to normal so quickly.

Went to see the man about permission to leave the country this morning but he's on leave today so left papers with a colleague of his and will call him tomorrow.

And the best news of the week is that our friend M, who has been working in The Gulf for several months, got back early this morning - he is being spoilt by his mum at the moment but should be receiving visitors later today. He's not been well whilst over there so I think she is aiming to feed him up, as mums do.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Just been out spending money on behalf of the business - because it is tax deductible it feels very different from our usual spending. The printer died so we now have a printer/scanner/copier laser thingy that only prints in black but scans [flatbed] in colour, which is nice as our previous scanner died some years ago. I haven't looked up the price in UK but we paid less than a hundred quid for it.

[Yipee]

Now I have to work out how to use it [Ultra confused]

I am sure it is so easy a 5 year old could understand it - but I am 63!
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
You mean it was around the same price as this?

Jengie
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A little more than that and a bit faster and greater dpi, I think, but a Panasonic rather than HP - not that I reckon there is much to choose between them. Ours is off-white rather than the current universal black.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Raining heavily today.

I was woken up around midnight by the sound of banging and crashing. Thinking someone was breaking into a car, I looked out of the window to see an enormous, very sleek fox taking a bag of rubbish apart, banging the tins in it around and extricating bones from somewhere. We looked at each other. It was quite an intimidating size – about the size of a Labrador, and I didn't fancy going down to scare it off, so I swore at it from the safety of my flat, banged the window shut and went back to bed.

Curiously enough when I got up this morning, the door of one of the cars was wide open, in the rain, and nobody to be seen. Perhaps it was the fox after all...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Perhaps he wanted somewhere dry to enjoy the bones.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I did wonder whether, not content with rifling through our bins, he'd then intended to drive off somewhere after his dinner.

(It could just be, of course, that not having the ignition key was what foxed him. )
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I am trying to imagine what car a fox might drive...

The new printer doesn't work [Mad] Power is getting to it okay but it won't switch on so I think The Man will have to come and see to it. This is particularly annoying as today is results day for the equivalent of GCSEs so we are expecting a visitor or several coming to get their marks. I can get their results but can't print them a copy.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Not a fox, but -- woke up and saw a mongoose drinking from the stone bird bath. Odd time of year for it to come into a domestic garden. There are very shy cobras right at the back of the garden and I hope the mongoose leaves them undisturbed.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
I am trying to imagine what car a fox might drive...

Isn't there a small VW hatchback called a FOX?

The Vulpine Mrs. S
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
We can get electrical equipment that doesn't work for less than £100 in the UK too, Welease Woderwick. I think you are on firmer ground with the weather and Kerala cuisine.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thank you for your, erm, support and encouragement mld! The man is coming to fix the machine tomorrow.

This afternoon I had one of the most yucky experiences of my life - as we gave kids their results today several came back with sweets to thank us - moonlitdoor knows my fondness for a particular Indian sweet, the ladoo or laddoo or laddu - yummy isn't in it. Anyway we had a number of the little beauties on a plate under a fly cover so I just lifted the cover, grabbed one and popped it in my mouth only to find that it was covered in ants! I had ants in my mouth, ants on my face - horrible!

I wonder how many I swallowed.

[ 26. April 2012, 14:05: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I posted this earlier on the Trans-Tasman thread and have only just noticed - so I've taken it out of there and here it is, FWIW:

quote:
Good results for local kids so far today - everybody has passed their exams - Ashiq, my cycling partner has got C in Chemistry and Maths but has done very well otherwise - one of his friends, name now forgotten, got 7 passes at A+, one A and 2 at B+!!!

Now the competition begins for places for the next level, here called Plus one and Plus Two.

Didn't go elephant spotting this afternoon as it rained somewhat more than somewhat but the fun bit of the day was early morning when two lads and I went for a cycle ride on a route they didn't really know - strange as they both grew up here. They both seemed impressed with my local knowledge which I find a bit odd - when I move somewhere new the best way to get to know the area is either walking or cycling - and HWMBO grew up round here, too, so he has shown me loads.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Not a fox, but -- woke up and saw a mongoose drinking from the stone bird bath. Odd time of year for it to come into a domestic garden. There are very shy cobras right at the back of the garden and I hope the mongoose leaves them undisturbed.

Good Lord above! You hope the cobras stay undisturbed!! [Eek!]

(Remember I am orginally from New Zealand, we didn't have any snakes, let alone highly venomous ones...I do hope I never see a wild snake in the UK.)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I just lifted the cover, grabbed one and popped it in my mouth only to find that it was covered in ants! I had ants in my mouth, ants on my face - horrible!

I wonder how many I swallowed.

[Eek!] [Eek!]

Oh how horrible. Hope you're not suffering any ill effects. That would put me off desserts for a while.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, it did put me off laddu for about 30 minutes so that is quite an achievement for the ants!

Quite a lot of rain last night so tonight we think will be the annual Night if the Flying Ants when thousands will come and batter themselves to death against the tube light on the verandah - we sometimes have fun and go out with a mozzie bat and zap a few hundred to death.

I'm a bit with Eleanor Jane on the cobras - generally I don't mind snakes [most of the ones we see here are harmless Rat Snakes] but even though I know cobras are generally only aggressive when they feel threatened we have so many kids in the neighbourhood that I'm not sure I'd be happy to take the risk - but then we have a pretty high population density.

my dad loathed snakes - he could hardly bear even talking about them!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
(Remember I am orginally from New Zealand, we didn't have any snakes, let alone highly venomous ones...I do hope I never see a wild snake in the UK.)

The chances of seeing a wild snake are almost zero, even in winter, when they are at their most sluggish, an adder will flee if it knows you're around.

Heathland, especially in coastal areas, is where you'll find them, and even then it's difficult, they're good at hiding. But you are much more likely to die of wasp stings than adder bites. Deaths by adder are about 12 every century. (I was bitten in Lincolnshire in the 1970s - serves me right for walking barefoot - its no more than a bit of swelling for a few weeks unless you have an allergic reaction.)

As far as I know we only have 5 species of snake wild in the UK, adders, grass snakes ans smooth snakes are native, whilst corn snakes and rat snakes have been seen, due to pets escaping and breeding.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Eleanor Jane wrote: Good Lord above! You hope the cobras stay undisturbed!! [Eek!] (Remember I am originally from New Zealand, we didn't have any snakes, let alone highly venomous ones...I do hope I never see a wild snake in the UK.)

That comment I made was far too cryptic -- out here in the Overberg it is very dry and there are Cape cobras everywhere, coming down from the mountains to drink water and eat eggs because many people keep poultry. So the snakes are part of the given, there are always snakes around. The safety lies in knowing where the snakes are and cobras do not like encounters with humans or dogs so for them to lurk in a thicket at the back of the garden is a win-win situation. Cobras are very shy and will only attack if cornered or trodden on.

The snakes I do fear (and I'm sure shamwari will know about this) are the green mambas that nest in trees and are bad-tempered unpredictable snakes. We don't get puffadders here, but they are as feared.

Edited for pre-caffeine typos

[ 27. April 2012, 06:14: Message edited by: Mary LA ]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I take it you won't be wanting these when you come over, Wodders.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, yes, as I am already pretty strongly allergic to chocolate the combination doesn't really appeal - but thanks for the offer! Perhaps offer them to one of our many chocoholics - I can think of several.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Mambas – black or green – are things to be wary of. I'm happy to say I never saw any live ones; most snakes are more inclined to avoid humans than seek them out. I can remember the excitement once when one of the gardeners killed a snake and we all stood round on the verandah looking at it from a safe distance, just in case it wasn't properly dead. I don't know what species it was. It looked for all the world like a long black shoelace – quite unexciting, though the smaller snakes can pack a pretty powerful venom and some of the really tiny ones can kill you in seconds.

All I've seen here has been a slow worm a few years ago. They're really beautiful (or the females are) – a lovely gleaming copper colour snake, but harmless.

Anyway – still raining. The fields have turned into small lakes, the sky looks like a bruise, the trees are full of blossom and when the wind and rain get going, it looks like a spring snowstorm as the petals shower across the car park. Passing cars going through the puddles can drench you from head to foot: welcome to the English spring.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We [very] occasionally see Kraits here and generally they are only small but are pretty unpleasant - we are on slightly higher ground and they prefer the damper bits so we are okay but HWMBO's friend killed one a year or two ago but then he farms down by the river and has little kids...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Oooh!! A double post!

Having the printer die on us then bought the new printer and it still doesn't work after two men came to see it today but another man is coming from the city to fix it tomorrow - and having reported the washing machine has a problem but the man is coming back with the new part tomorrow - on top of all that the soda machine, which is very old and owes us nothing, has packed up and we will have to buy a new one tomorrow!

And all this is in the week before I go away on what is likely to be a moderately expensive jaunt round UK.

[Roll Eyes]

Ah well, at least I got my permission to leave the country this morning plus I got some more stuff given to me to give to certain friends over there so there is good news as well as bad.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:


Anyway – still raining. The fields have turned into small lakes, the sky looks like a bruise, the trees are full of blossom and when the wind and rain get going, it looks like a spring snowstorm as the petals shower across the car park. Passing cars going through the puddles can drench you from head to foot: welcome to the English spring.

Yup, raining pretty thoroughly here now. It has been fine for most of the day, so I'm counting my blessings. Plus I don't actually need to go outside today, so that helps too. I would *like* to celebrate Friday with a pub and my husband but if it's too nasty, there's already pizza delivery!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
My train home was cancelled this evening, so I got a bus to Oxford. I was surprised and delighted to find a genuine Moroccan crafts market in Broad St, the white tents looking a little dejected with no lighting on a dark rainy day, beneath the walls of a 12th-century college.

The tents were full of beautifully carved boxes, North African musical instruments, lamps, jewellery, scarves and sandals, brightly decorated Moroccan pottery, and salesmen in robes talking to each other in Arabic, some looking every inch as if they'd stepped straight out of the Arabian Nights. One asked if I wanted to exchange my camera for one of his tagines (no deal).

I felt rather sorry for them - it was such a miserable day. First time I've seen a Moroccan market over here before - the usual thing is French markets with people who come over from Normandy on the ferry, and occasionally Italian or German. A lovely touch of sunshine, despite the weather.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
my dad loathed snakes - he could hardly bear even talking about them!

He was obviously a very Wise and Good Man. **shudder**

We're back. The travelling to Orkney went wonderfully - we even managed Edinburgh to the hotel in Caithness where we stayed before catching the ferry next morning in 4¾ hours, which was almost indecent. The funeral went very well - the east-end chapel at St. Magnus Cathedral was well-filled, and it was nice to see so many friends and relations (some of whom I probably hadn't seen for the best part of 40 years [Eek!] ).

Plans went a bit pear-shaped after that - the ferry we were supposed to get at noon on Thursday from Orkney couldn't go until 5 p.m. because of windy weather, which meant we'd miss the plane connection in Edinburgh. D. managed after a lot of faffing about to get it all sorted, and we hot-tailed it from the ferry, staying at my sister's in Edinburgh for about 3½ hours' sleep before getting a morning flight from Edinburgh to Heathrow. That was a bit late in leaving, so we had a hell of a scramble to get from Terminal 5 to Terminal 3 to catch the flight to Halifax and then home.

You do seem to have been having silly weather - we had a short but quite impressive hail-shower in Colchester last Sunday, although it wasn't too bad most of the rest of the time.

I think I'll go and do quite a lot of sleeping now ... [Snore]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's good to have you back, piglet and DD, and I'm glad it went as well as these things can.

Sleep well.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Deary me, Piglet, the latter half of your journey sounds exhausting just reading about it!

Sleep well...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've just been looking at the website for the left luggage people at Waterloo and saw that the same company does overseas shipping so thought I might as well ask for a quote for the books to get over here - amazingly quick service brought me a reply within an hour and a quote on the acceptable side of acceptable!

I can't accept the quote yet as I need to be over there and see the stuff but it certainly looks promising.

[Yipee]

The man has been to look at the printer and it is a switch complaint, the first he has ever found on these machines in the 5 years he's been doing the job - apparently Panasonic have a good reputation for reliability - he'll be back Monday with the bits.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Glad it all went OK, piglet, even if the last bit of travelling stuff sounds horrid. Sleep well!!

This has been a most horrible lurgy that's kept me confined to bed or sofa for the last four days. Worst thing has been the aching limbs and muscles. I'm really glad I did a major shop just before it set in, though less pleased that I'd bought a week's train ticket, which has only been used for one day.

I'm feeling a bit better today, though, and have got as far as changing my sheets and duvet cover, in slow stages, with a sit down and rest between each bit. I shall continue to languish on the sofa for the rest of the day, though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I hope you feel better soon, Japes.

As I leave here in under 5 days I think I might think about what I am taking - I may even do something but that might be a bit drastic for a weekend.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Look after yourself Japes. Old movies,a favourite magazine, hot chocklit and Campbell's tomato-and-rice soup (very difficult to find now) with slightly burned,buttered toast is the best cure I've found to that kind of lurgy.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Air it easy Japes & I hope you feel better very soon.

Today in town I wondered if I was seeing things.... a man out shopping with a lovely white duck at his heels. I only noticed it when it quacked.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
Glad it all went OK, piglet, even if the last bit of travelling stuff sounds horrid. Sleep well!!

This has been a most horrible lurgy that's kept me confined to bed or sofa for the last four days. Worst thing has been the aching limbs and muscles. I'm really glad I did a major shop just before it set in, though less pleased that I'd bought a week's train ticket, which has only been used for one day.

I'm feeling a bit better today, though, and have got as far as changing my sheets and duvet cover, in slow stages, with a sit down and rest between each bit. I shall continue to languish on the sofa for the rest of the day, though.

Still holding you and yours in prayer Piglet.
Sorry to hear that you've been sick Japes - take it easy as you recover. I've spent the morning changing bed and washing stuff and generally cleaning. My most favourite activities --- NOT - and takes me probably twice as long as most people. Not happy - especially when the person I'm paying to help me has not turned up for weeks!! Just off to do a bit of shopping then coffee with a friend for a mutual set of hugs for various reasons - mostly associated with supporting elderly realatives.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Work on sorting out what to take nicely interrupted by neighbour calling in to get some photos copied on to a disc - but I must do it soon.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Make re you bring some warm c.lothes Wodders - there's been an icy wind today.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
My train home was cancelled this evening, so I got a bus to Oxford. I was surprised and delighted to find a genuine Moroccan crafts market in Broad St, the white tents looking a little dejected with no lighting on a dark rainy day, beneath the walls of a 12th-century college.

Wish I'd known about that, especially as it ended today. Just mentioned it to Sandemaniac, apparently because I usually let him know about markets in town (there was a Chocolate Fair last month...), he'd assumed that I knew about the Moroccans when he saw it on Wed & Thurs. No, I usually need be in town myself to have any knowledge of such events. [Roll Eyes] (OK, sometimes I find them on the City Council website too.)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
...there was a Chocolate Fair last month...

I wish I'd known about that...!

I never thought of looking on the City Council's website, but now that you've mentioned it, it seems the Moroccans are doing a tour of a few cities in England and will be coming back at Christmas, though not to anywhere within reasonable travelling distance of us.

It was lovely. Broad St is an odd sort of setting but in a way it worked well, having Balliol's ancient spires and turrets overlooking the neat rows of white tents beneath, full of exotic Eastern goods. The complete lack of lighting in the tents seemed to add to the almost medieval feel of it, though if they'd actually lit some of those Eastern lanterns they'd have created a very attractive atmosphere. Health and Safety probably wouldn't have permitted it, though.

I wonder what will be next - probably just back to the usual farmers' market and grunge market in Gloucester Green for the foreseeable.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I came across a set of teepees in park as we were out after shopping today. It was a pop up restaurant selling British inspired tapas i.e. chips n curry sauce, onion bahjis, mini burgers... all fairy lights and fake ivy inside. Nice rose wine... I love Bristol!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Japes, that sounds like a nasty dose of Proper Flu™* that you've had. Hope you feel better soon.

I've been a v. lazy piglet today. I fell asleep on the sofa last night and woke up late, then went to bed and (luckily) slept really well, but I've done the square-root of bugger-all today. I've just put a laundry-load in, but that doesn't really count, as it'll look after itself as long as I remember to transfer it to the tumble-dryer before I go to bed.

I've got a lesson to read in the morning and a bit of solo-ing to do at Evensong tomorrow, so I hope the sleep-goblin doesn't hit at the wrong time ...

* as opposed to Man-Flu, which is a different beast altogether. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Stormy and dreadful weather here today. If the water boards DARE to complain of lack of water ........ I'll, I'll, I'll ... write a strongly worded letter! Here is a tip from me to them - Collect the stuff!!

(Rant over - hehe!)

I will go to Church today, we are preparing for our 40th anniversary (Spring Chickens, yes I know!)

I have coffee and warm croissants for anyone who's in need.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
This is like being back in February. It's stormy, wet and windy here too. Part of the motorway is closed, and a tree's fallen on the railway line. It's not the weather for going far, but should be good for rain photos if nothing else.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've been to an engagement function solo - the carpenter was threatening to come today so HWMBO stayed to see him but he didn't appear - GRRRRR!!!!!

Anyway it was a fun time and [shock! horror!] I ate too much as well as taking rather a lot of photos. The Groom-to-be has a PC at home so I was able to donwload my camera straight on to his machine before I left so no trauma about having to remember to get everything printed before I go away on Thursday.
 
Posted by Miffy (# 1438) on :
 
Three words: Wet, wet, wet! Where is an umbrella smiilie when you need one?
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Not just wet but gale force winds as well. I didn't go to church this morning as I felt it could be dangerous - my scooter isn't necessarily the most stable and the wind was so strong, it could have been blown over.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Last time I looked on the local travel sites they said there was a tree on the southbound railway line, overhead cable problems on the northbound railway line, part of the motorway was closed, but the back roads were mostly OK apart from the floods, fallen trees and fallen power cables.

Rain is smashing against the windows, puddles are scudding across the car park, the trees are losing a lot of the new spring leaves and smaller branches, and going shopping has been an adventure. At least three of the places I went to had leaking roofs, so people were looking at dripping shelves while skirting round strategically placed buckets.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A family we know from church have been camping out with married daughter and family overnight as their roof leaks so badly.

No rain so far today but we are expecting it later - just been on a cycle ride with neighbour and we hurried back as it looked so threatening but that band seems to have skirted us.

The problem with harvesting it on a large scale is capital investment and a financially unenthusiastic government - given the will and the investment there shouldn't be a problem in UK.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
It looks as if I will need to visit the church cellar to check flood levels. Not that I am expecting anything if the pumps are working.

Jengie
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
High wind and heavy rain here too. A tree came down across the entry road to our car park, the whole site was deemed unsafe, so the meeting was cancelled. I think more than a few people were relieved.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've just been chatting with my friends in Chorlton [Manchester] and they say the weather is foul there as well. I hope it clears up by next weekend!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Very localised flooding here.... the rain came in between the wall and the *new* flat roof because the roofer removed one of the pipes diverting the rainwater away from the wall. The rain came in through light fittings (eek) and I had puddles on the floor (vinyl thankfully). Replacing the pipe seems to have resolved the problem, and the wall & ceiling seem to be drying out now.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I hope the weather clears up for the Chorlton meet too. But it is Manchester!

Even here on the drier side of the hills it is very wet. The local council has cancelled all the local football matches as the pitches are either waterlogged or flooded. At least the council puts football pitches rather than housing on the flood plain.

Actually I want the dry weather to come a the weekend before the meet as I have bought a new bike and will be riding it home. Not fun if it hails like it has done the last two days.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Miffy:
Where is an umbrella smiilie when you need one?

Inside out somewhere.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Goodness, you have been having Interesting Weather - rather too interesting by the sound of things. It wasn't a bad day here at all, although it's much colder than it was and they're even forecasting a spot of sn*w overnight. [Eek!]

I suppose the socks will have to go back on ... [Frown]

First Lesson, Byrd Four-part Mass and Prevent us, O Lord in the morning, Responses and Short Service by Ayleward and Morley's Out of the deep (with solo piglet) at Evensong all dispatched safely.

I love Tudor music (I may have said that before). [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Miffy (# 1438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
quote:
Originally posted by Miffy:
Where is an umbrella smilie when you need one?

Inside out somewhere.
Ah well. It's beginning to brighten up, in our part of the UK anyway.

Here's a suitably weather themed link to cheer you all up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGLZqDXau98

[instant UBB sulking atm]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I had a "surreal or what" moment in work today.
I went to visit a gentleman and his wife, one of the cases that had been allocated to me. As I was going through the forms, getting their details, the wife asked me if I was from Merthyr.
The conversation then went something like this:
St. G: No, I'm from B**d
Mrs D.: I had an aunty and uncle live in B**d
St. G: Where abouts?
Mrs D.: B**n St.
St. G: Oh, my grandparents lived there
Mrs.D: What were their names?
St. G.: Will anmd Liz Evans
Mrs D.: Yes, and your mother was Betty - I am your 2nd cousin and I was one of your mother's bridesmaids!
She hadn't seen me for about 40 years - I can't even remember meeting her - but reckoned that as soon as I said where I was from, she knew who I was.
As I say, surreal or what? Darllenwr's mother used to reckon that there were only 300 real people in the world, and everyone else is a cardboard cut out. The more incidents like that happen, the more I believe her!
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
My mother is legendary for chatting to complete strangers and finding out either that they are related or she knows someone who is related to them.

The key is that you have to chat to anyone and everyone about anything and everything, in order for this to happen. Which is why it never happens to me.... (except online [Biased] )
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chorister:
My mother is legendary for chatting to complete strangers and finding out either that they are related or she knows someone who is related to them.

This is very much a rural thing, isn't it? In deepest rural Herefordshire no introduction is complete until you have worked out who you know, or might know, that the other person also knows are might know.

Great story, St.Gwladys. [Smile]

[ 30. April 2012, 19:39: Message edited by: QLib ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Having grown up in Orkney, I'm very aware that everyone's related to everyone else. As D (who was an incomer) says, you have to be careful what you say about someone, as the person you're saying it to is quite likely to reply, "he's my cousin".

There's a corollary to the Mummy Chorister scenario: I was stopped in the street by someone I took to be a complete stranger, who said, "hello Piglet, how are you getting on? How are your mum and dad and the piglet siblings?" I answered politely and tried not to look too puzzled ... I think it turned out to be a cousin of my dad's that I hadn't seen for years.

I also once had an entire conversation with someone I thought was a bloke I'd been in school with, but who actually turned out to be a different acquaintance altogether ...

Senior moment, methinks. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Once upon a time, in the Good Old Days we used to get proper air tickets in a little booklet thingy that I would receive then check then lock away in a little tin in my drawer that exactly the right size. Now we have PROGRESS and we print our own tickets on any odd bit of paper we have lying around.

Now then, somewhere in this office is a folder containing all my air tickets and bus tickets for my forthcoming trip [I leave in under 48 hours] but I have no idea where that little folder is.

I blame Smudgie, I think she slipped in overnight sometime and moved it just to confuse me!
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
More likely someone from the decluttering thread. Boogie perhaps? SHe's just done a stationery cupboard. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Good idea - I'll blame Boogie!

Anyway SOMEBODY [probably me] had moved that pile of papers to another place and there they were under a load of other paper.

AND I know where my residential permit papers are so all I have to do now is work out what I might like to pack.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
The Jackson 5 were right then [Big Grin]

In my experience no matter how carefully you file things away for a trip there's always something goes missing leading to last minute searching.

[Even with spellcheck and preview post typos can slip through.]

[ 01. May 2012, 09:25: Message edited by: Balaam ]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
It's so stressful keeping track of those damn bits of paper and your passport. I haven't yet, but I do dread turning up to board a plane and not being able to 'cos I don't have the right paperwork with me.

Talking of planes, I'm thinking of a couple of days in Edinburgh over the bank holiday weekend via Easyjet. Are they as bad as rumored? Any suggestions for getting there and back smoothly?

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A friend of mine once drove from Manchester to Liverpool to cath a flight somewhere and realised she had picked up the wrong passport - she doesn't look anything like her partner! She went back home and flew out the next day instead - and it was only for a weekend away.

She was NOT amused - but we all were!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:

Talking of planes, I'm thinking of a couple of days in Edinburgh over the bank holiday weekend via Easyjet. Are they as bad as rumored? Any suggestions for getting there and back smoothly?

Cheers,
EJ

Where are you coming from? Short-haul is tolerable. Bring your own drinks/ snacks of course.

And warm clothes. We've not had the rains, but it's been wretchedly cold - and the immediate forecast is still only just in double figures. And Princes St is under tram works and the buses are all over the place and the town is just a guddle.
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
But Edinburgh, even when cold and grey and awash with traffic cones and men in fluorescent jackets is wonderful; the impression that the city is a palimpset of architecture, history, literature, ideas, art.

I've never flown in to it, but arriving by train, walking up out of Waverley station and seeing the castle and the Scott monument never fails to give me a rush of pure pleasure, even in the pissing rain.

Enjoy your trip, Eleanor Jane!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:

Talking of planes, I'm thinking of a couple of days in Edinburgh over the bank holiday weekend via Easyjet. Are they as bad as rumored? Any suggestions for getting there and back smoothly?

Cheers,
EJ

Where are you coming from? Short-haul is tolerable. Bring your own drinks/ snacks of course.

And warm clothes. We've not had the rains, but it's been wretchedly cold - and the immediate forecast is still only just in double figures. And Princes St is under tram works and the buses are all over the place and the town is just a guddle.

and remember your passport, even though it is an internal flight (same applies to going across to the Channel Isles even by boat, but strangely not to The Island (of Wight that is).
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
My favourite thing in Edinburgh is Arthur's Seat, it's wonderful to have a proper hill in a city where you can see for miles across the town and far beyond. I won't go as far as North East Quine as I much prefer it up there on a nice day rather than a rainy one.
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
Although Arthur's Seat is good (You always need at least one serious hill to take you out of yourself), for every-day climbability, I prefer Calton Hill. You get some pretty amazing views from there too, and don't exhaust yourself in the process.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We flew with Easyjet from Stansted to Edinburgh last week and it was fine. OK, you have to buy anything that you might want to eat, but it's not really a very long flight; you'd be as well having a cup of coffee at the airport while you're waiting to board. As long as you've got something halfway decent to read (or the Telegraph crossword) you'll be grand. And yes - you do need photographic ID, which doesn't have to be a passport, but it might as well be. I love Edinburgh - it's just so civilised. Have a great trip!

Wodders - I completely understand. I'm always checking and re-checking our travel documents when we're going away, especially our Canadian Permanent Residence cards. I think they've finally taken effect: the immigration lady at Halifax looked at them and said "welcome home".

We've arrived, eh? [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...the immigration lady at Halifax looked at them and said "welcome home"...

BRILLIANT!!

That really is excellent, must have made you feel very chuffed.

I am now, as soon as I have finished this post, going to pack my bag so that if I find I need anything I can go and get it today as whatever I may need will cost ten times as much in UK.

[ 02. May 2012, 03:32: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Bag packed, apart from umbrella, some flags still drying and cable ties to close it off. Forms prepared and printed off for the shipping service to ship books over here. Cabin baggage nearly ready for packing though book for flight not yet selected.

I think I need a lie down next.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
And you wonder why I want to pack Saturday for a Monday departure.

Fusspots unite!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
You start worrying about packing three or four WEEKS before you leave!

Anyway, I have had a little sleep and can now face the next bit - LUNCH!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).

We should get organised to do a bit of Edinburgh next bank holiday when our finances should be a bit more stable and I should be more settled into my new job. Then Venice, Austria, more of France... etc etc! We just need to keep enough money and energy from our day to day lives to fit in regular trips.

Hope everyone's keeping dry today - it's not raining here at the moment! [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Beautiful, fabulous sunny day here - I spoke to friends in Bristol last night and then looked at weather forecast for Friday, when I arrive, and I was NOT encouraged!

I am packing a waterproof and a fleece.

[ 02. May 2012, 09:28: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Don't forget your earmuffs. You know, the ones you take to Munnar to wear at night. In bed.

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:


I am packing a waterproof and a fleece.

Oh yes - both will be needed!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
We flew with Easyjet from Stansted to Edinburgh last week and it was fine. [Yipee]

Glad to hear it - my baby boy will be piloting for them this time next year!

[Smile]
 
Posted by shamwari (# 15556) on :
 
Just triple your life insurance
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Don't forget your earmuffs. You know, the ones you take to Munnar to wear at night. In bed.

[Killing me]

Thanks Pete - that reminded me to pack my waterproof hat with the fleecy ear flaps!
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
You start worrying about packing three or four WEEKS before you leave!

Oh dear God - Pete I think you may be my mother! [Help]
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
Nothing wrong with starting packing early. Just a problem when you forget what you've already packed, so take it all out of the case and start again. oops. For me the question is always 'have I packed any pants'? and you can't ignore a thought like that.

Early packing also means you don't have any last minute panics. Honest.

J
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My essentials are:

- Passport
- Tickets
- Credit Card; and possibly
- Toothbrush

Anything else I can get on arrival if necessary but I prefer to take a fair bit to UK as new stuff is SO expensive.

Packed weight of main bag - under 15 kilos including all the chilli powder, black pepper, tea, etc. May be heavier on the way back with a couple of hundred CDs and a few books.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
... my baby boy will be piloting for them this time next year! [Smile]

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. On board this morning will be Captain Boogie ... [Cool]

Wodders, for reasons I can't explain, the thing I'm most likely to forget to pack is night-clothes, so have you packed your pyjamas?

And, of course, a teddy-bear. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's raining again. Yesterday we had a dry day, which felt unnatural after what we're now used to, but localized flooding warnings are back on, so things are back to normal.

WW, they were saying on the radio this morning that we can expect it to turn colder with "wintry showers" at the weekend so the fleece and waterproofs will probably come in useful. If you have winter clothing I suggest you pack some, the temperatures may rise a bit after the weekend but there doesn't seem to be a forecast for warm weather any time soon.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
The Weasel is circling the chicken coop, now.

Beware! Beware!

And have fun!
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Sounds like successful packing, all those chilli powders, tea and black pepper tucked in. I always arrive at Heathrow to find leaked peri-peri sauce or Mrs Balls' Chutney sloshing around socks and white tops. And then have to buy extra suitcases or carrier bags for all the books I bring back.

Raining here, heavy winter rains, very welcome. Autumn is so brief here, gone before we notice the trees changing colour. I'm making slow-roasted pork belly with steamed baby fennel for supper tonight.
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
hello distant friends! question- I watch the occasional BBC program,and it seems a lot of houses and pubs have these little metal jobbies hanging on posts or hearths. I'd guess a 3-4 inch diameter, roundish but with different details. all seem metal (bronze?) what the heck are they? they look really nifty. are they like saint metals?
 
Posted by birdie (# 2173) on :
 
They're horse brasses . I'm guessing that link will tell you more than you ever want to know!

They are decorations for the harnesses of heavy horses, now probably very collectable. I suspect their prevalence in pubs is because of the connection with dray horses, but I don't know.

I think some of the designs are probably significant in some way, whereas other are simply souvenirs of particular places or even awards. Like I said, I would imagine that link will have it all!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
I always arrive at Heathrow to find leaked peri-peri sauce or Mrs Balls' Chutney sloshing around socks and white tops.

A long time ago when my husband and I were moving to Belfast for a few years, I packed my herbs and spices by wrapping them in my husband's extra underwear. Unfortunately the lid of the curry powder came off. It turns out that curry stains don't come out. He wore curried underwear until it wore out.

Moo
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
He wore curried underwear until it wore out.

Moo

Brain bleach please!

(PS - did that not sting ??)
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.

The Envious Mrs. S
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
I've just been here for lunch and had the best food I've ever eaten. Rabbit with pickled ginger, grey mullet with cockles and raspberry souffle with white chocolate ice cream. Now going to lie on the sofa and smile [Big Grin]
 
Posted by comet (# 10353) on :
 
thanks, Birdie!
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
quote:
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.

The Envious Mrs. S

Indeed, Winchester is a Nice Day Out, with plenty of opportunities for cake. And, sometimes, shipmeets, but not this weekend alas.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Chive, that sounds deliciously expensive. **sigh**

Re transporting interesting substances: we once managed to get a mixed case fo wine from Lay & Wheeler's in Colchester to Belfast on the plane using the sock-wrapping method. These days we confine ourselves to jars of Tiptree jam and canisters of Bisto ...
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ferijen:
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
quote:
Thanks for the tips all, but we've decided money and energy would be better conserved by a wee jaunt to Winchester (why Winchester? My English mother-in-law suggested it as a nice old city with plenty to do...).
EJ, your MiL is so right. Winchester is wonderful. In those heady days when Mr. S and I used to entertain visiting Americans, a trip to the Cathedral would impress the best-travelled. And the city itself is fabulous just to wander around.

The Envious Mrs. S

Indeed, Winchester is a Nice Day Out, with plenty of opportunities for cake. And, sometimes, shipmeets, but not this weekend alas.
Ooh, we like cake! Cake is one of my favourite things.

Seeing as we're not going far, I doubt we'll need to pack any foodstuffs in our underthings. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by chive:
I've just been here for lunch and had the best food I've ever eaten. Rabbit with pickled ginger, grey mullet with cockles and raspberry souffle with white chocolate ice cream.

The lunch menu sounds great. £17.50 for two courses is quite affordable, too. There's nothing like a good meal to cheer things up!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I didn't actually get the length of reading menus - I saw the Michelin star and thought "expensive". Must have another look - might be Worth A Detour the next time we're down that way - D's sister lives in Kent, and is usually game for Eating Out.

Virtuous Piglet has been in action this evening - we've got the Cathedral spring sale (aka the Fête Worse Than Death) on Saturday. Carrot-loaves and tablet now ready for virtual tasting. If you want Piglet's Potato Salad you'll have to wait until tomorrow. [Smile]

I need GIN. Actually, I've got an excuse to have some: I woke up last night with the most frightful cramp in my leg (the sort that makes you cry out in agony and wake up your Better Half [Eek!] ), and apparently a glass of tonic water before you go to bed helps prevent it.

Tonic water without GIN is, of course, an Abomination Before The Lord™ ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I didn't actually get the length of reading menus - I saw the Michelin star and thought "expensive". Must have another look - might be Worth A Detour the next time we're down that way - D's sister lives in Kent, and is usually game for Eating Out.

One of the side effects of the recession is that many more places are now offering a fixed price menu which is affordable and good value. Choices are usually restricted, in order to persuade you to go for the more expensive a la carte, but some places can still offer a pretty good deal and Chive's restaurant would be do-able, if you go for the set price lunch menu and choose the wine carefully. Everything on their wine list looks like good stuff so if you go for a glass of the lowest priced it should still be good.

"We can open on a Monday lunch time for private hire if you can guarantee an £850 minimum spend."

Easy. Lunch for two off the a la carte, with aperitifs, digestifs and a bottle of the 1996 Chateaux Margaux at £680 a bottle (yes) should do it.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I have a cold and sound at the moment like Darth Vador. Chose to have a day off work to protect the innocent.
Why is that throwing panic in the way of elderly parents who think it must be something to do with my eating habits?? It's probably germs from the spluttering gentleman I met at the communal microwave in the open plan air virused office. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... Lunch for two off the a la carte, with aperitifs, digestifs and a bottle of the 1996 Chateaux Margaux at £680 a bottle (yes) should do it.

Jolly good. Are you paying? [Big Grin]

Enigma, get yourself some lem-sip, Manuka honey, lemon juice and cooking whisky; heat, mix, drink, then go to bed.

Hope you feel better soon. [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Piglet,
Better than that - I booked a holiday
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hope you're mended in time to enjoy it. Anywhere nice?

Potato salad for the turkey-and-salad suppers now made, tablet bagged up, aprons ironed (honestly!) and carrot-loaves labelled.

I'd better go to bed now and get some sleep - it's going to be a long day tomorrow ...

Night-night. [Snore]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Jolly good. Are you paying? [Big Grin]

Think you might have to wait until I win the lottery, sorry! Though do let me know if you win it first.

I worked out last night that if there are 8 glasses to a bottle each one would then cost £85. It would be do-able if we ordered 1 glass and found 17 people willing to cough up £5 each and bring their own straws to share said glass.

Unexpectedly interesting day today going off the beaten track locally. Sometimes it pays to do this: I've come home with a lovely new bedspread and cushion, a Moroccan lantern and a piece of African art, as made in China. Now I just need one of those beautiful Persian rugs, in dark red and black and cream, at a price that doesn't break the bank.

[ 05. May 2012, 14:56: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Mrs Sioni had a long working day, Elder Daughter ditto and I couldn't be arsed so we had an Indian takeaway. Very nice, nom nom nom etc, then I got something in my eye and rubbed it before washing my hands thoroughly.

Owww! I'd ask for prayer, but time and tears are the only cure.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
if you go for a glass of the lowest priced it should still be good.

Second lowest price brand for wines always works for me, never had a bad one doing that. And the price is still reasonable.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Poor you, SS - "ow" sounds about right. [Eek!]

Well, that's the Fête Worse Than Death over for another six months. Morning coffee wasn't too taxing, just busy enough not to get boring. I seemed to spend most of my time being given condolences from people in the congregation who I haven't had a chance to speak to since I came back after the funeral; it was nice of them all to bother.

Acquired a hefty tome by Hilary Mantel about Henry VIII, a set of storage jars and a rather appealing panda* without spending very many dollars.


* I tried to resist him, but D. couldn't ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Very nice, nom nom nom etc, then I got something in my eye and rubbed it before washing my hands thoroughly.

Ouch. Yes. I did that once while cutting chillies, absentmindedly rubbed my eye and immediately wished I hadn't. It takes a while but it does wear off. Hope you're OK now.

I don't know if this is true or not but apparently birds can eat chillies with no effect - they don't feel the heat.

Odd sort of day today - set off to go to Birmingham but the train was so congested I couldn't get on it when it came, so I went to Stratford upon Avon instead. Where I found that something I'd wanted was reduced to half price, so I am now the happy owner of two beautiful new Oriental rugs. (Well, made in Belgium, but who's to know?)

How are the rest of you doing on this unexpectedly sunny bank holiday?
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I am pleased to announce that after 12 days of horrible achiness, lethargy and general bleughness, that a more normal Japes-like service has been resumed!

So, I've been to church, done a little light housework, and a load of laundry. (Yes, I know it's Sunday, but I'd not done any of those activities for 12 days!)

However, if you spot me over-doing things, you are at liberty to tell me to sit down and do nothing.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Japes, go and sit down and do nothing. [Smile]
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... unexpectedly sunny bank holiday ...

According to the Daily Telegraph on the interweb, it was supposed to snow.

Snow in Newfoundland in May is not at all unheard-of, but in England? [Eek!]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Pausing in the middle of chopping small birdseye chillies for a fiery curry (a special request) to take to the community soup kitchen, and reminding myself of Sioni Sais, washing hands and not rubbing eyes.

Cold and bright weather out here, probably several degrees warmer than an English Bank Holiday. The last red leaves falling from the pin oaks.

Today I have to hit a word count of 6 000 words if I am to make a publishing deadline, so it is a perfect time to make a layered and complex curry and then hang around on SOF reading old threads.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Japes, sit down and do nothing! Tsk!

Morning all. No snow here, but since we're on holiday oop North next week, it'll definitely snow then. Be warned.
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
It's sunny here in Orpington.

I'm sitting here at my computer trying to complete a theological reflection essay for my Reader training course. The word count is creeping very slowly towards the required 3000 words.

Clearly inspriration is failing for the moment as I'm here on the Ship!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Lovely sunny morning ooop north today amber.

I'm making bunting this morning then we have relations for tea.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Sun is out here but I'm still coughing and spluttering - haven't had cold like this for as long as I can remember!! I've tried to drug it into submission but no joy so far. [Frown] What a waste of a bank holiday weekend.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What is this "sun" of which you speak? It's been raining almost all day here. This is Traditional Bank Holiday Weather, we have to have this.

"A law was made a distant moon ago here,
July and August cannot be too hot;
And there's a legal limit to the sunlight
In this northern spot.

The summer is forbidden until mid-June
And exits September second on the dot.
By order, winter lingers through the spring
In this northern spot.

I know it sounds a bit bizarre,
But in our soggy isle
That's how conditions are.
The rain may never stop till after sundown.
After ten, the morning fog may disappear.
In short, there's simply not
A less waterlogged yet drought-ridden spot
For happily-ever-aftering than here
In yes, you guessed it."
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Yes. I did that once while cutting chillies, absentmindedly rubbed my eye and immediately wished I hadn't. It takes a while but it does wear off. Hope you're OK now.


A friend of ours was a missionary to the Po-Karen tribe in Thailand, where chillis are a staple. They check if the chillis are ripe by wiping them across their eyes. OUCH!!!
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
An apt ode, Ariel.

Cold and wet here in the centre. Hoping it's fine on Saturday for my niece's wedding in Norfolk. [Votive]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Glad to hear you're feeling better Japes- but do sit down and rest. Ditto Enigma with the rest instruction! Hope you feel much better soon!

We had a reasonably fine couple of days in Winchester. I recommend Marwell Wildlife Park heartily! I saw lots of lovely animals I hadn't seen before - a field of grazing capybara, three beautiful snow leopards, an ocelot and some leggy, nervous okapi who reminded me of thoroughbred horses. The Sand Cats were determinedly asleep so they were just formless puddles of fur. It was blimin' cold all day and drizzled a bit.

Today was a bit a drizzle, a bit of sun and a long walk around old Winchester, the cathedral and Great Hall with (supposedly) King Arthur's round table (a 13th Cent. round table, anyway).

We cheated on the cathedral as they were charging 6.50 each to get in - went to Evensong and saw most of the place on the way in and out. Sadly not choral evensong and no Winchester Bible. Maybe we'll invest in a proper visit another time.

What did you all get up to? Fetes, curry...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Normal working Monday - it's not a Bank Holiday here, which might explain why the sun made a brief appearance this afternoon. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tree Bee:
An apt ode, Ariel.

Thanks! It's actually based on the Sixties musical "Camelot", where King Arthur explains to his bride-to-be how wonderful the weather is in Camelot, which I felt needed updating in view of how things are these days.

Apparently we had a tornado in Oxfordshire yesterday. I haven't met anyone yet who noticed, though.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Tried a whole day in work today and gave up early. I have a good boss in general terms. When I arrived coughing and spluttering over all he said 'Why are you here'. I pointed out that there was a monthly service review meeting this afternoon that was important and suggested that he attend instead of me .......... well - I came home after the meeting!!! He's busy too I know.

I just hope that this lurgy has not spread otherwise he might regret his words.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Today I have bought tickets for us to go and see Half Man Half Biscuit! [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

AG
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
As it was a really nice day here, after w*rk we drove out into the country, stopping at a walking trail near Gull Pond for the first walk of the year (so far most of this year's Nice Weather Quota happened while we were away [Frown] ).

There was a perfect Poohsticks bridge, so we had a game (which I won). On the way back, D. was out for revenge, which he sort of got, as my first stick sank, but I got lots of extra points when my second stick took a more interesting route ...

We settled for a draw. [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Guess who I'm having lunch with today?

Yes - WW!

I can't make the evening meet tomorrow but couldn't miss the chance to see him in the flesh.

How exciting! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Just don't nibble his flesh. I'm sure he tastes lovely, but other foodstuff may be available!

Please give my kindest regards to W2, if you will. [Smile]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Flesh-eating in an English spring?

Two kilos of Jerusalem artichokes to scrub and peel for a farty soup (or for a dozen farty soups, unless I give a dinner party). Then to finish a long dull chapter for some to-be-embargoed UN funding agency report.

I recognised the Camelot source immediately and recently read Sylvia Townsend Warner's 1950s biography of TH White, who wrote The Sword in the Stone, on which the film was based (very loosely).

Bright & crisp winter weather here in the mountains, blue-headed guinea fowl running up and down the road.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Two kilos of Jerusalem artichokes to scrub and peel for a farty soup (or for a dozen farty soups, unless I give a dinner party).

Wow, that would be some dinner party! A case of 'light the blue touch paper and ...' [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Fun and games on the railway tonight after a herd of 10 cows strayed onto the line outside one of the little country stations and a train ploughed into them, "sustaining substantial damage" and all services on that line were immediately suspended indefinitely. It took 4 hours to get home and still no estimate of when things will be back to normal.

Those poor cows. The driver is probably in a state of shock, the farmer coming to terms with the loss of his herd, and there are still people stuck on the train in the middle of nowhere waiting to continue their journey.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Cows don't get any more sensible. I remember, when I was about 7 or 8 being in the front seat of the family car when we collided with a cow on some unlit Irish back road. We were ok (I think cars of the period had a top speed of about 35 mph), but the cow was burger (if indeed those had been invented).
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
The chief animal danger here is moose on the roads. They're really not the most intellectually-gifted of creatures and moose collisions are all too common.

There was a story on the evening news today of a lady near Gander who hit a moose, and something happened to her memory that meant she didn't realise what had happened. She apparently drove about 40km (no idea what that is in English) with no idea that the whole front of her car was buggered and arrived at work to find her colleagues saying "what the hell happened to you?" It was only when they showed her the bruises (and a couple of broken bones) that she had any idea of what had happened.

[Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Out here in the Overberg mountains, we get eland (the largest antelope found in southern Africa with a blue-grey coat and spiral horns, magnificent) crossing roads as they come down from in search of water or sweeter grass. A drivers' hazard in the drought but locals know to drive slowly. Not as large as a moose, I don't think.

Scraped clean half a kilo of knobbly Jerusalem artichokes and made a tasty soup with chopped leeks, onions and some cream added at the end. Very silky and earthy flavour. I did put in a teaspoon of bicarb which didn't affect the taste but didn't stop the flatulence. Not for dinner parties, as QLib pointed out.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
There was a story on the evening news today of a lady near Gander who hit a moose, and something happened to her memory that meant she didn't realise what had happened.

Incredible picture of the car - she really was very lucky to still be able to drive to work after that!

She must have been really traumatized to blank it out so deeply. Hope she doesn't start having flashbacks or anxiety attacks, and that she gets the space she needs to recover.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Out here in the Overberg mountains, we get eland ...

And I thought they were only found in crossword puzzles ... [Big Grin]

I was really touched today when I went in to type the Cathedral bulletin to discover that members of the choir had made a donation to the Choral Scholarship fund in memory of my mum, although none of them ever met her.

What a nice thing to do. [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Happy 40th Anniversary to our Church today. We are in for a weekend of celebrations.

My contribution was hand painted bunting. Oh, and a cake!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Nothing more welcome than cake and bright bunting at a 40-year church celebration!

Took my Great Dane for a walk through some vineyards and saw a falcon as well as a small geometric tortoise, quite rare. If I get the next 5 000 words of my report done today I shall treat myself to an evening of listening to live jazz from Gugulethu musicians.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Happy anniversary indeed to Boogie's church - CAKE is always welcome ... [Big Grin]

For those with a taste for plainer food, there's a loaf baking in the machine, which should be ready and cooled down by Brit breakfast time. I'll put the kettle on, and there's a selection of Tiptree jams that we smuggled back from Blighty, and sundry jars of homemade marmalade that we got as presents for anyone wanting toast.

We've got the Bishop tomorrow for Confirmation. [Snore] It could be worse though - at least for Confirmation he uses the Book of Common Prayer, which is our default setting. When he does ordinations, he insists on the Book of Alternative Services (BAS), or Bloody Awful Service Book, as it's unaffectionately known.
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Tiptree jam! I'll be first in the queue, please. [Smile] Especially with home made bread. Yum yum. I'm hoping to make some jam this summer, I need a friend's help as I'm not very good at it. We made some raspberry jam a few years ago and it was wonderful.

It's finally sunny here. Hoorah hoorah. I should probably go out and attack the garden. I may be some time....
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Lovely day in London yesterday at Liberty's, two crafts markets, Covent Garden and the V&A. It was warm and sunny, and I could actually believe it was May. Liberty's is still beautiful, with dark, ornately carved wooden panelling and balconies draped with Oriental rugs, swathes of William Morris fabrics, and attractive, unusual artifacts to look at - though it'd be nicer if they didn't play loud in-store pop music at such a volume that at certain places in the shop, people were having to shout over it to the sales assistants.

They were having a Punch and Judy festival at Covent Garden, interesting and colourful, though very crowded. Lots of performances in pleasingly traditional little booths, and showmen wandering around in costume with puppets (and someone with a sousaphone wrapped round him, a bit like an enormous brass cobra rearing over his head).

This morning started off beautifully too, as I sat in a sun-drenched windowseat in a coffee shop thinking that it all seemed full of promise, but it's clouding over now, so normal service should be resumed shortly...
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Mmm... fresh bread!

Lovely sunny day here - I went out without a coat! (With wooly underwear but without the coat). We had a nice long walk exploring more bits of the city - gorgeous views across to the forest under the suspension bridge.

Yesterday we walked up to the market and had the most amazing Moroccan food - melting chicken with chickpeas in tomato sauce with preserved lemon. Nom!

Nice evensong tonight (my husband read quite nervously in his mild NZ accent but people seemed to like it), just waiting for the lasagne he made to bake. There's enough for an army so dig in!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
Tiptree jam! I'll be first in the queue, please ...

Bearing in mind where you live, you can get your own. [Big Grin]

Ariel, I absolutely love Liberty's - no trip to Oxford Street is complete without it. They used to do gorgeous skirt-lengths (sometimes in those lovely Liberty prints) - the elastic waistband was already sewn on, and all you had to do was stitch up the side seam and the hem. I lost count of the number of them I had; I used to buy one every time I was in London. I still have a few that must be cracking on for 20 years old ... [Eek!]

EJ, I was going to ask why on earth you'd need woolly underwear* in the south of England in May, but then I remembered you come from Warmer Climes™, so you're excused. [Big Grin]

* Slightly TMI, methinks. [Devil]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Just popping in to bemoan my weight - I weighed myself this morning and was NOT amused - I have been eating so much! For example yesterday a friend and I went out for an "all you can eat" Chinese banquet for lunch and then later other friends and I went out for an Indian meal. Everyone wants to meet up and eat - and I love food. Another meal out tonight, meal with family tomorrow and then the Shipmeet on Wednesday. Will they charge Excess Baggage on my stomach on the flight back?

[ 14. May 2012, 07:16: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Don't worry, Weasel. I'll make sure that Thursday is just water, with maybe a stick of celery or two to dunk in it. Anything to oblige [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Wod, you're on holiday. Enjoy it. It's not about sitting there glumly eating a small stick of celery, denying yourself this, that and the other and being generally penitential, you can do all that when you get home. Just have fun - and when you do get home, you'll have some good memories to look back on.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
What Ariel said.

Wodewick, you're in Britain in spring and there is an abundance of fantastic food asparagus and wild garlic, oysters, woodland strawberries, artisanal cheeses and Welsh lamb all around. Not to mention ethnic markets and restaurants. Italian restaurants with prima vera dishes with pea shoots and snap peas!

I wrote features on Chelsea Flower Show for a lifestyle mag at one stage and would fly out of a drought-stricken South Africa and eat like a little piggie for a fortnight, then go home and live on lentils and steamed vegetables for a month while writing up prize-winning dahlias, flowering dogwoods etc.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Besides, I read somewhere recently that thanks to gravity you weigh more in the northern and southern hemispheres than you do at the Equator - the further you get to the poles, the heavier you are apparently.

(Though that might have something to do with the layers of thermal clothing and the clumpy snowboots...)
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Yup, layers of thermal clothing... I'm a whimp about cold. Never was one of those girls strutting about town with no clothes on of an evening. Even in NZ I wore wooly singlets (not panties in case you're wondering Piglet!) all winter and into bits of spring and autumn. Here when there are highs around 8 - 12 degrees it's colder than the Auckland winter (NZ does get a lot colder, Auckland is one of the warmer bits).

WW - enjoy and weigh later! I'm sure you're doing plenty of walking at least.

On another matter - I now am prepared to forgive the huge emphasis on security here (passwords, pins, secret numbers, memorable phrases which arent etc) as someone tried to rip off my credit card for US$4000! Very startling. Luckily they didn't succeed but now my card has been cancelled and I won't get a new one for 5-7 working days...
[Waterworks]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
So sorry EJ hope it's all sorted soon.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Wodders - Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow ye diet.

EJ - that's a real bummer. I had my wallet nicked about 20 years ago and IIRC it took the bank over a month to replace my cheque/cashline card. Fortunately in those days cheques would be accepted if you wrote your name and address on the back.

We went for a walk at Quidi Vidi this afternoon; there were two icebergs close in where the sea narrows, so we clambered across the rocks to get a better look.

They were quite impressive but now my favourite sandals are b*ggered. [Frown]

[ 15. May 2012, 02:35: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Wearing sandals when it's cold enough for icebergs — I am impressed.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I think it was about 16°C - easily warm enough for sandals. [Big Grin]

I said to D. yesterday before we saw the iceberg that I thought I could feel ice in the air; it might be warm and sunny, but there's a sort of cold edge that you can feel when there's ice about.

We went back today (although not over the rocks again) to see how they'd progressed; the smaller one had disappeared altogether and the larger one seemed to have moved a bit closer in to the shore.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

We went for a walk at Quidi Vidi this afternoon; there were two icebergs close in where the sea narrows, so we clambered across the rocks to get a better look.

How interesting! I've seen a glacier, but never an iceberg.

[selfpity]
I'm off to university today to the library, books to return etc. I'm finding this degree a bit lonely now that I'm on the research stretch. [/selfpity]

Next job is to start packing - I'm off to Barcelona with 5 girlie friends for four days on Saturday!

Ginger cake anyone?
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
How interesting! I've seen a glacier, but never an iceberg.

The difference is obvious. Glacier. Iceberg.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
I'm off to Barcelona with 5 girlie friends for four days on Saturday!

There's a tapas place on the new harbour development with good views over the harbour. The Sagrada Familia is another must.

As it is a girlie trip I won't recommend going to the Olympic village (was that '92 or '96?) but if you take the cablecar from the Olympic metro station you get to the fort with great views over the city.

And the magic fountain is the best free show in Spain.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Enigma mentioned work difficulties on the Prayer thread but my story is better here. Same here and I 'showed a bit of passion' as they say. Tedious, contentious meeting with users and two IT development team leaders, and yours truly in the role of UN peacekeeping mission, ie both sides want me to do the fighting! All I want to see is the developers and users collaborating but they treat each other as separate species.

I suppose we did make some process but there are vested interests masquerading as high principles all over the place. [Frown]

It was especially good to come home to Mrs Sioni's cooking. [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I have booked a cruise starting in Barcelona. Must try to be strong regarding the food aspect!! Doing my best to get where I was a year ago before I go so there is a bit of room for slippage!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Another beautiful day here: 22°C this afternoon. [Yipee]

After D's organ recital, we went for a walk on one of the walking trails by the Geo Centre on Signal Hill; I'm sure all this gentle strolling's doing me good ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's still cold here in UK - on Tuesday I was in the Yorkshire Dales and it snowed!!!

Today is my last full day here and I hope to meet up with Smudgie then a quiet evening with friends and off to the airport in the morning for an afternoon flight - I get home tomorrow morning in time for a shower before lunch and then a nap - I have had NO NAPS whilst I have been here, I am nap-deprived!

Off to shower and get ready. Normal service will be resuned on Sunday.

eta: the trousers I had made before I came over have been great - they are thicker and warmer than I wear at home and I had them made half an inch bigger around the waist as I knew I would be eating a lot - they now feel a little bit tight. Back on the bicycle and down to two meals a day when I get home.

[ 17. May 2012, 07:29: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
I hope that you've managed to meet up with Smudgie - I'm sorry to have missed you but hopefully next time I'll be better organised. Have a good trip back - do you think you could send us some of your lovely sunshine, please?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yes, sorry to have missed you too (when are you going to think about visiting this part of the Home Counties? It's nice here and we'd make you welcome). Glad you had a good time, and looking forward to some photos, she said hopefully.

Woke up this morning with the One Pound Fish Song going through my head. Have a free earworm.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry not to get to your area, Ariel, though I did sort of pass through or by on my way south yesterday. Now I am off to pack my extra Marmite™ ready for the off tomorrow. I promise to do my very best to send you some sunshine.


eta: lovely to meet Smudgie and the Smudgelet today - as The Boy was at school Smudgie and I went out for a very abstemious lunch, hardly enough to keep a sparrow alive! We also, perhaps not too surprisingly, talked quite a bit. It was good.

Happy Birthday to Smudgelet for tomorrow.

[ 17. May 2012, 20:14: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
It was (entirely as expected) delightful finally to meet the weasel and exchange some offence in real life. Shame we weren't able to indulge in any serious eating - but the celery and water were pleasant enough and anyone who can consume marmite willingly should be grateful for what he can get.

The boy's comment "He's really nice, Weasel, isn't he?" - which is praise indeed.

Hope you got back to your friend's and the pasta wasn't too overcooked, WW. I'd feel terribly guilty if it were....
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Nice Ascension Day service at the Cathedral this evening - Missa l'hora passa by Viadana and God is gone up with a merry voice by Croft. And we actually had more in the congregation than in the choir, which isn't always the case at that service.

Wodders, have a safe journey home - hope the Marmite doesn't explode in your suitcase ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A saintly friend in Manchester bought me a jar of Marmite XO™ and I have bought six large squeezy bottles of the standard version of the nectar of the Gods as well - it should be enough to last a little while.

I have to report that Smudgelet is a nice lad, but then those of you who know him will know that anyway. It was nice to meet Pingu and have all my prejudices confirmed [Biased] It's a good thing I came out of the station on the north side - she hadn't told me there were two exits! I could still be standing there waiting on the other side.

Off to the station then the airport as soon as I have had a bit of breakfast and packed my bag - my friend's partner can then have his room back.

I'll be glad to have a rest on the plane, I have the required [OTC] drugs for the flight so should wake up just in time for landing at Riyadh, pop another pill and wake up as we land at home. A quick drive home, a shower, a little lunch and then an afternoon nap.

Bliss!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Travel well, WW, and a joyful homecoming.

When are you planning your next visit?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...six large squeezy bottles of the standard version of the nectar of the Gods ... should be enough to last a little while ...

[Eek!] [Eek!] [Eek!]

As you know, I'm a Marmite™ Hater* but even D., who isn't, would take several lifetimes to go through that much.

I won't even ask what you do with it - you might tell me. [Devil]

* possibly because on the one occasion I tried it I spread it on as one might spread honey: no-one told me you just spread a little on and scrape it off again ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
* possibly because on the one occasion I tried it I spread it on as one might spread honey: no-one told me you just spread a little on and scrape it off again ...

No wonder you're traumatized. That would put me off too.

Marmite got its name from the French word for a cooking vessel, and you can indeed use a spoonful of Marmite in a stew. You won't taste it as such: it's comparable to using a stock extract, and adds a quite pleasant note to a casserole. You might like it better as an ingredient.

If you google "cooking with Marmite" one of the first things that comes up is some Gary Rhodes recipes for cooking with Marmite, though I'd probably use less than he suggests in the recipes as there's a lot of salt in it.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
no-one told me you just spread a little on and scrape it off again

No wonder you don't like Marmite if you abuse it like that! It must be dark and smooth and shiny, not scraped!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Eeewww - gross...
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Big black jars of Marmite with those yellow labels!

I was brought up on Marmite sandwiches and Marmite on crackers and Marmite in stews for flavour if there was no Bisto around for a gravy.

Most of the time I loathe Marmite. But if I am sick with flu or gastric upsets and in bed, only slices of dry toast with a little smear of Marmite will cure me.

Bright frosty morning out here, squeezing oranges for glasses of juice at breakfast. The bathroom is full of little green geckos, presumably they like the warmth of steam.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
It seems to me that the entire world is divided into two camps: the Marmite lovers and the Bovril fanatics. No way will they drop their swords and declare a truce.

(There is also a third category: the "plague-on-both-your-houses, they're-both-disgusting" party. And, with the advent of Antipodean influence in the Mother Country, Vegemite is also making a bid for recognition).

PS I'm with Ken: scraping Marmite clearly alters its molecular structure, and must not be tolerated.

[ 19. May 2012, 08:53: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
No the one true only way to spread Marmite*, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.

This way it gets spread fairly evenly and thinly.

Jengie

* So I was taught by a South African so it must be true.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Butter first, Marmite second, then anything else you are putting in on top of that. (Marmite and cheese is a classic, though can get a little salty - Marmite and cucumber is good)

And it doesn't want to be even, that would be boring. You want some bits with lots, some with none, to provide variety in your sandwich. That's a general principle of sandwiches. Butter gets everywhere, other fillings should be anisotropic. Its mroe fun that way. A little bit of cheese here, a little bit of onion there, some mouthfuls have cucumber, others have dandelion leaves. Dandelion leaves are lovely in sandwiches. Try them someday. Young ones of course.

And it has to BE butter. Not ICantBelieveThisSlimeIsNotButterBecauseIAmAMoronWithNoTaste(TM) Proper butter, ideally unsalted though salted will do at a pinch, ideally not from British cows (I am still suspicious of Mad Farmer Disease), and certainly taken from a butter dish, kept at room temperature rather than in a fridge (there is a special Papal dispensation for summer when rooms are hotter than room temperature), and it ought to have been bought as a solid lump wrapped in foil or greaseproof paper - not a nasty plastic tub like margarine which just makes more rubbish and means you can't get the last bit out of the bottom where it goes mouldy in the corners.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.

Quite right. Though I'm sure we must have had this discussion many times and neither side has ever budged an inch from their entrenched positions...

Anyway, it was eggs Benedict this morning. There are few better ways to start the day, and I plan to have the same again tomorrow.

[ 19. May 2012, 09:46: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite*, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.

Margarine? Margarine? [Frown]
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
No the one true only way to spread Marmite*, is to mix a small quantity with butter/margarine and spread that on your bread or toast.

Margarine? Margarine? [Frown]
[Disappointed] No wonder the poor souls haven't yet learned the True Art of Sandwiches. One day they will make their peace with Marmite.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Margarine is indeed anathema! Here we can't get it so use proper butter - yes I know it has cholesterol but it has lots of goodness, too.

I'm with Jengie on mixing the butter and Marmite™ together first although I didn't do that the last two weeks - and I did have to eat margarine once as one of my hosts won't have butter in the house. My Marmite Mistake was converting HWMBO and Mrs E to liking the stuff and thus we need so much.

It was a great time away and the icing on the cake was to meet up with a guy who was a child in care in one of the places I worked in the '70s - he is now 51. He should never have been in care really but he had a rather violent stepdad so said that given the choice he would still choose the children's home over life at home. These days his dad would have ended up in prison - and rightly so. Back when he was 13 his brother one night carried him [clad only in pyjamas as they had to leave in a hurry] across town to one of the old children's reception centres and asked them to look after the lad as it wasn't safe for him at home!

It was lovely to meet so many shipmates - thank you all.

I had good flights back, dozing most of the way - I napped all afternoon and will be off to bed soon.

Goodnight.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Hey we could not afford butter when I was a kid. It is still a treat to this day.

Jengie
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It was the same with me - I think that later on, after my brothers left home to join the navy, we had butter occasionally but mum usually bought Summer County™.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Welcome back, WW - glad your flights went well.

I'm definitely in the butter camp - to my mind margarine is an Abomination Before The Lord. I remember my mum used to use margarine for baking, but I think she must have had some kind of light-bulb moment and started using butter ...

Talking of baking, I made a couple of citrus cakes this afternoon - I had a few slightly elderly clementines, so their grated rind and juice went in, along with a little bottled lemon juice and lime juice. Quite nice, v. moist and almost citrussy enough (I think my lemon ones were nicer). Also made a brown loaf in the bread machine - it tastes all right, but the top has sunk. [Frown]
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
One of my sons has a Friday lunch at the pub with workmates. Apparently the pub owner told the cook to use margarine rather than butter in garlic bread. First day it was tried was a Friday.

Son who loathes marg, was talking to cook later and complaining about the switch. Boss walks up and cook says, "See, I told you people would know the difference."
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Definitely butter rather than margarine, although we have olives grown all around here and very good locally pressed olive oil. Grassy green and peppery. I cook with olive oil, not butter.

Church bells clanging away on a Sunday morning, walked the Great Dane and admired klipspringers (small buck) on the hillside.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sorry I couldn't get to meet you, WW, but we were away on the high seas (down by the Canary Islands, actually)

Obviously all you who can't bear to have margarine in the house were not alive (or too young to know) when rationing was around. Butter simply was not available in any decent amount. Margarine was, reluctantly, king.

When I went to uni, I was in digs, and we had "big butter week" (2 oz, I think) and "little butter week" (1 oz.) alternately. The landlady, who had our ration books, would give us each our rations on a Sunday morning.

We three girls were divided as to whether it was better to eat all your butter at once, or divide it up into 7 tiny bits and scrape it on our toast each morning. Margarine was the alternative spread.

It was one in each camp, plus one ditherer who was usually late for breakfast anyway.

Personally I favoured the "eat it all at once at least you can taste it and then use marg for the rest of the week".

I don't remember Marmite being anywhere in the picture. Though I do like it on toast when I'm not well.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
When I was at university I used to buy soya marge, which was a leading supermarket's economy/no frills/basic of the time. It wasn't particularly nice but as I explained to a student friend, at 18p a tub it was a lot cheaper than butter (which I think was about 45p a packet). I don't know why the price has stuck in my head all these years.

Fun morning shopping yesterday - came back with another impulse buy, a beautiful Indian cotton shawl in rich dark reds, ambers, gold-beige and black (at the seriously cheap end of the range but it doesn't look it). I will have to go back and have a closer look at the rest of the range - this has fast become a favourite item. Or get a spare for when the inevitable happens.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
For a lot of things I use olive oil and a little bit of butter melted together just to get the flavour right - normally with the addition of rather a lot of garlic.

Why was it that shipmates I met found our consumption of a kilo of garlic every 2 to 3 weeks excessive? We think it is quite moderate.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
When I was growing up, margarine wsa definitely infra dig - Mam would never countenance using it on bread, it was only ever used for cooking.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
When I was growing up, margarine wsa definitely infra dig - Mam would never countenance using it on bread, it was only ever used for cooking.

Thankfully old New Zealand still had a butter mountain when I was growing up, so it was Anchor butter in a block wrapped in paper. I still love butter and do enjoy Marmite but NZ Marmite is a totally different thing to UK Marmite or Aussie Vegemite. NZ Marmite is jet black and much thicker than UK Marmite.

Glad to hear you're safe back WW and Piglet, I'd love some cake! I was actually inspired to make crumble the other day, so there's a bit of apple and peach crumble left if anyone wants to help me finish it off...

Also, I had my first faggot for dinner tonight. Delicious with gravy n mashed spuds.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
My mother told me not to play with youse
Because you're in the dirt.
It isn't because you're dirty;
It isn't because you're clean;
It's because you have the whooping cough
And eat margarine.

 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
My mother told me not to play with youse
Because you're in the dirt.
It isn't because you're dirty;
It isn't because you're clean;
It's because you have the whooping cough
And eat margarine.

Ah yes! Even now I can see the disdain my grandmother poured upon one of her DILs for using margarine. They didn't get on well at the best of times but margarine just about finished off the relationship. Made worse because my aunt insisted it was "margarine" with a hard "g". My grandmother said aunt was putting on la-de-da airs but ate margarine.

NZ butter? For many years down here I knew people who insisted on buying Fairy brand margarine as they had been told it was NZ butter in disguise. It was much cheaper than proper butter. Why anyone would want to disguise butter as marg I don't know. Even as a child I knew that Fairy tasted nothing like butter.

I was at school in the 50s. A lot of our beautiful butter was being sent to UK and we had rationing down here. Not wartime restrictions as many had, but it wasn't easy or cheap to buy. A raffle at school had a prize of four pounds of butter. My mother, who never won anything, won it and were we ever delighted.

[ 20. May 2012, 22:37: Message edited by: Lothlorien ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Pace EJ and Lothlorien, but I remember being sent to do the shopping on a Saturday afternoon, and my mum being Not Best Pleased when I brought home Anchor butter because she thought it was too salty (not for health reasons, you understand - she just didn't like the taste).

There used to be a creamery in Orkney; I remember being taken round it when I was in primary school. As is usually the way with factories, the best bit was the machine that put the foil wrapping on the butter, but for some reason in the late 70s/early 80s they stopped packing it themselves and had to send it away for packaging, which put the price into the stratosphere. [Frown]

Day off w*rk tomorrow - Victoria Day. Happy birthday, Vicky. [Devil]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Ah. That would be the time difference? I was wondering why they'd make you take Tuesday off when her birthday was actually on Thursday, which would probably be compensated for by the Monday off instead.

Speaking of monarchs, the Jubilee is coming up - the country is breaking out in a rash of red, white and blue already. I'm quite enjoying seeing the decorations and looking forward to seeing some of the more imaginative efforts.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes it took me a few days of being back to realise the number of Union Flags about was not the BNP taking over but preparations for Brenda's jubilee. I think the actions of the EDL just when I was arriving added to the confusion.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
With the news that the O****** Torch is coming to Newport on Friday I have booked the day off. Traffic is bad at the moment thanks to roadworks and the buses are always crap on Friday, so it's a good day to avoid the town unless you want to see the Torch and wave flags.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
Hey we could not afford butter when I was a kid. It is still a treat to this day.

All the more reason to enjoy it if you can!

When I was a kid I didn't know what asparagus or artichokes or aubergines or avocados were. Doesn't mean I can't eat them now if I want!

Heck, I didn't even know what a pizza was. We ate different in them days.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
Hey we could not afford butter when I was a kid. It is still a treat to this day.

All the more reason to enjoy it if you can!

When I was a kid I didn't know what asparagus or artichokes or aubergines or avocados were. Doesn't mean I can't eat them now if I want!

Heck, I didn't even know what a pizza was. We ate different in them days.

I remember the first pizza I ever ate. It was at school, had a pastry (!) base with cheese and tomato paste on top. It was disgusting and the least popular meal on the school lunches menu, despite stiff competition. That was in c 1964, so lousy food at school is nothing new, and I don't recall Fanny Craddock or Marguerite Patten making a fuss. We were supposed to clear our plates and be grateful we didn't have to bring a matchboxful of rice to school, like children did in China.

As for the 'A' team that ken mentions, the only one I remember before the 1970's is asparagus, which was a favourite of my mother's.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
My father tried to grow asparagus in our London garden, c.1967. He had to prepare a special sandy bed first, but it never worked. All we got were a few spindly fronds.

Here in Suffolk we usually have the most wonderful asparagus, but this year's crop has been devastated by the cold wet weather.

My wife can't stand the stuff - clearly a deficiency in her Scottish education. (On the other hand, I don't like spinach).

[ 21. May 2012, 12:17: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
My mother used to make pizza back in the 60s. I remember being quite disappointed when I went to Italy and found it didn't taste any different. I complained to my mother but for some reason she seemed very pleased.

My father was one of those people who would buy something interesting on impulse at a shop or market, then bring it home for my mother to cook. My mother was one of those people who enjoyed trying out new recipes, so it worked pretty well. Living overseas gave us plenty of scope for eating multiculturally, anyway. I seem to have inherited my father’s impulse-buying traits, but it's led to some quite interesting discoveries.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?

My impression was that most Brits weren't actually that fond of the Queen and weren't necessarily that openly patriotic (but were deeply patriotic in a private way). NZers tend towards a stiff upper lip, 'let's not make a show of it' type of patriotism. I can't imagine *any* event making NZ break out in a such a rash of red, white and blue. Here you can buy everything from underwear to foot stools to tea cakes with Union Jack decorations...

What gives? (In a spirit of friendly enquiry.)
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
We like shopping?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Life is short and there's a recession on, let's party?
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Chipping in on butter: I love it, I does, but I is lactose intolerant. [Waterworks]

We had butter at Christmas sometimes* when I was a child. Otherwise it was white margarine coloured by an orange blob with which it came. It was my Gran's job to mash it all up so Mother could pretend it was butter.

No one was fooled. Gran was usually performing the deed as I (and the others) arrived from schools in the afternoon.

*The PeteC pater and mater were dirt poor, which meant the kids were poor as well.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?

What bunting? What parties?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... the O****** Torch is coming to Newport on Friday ...

I looked up its route on t'web and it's going right past the end of the road where I used to live; if I still lived there I'd have tried to see it.

In answer to Firenze's questions, I don't think Jubilee street-parties and such things were ever big in Scotland (not in Orkney anyway), possibly due less to lack of patriotism than to the unlikelihood of sunny weather ...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I still remember the street party for the Coronation but sadly my Coronation Mug got lost or broken somewhere in the mists of time.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?

What bunting? What parties?
There's masses of it all over the place here down south... Maybe you could import some? [Smile]

Every shop has some kind of red, white and blue display. Bristol doesn't seem to be doing that much (that I've seen) in terms of events, but the little (and not so little) towns I'm visiting are mostly having street parties, hog roasts, church services, concerts etc. I'm thinking of going to my Grandmother-in-law's tiny village where they're going to crown a couple of school children King and Queen, have a procession, a fair, dressing up and all sorts. My parents-in-law are singing suitable patriotic tunes in a scratch choir. Sounds like fun.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Oh my - I just opened the back door and stepped straight out into summer. It's a blaze of light and shimmering heat, and the air smells of flowers. There's the sound of an ice-cream van in the distance, and the grass looks very green and lush to sit out on. I hope we won't be back to drought again in a short space of time after the rainy season.

Re the Jubilee - I think it'll be great. Much more fun and interesting than the Olympics. The torch isn't coming anywhere near where I live or work, though it's going past a colleague's house, apparently. I suspect she'll have some difficulty getting home from work that day – there's probably going to be traffic diversions, road closures and rather a lot of people trying to catch a glimpse of it.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?

My impression was that most Brits weren't actually that fond of the Queen and weren't necessarily that openly patriotic (but were deeply patriotic in a private way). NZers tend towards a stiff upper lip, 'let's not make a show of it' type of patriotism. I can't imagine *any* event making NZ break out in a such a rash of red, white and blue. Here you can buy everything from underwear to foot stools to tea cakes with Union Jack decorations...

What gives? (In a spirit of friendly enquiry.)

Well, I'd put the whole, royal family in a council house on minimum wage.

However, most people like an excuse for a day off and a party. We (I mean my street) are having a street party and I will be looking for somewhere to go to avoid it.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Can someone explain the attitudes re: all the bunting, Jubilee parties etc.?

What bunting? What parties?
None here that I've seen either. But then I live in inner London. Maybe its different in Much Binding in the Marsh.

No doubt our local pub will treat it as another excuse for a barbecue - but they have about ten of those in a year anyway, so it doesn't take much! A big football match will do it. There was one on Saturday.

quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
My impression was that most Brits weren't actually that fond of the Queen...

Oh we love our Queen, Gawd bless 'er and all who sail in 'er. Its just the monarchy we can't stand. And most of us are pissed off with the government as well.

So far the only direct impact the Jubilee has had on me is a few of my friends whinging that its too late to book any camp sites so they can get away from London for the weekend.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Unfortunately, hot weather and MS don't quite go together. Temperature up, walking ability veryu definitely down today. I think it's because we have gone from Winter woolies to Summer flimsies in 24 hours.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
St.Gwladys posted:

quote:
I think it's because we have gone from Winter woolies to Summer flimsies in 24 hours.
Well, they do say "ne'er cast a clout till May be out" [Biased]

My Mum used to make sure we had our Liberty Bodices on until she was sure summer had come.

How many remember Liberty Bodices???? Ken might, if he had been of a different gender
[Big Grin]

Sorry you are having problems, though St.G - I do wish you well for the rest of the summer.
 
Posted by Miffy (# 1438) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
St.Gwladys posted:

quote:
I think it's because we have gone from Winter woolies to Summer flimsies in 24 hours.
Well, they do say "ne'er cast a clout till May be out" [Biased]

My Mum used to make sure we had our Liberty Bodices on until she was sure summer had come.

How many remember Liberty Bodices???? Ken might, if he had been of a different gender
[Big Grin]

Sorry you are having problems, though St.G - I do wish you well for the rest of the summer.

Too young for liberty bodices, Nicodemia, but at my prep school we were only allowed to change out of our winter uniform (scratchy grey flannel skirts and equally scratchy blue twinset) into our summer dresses when the head deemed fit. It often seemed a long, hot, uncomfortable wait for us. I'm sure summers were much sunnier in those days!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Today was sunny and warm: yesterday was sunny-ish and not particularly (there was still the bone chilling undertow of east- coast haar). Nevertheless, the bus I was on had folk in the full on coat-scarf-tights-boots and a chap in jeans and a vest. Today there was a definite swing to the summer wardrobe - beige raincoats rather than black, with again a vanguard moving on to out and out beachwear.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It was an absolutely glorious day here - it reached 26°C in the afternoon. Temperatures like that would normally fill me with horror, but it wasn't muggy (no Humidex), so it was lovely.

We took a drive a wee bit out of town after w*rk and there were four icebergs (two quite decent-sized) out in the bay, which moderated the feel of the temperature a bit.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
There were a few days of rain here whilst I was over there but very little since I came back though we had a sprinkle this morning when I was in the shower after my cycle ride. Such rides may become scarce at the beginning of monsoon in a week or so's time so I'll have to fit in what exercise I can when I can.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
Well, I'd put the whole, royal family in a council house on minimum wage.

However, most people like an excuse for a day off and a party. We (I mean my street) are having a street party and I will be looking for somewhere to go to avoid it.

"Bah, humbug"?

Beware, no matter where you go, you may be visibly reminded of the Spirit of the Jubilee [Razz]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Helloooo I'm hoooome! (Been to Barcelona for a long weekend with the girlies)

I have white choc chip and fudge cake (that's in one cake) and lots of crushed ice with ginger beer.

Do help yourselves.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Did you take lots of photies?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Did you take lots of photies?

Yes - loads - but it was hard to do my usual obsessing as I didn't want to hold my friends up!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Speaking of photos, my new camera has just arrived. I'm amazed at how much lighter it is than my existing one from earlier in the range - when the box arrived I was convinced they must have left the camera out.

Really looking forward to trying it out, but that must wait until I can get a memory card. This weekend should be fun!

(Makes up for yet another evening of delayed and cancelled trains. I'm getting really tired of spending half the evening trying to get home. At least this time there was a nice surprise waiting.)
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Next Monday is a public holiday, we are going to make the most of it to practise the cello for our upcoming concert. The plan is to precede the hard work with a goûter, i.e. afternoon tea. I have said I am going to provide English baking. What do the panel think I should make?

I am thinking I should probably make scones, but then I might have to try to explain to the French people the jam first or cream first controversy and that might get complicated…
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Have you ever considered making pork pies? The French do wonderful charcuterie but they don't seem to have pork pies.

I don't pretend they are simple to make but they are an adventure and the most English of foods.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
A Victoria Sandwich (sponge cake)! They're easy to make, and always popular.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Bakewell Tart. Or a traditional short crust apple - no, better, rhubarb - tart.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Fairy cakes are good and easy - but otherwise I like the Victoria Sponge idea or the scones.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Cherry cake. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've just read the recipe, piglet - that sounds lovely!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Cherry cake. [Smile]

My blood sugar just shot up into the stratosphere. I haven't had so many maraschino cherries since I graduated high school. (Long, involved story)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, it IS a VERY long time ago!
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
I see that the news reports from the UK say the temperatures are higher than Bermuda or Africa.

Out here in South Africa we are having a mild winter that is like a cool summer and bracing ourselves for a rash of royal family documentaries on local television, old films about the Royal Visit to the Dominion of South Africa and the Rhodesias & Nyasaland in 1947, Princess Diana reruns and endless royal weddings replayed.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I thought about Bakewell tart but I've made it before - it went down very well with the French people. I'm making some sterling progress on convincing this particular group of French people that English food is tasty. And afternoon tea is definitely the bestest of all British meals (except for breakfast possibly).

In the end I'm sticking with the original plan of scones because I have just made the frabjous discovery that Marks & Sparks sell clotted cream - which you can normally never get in France [Yipee] . I shall endeavour to initiate the Frenchies into the mystery that is cream tea - jam first or cream first? (I say cream because it looks prettier, but we all know this is a tortured subject…)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... My blood sugar just shot up into the stratosphere ...

Sorry about that. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:

So far the only direct impact the Jubilee has had on me is a few of my friends whinging that its too late to book any camp sites so they can get away from London for the weekend.

That's why we're going to Amsterdam. OK, I tell a lie - actually, it's because a loooong bank holiday weekend is perfect for a cricket tour to Amsterdam, and the Knotweed (as have a number of spouses...) seems to have suddenly taken an interest in the game for the occasion.

I suppose as a wannabe historian I should be interested in only the second ever Diamond Jubilee of a UK monarch, but actually I'm just bummed that I'll be missing the pageant of ships up the Thames. That's the bit I'm excited by, I've got a bit of a thing about ships, I think it's the sailors in the family...

AG
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I have said I am going to provide English baking. What do the panel think I should make?

Marmite on toast.

Proper English toast - thick slices, of crusty bread, ideally an inch thick or more, toasted quickly and unevenly on *both* sides - none of your even golden brown of dried-out toasted-in-the-oven stuff, we want some bits almost uncooked, other bits black. And heaps and heaps of butter put on while its still hot so it melts right through in places and drips on to the plate underneath. That's REAL English cooking! [Yipee]

Wimps can have marmalade rather than Marmite of course.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
... actually I'm just bummed that I'll be missing the pageant of ships up the Thames.

As far as I understand the security arragnements you would need to queue from the night before to get within a mile of the river, and agree to be stripped naked and searched internally by one of the 873,000 armed police specially drafted in to ensure no Muslims get within long-range rifle shot of her Maj.

Not that they really care about the Jubilee from a security point of view, its just a dry run for the Olympics. Which are themselves a dry run for the planned simultaneous coup in every country in the world when the Metropolitan Police, in association with the Moscow Mafia, will take overcontrol of everything, subservient to the New World Order Supreme Ruling Council which consists of Prince Philip, Roman Abramovich, Tony Blair, David Attenborough, and Boris Johnson.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I thought about Bakewell tart but I've made it before - it went down very well with the French people. I'm making some sterling progress on convincing this particular group of French people that English food is tasty. And afternoon tea is definitely the bestest of all British meals (except for breakfast possibly).

In the end I'm sticking with the original plan of scones because I have just made the frabjous discovery that Marks & Sparks sell clotted cream - which you can normally never get in France [Yipee] . I shall endeavour to initiate the Frenchies into the mystery that is cream tea - jam first or cream first? (I say cream because it looks prettier, but we all know this is a tortured subject…)

Clotted cream is a wonderful thing! (We didn't have it in New Zealand). I've tended to go cream first 'cos it sticks better to the scone then dollop jam on top. And add extra little bits of jam and cream as I go... mmm.... sounds good... (there isn't a drooling smilie).
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
I suppose as a wannabe historian I should be interested in only the second ever Diamond Jubilee of a UK monarch, but actually I'm just bummed that I'll be missing the pageant of ships up the Thames. That's the bit I'm excited by, I've got a bit of a thing about ships, I think it's the sailors in the family...

You'll be able to get it on iPlayer - in fact, it'll probably be streamed live at the time, too.

It's been a perfect hot summer's day here in rural Oxfordshire, fields full of green leaves, and acres of yellow rapeseed flowers adding a vivid splash of colour to the countryside. Shimmering heat on dusty country roads lined with tall lacy white cow parsley and buttercups, birds shouting loudly to each other. People think the countryside is quiet, it's rarely ever silent.

(And commuters muttering epithets as for the third night in a row there were major delays and cancellations on the line. We're not being told why. Is this a rehearsal for the Olympics?)
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I'm also thinking I might try piglet's recipe and not bother with the part where you share it with other people [Snigger]
 
Posted by Tubbs (# 440) on :
 
test
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
... I might try piglet's recipe and not bother with the part where you share it with other people [Snigger]

[Big Grin]

It's dead easy, La Vie, and even more so if you mix everything in a food-processor. I used to mix it in a big bowl with an electric hand-whisk, but when my whisk went phut I tried it in the food-processor and it worked just grand. You're better to fold in the cherries with a spatula though, as they'd be cut too small by the blade.

The recipe also works with sultanas instead of cherries: soak about ¾ cup sultanas overnight in a tablespoon or two of the booze of your choice (I use Pimm's No. 1 if I have it, or port), add the liquid to the sugar/butter/cream cheese mixture and cut down the vanilla to about ½ teaspoon. Dredge the sultanas in flour the same as you would the cherries - it helps them not to sink.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I'm also thinking I might try piglet's recipe and not bother with the part where you share it with other people [Snigger]

This right and proper - you may need to do it several times as a sort of quality control to make sure you have it just right.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
This right and proper - you may need to do it several times as a sort of quality control to make sure you have it just right.

When my sons were young I did lots of baking, especially slices. For a long time they wondered how I could bake a slice with a neat corner cut from it! Quality control strikes again.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Piglet, your recipe sounds great but do you have any equivalent imperial measurements? I'm at a loss when it comes to cups.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
According to this conversion chart, 1 cup is 4.4 ounces; I'd say half a pound of flour would probably do it, plus a couple of tablespoons to dredge the cherries. I don't think I'll ever really get used to the idea of cup measures, even for butter* ... [Ultra confused]

Having said that, if you've got a cup of 8 fl. oz. capacity, fill it with flour using a scoop or large spoon until it's just heaped, and then level off the surface with a straight-bladed knife, then sieve it into a bowl.

It was another lovely day here, so we went for a walk along the walking trail beside the Fluvarium after w*rk. Another day, another bridge, another game of Poohsticks. [Smile] And it's forecast to be even nicer tomorrow. [Yipee]

* The foil on butter here is marked with lines showing ¼, ½, ¾ and whole cup measures; you cut at the desired line.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
I have trouble with tablespoon as a measure. I tablespoon down under contains 20 ml, elsewhere 15. I need to check origin of recipe. In some places, the difference is negligible but i have put too much/little of some things by mistake.

[ 26. May 2012, 05:00: Message edited by: Lothlorien ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
You can buy measuring cups in the UK - and measuring spoons. At a pinch I've used an empty individual yoghurt pot or the same mug. There's a recipe for blackberry fairy cakes using a yoghurt pot at Nature Detectives , (scroll down on that page) although I stopped using that one when I wasn't just substituting the yoghurt for soya yoghurt but also the flour for gluten free flour.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I turned off the alarm at 06.10 this morning and thought I'd have five more minutes. I woke at 09.30!

[Hot and Hormonal]

No harm done but it is very unlike me but then I won't get a nap this afternoon so perhaps it was in anticipation of this.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Thanks, Piglet and Curiosity. I've promised to make a cake for the office Jubilee celebrations. I pretty much know the sort of thing I'll be doing but am still open to recipe suggestions and like the sound of Piglet's cake.

I'd found a Jubilee Cake recipe online somewhere (which I'll have to google for as for some reason I didn't bookmark this) which is a kind of luxury Victoria sponge with a filling of clotted cream and fresh raspberries. I was going to decorate it with pale blue icing, as we're going for the "red, white and blue" theme, but my worry is that the raspberries might make the cake soggy pretty quickly.

[ 26. May 2012, 05:46: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
There's a recipe for a rather fruity Jubilee cake here

Also there are decorated cupcakes.

Personally if I see another red white and blue recipe I will go and live somewhere else for the duration !

Lovely sunny day here with nice, but strong, breeze. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
I'm going to have a go at that one for the schools' celebrations, Nicodemia. Though I bet it'll prove really popular and there will be no blueberries or raspberries to be found anywhere! The Victoria sponge with raspberry filling does sound wonderful, though. I can't imagine it'll last long enough to go squidgey.

It's another lovely day. I'm off to the garden centre - woefully late with everything this year but just too tired to manage that and work and being enormously pregnant all at the same time. So all low maintenance plus a few strawberry plants if I can get any.

Mr Jt9 has taken the kids for a day trip on the Norfolk broads, which will be glorious, I should imagine. All local family are away for the weekend, though so I am not allowed to go into labour. Hahahaha! I still technically have 2 weeks to go, though, so I don't expect I shall. Besides, have gardening to do, it would be terribly inconvenient! [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think if the clotted cream is smeared on both top and bottom pieces of the sponge then the raspberries added between the cream layers then all should be fine. What I mean is a sort of sponge-cream-fruit-cream-sponge sandwichy thing.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
I have trouble with tablespoon as a measure. I tablespoon down under contains 20 ml, elsewhere 15. I need to check origin of recipe. In some places, the difference is negligible but i have put too much/little of some things by mistake.

I'm probably teaching grand/mothers to suck eggs but Mrs S has measuring spoons that contain 1.25, 2.5, 5, 10 and 15 ml when level.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes, I have a set of those too, Sioni - they are very useful.

- - - -

In other news a fugitive penguin has been recaptured in Tokyo - good grief we don't want creatures like THAT on the loose in our cities!

- - - -

In other other news I saw a teenage lad in town today wearing a T-shirt which read

quote:
Trouble Every Day
Had I not been on the bus and him on the footpath I'd have stopped him to ask where he bought it so I could get one to send to Smudgelet [I met him last week and he's lovely] - I know it is not true of him in the least but it would give him a standard to which to aspire.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Thanks for the tip, WW. I think you're right - will have to give that a trial run.

quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
There's a recipe for a rather fruity Jubilee cake here

Thanks for that, Nicodemia - that sounds tasty! One of my colleagues has a nut allergy which means that anything with ground almonds would probably be out, but I won't be the only one baking and I like the fruit decoration.
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Bother bother. Only just realised that the Mary Berry cake requires greek yoghurt, which I do not have in, and I am too lazy to sally forth and get any. Hm, will have to be left a day or two. Yoghurt? In a cake? Really? I have put it in pancakes before, but a cake?

Will have to bake something though, as we are currently in a house without cake [Eek!] , and that will not do.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I think it was the Winnie the Pooh Cookbook which gave all measurements in yoghurt pots. Very practical if you are a student without a set of scales trying to cook in Hall. I've still got it somewhere. The book also includes a recipe for "eskimo bananas" - cut a banana in half, stick a couple of cocktail sticks in each cut end,. wrap them in foil and freeze them. Just before serving, take them out of the freezer, unwrap, use the cocktail sticks as a handle and dip the frozen banana in melted chocolate.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Yogurt pots and not honey jars in the Winnie the Pooh cookbook??
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
Bother bother. Only just realised that the Mary Berry cake requires greek yoghurt, which I do not have in, and I am too lazy to sally forth and get any. Hm, will have to be left a day or two. Yoghurt? In a cake? Really? I have put it in pancakes before, but a cake?

Will have to bake something though, as we are currently in a house without cake [Eek!] , and that will not do.

Yoghurt in a cake is fine. Makes it rich and dense and if you use a flavoured one eg mango or passionfruit or similar it adds a slight extra flavour. Dilute it with milk if you want to, but when I've used it, it's usually because I didn't have enough milk in house for cake.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
... we are currently in a house without cake [Eek!] , and that will not do.

It certainly won't, Jt9. I have citrus cake - it's the cherry-cake recipe but with the grated rind and juice of some left-over clementines, plus a wee squirt of lemon and lime juice instead of the cherries. It was an experiment - I've done it with just lemon rind and juice before, but I didn't have any lemons, and D. pointed out we had some superannuated clementines. Not quite as nice, but not bad at all. Do help yourself.

BTW, are you sure you ought to be gardening in your condition?

As it was another nice day, we went for a walk up to Fort Amherst, where we could see a couple of icebergs, though not nearly as big or as close as the one in the picture. However, we also saw the first whale of the season, really close in.

[Yipee]

[ 27. May 2012, 02:55: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Yogurt in a cake is absolutely fine - makes it lovely and moist.

If you haven't got Greek Yogurt, tip some ordinary yog into a fine sieve and let it drip through and then use the thickened residue as Greek Yogurt. The density of the residue depends on how much of a hurry you are to get the cake in the oven!

Those Eskimo bananas sound gorgeous! [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think HWMBO, or indeed anyone from here, would be enthralled by the sight of an iceberg like that - it gives a whole new meaning to "do you want ice with that?" Personally I'll stick to the warm.

Lovely touch after mass this morning when one of the littlest altar boys came rushing up to the car as we were about to drive off to shake my hand and say hello.

I think I upset another one of the guys from church, a fellow in his mid-20s and a ManUre fan, when I asked if he'd like my friend in UK to send him a Man City shirt [Snigger]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I used plain yoghurt in a cake recipe where it called for buttermilk. It went very well. Give it a go, you might be pleasantly surprised.

Another beautiful day. I hope it'll be like this for the Jubilee Week - are those of you who work all working that week or taking the three days off? With bank holidays and weekends thrown in, it can mean 11 days off [Cool]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I suspect I'll be taking the 3 days off. It would normally be half term, but I'm finishing with current work at the end of the month - basically because they can't afford to pay me, and am too bogged down in the leavers ceremony slideshow and tidying up the things I'm leaving behind to job hunt or sign up at temping agencies.

If anyone asks if I've transferred everything I will not be responsible for my actions. It's not quick. A goodly chunk needs converting from Open Office format to Micro$oft for me to be able to pass it on. Yes, I have asked if they can open OpenOffice format, they don't know. It doesn't help being one of the most computer literate around.

And adding the massive task of producing an individual collage of photos for each student to be framed for them to take with them to the slide show is not helpful. Particularly when offers of help aren't going to help - 75% of the job is going through and finding photos out my tens of thousands.

I want to go out and play in the sunshine, not stay in stuck in front of a computer! Grump!
 
Posted by FooloftheShip (# 15579) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Piglet, your recipe sounds great but do you have any equivalent imperial measurements? I'm at a loss when it comes to cups.

As in all things, Delia saves
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Curiosity Killed

Send them an email attachment in Open Office format, then see how many complain that they can't open it.

If you can make it something that needs a reply that can only be given once opened even better.

Jengie
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by FooloftheShip:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Piglet, your recipe sounds great but do you have any equivalent imperial measurements? I'm at a loss when it comes to cups.

As in all things, Delia saves
Then perhaps she should play in goal for Norwich!

[Sorry, Delia, that was a low shot!]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Hi All,

your cake ideas sound fabulous... especially the citrus one. I've got mini vanilla cupcakes from M & S. I get hooked by the edible glitter!

In terms of this weekend, I'm taking the Friday off so I'll have 5 days off. We're thinking of going up to the little village where my husband's grandmother lives as they're having a bit fete and my parents-in-law are singing in a festival choir. Keen to have a go at the hog roast!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think HWMBO, or indeed anyone from here, would be enthralled by the sight of an iceberg like that ...

You'll both have to come over and visit then. [Smile]
quote:
I think I upset ... a ManUre fan, when I asked if he'd like my friend in UK to send him a Man City shirt [Snigger]
[Killing me] [Killing me] You're a man after my own heart.
quote:
... Delia saves

Then perhaps she should play in goal for Norwich!

[Killing me] [Killing me] See previous comment. An Ipswich Fan Has Spoken. [Big Grin]

We did lots of lovely Tudor music today - Alleluia, I heard a voice by Weelkes in the morning and Gibbons' Short Service, O Lord, give thy Holy Spirit by Tallis and the Office Hymn set to the tune of the Agincourt song at Evensnog.

Good music and stuffing the French - what more could one ask? [Devil]
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Encouragement to try yoghurt in cake is noted, thank you. I shall have a trial run tomorrow before one needs taking to school on Friday.

Am suffering the ongoing saga of the Olympic tickets here they tried to deliver them on friday, allegedly, but left no collection card. Man on RM phone says it isn't needed, but man at RM sorting office says it was. Although I haven't got one. So he has my tickets, and I have the text from RM and my ID, but I can't collect them. Apparantly they're going to deliver tomorrow........

Gardening seems to be ok in advanced pregnancy, though getting up off the ground can be difficult, after weeding. I think this is God's way of telling me not to weed [Snigger] Family legend has it that mum went into labour with me whilst planting out sweet peas - I am hoping for the same result.

Lovely day yesterday - child A admitted to communion and then all of us off for pizza to celebrate. All very super. Today child A has gone to school in tudor costume to meet Henry VIII. As one does. [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:
... Today child A has gone to school in tudor costume to meet Henry VIII. As one does. [Smile]

How cool is that? I hope His Majesty is heralded by some Proper Music.

[Cool]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Is the child off to Kentwell?
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
I should hope there will be no beheadings! [Eek!]
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
My scones were a triumph. I have now successfully converted a group of food-snob Frenchies to the institution that is the English Cream Tea™. Her Majesty would be proud of me. [Big Grin]

I would offer virtual scones but there's none left.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
My scones were a triumph. I have now successfully converted a group of food-snob Frenchies to the institution that is the English Cream Tea™. Her Majesty would be proud of me. [Big Grin]

I would offer virtual scones but there's none left.

We are proud of you too. It's all about quality. The French and especially Parisians have the idea that British food is awful, so countering that is work of great value. [Overused]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Well done, La Vie! Glad to hear it was well received. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Hoorah for scone triumph!

piglet - I'm really looking forward to playing the Proper Music (TM) to Child A when she gets in, it's lovely.

Henry was visiting the school as part of their project on tudors. There weren't any beheadings, but apparantly there was jousting [Eek!] though I don't think any horses were involved. I must find out more....

I love Kentwell. We went there earlier in the month for their May Day celebrations; more I think for my benefit than the kids' (ahem [Hot and Hormonal] ) but they do really enjoy it too. We met the lady of the manor, saw the May Queen parade and the mummers' play, the girls did some spinning, Mr Jt9 chatted to the man in the hovel about his coracle, we pottered round the kitchen and bakery - no free food though, we've had hot cross buns at Easter in previous years.

Ah, 'twas ace. It's one of my most favouritest places, especially in May.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jemima the 9th:

Henry was visiting the school as part of their project on tudors. There weren't any beheadings, but apparantly there was jousting [Eek!] though I don't think any horses were involved. I must find out more....


I've seen some a jousting display with horses and very impressive it waas too. Needless to say it wasn't in Britain but in France, about five years ago. I think some Spanish guys did the riding which included knocking each other off their mounts. The Safety Elves would never permit it here.

We got a lot of friendly stick when we were heard speaking English, but once we told them we lived in Wales all was hunky-dory.
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
The Safety Elves do permit it in the UK - Leeds Armoury do competitive jousting, for real, with falling off and everything.

And if it was Good King Hal visiting the school, he has a quite amusing blog at www.goodkinghal.blogspot.com I believe the jousting includes the quintain and 'riding' in and out of poles, and keeps a running total of the winning teams (he divides it up into girls vs. boys).
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I've seen real jousting in the UK, at least twice.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I like the idea of Henry VIII writing a blog. I've got a Facebook "friend" who calls himself "William Byrd - resurgam" and writes in mock-Tudor: "To ye Cathedral where my Masse for Four Voyces was sunge skillfullye by ye choir" - you get the idea. I have no idea who he really is, but he's rather fun.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Fun? Nay he is verily a varlot and a knave. [Biased]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I've seen real jousting in the UK, at least twice.

I've seen it at the Royal Armouries tilt yard at Leeds. Choreographed stunt falls rather than real fighting, but still good fun.

The demonstration of pole-axe fighting indoors is the best of the fights though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm on my own most of the day today so I am going to have a completely lazy day and read and doze a bit then read some more!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I saw jousting at Blenheim Palace last year which was great fun - lots of posturing and some convincingly stroppy performers snapping at each other and threatening to storm off the field, but no splintered lances. They have jousting about twice a year, I think, Easter and summer.

Re the blog thing, there used to be someone writing as Chaucer ("Geffrye Chaucer hath a blog") which I followed for a while. That was quite well done.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
One of the niceties of train travel is that you get to hear the most interesting of conversations. On one trip I got too over hear a conversation between two people who stage historical re-enactments. They were discussing forth coming events and the jousting amongst them. Aparently the jousting is set a quite a precise historical time, because it is relatively easy to take a tumble and survive, as you get later in history the armour gets heavier and though harder to actually tumble the risks involved if you do increase. There are very few jousters therefore willing to do re-enactments of these dates for that reason.

Jengie

[ 30. May 2012, 07:55: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
That's me told then! I'll to look about myself more carefully for jousting.

Nevertheless, thanks for the heads up about Leeds Royal Armoury. That appears well worth a visit.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:


Re the blog thing, there used to be someone writing as Chaucer ("Geffrye Chaucer hath a blog")

Still is.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Thanks for the link, Firenze. The image of Chauser and King Richard pot-holing from the latest blog was great. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A day of rest well achieved - off to shower now as we are off to a pre-marriage event tonight and the actual marriage tomorrow.
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
Thanks for the King Hal link, Eigon, I'll show it to Child A, she'll like it. She's something of a history fan, due in no small part to Horrible Histories off the telly, which I love too. And the books, which are great, but rather lacking in dishy young men for my liking.

Your day of rest sounds lovely, WW.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
WW, your yesterday sounds like my sort of day. I don't suppose this pre-marriage event thingy will involve FOOD, will it? [Big Grin]

I seem to have frozen my left shoulder, which is v. nasty; I can't lift my arm more than about 80° without going "ouch"*. Treatments with frozen peas followed by hot-water bottles haven't been entirely successful.

[Frown]

* or possibly %*@#. [Devil]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

I seem to have frozen my left shoulder, which is v. nasty; I can't lift my arm more than about 80° without going "ouch"*. Treatments with frozen peas followed by hot-water bottles haven't been entirely successful.

[Frown]

* or possibly %*@#. [Devil]

Mrs S had this successively in her shoulders a few years ago. It's worth checking with a Dr as it tends to afflict women.

[Votive] in the meantime
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
WW, your yesterday sounds like my sort of day. I don't suppose this pre-marriage event thingy will involve FOOD, will it? [Big Grin]


Why would he go, otherwise? He goes to the wedding too. Feast is an implied word.

The day before is hosted by the groom's side. The day of is hosted by the bride's side. Usually.

And Wodders is there scooping up his rice and curries, regardless.

He might take some pictures, or 200, as well.

Who got married, Wodders?
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:

I seem to have frozen my left shoulder, which is v. nasty; I can't lift my arm more than about 80° without going "ouch"*. Treatments with frozen peas followed by hot-water bottles haven't been entirely successful.

Another one here too Piglet. Apparently women of over 50 are particularly susceptible to this. I can with great difficulty lift my left arm to same height as shoulder but absolutely no further. Changing the plane in which arm is operating is also very painful. Elbow down is fine but above elbow is very painful. Pain also goes down the outside of the arm to the elbow and this is one way of assessing the problem. I am using a gel pack heated in the microwave on it at night in bed. Do you find that across shoulders is also painful and tight because the muscles used to move arm are not being used correctly.

Apparently it can go as suddenly as it appeared and that time can't come soon enough for me. None of this is helped by my osteoarthritis either.

[ 31. May 2012, 12:00: Message edited by: Lothlorien ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It was a lovely, lovely wedding - and I say that as someone who doesn't really like them very much.

The bride lives on an island in the delta - but then don't we all? This island however has no land connection with any other and thus we travelled from the groom's house to the marriage function by bus and then by ferry - I've never been to a wedding by ferry before. It was then a short walk, 10 minutes or so, from the jetty to the hall beside the temple.

It was Vimeesh, from Cheriyapilly, who got married Pete and he was the first groom I have ever seen at a marriage in India who didn't look terrified. Being a Hindu marriage the formalities were over in minutes and the serious business of eating got underway. It was dry all day and the sun shone quite a bit of the time, too - strange weather for the last of May but very welcome under the circumstances.

The scenery, being set where it was, was glorious and the ferry ride back was, erm, a little crowded as was the bus but we got back to the groom's house okay where there was more food for those who wished it - not me, I had had ample.

Later the newlyweds will travel back to the island to the bride's house for the night and then back to the groom's house to start their life together tomorrow.

I took a mere 213 photos which I shall now write on a CD for the groom to write on to his PC.

Btw - the food was excellent.

eta: I have no idea how much it costs to hire a complete ferry for a day - bad enough to hire the buses! It was a big ferry by local standards, too, but then it needed to be.

[ 31. May 2012, 12:03: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
What I forgot to mention is that on arrival at the groom's house this morning there was breakfast on offer to anyone that wanted it - HWMBO, Mrs E and the neighbour we took with us all availed themselves of the offer - even though they had hadbreakfast before we left!

It was also fun that a lad from our village appeared at lunchtime - apparently he is at college with the Bride's brother - everyone is either related or otherwise connected to everyone else down here!

[ 31. May 2012, 15:58: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Just had my 2 youngest cats to the vet as they had been in a fight yesterday with a neighbouring cat and were each walking on 3 legs.

They are fine - ish having had treatment. I, however, have been bitten on the finger. B***dy cats!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lothlorien:
Apparently it can go as suddenly as it appeared and that time can't come soon enough for me.

I went through a period of that, waking up in agony and unable to even so much as carry a light shoulder bag on that side. That happy state of affairs lasted for weeks, the beginnings of it shifted slightly to the other side, then vanished. You have my sympathy as it's horrid to live with, and you don't have any idea how long it'll last - but it should go eventually. The menopause (or peri-menopause) can throw up a whole bunch of odd symptoms which are very real to the point where they may dominate your life, but they do usually fade out.

Anyway, on a happier note - am baking a Jubilee Cake. I've decided to go for a slightly adapted version of this, cutting down the sugar and using yoghurt instead of buttermilk, which I can't get; and the icing's going to be mascarpone with raspberries and blueberries. Fingers crossed that this works - it smells lovely but you never quite know how these things will turn out.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Ah well, live and learn. Guess I'll be buying a cake tomorrow morning on the way to work.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Sorry to hear about the cake. Pour yourself a large one as consolation.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Have I mentioned that I have a Diploma in the Disposal of Failed Cake(s)? [Smile]

Just sayin'. Don't feel obliged.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... This island however has no land connection with any other ...

I think that's kind of what "island" means. An Islander Has Spoken. [Devil]

D. went and got me some Napoxy-something-or-other tablets (having asked the advice of the pharmacist) and they seem to be helping; I can raise my arm almost straight up, although stretching back is still a bit iffy. As I only turned 50 in February, it's a rather depressing thought that I might get this every so often for the rest of my days ... [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... This island however has no land connection with any other ...

I think that's kind of what "island" means. An Islander Has Spoken. [Devil] ...
Thank you for the clarification, piglet.

What I meant to say was that there are no bridges to the island - nor are there likely to be for many years since the Government has just published its road building plan for the next decade and it's not included.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I had a feeling that's what you meant. Having said that, I'm generally not in favour of bridges - they take away that essential islandness.

When the British government imposed a bridge on the people of Skye in the Western Isles, they weren't best pleased, especially as there was a toll to be paid. This was waived for anyone carrying livestock, so there was this sheep ...

You've guessed it - people "borrowed" him and put him in the back of their cars, in order to avoid the toll.

Once the tolls had paid for the cost of the bridge, they were removed, and I couldn't help feeling a bit sorry for the (now unemployed) sheep.

Mint sauce, anyone? [Two face]
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
D. went and got me some Napoxy-something-or-other tablets (having asked the advice of the pharmacist) and they seem to be helping; I can raise my arm almost straight up, although stretching back is still a bit iffy. As I only turned 50 in February, it's a rather depressing thought that I might get this every so often for the rest of my days ...

I'm happy for you, Piglet, that something seems to be helping the shoulder. I have osteoarthritis and have tried pretty well all those things. They rarely do and sometimes the cure is worse than the complaint as they upset my stomach.

I hope the improvement continues quickly.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Thanks, Lothlorien - I'm more-or-less back to normal now as long as I don't try up and back at the same time. Deo gratias - I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.

We've been having a few things done to our house; just before we went away D. found A Man to build a new set of steps at the front door, as the old one was (almost literally) falling to bits. He made a really nice job of it, and as is the way with these things, he found a few other things that weren't quite right, and they are now.

He's also started the process of replacing the wooden siding on the front of the house; the lowest 8 planks have been done, and when I got home this afternoon I found that they've had their first coat of vermilion stain*, which looks brilliant. While we're away in the summer, he's going to replace the front windows (which are currently horrid sliders - not in keeping with the house at all) and do the rest of the siding at that stage.

v. happy piglet. [Yipee]

* Staining the wood lasts much longer and looks better than just painting it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Fun day at the office yesterday with lots of cakes, bunting everywhere, people wearing red, white and blue, turning up in Royal Family masks, etc. Some of the masks were put up in the window for the day. It was a bit disconcerting seeing the green light from the landscape outside shining eerily through their empty eyesockets, which flickered as you walked past. None the less it was an enjoyable day with a colourful, cheery atmosphere to work in.

The Jubilee weekend's begun with rain. It's very nice to be in, with no plans, and not have to go anywhere. Hope the river pageant isn't rained off tomorrow!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Off to Cardiff for the rugby today (if my lift turns up), Wales v Barbarians. I don't expect too much Jubiliana.

One of the offices at work really went to town yesterday. Union flags everywhere, banners, all red, white and blue. The effect was more like VE Day than the Jubilee.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Funny you should say that - the thought of VE Day had crossed my mind too.

Someone told me that on the way to work they'd passed another office where they were all sitting round in homemade crowns, some of which were about a foot tall. Wish I'd seen that.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We've got bunting up everywhere - road I'm off is having a street party and they're getting keen. I'm hoping for a puddle shot of decorations in the rain, but it's not quite raining enough.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I've only seen one house in a half mile radius with bunting up, two thirds of pubs are not bunted* either. We like the extra bank holiday though [Big Grin]

On the other hand there is a buzz about the Olympic Torch relay coming through here on the Sun 24th.

*New word, you saw it here first.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
After yesterday's abortive bureaucratic trip when I got there to find both the clerks on leave I went back this morning and was in and out in 5 minutes having collected and signed for the correct papers which means I am now fully legally resident again. After all these years the papers are getting a bit flimsy but they only have to last another 18 months. Does anyone know of anything that you can spray on papers [or otherwise treat them] so they stay strong?

I now have to cope with the minefield of applying for copies of my birth certificate from the General Register Office in Southport - don't tell them but I was surprised how inexpensive their service is. I think I might get a couple of copies whilst I am at it.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
After all these years the papers are getting a bit flimsy but they only have to last another 18 months. Does anyone know of anything that you can spray on papers [or otherwise treat them] so they stay strong?

You could put them in sheet protectors. That's what I do to keep papers from getting flimsy.

quote:
I now have to cope with the minefield of applying for copies of my birth certificate from the General Register Office in Southport - don't tell them but I was surprised how inexpensive their service is. I think I might get a couple of copies whilst I am at it.
We had to get copies of our daughter's birth certificate from Northern Ireland where she was born. There are separate fees for looking up the record and making the copy. This means that you save money by ordering more than one copy at a time, assuming you may ever need more copies.

Moo
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Whilst the papers are with me they are always in sheet protectors but when they are with them they are just held in a file and pawed by all and sundry - that's where the damage occurs.

Off for a walk in the evening cool in a little bit, I think.
 
Posted by passer (# 13329) on :
 
I wasn't sure on which board to post it, but I believe that the linked news item might be of interest to some of the English members, with possible shipmeet potential.

I'll just leave this here and tiptoe away.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Off to Cardiff for the rugby today (if my lift turns up), Wales v Barbarians. I don't expect too much Jubiliana.


Yup, no Jubilee stuff at all. We did have mention of the Queen's Dragoon Guards, guests of the WRU, who have recently returned form Afghanistan (most of them that is; some never made it and a few others are in still in hospital or rehab). They got a huge round of applause, as the QDG is regarded as Wales own tank regiment and there's a campaign on to retain it.

In other news Wales second-string beat a hard-case Barbarians team 30-21, but it was closer than that looks and not an outstanding game. The highlight was one of our party asking a question that will forever be understood as 'Where is Barbaria?'
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... Wales v Barbarians ...

I was going to ask how you can tell the difference, but that may just be to do with the Welshmen I know ... [Big Grin]

Just back from v. good supper in a restaurant downtown which is an all-day breakfast joint until 4 p.m. and thereafter does evening food. My lamb chops were perfectly cooked and subtly flavoured, as were the accompanying veggies (carrots, asparagus and brocc.) and baked potato. And it only cost $16.99, which is less than half what most eateries here charge.

Lamb is the most expensive thing on most menus - [Frown] - as a lot of people here don't seem to like it, I suppose it must be a supply-and-demand thing.

How could you possibly not like lamb? [Confused]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
About to head up to central London in order to see the Jubilee boat flotilla. After a couple of weeks of fine weather it is raining so not ideal for sitting around reading a book for a few hours until it's time, but I think that among all the sceptics and republicans there are enough people who still like the queen that it will be wise to get there early.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
You are very brave, Moonlitdoor - I hope you get a good vantage point and have a strong umbrella!

I might watch the Thames pageant on the TV - a river pageant sounds interesting, whoever it is for - big ships, little ships and all that.

Otherwise I've had enough of red, white and blue appearing on everything - well nearly everything, haven't seen the aforementioned colours in the bathroom. So far.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Good luck with that, moonlitdoor, I was hoping to go, but reckoned the chances of seeing anything wasn't great with everything shut off, and gave up on the idea
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Hope s/he makes it OK - looks like a dismal day and they were just saying on tv that people have been camping out overnight (!) to get the best places to see it from.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Hope you get a good place on the embankment, moonlitdoor.

Here in the Overberg mountains of South Africa, everyone is getting ready to watch the flotilla on the Thames, even those who still resent the British for the Anglo-Boer war. The TV coverage here will be two hours later than in the UK and there is much excitement tempered by the possibility of a replay of the rugby from yesterday in which case that might be watched instead.

Lovely hot winter sunshine, a glorious day.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I loved watching the choir singing "Rule Brittania" in the pouring rain - such a thoroughly British piece of nonsense - it makes me quite proud.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Britons never, never, never shall be slaves

Well done, indeed from what I saw of it.

[ 03. June 2012, 17:22: Message edited by: PeteC ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
That poor choir, singing "Land of Hope and Glory" with such enthusiasm as the rain streamed down, plastering their hair to their skulls!

Wonderful pageant - the organizers should be very proud of themselves.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
Hope you get a good place on the embankment, moonlitdoor.

Here in the Overberg mountains of South Africa, everyone is getting ready to watch the flotilla on the Thames, even those who still resent the British for the Anglo-Boer war. The TV coverage here will be two hours later than in the UK and there is much excitement tempered by the possibility of a replay of the rugby from yesterday in which case that might be watched instead.

Lovely hot winter sunshine, a glorious day.

Next instalment of the Anglo-Boer war begins in Durban on 9th June.

Both sides are in flux but this will be a serious test for the English, some of whom haven't been in a head-to-head with South Africa.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Oooo I loved all the Jubilee stuff today. Was up at the Royal Albert Hall last night at the Gala event there...brilliant fun with much flag waving and singing of all the usual songs.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
TV in this household was the river pageant on BBC, followed by All the Queen's Horses. I'm all Royalled out for one day.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I stayed away from the TV all day and had a day's solid reading with a short interruption for a cycle ride late afternoon - not a royal event to be seen!

Bliss!

[I still can't spell]

[ 04. June 2012, 02:29: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
The reason I'm even later than usual posting on here is I've just been watching the evening showing of the pageant. BBC Canada showed it live in the morning but, it being Sunday I was otherwise occupied. They very kindly showed it again just after Evensong. I thoroughly enjoyed it - like the Royal wedding last year, it was Britain doing what Britain's best at. Felt sorry for the soggy choir.

The down-side was I'd put a pot of soup on to cook and thought that there would be commercial breaks during which I could go and check it ...

D. came into the den about 2½ hours in and said "how's the soup doing?"

... oops ... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I reckon there will be a lot of very wet uniforms drying out today, after the wet pageant and sopping wet soldiers/sailors/whatever all standing to attention in the pouring rain!

I hope the Royals had some thermals under their royal clothes - be a lot of sniffling this morning!

Ah, but it made you proud to be British, didn't it? [Two face]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I was hoping for seriously big puddles where there's a lot of bunting because I really wanted reflection shots. I know, I'm not nice.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Sino Said posted:

Next instalment of the Anglo-Boer war begins in Durban on 9th June.

Both sides are in flux but this will be a serious test for the English, some of whom haven't been in a head-to-head with South Africa.


Rugby, more brutal than militarised combat. Head-to-head is a perfect description for those thuggy scrums.

Enjoyed watching the stoic queen and washed-out but magnificent flotillas. My elderly neighbour remembered the coronation and how it rained that day.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
I was hoping for seriously big puddles where there's a lot of bunting because I really wanted reflection shots. I know, I'm not nice.

Haha - hopefully you will get some today. We had puddles, but such low light the photos didn't add up to much.

I took pictures of the telly instead!


Here they are.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Mary LA:
...Enjoyed watching the stoic queen and washed-out but magnificent flotillas. My elderly neighbour remembered the coronation and how it rained that day.

Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!

I am a mature man, not one these young whippersnappers.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
(sheepishly) My neighbour is 75 but can pass for a frisky 49. Apologies, Wodders.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Lol - good grief, your neighbour is even older than PeteC!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!

Which one?
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I had chosen the area outside Tate Modern and arrived at half past ten. I secured a place 4 people back from the front which was fine as I am reasonably tall. It quickly filled up behind so it was necessary to stand in a fixed position for 5 hours waiting and an hour and a bit watching the boats. When it came time to move at last my knees seemed locked into place so it was a bit of an effort.

A lady close by me seemed to be in her 70s and with an illness that gave her a constant tremor in the hands so considering that I am doing a 10k race next weekend, I can hardly complain. Still I am glad that I did not have to go to work today.

I see on the internet that someone from the national republican society has said that not that many people were there and that other events get more, but all I can say is that I am glad I don't have to get home by public transport after those other events.

I have just been out to buy a newspaper, something I have not done for years, and found one with a photograph showing the same scene I was looking at, the millenium bridge, St Paul's, and the City of London school, so I have a nice memento of my day.
 
Posted by Caty M. (# 11996) on :
 
It's been quite a while since I stuck my head round the door here and waved at you all, hasn't it? [Hot and Hormonal]

Sorry about that.

Still. Hello, everyone.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!

Which one?
This round to Ariel.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I had a wonderfully festive weekend. We popped up to the little village where my husband's grandmother lives. They were having all sorts of events over the weekend.

We spent quite a bit of time in the pub 'cos it was reeeally cold and fairly wet. There was a lot of wet bunting hanging about the green! We ate hog roast and W.I. cake. We got roped into singing in a scratch choir Sunday morning and evening (Great fun bellowing the Hallelujah chorus!) and watched most of the action on the Thames nice and warm in Grannie's lounge room.

Yay England. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Was a cricket match planned, only to be rained off? That would make the ultimate English day.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
No cricket, but a do on the village green with a small dog show (the organiser was pleading on the mic. for people to enter their dogs), coconut shy, a small carousal (sadly too small for me to have a go) and a few stalls. All damp and cold but soldiering on (with regular trips to the pub for the loos and fortifications).

Oh, and a guy hollering some pop songs... I do wish folk would realise that singing is something you need to put some effort into learning how to do, just like you learn to play guitar or drums etc. (Climbs off hobbyhorse)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
There's no point complaining about the low standard and limited participation in village shows, fetes and the like. Everybody knows that Tom will win the prize for racing leeks, his wife will win the best decorate cake award and their daughter will guess the weight of the cake. It's part of the charm of such events. Our cricket team used to demonstrate this too, until we got South Africans in.

btw, I'm sure there's a better alternative to 'enter their dogs'. [Biased]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Hope and pray Prince Philip gets well soon. [Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Oi, less of the elderly - I remember the coronation!

Which one?
This round to Ariel.

[Big Grin]

Yes, indeed. I acknowledge defeat in this round.

However Pete and I were once discussing Royal Weddings and he remembered seeing one a while ago - he said the bride looked gorgeous and Prince Albert looked so dashing.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma: Hope and pray Prince Philip gets well soon.

Absolutely - poor old chap. [Votive] I suppose the up-side for him is he won't have to endure the Pop Concert ... [Big Grin]

I'm still debating with myself whether I thought the BBC's coverage was as bad as they're saying in the Telegraph. I accept it isn't the same without Tom Fleming, just as Wimbledon isn't the same without Dan Maskell, but as they're both dead, we can't really blame Auntie for that.

Because I've been on the other side of the Pond for nearly 10 years, I still assume that the worst of the BBC is going to be better than the best of anything I can get over here. For the most part that's probably still true, but they did seem to be aiming for the lowest common denominator, and I wasn't impressed by the two indoors (whoever they were) - they seemed a bit clueless.

As for the one who referred to the Queen as "Her Royal Highness" ... words fail me.

Is there still a block at the Tower? [Devil]

[ 05. June 2012, 02:09: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
The BBC coverage of the River Pageant was worse than awful. It was utterly inept, crass, inaccurate and naff. The presenters had not done their homework, and didn't actually sound as though they cared. I know it was a Bank Holiday and they probably didn't want to have to work, but still.....I bet they were paid extra and given TOIL to be there. There is no excuse for such slipshod and embarassing broadcasting.

As someone said, the Pageant Master had taken 2 and 1/2 years to pull it all together. The BBC sounded as though they'd pulled their bit of it together in the pub the night before on the back of a beer mat.

In other news...it's cold and overcast here today. Not quite raining...yet...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Erm, are you saying you didn't think much of it, then?
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
The BBC coverage of the River Pageant was worse than awful.

The Pageant Master had taken 2½ years to plan it, and all the Beeb did was show the same boats over and over again. Too many reporters at too many camera positions. One commentator and a camera at each of the start, finish and somewhere along the way would have been better, at least then they'd have had to show more than a few boats. A case of too many cooks.

However having just seen the balcony appearence and fly past flicking between channels, if the BBC coverage was poor then ITV was dire.

quote:
piglet:
I still assume that the worst of the BBC is going to be better than the best of anything I can get over here.

The worst of the BBC is still better than anyone else does over here too.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I never realized what an earworm Land of Hope and Glory could be. As if that wasn't enough, at a certain point it devolves into the theme tune from "It Aint Half Hot Mum" and a twangly sitar bit before starting all over again.*

Glad they didn't have to cancel the flypast - everything seemed to go well today.

*If you remember this you are old enough to remember the last Jubilee.
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
... and Windsor Davies shouting "Shaaaaaduuuuup!"
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I never realized what an earworm Land of Hope and Glory could be. As if that wasn't enough, at a certain point it devolves into the theme tune from "It Aint Half Hot Mum" and a twangly sitar bit before starting all over again.*

Glad they didn't have to cancel the flypast - everything seemed to go well today.

*If you remember this you are old enough to remember the last Jubilee.

I'm not sure how appropriate Land of Hope and Glory is. It was used as an anthem for England at the Commonwealth Games (Jerusalem is now used there and before every day's play at England's home cricket matches) while GSTQ is used for England's rugby union and football teams.

It's also the official anthem of the Conservative Party, while Jerusalem is sung at conferences of the Labour Party (and the W.I.)
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Was a cricket match planned, only to be rained off? That would make the ultimate English day.

Our match against VRA in Amsterdam was rained off - does that count?

AG

("Enter their dogs" [Snigger] [Snigger] [Snigger] [Snigger] [Snigger] )
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
... The worst of the BBC is still better than anyone else does over here too.

I'm not so sure any more. All the Queen's Horses, ITV's coverage of the Jubilee Pageant knocked the Beeb's efforts on Sunday into a cocked hat.

What did everyone think of the Service of Thanksgiving? My tuppence-worth:

Liturgy: mostly good; lessons should have been from the Authorised Version.

Choral singing: v. good (almost as good as the Royal Wedding from the Abbey). Pity they left out the trumpet obbligato bit in the Old Hundredth, and their descant to Cwm Rhondda wasn't a patch on James O'Donnell's one.

New anthem: I can't believe it's not Rutter. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.

It won't dry left hanging, you know! [Snigger]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Surely the Anglicans have to leave theirs up for at least the Octave!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
If you go out early when nobody else is around, the plastic bunting actually makes quite a clatter flapping in the breeze. I never realized how noisy it was.

Sorry Piglet, I'm afraid once the service got going I turned the TV off and went shopping. Superficial, perhaps, but I'd had the TV on for a while already to enjoy the anticipation and see who was arriving, and it was the fourth day of Jubilee in a row. It's all downhill from here now with a succession of sporting fixtures until September. [Snore]
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
What did everyone think of the Service of Thanksgiving? My tuppence-worth:

Liturgy: mostly good; lessons should have been from the Authorised Version.

Choral singing: v. good (almost as good as the Royal Wedding from the Abbey). Pity they left out the trumpet obbligato bit in the Old Hundredth, and their descant to Cwm Rhondda wasn't a patch on James O'Donnell's one.

New anthem: I can't believe it's not Rutter. [Big Grin]

Agree with most of above (definitely missed that obbligato!), although I was happy with the Bible version used (was it NRSV?) One point was that the language in the prayers of intercession varied between "trad." and "modern" - a bit bumpy.

I thought ++Rowan was excellent - not too sycophantic and he actually said something worth saying. Not that anyone will take any notice, sadly. The "Daily Mail" hated the sermon, so he probably got it right.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Surely the Anglicans have to leave theirs up for at least the Octave!

Mrs A was indignant about the skimpy quality of most of the bunting she's seen: smaller flags, she says, and further apart than e.g. in the glory days of '77. Hadn't noticed this myself but has anyone else?
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
We had bunting outside our church: when we unpacked it we discovered that the Union Flag motifs were only printed on one side, the other sides were blank. Not much good as it fluttered in the wind ...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The store Mrs Sioni works at had fabric with Union Flags on, but that, like the vast majority of fabric was only printed on one side too. It was the very devil to cut correctly as the flags weren't lined up near the edge!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
BT - I agree that the switching about from Cranmer's matchless prose to modern stuff was v. lumpy and a Bad Thing.

D's regular Wednesday organ recital today had a nice royal feel to it: Renaissance dances by Susato (as in The Six Wives of Henry VIII) and by Henry himself (Pastime with good company), French-stuffing music (the Agincourt Hymn [Big Grin] ), Vaughan Williams' variations on Greensleeves and Master Tallis's Testament by Howells among other things.

All good stuff. [Yipee]

[ 07. June 2012, 02:11: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We think the monsoon has officially arrived though it is not announced in the morning paper, hopefully it will be confirmed tomorrow morning. There was a LOT of rain overnight and the temperature dropped alarmingly - I will be getting a blanket out tonight.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yes, we're just waiting for the monsoon here too, according to Radio 4. It will be accompanied by 70 mph winds and probably the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.

I booked this week off but guess this is another day that isn't really suited to going off for a summer's day out. Are we getting the tail end of Beryl? I thought that had been and gone.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I rather think you're getting the tail end of Brenda!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rather think you're getting the tail end of Brenda!

[Eek!]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
[Overused]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
[Killing me]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
We once had a pet snail called Brenda ...
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
...red white and blue shell?
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Yes, we're just waiting for the monsoon here too, according to Radio 4. It will be accompanied by 70 mph winds and probably the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.

Sure, and my wife is face-painting for the Diocese all day and tomorrow at the Suffolk Show. She will be cold (although, just as I write, the sun has actually emerged for a moment!)

(You will realise from the comment above that my wife is not a True Baptist but Dangerously Ecumenical - or, as she prefers to describe herself, a spiritual mongrel).
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
...red white and blue shell?

Just for you Balaam ...


RWB Snail :0)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Aha! The announcement has been made - Monsoon has set in over southern and central Kerala - it has been a wet day - which is VERY GOOD! We love the rain.

My maths student didn't come to me all last academic year and still did very well at exam time but now he is in Xth standard, with the big exams in March, he is coming back to me again to get a bit more confidence, which is fun. Sadly the book I want to use as a guide isn't available yet but I hope to get a copy next week - the textbook his [English medium] school uses is NOT well-written. He comes from a lovely family, quite close neighbours of ours.

I made a classic error with him today and failed to read one of the questions in his coursebook properly so worked out quite a complex equation and then found the answer was something completely different so reread the question - DUH!! I told him to learn from that and always read the question thoroughly. The question they asked was actually quite simple.

Will he listen?

Probably not but he might.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The traditional English summer really has arrived.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
I'm sick of England now - can someone assure me it gets better? The last two times I've visted it's been in July/ August and the weather was generally warm and pleasant. Tell me I can look forward to that?

I'm finding it quite depressing being back in winter clothing, putting the heater on, having a lap rug on the couch etc.

And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Come to Canada where we often get 4 seasons of weather in a twenty-four hour period.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm sick of England now - can someone assure me it gets better? The last two times I've visted it's been in July/ August and the weather was generally warm and pleasant. Tell me I can look forward to that?

Yes you can - but there is NO predicting when!

quote:

And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)

There is only one way to describe English weather - completely unpredictable! I have an umbrella and sunglasses in my handbag at all times!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Come to Canada where we often get 4 seasons of weather in a twenty-four hour period.

I've been to Winnipeg in Autumn - it was pretty consistently amazingly cold! And very dry - my lips and nose etc all dried out. It was pretty and nice for a change but I don't think I could cope with months of snow.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It's not Wimbledon fortnight yet either, that starts next Monday
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)

Yes, but at least it's not boring. Now you see why everybody here talks about the weather so much.

In just a fortnight we should reach the solstice and the nights should start getting shorter, too. Given the way the weather is going at present, December should be hot and sunny, though the actual hours of daylight will probably be too short to do much about it.
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
British Weather is often very predictable - school holidays and bank holidays = rain.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Monsoon has set in over southern and central Kerala ...

Come down off that roof and put on some clothes, Wodders. [Snigger]
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Come to Canada where we often get 4 seasons of weather in a twenty-four hour period ...

As we say in Newfoundland, "if you don't like the weather at the front, look out the back".

After really heavy rain yesterday (I felt wetter after the dash from the car to the entrance at w*rk than I did coming out of the shower) which then turned to fog*, it's not been a bad day here, and is forecast to get better.

[Yipee]

* Fog is the St. John's default setting: we're not called Fog City for nothing. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I'm thinking of building an ark but perhaps a guttering repairer/clearer might be cheaper due to the pouring from above and the pool outside my front door. Fed up now - where is our summer??? Where is my bin??
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
Fed up now - where is our summer??? Where is my bin??

You have only to look to your sig. to find your answer!

[Snigger]
 
Posted by Silver Faux (# 8783) on :
 
Having bicycled a bit more than 40 KM today, I managed to disover how loud heavy rain sounds on the top of a bike helmet. [Eek!]
Oh well, at least no forest fires in the forecast at the moment!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
I'm sick of England now - can someone assure me it gets better? The last two times I've visted it's been in July/ August and the weather was generally warm and pleasant. Tell me I can look forward to that?

I'm finding it quite depressing being back in winter clothing, putting the heater on, having a lap rug on the couch etc.

And it's so confusing! The roses are blooming, the days are long, but the weather is like winter in Auckland, New Zealand! (tears hair and gnashes teeth)

Those times must have been a while back. July and August haven't been too special recently. Last year we just enough sun in the 'summer' to ripen the fruit so we had a bumper harvest of everything, so the farmers were grumbling about low prices!

Still, (I think) all of Britain is north of Canada's major cities, so we don't do so badly, most of the time. Just don't expect a climate, just weather. That why our Met. Office is the best in the world - they get more practice than anyone else!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and all of Britain is basically West Coast so not usually subject to the fierce sort of weather that east coasts can get - cyclones, hurricanes, etc - extreme weather is rare in UK. There is a massive difference here between east and west coasts, we're in the west, with devastating cyclones quite often [i.e. one every few years] ploughing into the east coast with resultant damage to crops and property - and sometimes loss of life.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
Fed up now - where is our summer??? Where is my bin??

Where are the snows of yesteryear?

As I used to remind my mother, we are as far north as Labrador. She never thanked me for this either. We had summer back in March, I think - this year's hot spring spell.

It would be nice to go out for the day, but it just isn't the weather for outdoor enjoyment. The Three Counties Show in Malvern is at the end of next week, but I'm probably not going this year. It can get very muddy quite quickly after rain and getting there could be tricky in this weather, anyway.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
If you want sunny (though not desperately hot) weather I'd wait for September and October. The tropical storm season will be over, so there should be few truly unpleasant westerlies and the winter chill will be to come. The kids will be back at school and the cricket season all but over.

The family joke was that we had better weather for my birthday (September 21st) than for my Dad's (June 23rd) and that was before anyone talked about Global Warming.
 
Posted by blackbeard (# 10848) on :
 
Long range weather forecast for Southern England is brought to you by Flanders and Swann.

In June, it rains and never stops.
Thirty days and spoils the crops.

In July, the sun is hot.
Is it shining? No, it's not!

August, dank and cold and wet,
Brings more rain than any yet.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...all of Britain is basically West Coast...

Not the bit I come from. [Big Grin]

The weather here's been rather odd. We had lots of sunshine in early May, some of it really hot (26° one day), but at the end of the month the temperature plummeted into single figures and hasn't really recovered. Socks, coats and even heaters have been re-deployed, which is rare for me. Usually once the socks come off they stay off until mid-October ...

A brave band of volunteers (of which I'm not one) is spring-cleaning the Cathedral tomorrow. As we're Anglicans, food has to be provided, which is where I come in, so there's a pot of Sandy's Spiced Winter Soup* merrily cooking on the stove. Should be ready for virtual tasting in a couple of hours.

I also baked a loaf the other day that didn't sink in the middle. [Yipee]

* I told you the weather had been cold. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It was apparently Corpus Christi on Thursday and it was translated to today here so a bit of a festival mass this morning with the centre 'aisle' at church covered with flower petals for the sacramental procession afterwards. The parish priest was there today, not the usual young assistant priest, and the altar boys found him a bit of a handful - they haven't had the chance to train him up properly in how things are done at Kizhacumpuram but they did surprisingly well, considering.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Corp. Christ. is always on Sunday chez nous. Not like the heretical others.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Miffy (# 1438) on :
 
Eleanor Jane, here's a handy fashion hint I once heard: When you're choosing summer clothes in the UK, never buy before you've considered what the garment looks like with a cardigan worn over it!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.

It won't dry left hanging, you know! [Snigger]

I thought of you when I went into the supermarket a couple of days ago. They've replaced the Jubilee bunting with football bunting.

Which will no doubt be replaced by Olympic bunting in due course. [Roll Eyes]

[ 10. June 2012, 17:16: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.

We can now. The local council kept their Jubilee celebrations till this weekend with a 3 day party in the park.

Day one was tribute bands for the Bee Gees and Abba.

Day two was the orchestra and chorus of Opera North.

Day three (today) was a concert with Tinchy Stryder headlining.

I hadn't realised Her Majesty was a Tinchy Stryder fan. [Biased]

Now that the Jubillee is over we can get back to what the summer is all about, SPORT.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Wouldn't a Queen tribute band have been more appropriate? [Big Grin]

I can even recommend one - Flash Harry - an excellent outfit from Northern Ireland, in whose backing group I sang a couple of times 20 years ago [Eek!] . It was easily the most fun I've ever had with my clothes on ...
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Could everyone please put their wet bunting away now.

Bunting stayed dry for the Jubilee concert and fireworks on Saturday but the flags are drying out now... they got drenched in Pimms [Frown]
Packing them up ready for next year when we celebrate the diamond jubilee of the coronation - this year is a rehearsal for that, isn't it?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'm getting used to my new location, in the same office but with a window seat. Less storage, but it isn't so bad.

It's been raining, more than drizzle, but the 'runners' have still gone out, returning like drowned rats.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
If it means we get some more bank holidays I'm all in favour of it.

Raining heavily here and has been all morning. Funny to think that yesterday morning was hot and sunny with people queuing for ice creams, sitting out in deckchairs by the river, taking boats out, etc – hard to believe when you look outside now.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Packing them up ready for next year when we celebrate the diamond jubilee of the coronation - this year is a rehearsal for that, isn't it?
You CANNOT be serious!!! [Eek!] [Biased]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Miffy:
Eleanor Jane, here's a handy fashion hint I once heard: When you're choosing summer clothes in the UK, never buy before you've considered what the garment looks like with a cardigan worn over it!

In my case, with tights under it (if it's a skirt), a wooly vest (if it's any kind of top), a cardigan and probably a coat!

What I'd quite like now is trick summer clothes i.e. a light coloured wool cardie, light coloured lacy patterned tights, pastel coloured trousers, floral silk scarves, shoes/boots that are waterproofish but not heavy black things etc. Things that look summery but work for the current weather. Unfortunately budget doesn't allow at this stage.

I did buy a lovely marled grey wool lap rug from the National Trust. I love the National Trust shops!

And I guess another plus is the trees etc are incredibly lush and green. I do enjoy that as I walk home from work beside the river.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:


What I'd quite like now is trick summer clothes i.e. a light coloured wool cardie, light coloured lacy patterned tights, pastel coloured trousers, floral silk scarves, shoes/boots that are waterproofish but not heavy black things etc. Things that look summery but work for the current weather. Unfortunately budget doesn't allow at this stage.

I did buy a lovely marled grey wool lap rug from the National Trust. I love the National Trust shops!

And I guess another plus is the trees etc are incredibly lush and green. I do enjoy that as I walk home from work beside the river.

If your budget runs to NT goods, I'm sure you can stretch to some trick summer things. I'd suggest shoes first as they are harder to find. Charity shops are another option (I kid ye not) but choose carefully. Go to the smarter towns and you'll find a better class of discard (ie, Winchester rather than Newport).
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
quote:
Packing them up ready for next year when we celebrate the diamond jubilee of the coronation - this year is a rehearsal for that, isn't it?
You CANNOT be serious!!! [Eek!] [Biased]
I don't think Daisymay was that far off the mark; when I mentioned on Facebook that I thought St. Paul's choir was nearly as good as the Abbey, a friend who sings in the Abbey choir replied that we'll have them to look forward to at the Coronation anniversary next year ... [Big Grin]

Bring it on ... [Smile]

It seems as if summer is gently nudging its way into Newfoundland - it turned into a really nice day today, and the forecast for the next wee while is getting better.

Mind you, my heart goes out to those of you back home who are thinking of fitting outboard-motors to your cars or investing in gopher-wood. [Eek!]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
When did Daisymay post, Piglet?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Hey Pete, she lives in Newfieland - they have a different reality over there!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yup, you're right, it's me again!

I just want to say I love the little bit of maths tutoring I do - it gives me a real buzz when my tutee gets what I'm saying to him - he had a lightbulb moment this evening when I showed him how something worked - it was brilliant!

In other news it rained like heck in the city today, incidentally when I was heading to buy the maths textbook for the tuition, and it was a very wet WW that climbed on the bus home, but it is warm wet so no harm done.

My eyes have been playing up today somewhat more than somewhat so I have HWMBO on standby for the morning to make an appointment for me with the Dr for Thursday, if they are still bad then, i.e. in the morning, and then I may have to go in and under the knife this very week [Eek!]

I know it will be so much better when it is done but...
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Laser surgery WW? Prayers that it goes well.

Icy weather out here with bright sunshine, avocados ripening on the tree, lemons in abundance. Rewrote the same damn chapter five times and it still doesn't work well.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's sort of squint surgery - she says 15 minutes or 20 at the outside - should be no problem.

What I have done when I've had problems like that with writing is give it up until the next day when it all seems to flow so much better - no idea why.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's sort of squint surgery - she says 15 minutes or 20 at the outside - should be no problem.

That sounds like a local anaesthetic job. I remember eye surgery under local, it isn't pleasant. Prayers ascending.

Due to a 3 day gap in what has become normal June weather, I've been able to get the grass mown and strimmed. The gopher wood supplier will have to wait for the order.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Good luck with that Welease Woderick
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Hope it works out okay WW. [Votive]

Re: clothes, I'll get there. We're still recovering from months of not working, the costs of moving country and coming over with just a suitcase each.

On another matter, I'm thinking of getting a bird feeder. Our neighbour has goldfinches and I want to steal some of them! I've been having a look on the RSPB site at recommended foods etc.

Anyone else enjoy England's lovely birds? I love them. I saw some young long tailed tits outside my work the other day. So cute! [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Votive] [Votive] For you WW

quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:

Anyone else enjoy England's lovely birds? I love them. I saw some young long tailed tits outside my work the other day. So cute!

Oh yes, I feed them every day. We get sparrows, blue tits, great tits, greenfinches, chaffinches, long tailed tits and robins.

Get a bird bath too - in dry spells it will be VERY popular (Yes there will be dry spells!)

I find cheap plastic bird feeders best because you can have plenty to easily keep them washed and clean. Enjoy!

(PS - cheap £1 bags of bird seed from Lidl are as good as anything, they seem to have all seeds mixed up so attract a great variety of birds :0)

[ 12. June 2012, 17:55: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
PPS - This bird bath is fantastic - looks good but is plastic and easy to clean. When the frosts come the ice just slides out. Heavy bird baths are hard to clean and de-ice.

<code>

[ 12. June 2012, 18:00: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Hmmmm.... I had one in my old place (rented). It does look very plastic, but is not so bad if half hidden under shrubs. When full of water (or ice) it is a bit unstable - but yes, you can usually get ice out without too much difficulty.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
When did Daisymay post, Piglet?

You're quite right, Pete - she didn't - it was Daisydaisy. I am a Piglet Of Very Little Brain and send my apologies to all concerned. [Hot and Hormonal]

Wodders - good luck with your eye surgery. [Votive]

Another nice day here - it's really getting summery now. [Smile]

After w*rk went shopping for a vacuum cleaner - we think we've settled on one of these. Having gone through two cheap models in less than nine years, we reckon it may be worth investing in a posh one. Anyone have any thoughts?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...Anyone have any thoughts?

At my age I try to avoid thinking as much as possible.

Actually I think what you really need isn't a Dyson but staff - it makes things so much easier!

Appointment made to see Dr Elizabeth tomorrow afternoon so things moving on there - in honour of which I think I shall give myself an easy day today.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
Hmmmm.... I had one in my old place (rented). It does look very plastic, but is not so bad if half hidden under shrubs. When full of water (or ice) it is a bit unstable - but yes, you can usually get ice out without too much difficulty.

Nonsense [Biased]

I even have huge wood pigeons bath in mine and it's perfectly stable - I re-fill it several times a day in dry spells, the birds splash so much out! I tell myself it looks like metal - that'll do for me :0)

I am up early and off to work today and for the rest of the week - a bit of a shock to my system, I'm really enjoying semi-retirement and w*rk is getting in the way a little!

<eta grammar>

[ 13. June 2012, 06:24: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Half day today - perfect summer weather, warm, strong sunshine. I've just borrowed the DVD of "War Horse" from the library and am wondering what I'm letting myself in for - is this going to be harrowing?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
The play wasn't, it was amazing, not seen the film.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... what you really need isn't a Dyson but staff ...

Right on, WW - when can you start? [Big Grin]

In fact D. usually does the hoovering - [Axe murder] - he doesn't mind it and I hate it with a passion.

It being another glorious day (up to 23°), we went down to the Irish Loop coffee house in the afternoon for Earl Grey and the best cinnamon-and-raisin bread pudding imaginable.

nomnomnom [Smile]

Ariel - I've never seen War Horse, but I understand it has a fairly high Kleenex factor - apparently it made the Duchess of Cambridge cry. I'm no good at sad films, especially ones that are sad about animals; I cried at the end of Charlotte's Web, and that was only a spider ... [Hot and Hormonal]

soft-hearted piglet
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... what you really need isn't a Dyson but staff ...

Right on, WW - when can you start? [Big Grin] ...
No problem, piglet, as I said the other week to someone, I think it was you, you send me the air tickets [Business Class] and I'll happily pop over and clean up for you.

[Big Grin]

- - - -

A Special Announcement

If you take antihistamines, or probably any tablet, make sure you place them on the back of your tongue - if they are not swallowed first time and dissolve on your tongue they can taste disgusting!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
War Horse will make you cry, if you are all inclined that way.
Just saying....
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
OK, so I should have qualified that comment about War Horse by saying that I don't cry easily, far more likely to cry with laughter
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
I couldn't even watch the trailer for Warhorse. My mother was taken to see Disney's Bambi as a child and said it was the most traumatic experience she could remember. My mother, sisters and myself all covered our eyes when anything involving animals came onto the screen or TV. A bit pathetic.

Snow on the mountains out here, blue cranes perching on fences, geometric tortoises floundering in wet ditches that are usually bone dry. The garden is full of tiny green-black tree frogs.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Oh the play of War Horse was just fabulous [Overused] and the puppetry amazing. Did anyone see Joey rearing up on the roof of the National Theatre, during the Water Pageant?
I only sniffed a bit near the very end - but I avoided the film as I thought it might be a real heartstring-tugging Disneyfied experience [Projectile]
Mrs. S, loving those puppets [Axe murder]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
piglet, I would send tickets for HWMBO and Mrs E as well. Not that I would want to cast any doubt over WW's domestic goddess credentials, but I think I can fairly say that they work well as a team.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thank you, moonlitdoor, that was most delicately put.
 
Posted by Nanny Ogg (# 1176) on :
 
It's a lovely warm and sunny day hear in the land of the Yellowbellies.

The town market was not as full of stalls as usual but I did get some fresh bread, pork chops and venison sausages as a treat [Smile]

There are plenty of ducks and ducklings on the river which I have to cross to get to the supermarket. Lots of people on the "ducksteps" watching and feeding them - I just hope my pesky cat doesn't go on the hunt when the crowds have gone [Frown]

Popped into the vet on the corner to get the cat a new collar as his last one broke to find a couple with a female Bichon and three 10 week old puppies. They were absolutely gorgeous and I fell in love with them [Smile] Apparently she had 7 pups in total with 3 already with new owners and the 4th was in the vet's room with his new owner being chipped etc. No wonder the mother was barking [Big Grin]

The good thing about living in a small town is that people do stop and chat, even with people they don't know. It makes the chore of shopping a pleasant experience. [Smile]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I agree with Nanny Ogg. A friend moved back to our small town after living in London for many years. She's amazed at how many people talk to her or even just smile when they pass her. It's something you take for granted until you move away.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Re: tickets for WW, HWMBO and Mrs. E. - as soon as the lottery numbers come up ... [Big Grin]

We bought the Dyson today, and once it was charged up (it's a cordless one that you charge like a mobile phone) D. had a brief go and pronounced it to be very good. At $350 (about £220) it bloody well ought to be. [Eek!]

As we had some corn-cobs and cooked chicken that needed using I tried my hand at making Chinese chicken-and-sweetcorn soup today, complete with egg-drop. It wasn't bad for a first go although my substitution of powdered ginger for fresh* didn't quite work as I have no idea how to convert quantities from fresh to dried.

All I know is I let the ginger cook a bit too long and I can still feel it in my throat two hours later.

* Pace Wodders - I don't usually stock fresh ginger as I'd probably never use it up before it went off, although this might convert me.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Don't worry about that, piglet, I understand - we grow it in the garden so no problems for us. When I lived in UK I used to keep a jar on minced ginger in the fridge which was sort of okay, though I'm not sure HWMBO would really agree.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
You can keep fresh ginger root for longer by putting a root of it in damp sand on a windowsill. It tends to grow, which gives you fresh growing ginger. I used to ship it home from London to my very rurally based mother to be shown a green leaf in a tub and fresh roots some time later.

The other way to go through ginger by the root is to make tea from it - grated ginger with honey in a cup, pour over hot water, add lemon juice. Much, much nicer than lemsip.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Also, you can freeze fresh ginger and grate it or chop it finely straight out of the freezer then put it back. That's how I did things when I was being a bit more fancy-pants.

Also, ducklings! Where are all the ducklings? I've seen about four in total this season and I have been looking...

And you may be interested to know I got a cheap plastic bird feeder and some of those seeds for goldfinches. We don't have any squirrels here and I wanted to get a cheap one to see if anyone nicks it (outside our flat is semi-public property). Just need to put our address on it with marker and see how we go.

Really should get dressed and go to work now, considering it's past 9! Bye...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Another test at the hospital today - something they injected into me and tested my eyes every 5- 10 minutes - gave me horrible stomach spasms and some weird muscle tremor for half an hour or so and it was all negative so it looks like I go under the knife next week!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another test at the hospital today - something they injected into me and tested my eyes every 5- 10 minutes - gave me horrible stomach spasms and some weird muscle tremor for half an hour or so and it was all negative so it looks like I go under the knife next week!

IANAD but could that be a muscle relaxant? A family member reacts to one or two of these and carries a card to that effect. The dramatic effect was that when the anaesthetic wore off she couldn't make any voluntary movements, though she could hear perfectly well!
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
That sounds really unpleasant WW [Votive]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
I agree with Nanny Ogg. A friend moved back to our small town after living in London for many years. She's amazed at how many people talk to her or even just smile when they pass her. It's something you take for granted until you move away.

That's Wales. A naturally chopsy lot. After eight years I was still a stranger in the Norfolk village I lived in.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
That sounds so horrible, Welease Woderick, best of luck for the next bits.

It's chatty here too, well it is where I am - could just be me growing up in villages and small market towns where I'm used to knowing people and chatting.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Another test at the hospital today - something they injected into me and tested my eyes every 5- 10 minutes - gave me horrible stomach spasms and some weird muscle tremor for half an hour or so and it was all negative so it looks like I go under the knife next week!

WW, one of my sons was admitted to hospital last year with excruciating stomach cramps and spasms. He was given a specific drug for the cramps but was also told he would have trouble staying awake because muscles in eyes were same type of muscle and would be affected too. Perhaps this is similar? Hope all goes well.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Goodness, WW, that seems a bit alarming. Best of luck next week though. [Votive]

Thank you all for the ginger tips; I understand you can store it in a jar with sherry, but it might have an interesting effect on the things you used it for. I may try the freezer option though - it sounds (a) sensible and (b) lazy, which suits me just fine ... [Big Grin]

D. is still waxing lyrical about the Dyson - he suggested it might convert me to hoovering [Eek!] but he's so impressed with it I doubt I'll get the chance.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

D. is still waxing lyrical about the Dyson - he suggested it might convert me to hoovering [Eek!] but he's so impressed with it I doubt I'll get the chance.

Don't call it hoovering! Not in earshot of James Dyson, the inventor of Dyson vacuum cleaners at any rate. He's very sensitive about this and hires lawyers to say so on his behalf.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Just call it dysoning and all will be well.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Well, it was pouring down during the night but the rain has stopped now - so that's better than the forecast.

[Smile]

I won't get the lawn mowed today though - too damp. So, a lazy day it is then!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Don't call it hoovering!
Not a term much used down here in my neck of the woods. We call it vacuuming. Just as we don't do laundry, we do the washing.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I have declared a Lazy Weekend. no vacuuming, hoovering, dysoning, laundry, washing, dusting, or whatever.

It's been a busy few weeks, and weekends, and I think getting through the last week of term reasonably relaxed(technically there's another two weeks, but most of my students' courses are finishing this coming Thursday.)and gearing myself up for being sent off to work with students who need my carefully judged assistance for completing final work, is the best policy.

Coffee and cake, anyone?
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Is it too late for coffee and cake? [Smile]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Never too late for coffee and cake in these parts.

I have enjoyed my lazy day!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I know Sir James wouldn't approve, but it's been called "hoovering" since long before I was doing it (although the term's not generally used on this side of the Pond either).

I had a fairly lazy day today: there was a supper at the Cathedral this evening given by the organisers of the Crypt Tea Room to thank everyone who volunteered* last summer. My contribution was a spinach, mushroom and mandarin orange salad, which seemed to go down well; there wasn't much left by the time I got to the buffet table.

* As I'm in the choir and we do one of the weeks, the term "volunteer" isn't strictly accurate; "conscript" might be nearer the mark. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by chive (# 208) on :
 
I have tickets to see Leonard Cohen in concert in September. I am so happy, happy, happy, happy. I saw him in Edinburgh a few years ago and he was fabulous and I never thought I'd see him again.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Hi Amber - great to see you!

And its never too late for coffee and cake! Or shortbread?

Bits of blue sky today, so I really hope the rain has gone for a bit!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Just finished watching "War Horse". What an amazing film, keeps you hooked right to the end wondering if the pair will make it back intact.

The story had personal resonance for me as my grandfather was in the Artillery in WWI and had a horse he was very attached to. Unfortunately the horse got injured in battle and my grandfather had to put it down - which as you'll appreciate was really difficult for him. So it was particularly interesting to see this film - and I'm grateful that it wasn't as harrowing as I thought it might be. Thanks for all your comments earlier!
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Ooh, cake, that sounds fabulous! Had a huge roast for lunch (chicken but they gave me a yorkshire pudding for some reason?!) so I don't feel like much. I am, however, always up for cake.

WW- maybe some cake might help you feel better in the short term? It does cure most ills...

I'm so glad I've got tomorrow off. Worked Saturday (two hours' drive away) then was on the door for the choir concert. Gutted I couldn't sing in it ('cos I had to miss the dress rehearsal) and they're now in recession for three months! And I heard today that Uni is off for four months!! What's with this, Britian?

In New Zealand, they tend to close down for summer holidays for January but life goes on after about the 20 somethingk. No choirs stop for a third of the year and Uni holidays are about 8-9 weeks depending on exams.

I was going to say that I don't know what to do with myself, but I've allowed myself to get roped into fundraising for the church roof, so that'll keep me busy, I think. A big target and a shortish timeframe... fun, fun!

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Son's idea of a Fathers' Day present was to take me on a cycle ride. Very enjoyable but keeping up with a 26 year old on a racing bike when I was on a hybrid, was not easy, even though he wasn't really trying. I was knackered.

Good news is that when we were out LRP made some lemon drizzle cake and some welsh cakes. [Smile]
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Ooh, cake, that sounds fabulous! Had a huge roast for lunch (chicken but they gave me a yorkshire pudding for some reason?!) so I don't feel like much. I am, however, always up for cake.


You never need an excuse for a Yorkshire Pudding. You certainly don't need roast beef to justify it...
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
The traditional way of eating Yorkshire Pudding is as a starter with gravy. The roast (which can be anything, not just beef) comes afterwards, without any Yorkshire puddings.

Sadly, even in Yorkshire, Yorkshire puddings tend to be served with the roast these days. Another tradition gone [Frown]

A bit of a cross cultural thing, I enjoy large Yorkshire puddings filed with Irish stew. Delicious.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Bits of blue sky today ...

We had a whole blue sky today. [Yipee]

Slightly sad day for the choir today as we said farewell to one of our choral scholars who is going to Ontario to do post-grad study. She has the voice of an angel and will be sorely missed. [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I apologise in advance for upsetting Balaam but Yorkshire Pudding can also be smeared with jam and served as dessert!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Smeared with jam? surely you mean to be a bit more generous than that with one of those nice fruity jams?

How is HWMBO's mum?
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
As a child I had Yorkshire pudding with Golden Syrup. But not at my Mother's. She would be horrified.

I had a good friend's mother who knew what sort of sensible thing to give growing girls!! [Smile]

It has started a bit sunny today. I have no faith at all in it lasting longer than mid-morning. [Frown]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Weather should be a little bit mixed today but we get summer for Tuesday and Wednesday, after which we get deluged on Thursday and it's back to rain and gales. I can't keep track of it, but it always rains around Wimbledon anyway.

I wish you hadn't mentioned Yorkshire Pudding. I sometimes buy one that comes ready filled with roast beef, which is lovely.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Update on the family:

HWMBO's mum came out of hospital this morning - she was loads brighter when we saw her in hospital last night. She has been given a list of dos and don'ts which she will probably ignore. I believe she is currently resting.

HWMBO's brother also diabetic and with occasionally nasty figures has managed to make a major cut on one of his fingers so there is a concern about that and will it heal okay?

The rest of us are fine at the moment and awaiting my hospital trip at the end of the week after which I shall be given a list of do and don'ts which I shall probably ignore as well - I am not a good patient!

The week is forecast to be a wet one - we have not had much rain really so far so are looking forward to a bit of a deluge - looking at the paper over lunch I see we have so far only had 43% of 'normal average' rainfall for this date so more would be welcome.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Did anyone see Joey rearing up on the roof of the National Theatre, during the Water Pageant?
To answer my own question - I caught it on the coverage of the Queen's Birthday Parade on Saturday at Miss S's house. It was fab!

And the Birthday Parade took us back to the day when we took the Dowager Mrs S (much the same age as HMtQ) to the Parade, which was a truly amazing day [Axe murder]

Mrs. S, still awestruck by Joey [Yipee]
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
And I heard today that Uni is off for four months!! What's with this, Britian?

In New Zealand, they tend to close down for summer holidays for January but life goes on after about the 20 somethingk. No choirs stop for a third of the year and Uni holidays are about 8-9 weeks depending on exams.

Yup - we got rid of our students last week, don't get them back til the 17th September. Seems long to me!

Jen
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
As a rough guide, the posher an Emglish university is the longer its vacations are and the shorter its terms.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I apologise in advance for upsetting Balaam but Yorkshire Pudding can also be smeared with jam and served as dessert!

I have known households in which Yorkshire pudding is served before the roast, with the roast and afterwards, all in a desperate bid to satisfy vast appetites.

I believe the tradition is to serve it with onion gravy before, then with the meat gravy with the roast.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!

Will have to make do with something else... maybe stewed apples 'cos I've got some apples that are past their best.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
chive, I am spectacularly jealous you are seeing Leonard Cohen. We have the DVD of the last tour and it looked amazing.

I'd offer some Hotel Chocolat truffles I got as a belated birthday present, but, er, well, even the virtual ones seem to have disappeared. Sorry* and all that.

* [Big Grin] <-- me looking very penitent, especially after the rum truffle.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!

Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!

Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
[Eek!] Poor wee dog. [Frown]

We're beginning to do a spot of clearing (maybe I should visit the de-cluttering thread) in preparation for The Chap replacing the front windows while we're away. Dustbin-bags are filling and multiplying and our bedroom seems to have grown by quite a large degree ... [Big Grin]

The new bright-red siding, which so far reaches about a third of the way up the house, is apparently eliciting cries of "awesome!"* from passing teenagers.

* I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon. [Cool]

PS Glad to hear HWMBO's mum's doing well. [Votive]

[ 19. June 2012, 01:54: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
piglet thinks that awesome is
quote:
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.

Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning. [Tear]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Eleanor Jane:
Yum, I've just had dinner and a yorkie with jam/ golden syrup sounds pretty good to me!

Well, each to their own, but you might have a bit of a job getting all the jam and syrup out of its fur...
Nope, I just eat it fur and all! [Big Grin]

On another note, what a gorgeous day today! I had bare arms for a bit! And a lovely trip to Cardiff on the train for a meeting. I'm still excited by being able to go to another country so easily.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I think I must be getting old. My youngest colleague looked at me askance at lunchtime and said "It's hot outside, you won't need that jacket". I got outside and a cold wind cut through my summer clothing making me devoutly thankful I was indeed wearing said jacket.

I don't really call it hot until we get blazing sunshine in a cloudless sky and intense, direct heat shimmering off the sands in front, mirages on the way home, fellow commuters wilting and falling off their camels before we reach the oasis, etc etc.

Still, it's a change from the rainy season.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Interesting day today. Day off w**k.
My upstairs has been cleaned, courtesy of myself and my niece. Took day off to encourage and help her and wear myself out 'cos I'm getting on now and have dodgy joints. Hope I can walk tomorrow. I don't think I have ever climbed stairs so many times in one day in my house to help [Biased]
Planned appointment for quote for a few replacement windows came along too - 5 in all. Ouch!! Then another off the wall offer from a wandering salesman who wanted to clean my guttering.
I accepted the guttering minstrel - but was it wrong for me to get the rubbish from my guttering put into next doors' bin because mine is full and they are away???
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I don't think so, Enigma - after all, who's going to know? Glad you mentioned it though - it's reminded me that I must put out the sundry bruck* that we've bagged up in the last day or two as the bin-men come on Wednesday.

It was another glorious day here - sun beaming out of an almost cloudless sky. [Yipee]

Now I must stop messing about on here and go and see to the chicken stock (straining of).

* bruck n. rubbish, garbage (Orcadian dialect, may or may not come from Old Norse [Big Grin] )
 
Posted by Campbellite (# 1202) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
piglet thinks that awesome is
quote:
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.

Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning. [Tear]
If I am not very much mistaken, that is the whole point of teenage slang.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Campbellite:
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
piglet thinks that awesome is
quote:
I believe this is among the highest accolades in the teenage lexicon.

Unfortunately, by the time we oldies pick up on teenage slang, they've changed the meaning. [Tear]
If I am not very much mistaken, that is the whole point of teenage slang.
'Awesome' is current slang amongst Xtian yoof and it isn't reserved for the Almighty (Nando's is 'awesome', amazingly). IMNSHO that confirms it is obsolete amongst mainstream yoof.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... it is obsolete amongst mainstream yoof.

So am I. [Devil]

It was another lovely day here today although I didn't see much of it - w*rk in the morning, lunch in a v. good (and v. cheap) Indian restaurant, then down to the Cathedral to type Sunday's bulletin. The next one will be a generic one to cover the summer, and give me my Thursday afternoons back for a couple of months.

I've just made some chicken liver pâté for nibbling on while waiting for the steaks to cook at the Cathedral barbecue on Saturday; by the time you're reading this it should be ready for virtual tasting.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I can't understand what mainstream yoof say! I have to ask my grandson to speak slowly (and he is 20 and works in a posh call centre, so goodness knows how he manages to be the best in his team!!)

But to hear them around here and they may as well be speaking gutteral high German.

My days of being yoof are long gone. [Help]

Though come to think about it, yoof hadn't been invented when I was in my teens. You were children at school until you left and then metamorphosed into adults.

Happy days!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
They (the yoof) don't want you to understand - mostly - except when they do*! I can't remember what it was recently, but one of the kids said something very yoofspeak to me and I answered in kind, it was quicker. The look of horror on his face was really quite funny.

* unpicking the speech from a very indignant teenager and working out why they are so cross that they can't translate into normal English and what needs dealing with ...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm just back from D's Last Night of the Proms concert - all the usual stuff played on the organ (and one of the choir sopranos singing Rule, Britannia!), flag-waving and teddy-bears (people bring teddies to donate to the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary to give to children who have been in accidents or otherwise traumatised).

He also played his transcription of Vaughan Williams' Variations on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, which was spine-tinglingly sublime.

[Axe murder]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I love that Teddy idea! I ought to be taken up here - at least in Cheshire if nowhere else!

Went last night to - well, not sure what to call it! There was a "Comedy Duo" who did 25 acts in 25 minutes, and I laughed till I cried! Then after a very noisy interval with bar, we had Jo Bell, a poet writing very much from the woman's point of view, who again was very funny - well the women were in hysterics, but the men looked a bit sheepish! And then John (?Jon) Hedley, another poet, billed as a Bard, who was also very funny, and rather rude, but he had a habit of dropping his voice on the punch line, which meant that I missed it. Also he played a small guitar as he "sang", and very little of which I could make out. But what I did get was exceedingly good!

I went with two female friends, and didn't get back until after 11.00 pm to the concern of Mr. N!

Thoroughly enjoyable! Not musical, Piglet, but very contemporarily literary!
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sorry, that should be John HEGLEY!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yesterday we went out for a pub lunch to celebrate a colleague's birthday. I had large baked mushrooms stuffed with Stilton and Cajun spices and a side order of chips. Unexpectedly, utterly delicious, one of those things you eat until you're stuffed and then wish there was more of. Luckily we had pre-ordered as the pub was so crowded that there was an hour's wait for food if you hadn't!

The closest I got to any comedy venues or choral performances was watching "The Full Monty" on television in the evening. Not sure if that counts, but it was a good laugh.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
No choral performances here today either, but we had the annual Cathedral barbecue and auction this evening, which was quite fun, and involved rather more wine than a sensible piglet ought to have had ... [Hot and Hormonal]

Quite large choral performances tomorrow for the Patronal Festival: Hassler's Missa secunda and Tallis's O sacrum convivium in the morning and Byrd's Second Service and This is the record of John by Gibbons in the evening.

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
The annual Cathedral barbecue ... involved rather more wine than a sensible piglet ought to have had.

Did that make you an insensible piglet, then?

What will the Methodists be saying?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Another long day at Boogieville mansions. Mr Boog is on a bike ride (USA coast to coast, Seattle to Boston). It's quite nice making my own routines - but I do have a naughty tendency to waste time online!

The rain has stopped here but there was terrible flooding just over the border. No lives lost, thankfully, but many homes swamped - very sad.

I am having the biggest de-clutter of my life! It's really easy with just me in the house. So, up and attem!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Well done Boogie! Glad you are still above the flood level. Very nasty in some places. Thankfully we are on a hill in this part of the town.

Its not raining now, so going to the monthly Sunday Market as it is special today - its Barnaby! [Biased]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I came out of hospital yesterday and felt really off but am a bit better this afternoon - I have some stitches in my eye for the next three weeks and the ends rub against the inside of my eyelids every time I blink - not much fun!

Anyway I am logged on for a little bit and shall then have another lie down.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
I've had painful eye surgery too WW -- sympathy and prayers. Eye drops helped me a little.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The eye drops are great - I have two sorts, one twice a day and the other four times a day and tablets, too. They looked after me very well but these things are perforce uncomfortable. Still the surgeon was confident there will be some improvement though she was careful to say that she didn't guarantee perfection. She said it will take 2 - 3 weeks to stabilise.

AND there was a wonderful unexpected bonus of a refund f nearly 20% of the cost, which we had to pay upfront. That was a most cheerful moment.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Stitches sound pretty nasty, Wodders - hope things improve soon. Good luck with the decluttering, Boogie. I have been busy in small doses over the weekend: lots of tiresome jobs done, including some pure silk trousers that have been waiting for a patch for at least two years.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I came out of hospital yesterday and felt really off but am a bit better this afternoon - I have some stitches in my eye for the next three weeks and the ends rub against the inside of my eyelids every time I blink - not much fun!

Ouch. It sounds as much fun as conjunctivitis. I really hope the op has been a success and that once the stitches are out, you'll find it all an improvement.
 
Posted by angelica37 (# 8478) on :
 
I've not been around on the ship much recently but felt this might be the only place I could say that although my son and his lovely girlfriend are making wedding plans and very happy, I am feeling a melancholy sense of failure because they are planning to have a humanist wedding.
I know I shouldn't but I feel he is rejecting the faith he was brought up in and which is very important to me
 
Posted by Polly Plummer (# 13354) on :
 
Angelica, I've been there. All you can do is go along with what they want and rejoice with them - and pray - and wait and see how things turn out in years to come.

I do find secular weddings has a big hole in them where God isn't, or rather isn't seen by people.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Wonders, I wish you a speedy recovery.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Ouch. It sounds as much fun as conjunctivitis. I really hope the op has been a success and that once the stitches are out, you'll find it all an improvement.
Well, I was thinking stitches after childbirth! Another sensitive area.

Sending you best wishes for a speedy recovery WW, and a really wonderful outcome for you.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... rather more wine than a sensible piglet ought to have had.

Did that make you an insensible piglet, then?
No - just a slightly hungover one. [Ultra confused]

quote:
What will the Methodists be saying?
They can say what they like - I'm an Anglican. [Devil] Patronal Festival services safely dispatched - especially a v. nice Tudor evensong. [Smile]

Wodders - that sounds very "ouch". The first time I had eye surgery (over 30 years ago) they cut my eyelashes beforehand - a rather surreal experience demanding total trust on the part of the patient. [Eek!] The new ones started to grow back right away and caught on the gauze eye-pad, which itched like mad, so you have my sympathy.

Angelica, you have my sympathy too; my nephew got married in a humanist ceremony. Lovely setting and all that (it was in a ruined castle) but as PP says, the absence of any reference to God does leave a gaping hole.

Orkney seems to have had an explosion of pagan weddings lately. My dad sends me copies of the local paper, and nearly every other week there seems to be a photograph of rather Gothic-looking people who have been "legally married in a pagan ceremony" - usually at the Ring of Brodgar. TBH I doubt if many of the protagonists are locals - I imagine they like the idea of getting married in an ancient stone circle and you can't get that close to Stonehenge.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My black eye is now developing nicely but doesn't look as if it will be nearly as dramatic as I had hoped!

From when I got up yesterday morning my recovery seems to have been remarkable and I think it should continue providing I take care to avoid strong light [not easy living where I do so am keeping curtains closed and am wearing medical strength dark glasses when going out] and don't spend too long at a time in front of the monitor and it's a great excuse for having a lie down on a regular basis!

I took loads of photos in hospital but sadly not one of the lovely Krishna, a little lad who had a sibling in for for a squint operation and who hung round the nurses station on our bit of our floor. I thought he was possibly 8 or maybe 10 years old so was flabbergasted when HWMBO asked him and he is 12! One of the tiniest 12 year olds ever, I reckon. He got to know everyone on the floor and all the parents were saying goodbye to him as they headed off home - he accompanied us downstairs to the bill payments section when we went to get our refund [70 quid!].

Most traumatic moment was coming out of the theatre suite when there was a dad carrying his screaming 3[?] year old who had woken up after surgery and couldn't understand why he couldn't see anything at all - both eyes were covered and he was kicking up a heck of a fuss - in a sense who can blame him? It must have been a terrible shock.

Silliest moment was when a nurse knocked on our door to remove my dressings and clean my eye on Sunday morning BEFORE IT WAS LIGHT! We told her to come back later, she didn't seem to understand the problem.

On my second visit to the theatre, on Sunday, the doctor said she found my accent difficult so could I please speak more slowly, which I thought was quite funny - she is lucky I wasn't speaking scouse!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Glad you're recovering well, and hope you keep this up.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Do hope your eye is continuing to improve, WW - anything to do with eyes is quite nasty, I think.

Especially if it involves stitches [Eek!]

It is not raining here - so far. Believe me, that is a very positive statement!! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
When I did my first second degree, we had a lot of Sri Lankan students on the course. Sri Lankan is polysyllabic language so they are used to speaking fast. About half way through the year the request came from the English students, would the Sri Lankan's mind speaking English a bit more slowly we are not able to keep up.

Jengie
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... would the Sri Lankan's mind speaking English a bit more slowly we are not able to keep up ...

I sometimes get asked that, usually when I'm just back from visiting Orkney, and my accent gets stronger ... [Big Grin]

Glad to hear you're improving, WW - long may it continue. [Smile]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I am deeply grateful I'm having a day's annual leave today.

It's silly season at work, and the bit of the year I hate most. I've got my usual students off my hands, finished and completed, and now my attention is directed to those who have not finished....

My students, after a year in my company, are trained in the ways of a Japes and the paths of righteousness. These ones are not, and I've not time to train them or be nice. So, it was a simple policy of "Fine, it's either do as you were politely asked to do (stop eating your sandwich lunch in a computer room/reading Fifty Shades of Grey* which does not contain any information about your coursework/move to a different computer because you can't stop talking and distracting other people who are working) or I get your tutor." Which they didn't expect me to follow through with.

It was a long, long day.

*It was a dilemma. On the one hand, they were Reading A Book. Which delighted my heart. On the other hand, they each had about 8-10 outstanding pieces of course work to get finished.

They were deeply confused that I identified the book instantly without seeing the cover, just by looking over their shoulder and seeing the title at the top of the page. I'd already worked it out though...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Went to the local farm shop today to find this notice:

"No duck eggs for 6 months - the fox ate them - sorry."

Such is life in the countryside, but I feel it's the fox who should be apologizing.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
First catch your fox........... [Help]

Poor ducks! And poor Farmer for loss of income. [Frown]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Such sweet finches! We have a birdfeeder out and I'm sitting here with warm (muggy but I don't mind 'cos I'm from Auckland) air coming in, cheeping birds in the trees and two beautiful little goldfinches pecking busily at the seed about 8 feet away from the sofa. It's been up about three days and they ate almost the whole lot!

I'm going to leave it a couple of weeks to see if anyone pinches it (we're on semi-public land) then get a feeder and seeds for blue tits. There are less tits than finches around here but here's hoping.

That's all. Just wanted to share the cute. [Smile]

Cheers,
EJ
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
@Japes, "at least they were reading..." All you need now is for them to read something well written.

And Wodders, how's the eye getting along?
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Big Grin] One day, maybe!!

I did tell them I was delighted to see them reading, before suggesting they got on with some work... I believe progress is being made on the work front, though.

It was back to the train today after three weeks with a car. I'd handed it back quite happily every year so far, but this year, I find I'm missing it and went quite reluctantly to the train this morning. I think saving up for a car is my next big project.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm doing okay thanks Balaam, no painkillers last night and I didn't miss them - WooHoo!! Vision is also, I think, improved a little - Dr says it will take 3 weeks to see full effects and it is not quite a third of that yet.

Globalisation: IKEA are hoping to invest 1.5 billion Euros opening 25 stores in India and I am trying to work out if I like the idea or not. I'm not even sure if any of those stores will be anywhere near us but... Anyway the reality is that if they do come here then lots of small furniture, etc. shops will be put out of business.

At last we seem to be getting a decent amount of rain - we need several days of solid rain to hit target.

In other news a company here is offering a 10.2 inch HD laptop with memory expandable up to 1GB for under 60 quid!

[ 28. June 2012, 04:01: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Wod - glad the eyes are improving!

quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
It was back to the train today after three weeks with a car. I'd handed it back quite happily every year so far, but this year, I find I'm missing it and went quite reluctantly to the train this morning. I think saving up for a car is my next big project.

It's not a bad thing to do on a summer's morning when it's bright and warm, and it gives you the option of getting out at lunchtime too. It's less fun in winter, especially when it's dark and conditions are less easy. At least with the train you can fall asleep, eat, or read, and the chance of getting stuck behind a snail-pace lorry with an annoying motto on its backside for the next three miles is a lot less.

Having said that, a car is certainly nice for weekends and for getting to places that trains don't go to. I have driven to work occasionally, but the A34 seems to get more than its share of accidents and long delays so I have no plans to give up my season ticket in the near future.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
No painkillers last night and I didn't miss them - WooHoo!! Vision is also, I think, improved a little - Dr says it will take 3 weeks to see full effects and it is not quite a third of that yet.

This is Good News!

Well done WW!


[Yipee]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Boogie - you weren't anywhere near the gas explosion in Shaw, were you????

It must be awful not being able to get back into your house because its unsafe!

[Votive] for all
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Boogie - you weren't anywhere near the gas explosion in Shaw, were you????

It must be awful not being able to get back into your house because its unsafe!

[Votive] for all

Thank you for asking - Shaw is not far away but I wasn't affected in any way.


[Votive]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Looks like it's the West Midlands turn. Are people all right? A colleague emailed a picture of the oncoming storm from Coventry which looked a bit worrying, then it broke...

Storm pics

Article
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
We had thunder today, but not a drop of rain.

As for the explosion, I was cycling on the road between Denshaw and Delph at the time. Still there's a hill in the way, but I was probably the nearest.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My brother and his wife have recently moved to Shropshire but I think [and hope] the storm will have passed a little to the south of where they are - they are close to the Cheshire border.
 
Posted by Drifting Star (# 12799) on :
 
Ludlow and Bridgnorth were badly affected, but further north in Shropshire less so, I think. The sun is shining on the far west of the West Midlands now. I think the Durham/Newcastle area is currently getting the torrents of rain and the thunder.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Back to bright sunlight here.

Though we had no rain, my son says they had plenty 4 miles away in the next valley. Nothing like the rain that caused last week's flooding though.
 
Posted by Ceannaideach (# 12007) on :
 
What a change in the weather this afternoon - thunder, lighting, huge hail (size of ice cubes), torrential rain and massive double flood. Now followed by blue sky, sunshine and parish home group BBQ

Why a double flood? The first flood was just from the run off from the hill which caught the post office. We're a little way up the hill and still had a mini stream of water pouring down into our garden which may have flooded the house if we hadn't noticed and opened the back gates and lifted up the man hole covers to let it drain away. Never seen anything like it!

That had just started to go down when the nearby stream burst its banks like stink and poured half the north sea down the road. (Well maybe not that much but there was still a brick load of water thundering down the road). Current was swirling so strong by the bottom of the church path that we nearly lost our footing even though the water just reached the top of our wellies. So strong was this vast flow of water that two heavy plant pots went sailing by before being fielded by someone.

Post Office flooded, local pub flooded and some houses near the low point of the village. Worst part is some of the houses have been refused flood insurance.

But as quick as the torrent appeared it has disappeared, just leaving the mess and mud to clean up.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I seem to have been very lucky, in that I didn't have to go out today at all, and bad as it has been here, it's not been as bad as other places around the city. Certainly not good travel reports on my normal train route.

I did have to sweep a bit of water out of the back door, but that's normal when it rains! (I really must see to that sometime..)

I've made the most of being stuck in by moving furniture, doing my End Of Year sort of paperwork and files, and sorting the recycling. I am exhausted.

One day, my grass will get its third cut of the year.
 
Posted by Doc Tor (# 9748) on :
 
Tyneside is pretty much underwater. It took about 15 minutes.

I live at the top of the highest hill in the borough. [Razz]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Votive] for all of you under rather more H2O than you'd like. They've apparently had it really bad in Northern Ireland; friends of ours in Belfast who were abroad on holiday came back yesterday to a flooded house ... [Frown]

It's been moist and muggy today - around the 20° mark but intermittently wet. We're just back from v. nice dinner in a restaurant with two other couples (to celebrate all our wedding anniversaries: theirs were respectively late April and early June and ours is on Monday).

[ 29. June 2012, 01:59: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My brother and wife in northern Shropshire had sunshine all day! Weird or what?

Today I must go and have a haircut - it is getting to the itchy stage so back to a Number One! I'll get a shave, too, as they always do it better than I can and it feels so luxurious having a professional shave - and it costs less than 50 pence - less than a quid for shave and haircut.

I like spoiling myself occasionally - well, quite often really.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I too badly need my hair tidying up - would that it would cost me 50p! Unfortunately not. Just going to ring to make appointment for tomorrow.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The barber's shop is a sort of gathering place for men in the village - there are two or three to choose from but the one I use, just by the mosque, has TV on all day [probably most do] so those who aren't busy pop in to watch TV and chat to whoever is about - it is all very pally - BUT they always seem a bit overawed when I appear, even though I'm a regular.

Anyway, it was all done and dusted in pretty quick time and, with a small tip, just topped the one pound mark. I feel so much better with it all chopped off almost down to the skin - long hair is no fun in this climate.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I know it is no consolation to your friends, Piglet, but to open something called Belfast Titanic is asking for it to be underwater.

I found it ironic that when the Prime Minister was in this area at the scene of last weeks floods that the rain would miss him altogether.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We have a peacock!

Well, not us personally but one of the little beauties has appeared in the grounds of our local temple - I hope everyone going to have a look won't scare it off - and I hope it doesn't start screaming at some silly hour of the morning as it is probably only a hundred yards from the house! They can make a horrible din that sounds a bit like a child screaming.

Let's hope that peahen or two joins it and we can have a little colony of them - we don't often see them around as we are bit too urbanised even if they never really seem to worry too much about people.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Talking about animal noises - birthing season for cows wakes me up at night where I live. At least I think that's what it is - otherwise I have some very unfortunate neighbours.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Perhaps more likely that they have taken the calves away from the cows?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I love the idea of having a peacock living nearby - they're just so impressive. I remember seeing one (I think it was in the Isle of Man) proudly strutting his stuff and being cordially ignored by a nearby pea-hen.

We assured him that we were impressed, even if she wasn't ... [Big Grin]

Glorious day here today - 23° and mostly sunny. I took a stroll along Water Street (where there are one or two nice shoe shops) but didn't spend a cent - nothing that appealed to me would have appealed to my bank manager.

frugal, virtuous piglet [Angel]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Having worked somewhere where there were a pair of male peacocks, the noise is pretty horrible, I'm not sure the beautiful tails are worth the noise.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and they don't have the tails all the time anyway - only at mating time.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Peacocks do scream a lot. There are a few places round here that have them - one is a scenic sort of pub on the outskirts of Oxford, where the peacocks wander round the pub grounds. If you sit out (which people do because there are scenic views of the river), chances are they'll wander past your table at some point. They mostly seem to ignore people rather than beg for peanuts, bits of lunch etc, but they do sometimes have arguments with each other, scream, chase each other and then at least one flies off in a huff. They're impossible to ignore.

A peacock in full flight is a sight indeed, even if only for a short distance.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
There is a restaurant near us called the peacock and they keep several in the grounds. Trouble is they poo on the patio - spoils the ambiance somewhat.

[Smile]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Went to see an open air performance of Macbeth at Leeds Castle last night. The peacocks crying in the background added exactly the right atmosphere. An altogether good occasion.

And yes, we saw wild peacocks flying in Nepal years ago - unforgettable sight.

M.
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
There used to be a peacock in Reepham in Norfolk who would stand with his tail in the road - and watch cars driving over it! Scruffiest peacock I've ever seen.
There was also a family of feral guinea pigs who would come out and scurry across the lawn in the evenings just by my friend's house.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
My Gran had a peacock on the roof of her bungalow for a while (in East Anglia). It was a noisy bugger and she was generally glad to see the back of it. [Cool]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
There is a restaurant near us called the peacock and they keep several in the grounds. Trouble is they poo on the patio - spoils the ambiance somewhat.

Yes, on the other hand it would be quite annoying to have to queue for the loo and find a bunch of peacocks all queuing up in front of you.

And I bet they'd take their time in front of the mirrors, too.
 
Posted by Chorister (# 473) on :
 
I wasn't glad to see the backs of the amorous peacocks which were parading around the outdoor seating area of the cafe where I had my cream tea. You don't want to know what they were doing, but it certainly wasn't poohing, and I saw rather too much of peacock rear ends. Quite put me off my clotted cream.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I don't like peacocks. Yes, I know they are very beautiful, but that doesn't make me like them.
One of the funniset things I've seen was a peacock displaying at Cardiff Castle and being blown over by the wind. As I say, I don't like peacocks.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I am onto a new chapter of trying to convert the world to English cooking. My friend invited me round his house tomorrow night to watch the football and then went "oh crap, there's no food in the house, my wife's going to kill me for inviting guests". (They are Malagasy and the idea that we could just sit on the sofa and watch the football and there not be food is unthinkable [Biased] )

I volunteered to bring something (English) and have now got a bowl of Coronation Chicken sitting in my fridge. It's the Hairy Bikers recipe, and must have been updated a bit because there is mango in it and I have a feeling most British people in 1952 had never seen a mango in their lives. I believe French people will also be present. I shall come back with a progress report.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Hope all goes well with coronation chicken. I love it! It is one of my specialities but never the same twice because I have no real recipe - just see what I've got and add curry seems to work for me.
Andy Murray in Wimbledon is a trial!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
There is a restaurant near us called the peacock and they keep several in the grounds. Trouble is they poo on the patio - spoils the ambiance somewhat.

Yes, on the other hand it would be quite annoying to have to queue for the loo and find a bunch of peacocks all queuing up in front of you.

And I bet they'd take their time in front of the mirrors, too.

As the peacocks would be going to the Gents I can't see how it would affect Boogie.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
Hope all goes well with coronation chicken. I love it! ... just see what I've got and add curry seems to work for me.

Not a good approach if you are out of chicken.
quote:

Andy Murray in Wimbledon is a trial!

Singles is a trial. I find doubles far more interesting.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I just Googled the Hairy Bikers' coronation chicken recipe - it's a hell of a lot more complicated than mine. I just mix chopped left-over chicken with some halved seedless grapes and stir in mayonnaise that's been mixed with curry powder and lemon juice.

It's very nice (especially on sandwiches) but maybe it's not Coronation chicken after all ... [Hot and Hormonal]

It was a horribly sticky, muggy day here today (29° with the humidex factor) - just a day for sitting beside an electric fan, which is what I did.
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
I used to work for a couple who had extensive gardens, and in those gardens they had a pair of peacocks. We called them Darius and Roxanne. Once, Roxanne's nest was destroyed by a neighbour who was feuding with our boss, and she flew off down the Dingle and disappeared. Several days later, she was discovered. She had found a bungalow with a floor to ceiling plate glass window, and was spending hours in front of it, preening!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Interesting times at Evensong today - there were only three of us plus D. in the choir. We're officially "on holiday" until after Labour Day (early September) but we try and maintain fully choral services if possible. We were particularly low today partly because of people being away, partly because of the Canada Day holiday and partly because some bunked off ...

We managed it though. D. accompanied everything, and we did a unison setting of the canticles, unison hymns and a bit of harmony in the psalm and the Smith responses. Quite fun really. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I think the sound of peacocks on a wet day in wet English summer is one of the most mournful sounds imaginable. I can't see myself ever keeping peacocks as pets - as lunch, maybe. I believe roast peacock is delicious.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
The problem with keeping any birds as pets is the poo. They can't be trained to do it in one place.

I rather like the sound of peacocks squarking.

In other news, it's raining outside. I must say I'm a bit of a fair weather dog walker. Poor old Gavin needs carrying half way these days.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
If I lived near peacocks I might well be tempted to roast them - and I'm a vegetarian! Our momentarily local one appears to have moved on.

- - - -

Young friend who has been working overseas came to see me last night and was saying that some of the other workers, from another country, couldn't believe why he at 22 was not married - in their culture boys marry at about 15 and girls even younger, some at 9 years old! He found this shockingly young.

I'm not starting a discussion in Purg or a rant in Hell about this - after all it is not that long ago that such things were common practice in Europe and, given the cyclical nature of such things, could become so again.

- - - -

Lots of heavy showers passing through today but yesterday I spoke to a friend on Merseyside and he said there was lots of rain there recently.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Coronation chicken is added to the list of English food that French people will enjoy and eat. [Smile]

Piglet, the original recipe is Constance Spry's which does indeed involve tomato paste and apricot, but it's true that it often gets simplified.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Mr Boog is leaving Jackson, Wyoming today on his USA coast-to-coast bike ride. He is one of the elite 'EFI' group.

Here is a clip from his latest email explaining the 'EFI' acromym.

"There can be up to 80 people on the tour in any one week but only 37 left Seattle intending to do the whole thing. The current number of riders who have not been in the support wagon now total 27. We have become known as the EFI riders. It stands for Every F****** Inch. I'll leave it to you to fill in the blanks!"

Well done him - so far so good!

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Given the views expressed on this thread so far, maybe we should have a recipe for coronation peacock...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Given the views expressed on this thread so far, maybe we should have a recipe for coronation peacock...

[Killing me] A right royal dish! [Killing me]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Given the views expressed on this thread so far, maybe we should have a recipe for coronation peacock...
[Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me]

Mrs. S, looking for the solar topi and peacock net ...
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Peacock used to be a special dish, in I think Tudor times, and possible also Victorian must check Mrs. Beeton!

They saved the tail to fix in position when it was brought in.

Pity the poor footman/maid carrying it in! [Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A question in 2 parts:

a] why does morning come so quickly?; and

b] shouldn't there be a law against it?

I think I'll go back to bed for a while then I want to head to the big city to haunt the secondhand bookshops.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
D. and I celebrated our 24th wedding anniversary today; no coronation peacock [Eek!] but rather good rack of lamb at a retaurant downtown. I wish they'd cool their white wine a bit more though, especially as it was 27° and v. muggy today. It's raining now, with intermittent flashes and rumbles: maybe that'll clear the air a bit ... then again maybe not ... [Frown]

We went for a walk in the afternoon out at Cape Spear, where it was a wee bit cooler, but we could feel the air heating up again as we got closer in to the city.

Back to work tomorrow after the Canada Day holiday; hurrah for air-conditioned offices.
 
Posted by Campbellite (# 1202) on :
 
The middle school I went to was across the street from the local zoo, and we often encountered peacocks. Most of the year, they stayed within the confines of the zoo.

But during mating season (February-March) the dominant males ruled within the zoo grounds (and got all the hens!) while the younger males paraded vainly all over the neighborhood, preening, displaying and squawking.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Hot and Hormonal]

I've just slipped and went to catch myself by leaning on a 7 foot set of freestanding metal shelves which collapsed beautifully spilling [lots of] stuff all over the floor!

[Hot and Hormonal]

I think I shall postpone today's planned trip to the city whilst I clear it all up.
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Hmmmmmm..... no comment....
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mrs E and I have just finished clearing up the mess - she's a star!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
D. and I celebrated our 24th wedding anniversary today

Congratulations! Silver next year :0)

I'm off to a singing group this morning - eeeek! I can't sing. But I love to sing and, since I don't go to Church much now I have joined the local library singing group.

First time today.


[Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Still on about my house-wrecking exercise this morning - we found loads of things I thought we'd lost!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Went out for lunch today and realized on the way there that I'd forgotten my reading glasses, so stopped off at Superdrug and bought a replacement pair.

Had a very nice lunch and wander around the city, then realized on the train home that somewhere in the past three hours I'd lost my newly acquired reading glasses.

[brick wall]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
... I have joined the local library singing group ...

Shhh!!!!!!! [Snigger]

It was a tad cooler today (Deo gratias) but still a bit heavy-going. Had a bit of a walk around Signal Hill in the afternoon, thinking there would be a bit of a breeze up there. There wasn't - I don't think I've ever felt it so completely calm there.

Wodders, dear, couldn't you have found something a bit less dramatic? [Big Grin] Glad you didn't hurt yourself though.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I am struggling with the thought that I am one year older, no wiser, but thankful to be loved. When will I grow up?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My dad, who made it to 93 and a half reckons we settle down and get things sorted and all that moments before we die!

Don't worry too much, you're doing fine.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I keep getting older but certainly not wiser, only regretful I didn't do things differently! [Confused]

The older you get the more hindsight you find! [Frown]

<sigh>
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I'm not sure what "growing up" looks like, but I am sure that keeping an outlook that is inquisitive and enquiring, joyful and open-hearted is what keeps us able to appreciate new experiences.

In other news, its stopped raining, but I still feel a little cold. I may go and do Some Ironing, or then again, I might not.

Its been 2 weeks since the break-in and I still feel jittery.Plus I miss my heart-shaped necklace, an intensely personal piece of jewellery that had all sorts of resonances for me. I'll never be able to replace it with exactly the same, and there are a few other things that were irreplaceable as well.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Oh my goodness, St. E - that's awful, and it's bound to make you jittery. [Votive]

Enigma - many happy returns - remember you're only a day older than you were yesterday ... [Smile]

D. and I have been doing rather a lot of eating-out lately (OK, I know that's not exactly "news" [Big Grin] ) and this evening we went to a relatively new place - so new it hasn't got a wine licence. [Eek!]

However, it did have a v. good spinach and goat-cheese salad with mango and raspberry coulis (which we shared as a starter) and the best lamb-shanks we've ever tasted, done in a Moroccan-spiced sauce with roasted potatoes and sweet carrots. In fact, D. reckoned it was possibly the best thing he's ever eaten, and we've had some pretty stellar feeds in our time.

Score on the Piglet restaurant scale: 15/10. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Enigma - belated Happy Birthday, call it a time zone difference or something.

Piglet - glad to see you are both making an effort to keep the Newfie restauranteurs in business - isn't food wonderful? Sadly these days my consumption becomes rather quickly conspicuous if I overdo it.

I had some VERY weird dreams overnight so ended up sleeping in until 09.00! So bang went my planned trip to the big city but then I'm going on Tuesday and may well go again late next week with HWMBO for the heavier stuff.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
I am struggling with the thought that I am one year older, no wiser, but thankful to be loved. When will I grow up?
Enigma - Happy Belated Birthday, and remember that although you are now older than you have ever been, you are younger today than you will ever be again!

Mrs. S, going downhill rapidly [Killing me]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Hope you had great one, Enigma - I'm determined to meet you one of these days!

I've been on a training course all day - Alcohol Awareness - which makes it a bit ironical that I'm sitting here with a glass of Thatcher's pear cider on the desk in front of me. It was a good day, but I'm shattered. I've got tomorrow off - Yay! - but it's going to be a busy weekend. We've got Gordon Giltrap coming to do a concert at our church hall on Saturday night, and we're hosting him and his wife.I'm looking forward to it, but panicking a bit as well!
 
Posted by Nanny Ogg (# 1176) on :
 
The rain continues in Yellow Belly land and we are on amber alert [Help]

I am wondering how long it will be before the siren goes off, the river bursts it's banks, and Tescos is flooded!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's been raining steadily all day. Some of the roads are flooded. More rain to come over the weekend. Somehow I don't think I'll be getting out much this weekend, either. How is everyone else doing?

Sent from my iSnorkel
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Rumour hath it that we will have two dry days in September.
So much for "draught"!
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
Raining here but who cares when there is Wimbledon and strawberries?
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
Poured all day here but stopped around 4, when I dashed out to pick some of my gooseberry crop.

The berries are turning red and are huge this year, must be due to all the rain.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Rumour hath it that we will have two dry days in September.
So much for "draught"!

They will be around my birthday (21st September). Put a note in your diary.

eta: I can confidentally predict that the 27th July will be like today. That is because it is Sports Day, and our little team (plus a couple of carefully seleted ringers) are in the rounders. What a great game for grown men and women.

[ 06. July 2012, 20:28: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
I'm glad I have no reason to go out tomorrow because I feel early hiernation coming on.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:


Sent from my iSnorkel

I prefer my iwet suit

[Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It's official. I am treating my feet for mildew. [Frown]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
Raining here but who cares when there is Wimbledon and strawberries?

Enjoy it - at least over there you get proper British coverage without commercial breaks every 2 minutes.

PS Sock it to him, Murray! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Over here it is monsoon but VERY little rain!

I obviously should NOT clean - my PC didn't work this morning so we had to call the service man in - fixed in 2 minutes - but whilst we waited I vacuumed the study. Later HWMBO couldn't get any display on his monitor which had been working earlier when I checked it - when vacuuming I must have knocked off the monitor power switch [Hot and Hormonal] Then he couldn't get into the network - apparently I had knocked off that power switch as well [Hot and Hormonal] [Hot and Hormonal]

piglet, I didn't know Murray Walker played tennis.

[Fixed your code. Usual charges apply.]

[thanks, and I fixed the bit we both missed [Hot and Hormonal] ]

[ 07. July 2012, 16:53: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
As you all know I love living here but sometimes it hits me more forcefully than others - I am sitting here and was reading and in the distance I can hear some of the local kids practising chendamelam - a drum music peculiar to this part of the country - and they are getting pretty good!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Someone in one of the flats opposite has a small child: there are huge, beautiful bubbles drifting out of one of the windows, across the car park, small global rainbows in the sudden stillness after the torrential rain we've just had.

Of course it could just be that their flat is flooded...
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
As you all know I love living here but sometimes it hits me more forcefully than others - I am sitting here and was reading and in the distance I can hear some of the local kids practising chendamelam - a drum music peculiar to this part of the country - and they are getting pretty good!

Will I get a welcome concert when I arrive in January?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I will speak to Murukesh and Kannan and ask them, okay?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I've had a perfect early-July Saturday - lazing in front of the tennis for several hours - well done Serena, and well done unpronounceable Polish lady who took her to three sets, and more importantly well done the winning men's doubles team, half of which was British.

[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

Then I made cherry CAKE, which should by now be ready for virtual tasting - help yourselves. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've missed mass as the timing would have been dodgy as we have to leave not long after we would have got back to go to the dunking of Mrs E's first grandbaby some way south of the big city. Now we just have time for breakfast, shower and get on the road.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Just fancy some cherry cake [Smile] plus of course a large coffee. Anyone join me?

It is actually NOT RAINING! And yesterday was a fairly reasonable day, with just a few heavy showers.

But now it is forecast to get wet again, and colder. [Frown] Roll on Autumn, it might actually be warm!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Just fancy some cherry cake [Smile] plus of course a large coffee. Anyone join me?

Oh yes please!

We had no rain yesterday, and it's still dry this morning (just) but it is very humid. I stayed in my jamas, did the gardening, got very hot and steamy - then had a shower. Now to relax with that coffee and cherry cake.

Cheers!

[Big Grin]

(PS - my jamas don't look like jamas, they look like a track suit!)
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
We've got your rain, it's been tipping it down all morning and the heavens are still dumping great gobbets of stuff down now. It wasn't too bad yesterday, the odd spitty-spottle here and there, after I'd waited out a few stair-rod showers in the morning before leaving to collect my daughter.

I like going to St Pancras lots of interesting people watching. In fact, I was so busy taking pictures of festival goers coming off trains that I missed my daughter in the crowd and got a phone call finding out where I was.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Child appropriately dunked - they did 5 in a group today. Got a couple of nice photos of baby being held by her Great-Grandmother!

I gathered a shadow at church, a little lad in 7th Standard who sat by me and walked by me and it was difficult not to turn round and fall over him! He was with one of the other groups so solemnly shook my hand after the church bit before he went off to their family feast.

Our feast was okay but, as I just said to HWMBO, I prefer Hindu food to Latin Catholic food; he replied "A very different methodology" which is true, I suppose, it certainly tastes different.
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
Been up to Northamptonshire for an 80th birthday party and found the sun!
Unfortunately the rain caught up with us enough to drench us on the walk back to the car - and it's followed us down the M1 to home.
Humph!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Summer arrived today - it was dry enough this morning to cycle to church, and sunny enough this afternoon to visit a garden then work in my own putting in the plants that I bought there (after creating some space for them) having told myself I have no space for any more. Looks like autumn might come back again tomorrow, so I'm glad that I could do all that today.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tree Bee:
Been up to Northamptonshire for an 80th birthday party and found the sun!
Unfortunately the rain caught up with us enough to drench us on the walk back to the car - and it's followed us down the M1 to home.
Humph!

[Northamptonshire joke] Sounds like good weather for my ducks! [/Northamptonshire joke] (I know it's very sad, but I'm chuckling away at that. I'm so funny) [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Two and a half glorious hours of blazing hot July sun. Lunch outside in the open air of a National Trust garden, the breeze in the trees, the sound of birds calling to each other, the occasional bleat from sheep on a distant hillside. Flowers given extra life and vivid colours by the light.

Then the skies clouded over, summer faded back into autumn, dark clouds appeared and followed me home, where it's now raining.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Lovely afternoon - husband and I went for a longish walk the other way around the harbour, found a pub on a boat with tables on the top deck looking over the harbour (and very good beer, reportedly) then had dinner at another pub with a less nice view, but still gloriously outside and not in the rain!

Sadly we missed out on outdoor Shakespeare on Friday. It rained persistently from about midday into the night. I feel a bit gyped that the tickets were non refundable. [Frown]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Ah yes, the optimism of buying tickets for outdoor productions more than a couple of hours before it starts.... and yet we do it every year.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Having had Choral Duties™ in the morning, I only saw the very end of the tennis. [Waterworks] Oh well, there's always next year, eh?

Really nice Evensong tonight with just four of us plus D. in the choir, but we did Tallis' Short Service, the Neary responses and Jesus Christ the Apple Tree, and though I say it what shouldn't, did them rather well.

Day off tomorrow as it's a public holiday (Orangemen's Day). Having spent 15 years in Belfast trying to escape from it, I'd almost rather work, but the weather forecast is rather good* so I may as well enjoy it.

* Your weather on the other side of the Pond's been that rotten I almost feel guilty ...

... almost. [Big Grin]

edited - splelign

[ 09. July 2012, 02:05: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I'm growing webbed feet!

[Help]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Nicodemia, you need a pair of these.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I'm growing webbed feet!

[Help]

Nice booby! [Big Grin]

AG
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Today was the second time this july that we've had "a month's rain in twelve hours." The weathermen are running out of clichés.

Living on the hillside has advantages.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm not even going to tell you what our weather was like today. [Hot and Hormonal]

Laundry in tumble-dryer, bread-machine whirring away - Domestic Goddess Piglet strikes again. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's raining here, too, and we live on the top of a slight rise [can't really call it a hill] so no waterlogging - after living in the city for a few years when the house became an island in the rain this is far better!

I rang my UK bank just now to do my monthly transfer to my account here and the woman said it is cold and wet in Skelmersdale - it is relatively cool here, too, but probably over 20°C.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rang my UK bank just now to do my monthly transfer to my account here and the woman said it is cold and wet in Skelmersdale

A pretty typical July day in Skem, then. [Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Nicodemia, you need a pair of these.
[Killing me]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I rang my UK bank just now to do my monthly transfer to my account here and the woman said it is cold and wet in Skelmersdale

A pretty typical July day in Skem, then. [Smile]
That's just what she said!
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Balaam:
The weathermen are running out of clichés.

Never! Impossible, they have so many ..
"Rain sinking its way south" Arrgh. 'Its way' is always redundant.
"Showers bubbling up" (showers here don't go up, they come down!)
"Heavy rain causing surface flooding.." Is there flooding 'up there' in heaven?
".. in low lying areas." You are a low lying area, you are!

And that's just a few of the rain-related clichés. There are so many, many more. Might make games the the Circus.
BTW Weather women are just as guilty. And they all look so damn pleased about it! [Devil]

Gotta go and lie down in a darkened room.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
At this rate, by Friday my normal train will be replaced by a regularly scheduled submarine.

(I suppose "This submarine has been delayed because of whales on the line" will make a change.)
 
Posted by Jemima the 9th (# 15106) on :
 
I could have sworn the sun shone for 10 minutes earlier. It's stopped now, of course, and clouded over. There will be rain for the rest of the afternoon.

It's only been a little soggy in glorious Essex so no need for flippers yet, although we are supposed to be going camping this weekend. The forecast isn't dreadful but it's hardly going to be a scorcher. I expect more than 16deg in the middle of a July day. I mean really. Tut. [Disappointed]

I say "we" are going camping, but it's actually Mr Jt9 and children A&B, I'm not going to inflict a month old baby on a campsite! Or camping on an already sleep-deprived me, come to that..
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Just been camping. In Shropshire, right on the Welsh border. Got quite badly sunburned.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I went camping once, which was once too often. Inflicting camping on anyone, IMHO, amounts to Cruel and Unusual Punishment.

Even a hotel/B&B room without en suite facilities is roughing it a bit ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Camping varies according to the facilities, the weather, company but most of all the management of the site.

A couple of years ago a group of us took a few nights on the Gower peninsula. The weather was the usual blustery stuff but Mrs P.... who ran the place was a tyrant. Cars had to be placed *exactly* in front of your tent (to block out any view), phones would be recharged for a £1 a go and the showers were available for 4 hours a day. I reckon she was put there by the Bed & Breakfast association to get potential campers to use B&Bs instead.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I'm with Piglet on the camping front...I have recently been on a course which was at a lovely house in the deepest countryside, with a river at the bottom of the garden. Soft furnishings etc co-ordinated and the food was Very Good Indeed.
But one loo (with WHB) and one bathroom (with loo and shower over bath) between 8 bedrooms was not quite adequate enough...
The horror of possibly stumbling across some bloke while in my 'jammies was sufficient to cause Very Early Waking-Up so that I could have first shower...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Inflicting camping on anyone, IMHO, amounts to Cruel and Unusual Punishment.

Totally agree, wild horses couldn't pay me enough to go camping. The idea that only a thin piece of fabric would be between me and the outside world, weather, passing predators, etc, is enough to ensure staying awake all night.

Each to their own: when I go on holiday I want a comfortable bed in a quiet en-suite room with a view, television, and a door that locks, and the option of a really lavish Full Breakfast, which I have not cooked, in the morning.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
The temperature was such today that we made enquiries of the Powers That Be and discovered that the heating at work has been officially turned off for the summer. I suppose it makes sort of sense as a general policy, but I suspect when the policy was decided temperatures of 10 degrees weren't expected in July. Brrrrrr.

TME and I are going on an archeological dig for a weekend at the end of the month. I can't tell you how much I am looking forward to spending the weekend on my hands and knees in a muddy trench in this weather [Roll Eyes] (it's his birthday present so he's not paid for it, so I'm allowed to moan but he's not [Devil] ).
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Not Copped Hall for the dig?
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
No, CK, we're going to Flag Fen. It will be great, but I'm hoping the ducks hold off the rain-dancing for a bit (especially as we will also be camping).
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
lol, didn't think it could be, but there are weekend digs at Copped Hall too.
 
Posted by busyknitter (# 2501) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Just been camping. In Shropshire, right on the Welsh border. Got quite badly sunburned.

Proves nowt. You would burn in a downpour. indoors.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... a really lavish Full Breakfast, which I have not cooked ...

Oh YES. With Proper Bacon™. **sigh**

It was a beautiful day today (23° with no Humidex [Yipee] ) and when D. picked me up from w*rk he'd made chicken sandwiches which we ate beside Topsail Beach, looking out towards Bell Island and trying to decide if the slightly unusual ripples in the water were caused by whales; we didn't actually see any coming up for air, but we were fairly sure that they were there ...

There were even a few people in paddling. [Smile]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:

Each to their own: when I go on holiday I want a comfortable bed in a quiet en-suite room with a view, television, and a door that locks, and the option of a really lavish Full Breakfast, which I have not cooked, in the morning.

Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.

Having used the in-room espresso machine, time to move on to the breakfast.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
...Not to gloat or anything...

Huh!?!?

I reckon you did that quite delibertaly.

Good for you.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
My view on camping is that it gives you a new perspective on life which helps you to appreciate home comforts even more. [Biased]
As I age (dis)gracefully I need more and more to save my holiday energy for exploring, not surviving!!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.

Royal County?

Not the safest place to be if the Wear really DOES flood [Two face]

quote:
Originally posted by Enigma:
As I age (dis)gracefully I need more and more to save my holiday energy for exploring, not surviving!!

Hmmmm... I actually feel better for a night ot two sleeping in tents. In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning. There's a natural limit of about three or four nights after which things start to smell a little though. You probably don't want to be sitting next to me on the train back from Greenbelt.

The only real problem is that its hard to lie in in the morning because as soon as the sun is up it overheats badly so I am forced to get up earlier than normal. Sometimes even as early as 9am. On holiday! [Eek!]
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Haven't tented in years and years 'cos my husband gave it up. That time when his pillow was floating in the tent probably had something to do with it.

I don't particularly like savoury breakfasts (sorry for the blasphemy there) and I particularly don't like getting up and dressed by 8.30 or so when I'm on holiday in order to get said breakfast. That said, I always do 'cos it's included.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in. If I move to this side, I can see the castle, and the tower of the cathedral.

Where's the green with jealousy smilie?
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning.

Time to get a new bed, or do what my brother-in-law does and stick a board under the mattress.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
In some ways my little tent is more comfortable than my bed. My back certainly feels better the next morning.

Time to get a new bed, or do what my brother-in-law does and stick a board under the mattress.
The board helps but under nylon the only things that wake me are my bladder, the whistling kettle or the smell of bacon frying (which I detect like NORAD does Russian bombers). A sleeping bed on top of a foam bedroll is very comfortable indeed. Mrs Sioni tells me it reduces the snoring too.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
There is a board under it!

In my tend I just use one of theose light rolls of foam about a centimetre think and a sheet & put my head on my pack. It's a very little tent. Don't usually bother with sleeping bag or cushions or pillows or anything. Its fine for a few days.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm trying not to be smug too, but without much success - we really are getting Summer this week. We went for a walk in the Botanic Gardens where it was hot enough (25°) that I was only comfortable in the shade, then cooled off with Timmy's™ iced cappuccino.

You can all feel free to gloat on St. Swithin's Day (next Sunday), after which it'll probably chuck it down for a month ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, we survived a night without power; I think we were all glad it happened at a cool time of year. The line man came this morning and got things sorted, much to our relief. During the night our back up inverters were completely drained so we didn't have a spare electron in the place! It just affected two houses so wasn't a major thing, just annoying for those affected - and basically just a loose connection!

Or should I say a connection worked loose by some pretty hefty winds recently.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Not to gloat or anything, but I am currently looking down on an almost- flooding River Wear from the sitting room of a suite rather larger than some flats I have lived in.

Well, today looks like a beautiful day here in Oxfordshire, though temperatures are distinctly below average for July. The sort of day when the Cotswolds will be looking their best, although maybe a little cool for an al fresco lunch in a pub garden...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, today looks like a beautiful day here in Oxfordshire, though temperatures are distinctly below average for July. The sort of day when the Cotswolds will be looking their best, although maybe a little cool for an al fresco lunch in a pub garden...

Good - hopefully my boy will get some flights in, they are quite behind on their schedule.

(Give him a wave as he buzzes over :0)

It's fine, sunny and cool here too. I am starting my uni work at 9am every day now, finishing at 12 noon for a swim (our town has a posh new swimming baths which opened on the 1st July)

This afternoon I am making cakes to take to work tomorrow - ginger with chunks of crystallised ginger, yum!

Mr Boog has done 1500 miles of his USA coast to coast and was camping facing Mt Rushmore last night!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I can testify that the good weather obtains at least as far as Warwickshire. However, the forecast is for throwing it down by late afternoon.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We seem to be in an ideal phase at the moment with warm, sunny days and wet, wet nights.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We seem to be in an ideal phase at the moment with warm, sunny days and wet, wet nights.

Glad to hear that monsoon rains are picking up. The local valley appears to be in a drought at the moment. I caught a headline in the paper that said something about welcome to the dustbowl.

Of course, one month without rain is hardly akin to several years. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Good - hopefully my boy will get some flights in, they are quite behind on their schedule.

(Give him a wave as he buzzes over :0)

Well, there's sunshine outside our office right now, and I'm in one of the buildings near Kidlington Airport, so with luck they'll get some more flight time! Doesn't look to be too breezy so far either.

[edit as cannot spell...]

[ 12. July 2012, 11:43: Message edited by: Celtic Knotweed ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Thank you Celtic Knotweed!

Oh my - fun and games at Boogieville Mansions! As I returned from my lunchtime swim a tortoise was wandering down the drive! I have printed his photo and posted it on my gatepost in hopes his owner will see it.

Anyone know how to look after them?

I have shredded some paper and put it in a hastily-constructed enclosure in the utility room so that I can bring it in at night, it must be too wet and cold for it to be outside! Meanwhile it's eating lots of lettuce!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
The weather in London this week is, as always, wonderful
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Oh my - fun and games at Boogieville Mansions! As I returned from my lunchtime swim a tortoise was wandering down the drive! I have printed his photo and posted it on my gatepost in hopes his owner will see it.

Anyone know how to look after them?

That's amazing! It can't have travelled too far, I don't suppose, given the speed at which they go.

Still, lettuce is supposed to be a sedative so I expect it will fall asleep pretty soon.
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
The tortoise may have been rather hungry. Love the picture!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Fine this morning, pouring down this afternoon, and I've got a streaming cold. You really didn't ought to have colds in July. [Mad]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Tortoise update - I found his home! He lives near us with an elderly couple - he's been with them for 59 years! He sleeps on the hearth and has the run of their house and garden.

She was so happy to see him, his name is Sammy and he's been missing for a full week!

Ever seen someone cuddle a tortoise? I have now!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
One of my bizarrest health visiting experiences was when I visited a family, I was sitting in the living room chatting when what I had thought was an ornament suddenly started to walk across the floor, it was a dozy tortoise. I got such a fright! The family laughed at me and said there was another one in the kitchen, I turned round to look and lo and behold there was another tortoise, this one trying to hump the washing machine.

Good old Govan [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
D. was given a tortoise when he was little (for "being good" when having injections). I understand it survived for another 20 or so years, although they may not have known how old it was when they got it.

I have Given In: today, for the first time in my life, I became the owner of a mobile phone, so as you might expect I'm a more than somewhat confused piglet. The instructions that came with it are rather basic; apparently if you want to know more you have to download it from t'interweb (where it will probably run to several hundred pages and be written in Martian).

[Confused]

I have, however, worked out how to make it take photographs, so now when I open it up there's a picture of the teddy-bears who live on the sofa ... [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I have Given In: today, for the first time in my life, I became the owner of a mobile phone, so as you might expect I'm a more than somewhat confused piglet.

Good luck! I found there were a lot of tacit assumptions, that you just "know" how they turn on/off, or how to scroll/type a message, and what SMS is and so on - but I'm sure you'll get the hang of it pretty quickly.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

I have Given In: today, for the first time in my life, I became the owner of a mobile phone ...

Everyone does, in the end. A good strategy ... leave it switched off until you need to make a call.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mine is bog standard for phone calls and SMS, all I want to use it for, and is wonderful - but I am on the national Do Not Call register so I get no marketing calls or SMS. I make one or two calls a day and perhaps 10 SMS a day - I'm on a special deal for that so it is ridiculously cheap.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Can finally use mine - O2 was down for a day and a bit. Red faces all round from one of the biggest Mobile phone networks!! [Eek!]

You'll get used to it Piglet - and wonder how you managed to do without one! Though I can't quite see you one of the glued-to-the-ear-all-the-time folk! [Biased]

Dull and grey, threatening rain. Got to take the dog out. Guaranteed to rain, then. [Frown]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Is raining here, now. A grey, louring, depressing sort of day...the heating clicked in for a short time this morning. In July. And we put the fire on last night...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Big Grin]

I don't think I need say any more.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Best not say anything, really. Otherwise we would all have to come and Visit You, and bring our weather with us...

And I have to go out in it in a moment.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I don't know what you're grinning about, Wodders - are you not in the middle of the monsoon season as well?

So far 21° and humid today here (Humidex 26°). It'll probably be really uncomfortable by the time I finish w*rk in a couple of hours. [Frown]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
It may well be a very soggy Brum for the Brum meet, judging by the wet weather that has just woken me up. (Heavy rain on small perspex roof over utility area makes a disproportionate amount of noise.)

I don't think it's that I need plenty of sleep prior to a Shipmeet, more that I reacted to the lack of sleep earlier in the week, which was w*rk-stress induced. About time to seek other employment, I think.

I've also had a splendid morning playing the organ for a local secondary school who were using the church for some lesson work this morning. It's rare to find an non-adjustable organ stool that works for me, but this one could've been made for my little legs. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Just about to dig out the waders & snorkel ready for an outdoor performance with my choir tomorrow - not only outside but also on a waterlogged park. As a treat, before then we have a slot on a covered stage and another inside a church.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I came out of the photo printing place in town earlier and the heavens opened! It only rained for ten minutes but the roads turned into rivers in that time, really torrential - I had a brolly, most people carry them here, so wasn't too bad. By the time I got home the sun was cracking the flags.
 
Posted by Eleanor Jane (# 13102) on :
 
Cute tortoise!

And iPiglet - go you!

In the weather news: it started to get all cold and threatening around lunch but cleared up so "my husband and I" (said in the accent of the Queen) could walk to dinner.

Best Indian we've had in Britian, we think. Excellent crispy but tender dosas (and not too big), tender paneer and really tasty curry sauces. Nom.

On the downside, the English Defense League are marching tomorrow, and there's a Marxist anti-march AND the Pride festival! I'm giving the city centre a wide berth all day which is a bit poo 'cos we live really close to it so there's not really anywhere else to go out for a walk. I'm proposing an outing in the car to the seaside or something.

Anyhoo... happy weekends all. [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I think you're being very wise, EJ. Any demonstrations of a political nature (especially when there are opposing sides involved) are best avoided, IMHO; I speak as someone who lived in Belfast for 15 years and would do anything to escape the "marching season". [Eek!]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Weekend shopping now completed - it's pouring here.

Meanwhile, I've been checking the schedule for travel during the O******s, to see which trains are best avoided - apparently, all of them, from the crack of dawn until midnight, as no matter which train I get, there will be likely be hordes of sports fans on it, as this part of the world is perfectly positioned for direct trains to at least five of the main venues, including the football (some of which is late night) and a special lot of trains to the boating events.

My sympathies to anyone trying to live and work in central London in the next couple of weeks...
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Yeah, I'm in a similar situation - nicely positioned access for the main Olympic Park, Hadleigh Farm, the Lee Valley White Water Centre, Greenwich and anything central London. I've got to go through Stratford to go into London too. I'm not looking forward to the next few weeks.

It's just tipped down here, which makes me think that which I volunteered for today is not going to happen. Too dangerous to open the church tower in the rain. We have Town Festival here.

[ 14. July 2012, 08:59: Message edited by: Curiosity killed ... ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Bright sunshine here :gloatgloat: I have released the rest of the Painted Lady butterflies as no idea how long it will last!

A lovely sight they made as they flew off in convoy towards the park.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Hah! For some reason best known to themselves, the Excursion Committee at this Hellhole of a Summer School, have scheduled an educational trip to Central London slap in the middle of the Olympics. So that'll be 5 hours on the bus getting into London, turn round and spend 5 hours going back again. Great. [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dormouse:
Hah! For some reason best known to themselves, the Excursion Committee at this Hellhole of a Summer School, have scheduled an educational trip to Central London slap in the middle of the Olympics. So that'll be 5 hours on the bus getting into London, turn round and spend 5 hours going back again. Great.

Oh dear! What age are the people going on the trip?


Here is a piccy of my butterfly release.

Still sunny here - time to walk the pooch.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
As Andy Hamilton said as one of his one-liners that didn't get recorded* "If you were designing an Olympic stadium for London in the summer, what would be the first thing you would think of?" At which point we chorused either "roof" or "rain".

* Old Harry's Game recording last Sunday - where we were queuing in the rain and there had been a lot of rain all day. The BBC overbooks the venue to make sure they have a full audience. And warn you of that in the tickets, so we were queuing at 5:30pm for doors open at 6:15pm, for show starting 7:30pm. We got stickers of 78 and 79 out of 250.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
One of the local lads has just been to check out whether he has been given a college place - and he hadn't filled out the right form so he wasn't considered for the allotment process. I know it's not my responsibility but I just felt so sad for him - he was devastated.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Oh Wodders, that's rotten for your friend. Is there any kind of clearing system that might come into play later in the summer?

Boogie - if your butterfly's male does that make him a painted gentleman? [Big Grin]

Had a spot of retail therapy this afternoon; D. dropped me off at the shopping centre before playing for a wedding. I used my new mobile for the first time - although I was expecting him to phone, it took me a wee while to twig that it was my handbag that was ringing ... [Cool]

Weather still a bit close today although not quite so hot - temperatures in the high teens, which will suit me just fine.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sadly no - he'll have to get a place at a private college - the cost will be about the same but the facilities won't be as good.

The good news of yesterday, which I'm sure Pete will be glad to know, is that our neighbouring just 15 year old who walked with Pete and I has got the equivalent of a 6th Form place - he's away at the moment but I sent a text so hopefully he will be back in time to register.

eta: as two of his subjects are history and sociology I rather expect I may be asked for advice at some point over the next couple of years - and HWMBO for the political science.

[ 15. July 2012, 04:35: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
History and Sociology are two subjects that a dead frog knows more about than I do. Which in my book make him very intelligent.

On Derby station, post meet, waiting for the train to Yorkshire there was one of those announcements, the sort no one likes to hear.

The train to Birmingham had been cancelled due to a person being hit by the train. Erk.
 
Posted by Polly Plummer (# 13354) on :
 
It's St. Swithun's day and no rain here! admittedly not a lot of sun either.

I've not often heard railway announcements refer directly to someone being hurt/killed by a train; they usually say there's been "an incident on the line". All the same to the person hit, I suppose - and to the poor driver.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Votive] for the person hit by the train, and the driver.

PP, there was no rain here either - it was an absolutely gorgeous day. [Yipee]

Byrd Mass for Four Voices safely dispatched this morning, with v. favourable comments from members of the congregation; Farrant Short Service and Byrd's responses and Teach me, O Lord at Evensong.

Tudor music - happy piglet. [Smile]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
It's St. Swithun's day and no rain here! admittedly not a lot of sun either.

Here it was lovely and dry, even sunny towards the end of the afternoon.
Shame that the thing about St Swithin's day is about if it rains, not if it's dry.
Still, the soft fruit that I picked yesterday was lovely and plump.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
quote:
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
It's St. Swithun's day and no rain here! admittedly not a lot of sun either.

Here it was lovely and dry, even sunny towards the end of the afternoon.
Shame that the thing about St Swithin's day is about if it rains, not if it's dry.

You want to predict dry weather? In an English summer?
quote:

Still, the soft fruit that I picked yesterday was lovely and plump.

Like last year. Some good may come of it. Mrs Sioni made 10 jars of strawberry jam last week (now 6 left!).
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Polly Plummer:
I've not often heard railway announcements refer directly to someone being hurt/killed by a train; they usually say there's been "an incident on the line". All the same to the person hit, I suppose - and to the poor driver.

"Incident on the line" is wider, at one end is reported tresspass, then objects on the line, then animals (both of these necessitate delays) right the way up a human being killed. For instance if sheep are on the line, it is preferable to get them removed before a train hits them, that way there are less delays and happier farmers.

Jengie
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
On London Underground you get told it's someone under a train. Usually that's a cue for the carriage/platform to start muttering about selfish bastards. It really takes the schedules down and slows everything down for hours. And I can't help thinking of the clean up squad, having worked with the wife/mother of a couple of people who worked on that one many years ago.

And having been involved in a funeral for someone I knew who went under a train deliberately, we looked at what happened to the drivers. Most don't return to work. Not that I blame the lady I knew, she had been in and out of hospital for quite some time beforehand and really wasn't the person many of us had known.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
In this area it's "a fatality on the line", usually either at Southall (outside London) or Tackley (outside Oxford), where level crossings are involved. Some of the fatalities are intentional, though one of the recent ones (Southall area) was someone who got himself electrocuted while trying to steal copper cables from the lineside.

As usual when they make an announcement about a de-personalized fatality there's the usual irritable response of "selfish" and "I'll be late home now, thanks a bundle". Which doesn't mean that people wouldn't care if they didn't know more, it's just that it rarely seems real when presented in that way.

You don't often hear the stories that come to light with these, though the one about the woman trapped in an unhappy arranged marriage, who took herself and her children off to the railway line (Southall), followed some time after by her mother, who couldn't forgive herself for being involved in arranging the marriage, was one of the saddest stories.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
It was a gorgeous day yesterday, especially in the afternoon, but the curse of St Swithun struck as I'm told (wasn't outside to notice) it began to rain before midnight. Hence it's been non-stop all morning. Looks a bit brighter now though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Back to the hospital this morning to have the operation officially pronounced a qualified success - I can now manage 2 prisms less in my specs so have ordered a new pair - lenses [top of the range] made in Kolkata so by the time they are flown down here I won't get them until Friday or Saturday but not bad for all that - I'll not tell you the price as it will only upset you all.

We came home by a different and quieter route and stumbled across a couple of amazing churches - a Syro-Malabar Catholic one and an Orthodox Cathedral almost next door - a great trip and loads of photos.

eta: okay, I had to edit a typo so I may as well say: How does a tad over 50 quid sound?

[ 16. July 2012, 13:03: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
You're absolutely right, it does upset me!

I paid just under £600 for my last pair of varifocals...
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ElaineC:
You're absolutely right, it does upset me!

I paid just under £600 for my last pair of varifocals...

[Waterworks] me too - mine were just under £700.
Wodders, have you thought of targeting the tourist spec market?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and mine are Transition lenses as well as strong light can be a problem here.

- - - -

A few of the local 16 year olds have just been round to check some exam results released today, equivalent of 1st year 6th form - first two of them came but didn't bring their roll number [Roll Eyes] so they went off then came back with a couple of others - all need work on their English but some need to work very hard this year to improve half of their subjects but one of them, one of my favourites, scraped a pass in English and passed every subject! Well done Krishnaraj!

I think Pete will be pleased to hear that, too.

To Pete: the other three were the paper boy, the brother of no-brakes and the cat thief.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, there is a certain high street chain that does them for considerably less. Their website says they start at £49. They were the reason I changed from a certain other high street chain - and at the time I got a free pair thrown in. I wasn't in a position to pay £600-odd - I have a complex prescription with short sight, astigmatism and one or two other joys so it was never going to be cheap, so it does pay to shop around.

I can't remember exactly what I paid but it was nothing like £600, nearer £200 or so, which did help because my prescription changes annually and I have to shell out for new lenses of one kind or the other every year.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I need a new prescription. Went into the opticians last week to ask how much lens replacement for my present frames would be - £400.

Then it's £150 for my Irlen tint.

erk!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Well done Krishnaraj!

I think Pete will be pleased to hear that, too.

To Pete: the other three were the paper boy, the brother of no-brakes and the cat thief.

[Yipee] Hamster dance time! What about my dear B?
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
meant to add, for the benefit of others : I know every one of those kids to whom Wodders refers. How pathetic is that
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
B hasn't called and it is too late to go round there so I will go and see him tomorrow after school - and ask after grandpa at the same time. Although you haven't directly said I shall tell KR that you are delighted for him, because I know you are.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
And give KR big hugs from me!
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
meant to add, for the benefit of others : I know every one of those kids to whom Wodders refers. How pathetic is that

I'm just loving the nicknames you two give them. I bet they'd be tickled to know, at least many of them. [Smile]
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Well, there is a certain high street chain that does them for considerably less. Their website says they start at £49. They were the reason I changed from a certain other high street chain - and at the time I got a free pair thrown in. I wasn't in a position to pay £600-odd - I have a complex prescription with short sight, astigmatism and one or two other joys so it was never going to be cheap, so it does pay to shop around.

I can't remember exactly what I paid but it was nothing like £600, nearer £200 or so, which did help because my prescription changes annually and I have to shell out for new lenses of one kind or the other every year.

Yes, I changed to that branch too, and paid less than half the price of my previous specs and they were almost identical.
Just ordered a new pair for the same price as 2 years ago, £280. They are varifocals with photochromic lenses.
You should have gone there!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
My opticians are very good and very thorough. Buying glasses through them is expensive, but I feel a bit shitty taking my prescriptions elsewhere. They've just started one of these monthly schemes whereby you get quite a big discount if you sign up. Thinking about it.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... I know every one of those kids to whom Wodders refers. How pathetic is that

Not pathetic in the least, Pete - after all, you spend a quarter of the year there. Well done to them from over here too, and good luck to the ones who have to do re-sits or whatever.

I can sympathise with those of you being ripped off by opticians. D. had new spectacles a few months back (having put off replacing his for years) and although I can't remember how much they cost, I remember thinking it was far too bleedin' much - even with the proportion that's covered by our health insurance.

I have complicated eyes and use both contact lenses and spectacles; fortunately my sight doesn't change very much, so they only need to be replaced about every 10 years or so.

It seems to me that opticians, like up-market car makers, charge what they do because they can.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I get my eyes checked and take the prescription to India (where I'm going anyways) I save enough to live comfortably there for a long time.

When I no longer travel, my air fare will cover the non-health care plan part. I hope.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Gwai- they have nicknames because, for the most part, it would be like referring to Billy Bob, Billy Bob and Billy Bob, without trying to differentiate them from other Billy Bobs.

What they use is the other Billy Bob's house name, which is sometimes helpful. But not always. There is a common house name that is used for kids of wildly different formal names.

And there is one kid we have always referred to by his house name. Last time out, we were informed of his proper name which is [XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX]. We thought it would be a good idea to continue to call him XXXXX. He nodded.

And thank goodness there are young adults who continue to use their house names. It helps to set them apart from other Krishnas and Vishnus and such
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I only have single vision lenses rather than varifocals, but needing a new pair last year I decided to try buying them from an internet supplier. They are excellent and so much cheaper, I don't see myself going back to an optician except to get a prescription.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Even when I shop around, it still comes out at between £600 and £700 - and last time I tried a slightly less expensive option they put one of the lenses in skewed which led to me falling over and feeling dizzy. When I eventually found out what was causing that (I went to my very helpful opthamologist) they denied any problems so I ended up paying twice. Fingers burnt and all that.

I'm now trying out contact lenses for the first time so the overall costs are slightly higher anyway. I'm enjoying having the option of having something resting on my nose or not, but haven't quite sorted the combination of prescription/low cost reading specs so that I can see for reading as well as with my regular specs, but it's a welcome change (I've been waiting most of my life to be able to do this).

On another note......... we have SUNSHINE here !! [Cool]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Update for Pete:

The Big B passed all but biology and says he is confident of recovering that and getting an A next year!

Muru passed two and failed 4 but mostly narrowly so not too tough to make up next year - he got 88% in Malayalam!

Abhijit [from the other side of the temple] passed everything including 95% in Malayalam. He only got 36 in two of the subjects so was upset a bit until we realised that those two were marked out of 80 so both 45%.

Don't you just hate clever people?

No - congrats to all of them.

- - - -

Yet another lazy day for me today - typified by an entry on my school report nearly 50 years ago:

quote:
He has the ability, when is he going to make the effort?
[Big Grin]

[ 17. July 2012, 14:34: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I can't believe you lot are paying so much. There ought to be some kind of inquiry into opticians' prices.

On another note, how are people getting along with digital TV reception these days - my mother says she's unable to receive any broadcasts now they they've gone digital, and she lives between two mobile phone masts less than half a mile away which we think are interfering with reception. I'm wondering if there's anything that can be done (other than moving which she doesn't want to do).

I have to say I think reception was a lot better on the old analogue than it is on digital.

[ 17. July 2012, 11:15: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Aren't people kind?

My maths student came over tonight, he only comes when he has a problem these days as generally he is doing okay, and noticed we had a problem with the light on the verandah. We sorted the problem and he headed home then came back a short time later with his dad & dad's toolbox in tow and they set to to fix the light, but it needs a new part, so they then fixed the other verandah light instead then off they wandered home again - no charge.

Nice neighbours make such a difference!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I am so very chuffed, Wodders! I hope you gave Big B a hug for me! And all the others. [Yipee]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
... they have nicknames because, for the most part, it would be like referring to Billy Bob, Billy Bob and Billy Bob, without trying to differentiate them from other Billy Bobs ...

I know what you mean. Until I was about four and we moved to Orkney, we lived in a little village in the north-east of Scotland where the surname of many of the inhabitants was Mackay, and they were all identified by nicknames, a fact that I only found out much later. One of my brother's friends was called Bobby Straw, and it never occurred to me that his parents weren't Mr. and Mrs. Straw, but Mr. and Mrs. Mackay ...

[Confused]

The same applied to the small island in Orkney where my grandmother grew up; there people tended to be called by their farm name - Tommy of Westbreck or whatever.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today is Karkadavavu, a day of prayer for the repose of the souls of departed relatives, so we were up, showered and out to the riverside temple at Palliakavu, not far from here, so HWMBO could go to puja for the repose of his father's soul. I went along in a support capacity and to record the event for posterity. It was a lovely morning with some light mist and the sun rising above it and reflecting off the water. It all took a bit longer than expected and I was glad to have breakfast when we got back!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Today I am waiting in for the post woman - who will be delivering my new camera shortly, I hope.

Then guess what I'll be doing?

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We want a full report, Boogie!
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
The same applied to the small island in Orkney where my grandmother grew up; there people tended to be called by their farm name - Tommy of Westbreck or whatever.

We noticed that in graveyards, piglet (yes, we even go graveyarding on holiday...) - there were a number of surnames corresponding with placenames. We didn't see any Norseman, but we did see several people who had obviously lived... well, you know exactly where I'm thinking of, don't you? [Snigger]

AG
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I do indeed, [Big Grin] although I really meant in addition to their surnames; where Granny grew up there were lots of people called Thomas Harcus (her father was, as was her eldest brother and several of her nephews) and adding "of Wherever" (in conversation anyway) distinguished them from each other.

At least it's not quite as confusing as Iceland, where they use patronymics. [Eek!]

[ 19. July 2012, 03:53: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Its much easier having a really unusual surname! [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname! [Biased]

Consider yourself fortunate. I have a fairly common surname that 90% of the population can't pronounce.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname! [Biased]

Yes - for identification purposes - but the varieties of spelling can be interesting. Before I got married, people would just get my Christian name wrong; now they get them both wrong.

I tell them they can call me what they like, just don't call me too early in the morning ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
My husband is called John Smith - it gives him endless trouble. He never fails to get detained with an 'orange folder' when entering the USA.

They then faff about for ages verifying that he really is John Smith.

As if he'd call himself that if he wasn't.

[Roll Eyes]

[ 19. July 2012, 15:03: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Consider yourself fortunate. I have a fairly common surname that 90% of the population can't pronounce.

You too? Even the francophones don't pronounce mine correctly. And I shudder inwardly when I introduce myself to an Anglo.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes, but you have an English first name, a French last name and a Swahili middle name [Biased]
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
As if he'd call himself that if he wasn't.

Tell him to change it by deed poll...

.

.

.

... to John Doe.

[i]bad code [/b]

[ 19. July 2012, 18:13: Message edited by: Balaam ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Nice visit last evening from the little lad I photographed early last week - I was waiting in the car, he was waiting at the roadside opposite and the light on his face was just perfect. We had taken him a print a few days ago and last night he persuaded his grandfather to bring him and his brother round to see where the foreigner lives. Predictably enough the grandfather is cousin to one of our neighbours, this is a very small village for all that it links on to the town!

Naturally enough I now have to get more printing done to take to them.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname! [Biased]

Yes - for identification purposes - but the varieties of spelling can be interesting. .....
My first name isn't unusal, and my last name is that of a well-known town, but people tend to want to add letters to both. If I were Jane Smith they'd be spelling it Jayne Smyth.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Its much easier having a really unusual surname! [Biased]

We had a day a while back when every Pole at work (or it seemed like it) had a parcel delivered. Trying to work out who the parcel is for when the name appears to have been machine translated via Korean is not a great deal of fun...

AG
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Yesterday's entertainment was heading to the Globe to see Richard III. No, no booking, having checked to find only the most expensive tickets were around, I ambled off for a wander and arrived back in plenty of time to stand and wait for returns, met up with Gamaliel and then were groundlings propped up on the stage. It was fantastic. Mark Rylance playing Richard III, all male cast, Elizabethan costume - which looked incredibly authentic the way it was made - and I got to see a lot of shoes and hems very close up, including quite a number of swords swinging round at what felt like nose height.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia: Its much easier having a really unusual surname
My (married) surname is very unusual, differing in one letter from a slightly less unusual one - think, say, Jobson vs. Jolson. In my days in customer service, I was always amazed/infuriated by how many people would respond to a letter that gave my name, correctly spelled, in block capitals and bold yet, addressing me by the slightly different one! [Mad]

Mrs. S, still grumpy after all these years
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My family name is also pretty unusual and, as a family, we have had all sorts of variations over the years - my dad reported that he had them at school as did his father before him, so back into the 19th century.

My first name, which you may be able to guess, is not that common but neither is it uncommon - and it is amazing how misspelt it can be!
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
My name is uncommon in the UK but fairly common in France except with a different spelling. These days I've pretty much given up and expect to see it spelled the French way.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I am a mis-print and have been all my life. [Smile]
 
Posted by Gwai (# 11076) on :
 
A minor celebrity who quite annoys me for other reasons *Perky fakey freak* has the same firstname as I do, but spells it in another (less logical, grr) way, so now people regularly misspell it. Didn't use to ever get my names mispelled though as they are relatively common.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... My first name, which you may be able to guess, is not that common but neither is it uncommon - and it is amazing how misspelt it can be!

You mean it's not always spelt with a "W"? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
There is a strange rumour about my surname; it says that somewhere there are people with it that spell it with a single "l". Each time I have been put onto such a person it has turned out that they like everyone else use the "ll" spelling.

I presume this is people who want to make it less effort for them to write or type and think by starting this rumour they will eventually get us to change how we spell it. Needless to say it just annoys us and we just automatically say "with a double l".

Now people who can't spell it are far, far more creative.

Jengie
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I have to confess that every time I see David Walliams' name in print I struggle with an urge to correct what looks like an obvious typo.
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
There is a strange rumour about my surname; it says that somewhere there are people with it that spell it with a single "l". Each time I have been put onto such a person it has turned out that they like everyone else use the "ll" spelling.

I presume this is people who want to make it less effort for them to write or type and think by starting this rumour they will eventually get us to change how we spell it. Needless to say it just annoys us and we just automatically say "with a double l".

Now people who can't spell it are far, far more creative.

Jengie

Yes, I have exactly this problem too. Each time they ask how many 'l's I do a mental double take.

Still, it's better than before I was married as I had a very unusual surname that had to be spelt out each time.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
I spend a lot of time explaning that my first name is without an E and that my second name is not a Middle Eastern one, so they don't have to try to pronounce it or write it in unusual ways. I'm often asked whether we have special dietary requirements for our Jewish or Muslim faith (as the case may be). Er, no, it's a Yorkshire surname [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by amber.:
I spend a lot of time explaning that my first name is without an E and that my second name is not a Middle Eastern one, so they don't have to try to pronounce it or write it in unusual ways. I'm often asked whether we have special dietary requirements for our Jewish or Muslim faith (as the case may be). Er, no, it's a Yorkshire surname [Big Grin]

John Smith then [Smile] NOT
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
... there are people with [my surname] that spell it with a single "l" ...

There are people who do that with my surname too; I just assume that they're an inferior breed (inferior to my husband, that is [Big Grin] ).

In other news, the improvements to Château Piglet are proceeding nicely: the first of the new windows is in and is going to look very well indeed. Eventually.

At the moment the place looks as if a bomb's hit it ... [Help]

PS Hello Amber! **waves** [Smile]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Curiosity Killed, sounds great. I've never been to the Globe yet, really must do.

A couple of years ago, I saw Mark Rylance in an all-male version of Twelfth Night at Middle Temple. He was Olivia. I was actually very underwhelmed and thought he was the weakest thing in it.

M.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I was 55 yesterday - a nice balanced age, I think. Doesn't time fly when you are having fun?

I celebrated with girlie friends, we went to a cocktail bar - very posh! I could have bought five bottles of wine with the money I spent on cocktails! It was fun and we had a good old girlie giggle.

Mr Boog is now half way across the USA and baking. He says it's like cycling in a furnace with a fan heater blowing in his face - erk! But he's never sounded happier, he's on his drug of choice you see (exercise) he's made two good friends, on from Seattle and one from Coventry. They camp every night except Saturday, when they treat themselves to a motel as Sunday is rest day.

He is cycling for two charities - street kids in Mexico and a homeless refuge here in Rochdale.

[Big Grin]

[ 21. July 2012, 09:32: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Happy Birthday Boogie - you sounded like you had a good time! [Big Grin]

Hi Amber - good to see you here. I hope all goes well?

Off to visit daughter and Great Granddaughter this morning [Yipee]
 
Posted by M. (# 3291) on :
 
Happy Birthday, Boogie - 55 is an excellent age!

M.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Glad you had a good birthday Boogie.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
very odd today - the sky was a strange blue colour and there was a strange yellow ball in the sky....
We took a trip to Hereford and actually had our coffee-and-cake sitting outside the cathedral. We called into Abergavenny on the way home, and bumped into Birdie, which was an unexpected, pleasant surprise! ***waves to Birdie
 
Posted by Jahlove (# 10290) on :
 
not quite the *phew wotta scorcha* promised but fairly warm today. Steam-cleaned my suedette boots; currently hanging on the line - just need to do a bit more hoovering to get rid of the rest of the cat hair.

Usually, I only know when my bacon is done when the smoke alarm goes off. Today, I am delighted to say that I made the almost-perfect bacon nomwich for breakfast [Smile]
 
Posted by Lord Pontivillian (# 14308) on :
 
I made the most of the weather by going to Canterbury Cathedral for the first time. I really like the cathedral but left as soon as a whole load of french tourists arrived. I sought sanctuary in the ancient church of St. Martin.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Boogie - many happy returns! [Smile]

You're quite right, Lord P. - there's nothing buggers up a nice day in Canterbury quite like French tourists.*

I had a nice little earner this afternoon - verging for a wedding. The Dean's daughter (who's a student and presumably needs the money) does most of the summer weddings, but she couldn't do it so I got drafted in. It's probably the easiest $50 I'll ever earn - and I'm needed for another one next Saturday. [Yipee]

They had glorious weather for it - 23° and sunny - and it's forecast to go up to 26° tomorrow. [Eek!]

*Except French schoolchildren, who are even worse. [Mad]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Lord P - have you been to the ancient church (forget which saint, it might be another Martin) at Herne Village. (Not Herne Bay). Its really lovely. My mother was married there.

Haven't been to Canterbury Cathedral for years - I always think tourists spoil it!! [Biased]
 
Posted by Morlader (# 16040) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lord Pontivillian:
I made the most of the weather by going to Canterbury Cathedral for the first time. I really like the cathedral but left as soon as a whole load of french tourists arrived. I sought sanctuary in the ancient church of St. Martin.

The very best time to visit Canterbury Cath (and Westminster Abbey, for that matter) is to sing in a visiting choir. Cos (a) you are guaranteed a seat and (b) no tourists in the choir pews - though vergers sometimes can't get them to move! Mind you I have been greeted with "Gee, is this place still used?"
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Last time I went to Canterbury Cathedral I found myself at the end of a long queue having to pay for admission to get into the grounds. It's £9.50 now and not optional, unless you're there for a serivce.

It's a beautiful cathedral and the windows are glorious, but the place does seem to have become something of a theme park in recent years. I suppose it was always going to be a tourist attraction since the murder of Thomas a Beckett, and since the opening of the Channel Tunnel it's clear that visitor numbers have soared... but so much was roped off with "Walk this way", so many tourists with cameras, the audiovisual experiences on offer, etc etc, that it wasn't as pleasant as it used to be. But still a place one should see.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Hereford Cathedral yesterday didn't have any obviously French tourists, but had been taken over by the Three Choirs Festival, so we couldn't go in to the cathedral as there was a concert on. However, our coffee-and-cakes were accompanied by some lovely music, and there was a crafts marquee in the grounds with absolutely gorgeous things - I could have spent a fortune, but was very restrained and only bought a little Christmas ornament.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Second fine day in a row (second fine day of the summer, TBH) so after our 'Olympig* Games' for the young and not-so-young, Mrs S and I had coffee and a very pleasant cake watching clots in yachts on Cardiff Bay.

*Yes, pig-themed competitions. Boris, Jeremy Hunt, LOCOG and the IOC would be apopleptic, but we didn't use the rings, so we may get away with it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Lovely afternoon visiting a beautiful historic house. Fine view from the rooftops over the gardens, moat and fields in the hot sunlight of a July afternoon. The sound of the water lapping at the edge of the bank, and the calls of the birds. Cattle lowing gently from the field across the moat, sheep calling to one another; the drone of the occasional bee; dragonflies darting across the waterlilies and back. Summer at last, after weeks of rain. An idyllic way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Time to think about holidays, and sundrenched little harbours with sailing boats, the sun sparkling on the waves, fish and chips eaten on the seafront, and all that.

(Though Weymouth is probably best avoided for the duration.)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... 'Olympig* Games' ... pig-themed competitions ...

[Eek!] [Confused] [Eek!]

Nothing like that here, just another glorious summer day. It was sufficiently warm that nobody tried to close the West doors. It's a sort of running battle in the summer - D. goes and opens them so that there's a bit of a breeze blowing up the nave towards the choir, and some silly old duffer will close them because he thinks he can feel a draught. Of course there's no point in telling him that the members of the choir haven't the option of removing their robes or, Heaven forfend, suggesting that he move, as his family has sat in that pew since the Reformation ... [Mad]

We even had a bit of a congregation at Evensong, in the form of some cadets from HMCS Avalon. I hope they liked Tudor music. [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Good morning to all in the Shippyverse. I have coffee and birthday cake for all who would like some.

My niece and I had a birthday party for Mum as all the rest of the family have deserted us to go on holiday!

She was 92 yesterday and is doing well, considering.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Happy Birthday to your Mum, Boogie! She certainly does not look 92!

But I'd love a bit of yuour birthday cake with my coffee, thanks. [Smile]

Lovely morning here, with pleasant breeze. Have taken the opportunity of washing a bedspread - usually a certain omen of rain.......

But hopefully, not today. [Cool]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Happy birthday, Boogie's mum! [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
HWMBO had his operation this morning and his cute appendix has been removed! He says he is hungry, nothing unusual there! Heading back to the hospital now.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Votive] for HWMBO

Hope he's soon home and happy.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Originally posted by Wodders
quote:
HWMBO had his operation this morning and his cute appendix has been removed! He says he is hungry, nothing unusual there! Heading back to the hospital now.
Mr. S had his out just over a year ago - though I would not have described it as cute, Wodders! - when he was 60 (which is why it took them so long to diagnose it - very rare to have a dodgy appendix at that age, apparently). Every time we saw a doctor after, they invariably said 'Nasty appendix, that!' which doesn't make you feel good; but the point of all this is to say that even with 5 scars, at that age, and with that level of infection, it didn't take him long to recover completely - so be encouraged [Votive] be very encouraged [Votive]

Mrs. S, reflecting that at least the wretched things DON'T GROW BACK!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Great news WW - hope he makes a speedy recovery! [Smile]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
WW glad all went well.
What is the appendix for anyway? Apart from causing pain. I reckon that's another question to ask the big guy. [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I understand it's an evolutionary throwback - it's "vestigial" in humans because we don't need it any more, but normal in animals like rabbits whose diet makes it necessary. I've forgotten most of what I learned in Higher Biology but for some reason that bit stuck.

Glad to hear HWMBO is on the mend. [Votive]

PS You might have to go easy on the red-hot chillies for the next wee while ... [Big Grin]

[ 24. July 2012, 15:08: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Lord Pontivillian (# 14308) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Lord P - have you been to the ancient church (forget which saint, it might be another Martin) at Herne Village. (Not Herne Bay). Its really lovely. My mother was married there.

I didn't know about that one, so will have to remember it when I next go out that way. Part of the joy of the ship is that there is always someone with insider information, if that makes sense.

quote:
Originally posted by Morlader:
The very best time to visit Canterbury Cath (and Westminster Abbey, for that matter) is to sing in a visiting choir. Cos (a) you are guaranteed a seat and (b) no tourists in the choir pews - though vergers sometimes can't get them to move! Mind you I have been greeted with "Gee, is this place still used?" [/QB]

I have resisted joining the choir so far, for one thing it would be most unkind to the congregation.

quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Last time I went to Canterbury Cathedral I found myself at the end of a long queue having to pay for admission to get into the grounds. It's £9.50 now and not optional, unless you're there for a serivce.

I prefer it to St. Paul's in London. I really found St. Paul's to be too much of a tourist attraction. The crypt at Canterbury feels like the living part of the Cathedral, if that makes sense though it might not.

I really need to get my bsckside into gear and see the sights of the South-east whilst I am living down here!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Glad the cute appendix is sorted.

I'm on holiday at the mo. A coupla days ago, we went to a beach that, after a five-mile drive and another mile of steep downhill walking, you had to scramble across rocks to access. I slipped on some slimy rocks and got shorts covered in muck and slime. Finally reach beach, and discover swimming costume is back home, but I am so hot and dirty that I decide I must swim. So I wade in - though someone is yelling about jellyfish - swim for 10 mins (until daughter #2 also spots jellyfish) and then wade out.

Someone seated nearby told me she thought I was "very brave". I thanked her, but have no idea whether she was referring to the fall, the temperature of the sea, the jelly fish, or my (at least thirty-odd years too late) entry for the Miss Wet T-shirt competition.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Had to laugh when getting on the train today and seeing the scrolling announcement that read:

"We apologize for the delay to your journey. We are waiting for a problem with lineside equipment".
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
... We are waiting for a problem with lineside equipment".

I'm sure if they wait long enough one'll come along ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
No new post on here this morning??? Piglet, are you OK?

WW - are you recovering, and HWWBO well?

And the rest of you? Still with us, I trust?

I can offer coffee and hobnobs to anyone feeling they need a little sustenance. [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Coffee and hobnobs would be just great Nicodemia. Then I have to stir myself to get this house tidy.

I'm having a party on Sunday for lots of friends so that we can do a Skype link up with Mr Boogs on the big screen. He is still in the EFI club on the coast to coast USA ride, but it was touch and go on Thursday as he got grit in his eye and now looks like Long John Cyclist wearing a patch.

Here he is on a new bike (?) outside a coffee shop in Cannon Falls, Minnestota. The sleeves are because of the sun as it's hot hot hot!


(EFI = 'Every F***in inch!)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I think we're all stunned into awe or delirious with joy at the thought that the Olympics are finally about to begin, and therefore too incoherent to post.

It's a beautiful day - I'm off out, a-wandering. Somewhere with a river or lake, methinks.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We're back! Not sure I needed graphic details from surgeon about how inflamed the offending bit was or how, if we had been 2 days later, it would all have been in vain!

Now going to rest a bit, I think.

As it was a laproscopy there are no scars and he can immediately eat anything he wants and carry on life as usual but not heavy lifting for a week.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:


It's a beautiful day - I'm off out, a-wandering. Somewhere with a river or lake, methinks.

And a camera - of course?!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I think we're all stunned into awe or delirious with joy at the thought that the Olympics are finally about to begin, and therefore too incoherent to post. ...

I was so stunned in awe and delirious with joy that I overslept and so avoided the decision of whether or not to participate in the bell ringing. On the other hand it meant I missed the glorious ringing of the local Abbey bells which was a shame. Hopefully they're ringing later this evening.

Did anyone else ring something?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
My alarm-clock went off about 8:30 Newfoundland time today - does that count? [Big Grin]

Nicodemia - I'm grand, thank you for asking (just about to finish w*rk). I have coffee but a Hob-nob would go down very nicely.

It's a scorching hot day here - I've just checked Environment Canada's web-site and it's apparently 27°, but feeling more like 30° with the humidity. [Eek!]

Maybe I'd be better staying in the office, which is air-conditioned ... [Help]
 
Posted by Ferijen (# 4719) on :
 
I was a bit stuck feeding my baby but played Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells on the iPad. Does that count? Could hear tinkling outside as well at the same time, so I wasn't the only one!

Gorgeous warm day today, and I've made scones, anyone want one?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
And a camera - of course?!

Goes without saying. Though don't do what I did and blithely assume without checking you packed the spare battery, so it wouldn't matter if your camera ran out when you got there...

Lovely day none the less, no sign of rain either.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
D's sister's working as an Olympic ambassador and she e-mailed him to tell him to ring the Cathedral bell, but as he pointed out, if he'd rung it at 8 o'clock British time, he'd probably have got arrested as it would have been 4:30 a.m. here ...

I've just watched the opening ceremony and I thought they made a brilliant job of it. Boris was right - when he was asked about it by Clarkson on Top Gear just after the bid had been won, he said it would be done very well, but in a particularly British way, and that's just how it was.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We slept through the whole thing!

Must go shopping soon as we have no fresh food in the house having been missing for nearly a week.

Plus my shipment from UK [books from my dad's estate plus old photos and photoslides of mine] is waiting for me at the port office - I think we will go down Monday to collect.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I was trying to get some sunset photos - not that had one last night ...
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
.........
I've just watched the opening ceremony and I thought they made a brilliant job of it. Boris was right - when he was asked about it by Clarkson on Top Gear just after the bid had been won, he said it would be done very well, but in a particularly British way, and that's just how it was.

I watched it projected onto the outside wall of the Abbey here, and thought the ceremony was tremendous - a great balance of cultural and humour and wow. My favourite parts were the moths(?) on bicycles, the Queen parachuting in, and Mr Bean, but there were also some magnificent tributes that I thought were a good touch - Tim Berners-Lee, the NHS....
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Ahem - I think they were meant to be doves (of peace) on bicycles last night...encircling the arena.

Just saying...
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Can we have moths of peace just once? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I watched some of the opening ceremony last night but it was getting rather late so I finished watching it on iplayer tonight.

"Hey Jude" is a terrible earworm. [Help]

Otherwise, we had a lovely day in Wells. It was hot enough to go without a cardigan, but not so hot as to be uncomfortable. As part of the Jubillee celebrations, there are 60 large swans in the town - sculptures which have been sponsored by individuals, businesses and groups and individually decorated. They are quite amazing! We didn't really hunt for them, but we saw about a dozen.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Another vote for moths of peace, Mr Bean and HMQ doing the Bond thing. And the torch/cauldron was superb.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
Doves. Puleeease, just look at the shape of the wings.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I know they were meant to be doves, but the glow-in-the-dark thing is all moth. [Smile]
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
People. People. People. Sigh.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Oh yes - the cauldron was an amazing concept and worked so well. Have I understood correctly that the individual "petals" are to be dispersed at the end of the games? Do you think the moths of peace will be drawn to it?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... "Hey Jude" is a terrible earworm ...

My Hey Jude earworm has been replaced by another one. D. was playing for a wedding this afternoon and I acted as verger. For some reason the bride wanted to come in to the theme music from Game of Thrones, which is quite a nice tune (sort of Clannad meets Lord of the Rings) but has been in my head ever since ...

I felt a wee bit sorry for the people getting married today; it was more-or-less the first non-sunny day we've had in over a fortnight. It was much cooler too (14°) although that wouldn't have bothered me - I feel sorry for people who get married when it's horribly hot and sticky.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...I feel sorry for people who get married when it's horribly hot and sticky.

I thought that was the whole point!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Oh yes - the cauldron was an amazing concept and worked so well. Have I understood correctly that the individual "petals" are to be dispersed at the end of the games? Do you think the moths of peace will be drawn to it?

In the same way that the doves of peace were drawn to the cauldron in '88? I hope not.

At least they didn't release any real doves. There are far too many pigeon like creatures in London without adding any more.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Had to laugh when getting on the train today and seeing the scrolling announcement that read:

"We apologize for the delay to your journey. We are waiting for a problem with lineside equipment".

This reminds me of an anniuncement I hear some years ago:

"We are now approaching Carnforth. We are running ten minutes late, this us due to delays incurred before reaching Carnforth".

I think I could have worked that one out for myself!

[ 29. July 2012, 06:37: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
We were once told, "This train has been delayed because of passengers getting on at Southampton." Yes - everybody knows the trains would run a lot faster if they didn't have to stop and let people on board.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I'm busy baking ready for my party tonight and it's time for a break. The weather is FOUL! (Heavy showers and dull dull dull)

Coffee and lemon cake anyone?

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'll have the cake but skip the coffee, thanks.*

Still tired after my week and last night's shenanigans but getting excited that I might get all my old books and photos from the docks this coming week. I'm told there should be zero duty on them and I certainly hope so.

eta: *does this mean I can have double cake?

[ 29. July 2012, 11:16: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
It has just taken more than 24 hours to download the latest operating system for my laptop...is this a record? And can I have a gold medal, please? I promise I'll keep it all nice and shiny...
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I have been to see the women's cycling road race this afternoon come through Richmond Park. A lot of roads in the area were closed and it was hard to find out what buses were running and with what diversions, but I managed to get a bus to about 15 minutes walk away from the park. The riders were preceded by an extraordinary number of police cars and motorbikes, not far off one each.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I am now Great-auntie Piglet - Marla Daisy was born 28th July 2012. [Yipee] As she wasn't terribly large (6lb) she'll still be tiny when we go over; we're heading over to Blighty on 12th August for about 2½ weeks.

Further [Yipee]

Now I must go bear-hunting - everyone should have a Small Bear, and D. and I have appointed ourselves official Bear Providers ... [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today is my dad's birth centenary so Happy Birthday Dad! It's a pity he didn't make it but I think he was fairly tired towards the end.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Congratulations Great Auntie Piglet! (Makes you sound very old and wise [Biased] )

Guess what, its raining here! I watched the women's cycling yesterday, it was just so exciting. And I was very pleased to see that huge crowds had turned out for them, I rather thought there wouldn't be as big crowds for the women's cycling as there was for the men. I think they were a bit smaller, but then it did pour with rain most of the race! [Eek!] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

Now I must go bear-hunting - everyone should have a Small Bear, and D. and I have appointed ourselves official Bear Providers ...

What a super job - enjoy!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Congratulations Great Auntie Piglet! (Makes you sound very old and wise [Biased] )

[Looking severely at Nicodemia over the top of her spectacles] Great Aunts are not necessarily old, but they are, of course, very, very Great, as well as being wise.

Congratulations, Piglet. I recommend The Complete Book of Aunts by Rupert Christiansen.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
[Looking severely at Nicodemia over the top of her spectacles] Great Aunts are not necessarily old, but they are, of course, very, very Great, as well as being wise.

Actually, of course Great Aunts are noted or taking the sides of their great-nieces and nephews in any trouble!

I am a Great Aunt 4 times over, but I am also a Great Grandmother, which I assure you, is both very old and very, very wise!!! [Big Grin]

[ 30. July 2012, 12:19: Message edited by: Nicodemia ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I am EIGHT times a great uncle - but generally that just means I am allowed to be silly.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Any excuse to be silly should be grasped with both hands.

And congratulations to Great-aunty Piglet. I am only toasting you with instant coffee because that is what I drink at this time of day, but the thought is there.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Cheers, Balaam! **raises cup of Timmy's™**
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I am now Great-auntie Piglet - Marla Daisy was born 28th July 2012. [Yipee] As she wasn't terribly large (6lb) she'll still be tiny when we go over; we're heading over to Blighty on 12th August for about 2½ weeks.

Further [Yipee]

Now I must go bear-hunting - everyone should have a Small Bear, and D. and I have appointed ourselves official Bear Providers ... [Smile]

Congratulations!

On the basis of your location wouldn't a Moose be more appropriate?
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I don't think I have ever told of the occasion shortly after Sven stopped his travels when I late at night left a now defunct restaurant and saw a moose like Sven sat on the pillion seat of a rather big motorbike in the car park. It is one of those occasions I regretted not having a camera ready.

Jengie
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... On the basis of your location wouldn't a Moose be more appropriate?

We'd never get it on the plane ... [Big Grin]

A Small Bear has been bought and will be looked after with all the other bears until we go over. I spoke to my sister (the proud granny) today and there is Much Excitement. [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

A Small Bear has been bought and will be looked after with all the other bears until we go over. I spoke to my sister (the proud granny) today and there is Much Excitement.

Super cute bear.

[Smile]

I'm on with more de-cluttering punctuated by a swim at the new leisure centre at mid-day.

Up and attem!

I'll be back at coffee break to see what you are all up to.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Hospital visit went well this morning, HWMBO was given yet more tablets!
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I hate tablets! I've been on another planet for weeks (some might say all my life I guess [Biased] ). Planet Enigma is somewhat wobbly at the moment.
In other news, last Friday I was presented with a s starter mix for 'Herman'. He is now 4 days old and I think I fed him too much this morning. [Help]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
It's raining. Again.

Inspired by the Olympics, I wanted to go and shoot some arrows this evening, but I don't want to get cold and wet doing so.

I really need some exercise...don't wanna walk, don't wanna cycle, (would get wet doing both, and I might as well get my bow out) don't wanna swim (would definitely get wet doing that, plus the chlorine in the pool has a tendency to turn my hair greenish and with a marked resemblance to straw).

Waaah.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Chicken stock is in production chez Piglet at the moment - I'm just about to go down and strain it into the slow-cooker where I've got the veggies ready chopped up. It should be ready for virtual tasting by lunch-time in Blighty - help yourselves. [Smile]
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
quote:
posted by Enigma:
In other news, last Friday I was presented with a s starter mix for 'Herman'. He is now 4 days old and I think I fed him too much this morning. [Help]

I have a friend with a dog named Herman. Which meant the above caused me to [Eek!]

[ 01. August 2012, 12:56: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Tree surgeons arrived here this morning to fell several trees in the garden, and cut off dead branches etc from other trees. This is Good, because it means that we shall at last have some light in the garden,
and Bad, because it means that I shall have to clean the windows as the increased light will mean that the smears, cat nose prints and &ct will be seen Very Clearly Indeed.
Still, it has needed doing for years (why do people plant trees and then ignore them until they constitute a hazard?)

Not-At-All-Domestic Goddess St E.....who cannot concentrate on anything else because of the noise of chainsaws, and shredders, but who will be very pleased once the work has been done and all the wood collected (for free) by those who have wood burning stoves.

Edited - Freudian typo that sneaked through... [Hot and Hormonal]

[ 02. August 2012, 10:56: Message edited by: St Everild ]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Herman lives despite my best attempts to kill him. He is very smelly though and I'm concerned that my resuscitation skills might cause a taste disaster when the final product is produced. Watch this space.............
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Yippee!! Holidays have begun!!

I am, however, reacting to four solid weeks of office based work (my work is normally much more active) with a major upsurge of energy, and am expending it on the garden. Front Hedge restored to order, hay meadow hacked down to manageable height, so it won't cause the lawn mower apoplexy, and paths weeded.

Two loads of laundry done and through, and once I have hoovered through, and mopped the kitchen floor, I will collapse in a heap on the sofa for the rest of the day.

Wonder if there are Housework and Garden Medals available?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have been even more than usually lazy the last few weeks but I did manage a bicycle ride to the ATM in a nearby village yesterday - my own bank's one was closed but the other ATM in the village was open. It is getting a bit late in the day but I think I might do another bike ride or have a walk - I am horribly unfit and I know that exercise is one of the best things for me if/when I feel depressed and I know it is best to start the routine when I am not depressed.

There was a state wide strike yesterday so cycling was great fun as there was almost no traffic, I like roads like that!

[ 03. August 2012, 11:54: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
AAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!

I have just had a 10 minute panic searching for my mobile phone - I found it eventually...

.

.

.

...it was in my pocket!

[Hot and Hormonal]

[Roll Eyes]

[Killing me]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
... once I have hoovered through, and mopped the kitchen floor, I will collapse in a heap on the sofa ...

I want to go and collapse in a heap on the sofa just reading about what you've done today. [Hot and Hormonal]

It was far too hot to do anything much except collapse in a heap today (23° but it felt like 30 with the Humidex), and it's apparently due to be even worse tomorrow. [Frown]

Having said that, this afternoon I did a spot of minor shopping (mercifully in an air-conditioned shopping centre) while D. was playing for a wedding, and then we went to Gracie Joe's for magic lamb shanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
It's not quite as impressive as it sounds, piglet, honest!

I did collapse in a heap not long after all of that, and other than a trip to the supermarket, have every intention of remaining that way for the rest of the weekend.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Well, I did manage to dead head a whole lot of climbing roses that have got way too tall, because they live next to a honeysuckle, which has lovingly twined round the rose stems, so they can't be pruned and the roses get high and higher........

And I get giddy looking up too long (where is the emoticon for self-pitying whine??)

On the other hand I can see some blue sky [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

On the other hand I can see some blue sky

Wayhay - there's a bit here too. I was up and attem early today and have cleaned the kitchen. Now I need some energy to go food shopping - hate food shopping!

I managed to cut the lawn yesterday - it was so long it needed two cuts and lots of raking.

The greens are great in the garden, but not much colour.

I may buy some from the garden centre later.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Blue sky here too! Though as I have put out two loads of washing on the line, it'll probably be grey in about 2 minutes.

Part of today's plan (alongside tackling the front jungle, I mean garden) is to see about buying a jasmine and/or honeysuckle for one side of the front door. I had put some beans in as a temporary climbing thing (with added benefit of being edible); however I came back from holiday/work yesterday after 2 weeks away to find that the one remaining bean has been munched to oblivion by the slugs, so I shall bring the flowering climbers plan forward a year so at least there's something there. We've got a couple of beans in pots indoors which I'll try in a pot in the back garden instead, I think I'll have to fill the pot with stones and pellets in an attempt to stave off the slimy *******s.

Why can't they just eat the weeds? [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jack the Lass:

Part of today's plan (alongside tackling the front jungle, I mean garden) is to see about buying a jasmine and/or honeysuckle for one side of the front door.

What a good idea - then you get the scent as you leave and enter.

I may copy this idea [Smile]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
I may copy this idea [Smile]

You're welcome [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I remember that from my childhood - my parents had planted jasmine and honeysuckle by the front door. It was lovely (though you do have to watch out for the odd bee).

Is it me or has it gone suddenly colder? This morning I was sitting outside in the early morning sunshine having a coffee and watching the world go by, but there's a bit of a chilly edge to the wind now, reminiscent of autumn.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well the sun is heading south and the nights are drawing in...

[Two face]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Ariel, for some reason we already have lots of bees in our (miniscule) garden - I've no idea what the flowers and shrubs are, but the bees seem to really like them.

The jasmine and honeysuckle are in, and, er, I might have bought some other stuff at the garden centre as well. I always go with such strong resolve, and it crumbles as soon as I see all those lovely plants [Smile]

I also killed a slug with my trowel. I have no way of knowing if it was the one that ate my beans or not, but I like to think so, it made it even more satisfying [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jack the Lass:

I also killed a slug with my trowel. I have no way of knowing if it was the one that ate my beans or not, but I like to think so, it made it even more satisfying [Big Grin]

Even if it wasn't the one it was bound to be related - a sluggish funeral must be underway!
I have spent this afternoon celebrating a 65th wedding anniversary. A lovely afternoon but I must confess to being a little confused and hoarse due to the extra concentration and voice required for such times. [Smile]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I've had an interesting afternoon. Decided to rip up the old vinyl flooring in my 1950s house. Turns out the old lino was laid in 1979, though, and I'm clearing up the papery stuff from the edges where they glued the vinyl to the old quarry tiles beneath. Suddenly it occurs to me that the papery stuff might not be paper – it might be asbestos. I check on the interweb thinggy. Yup, asbestos was used as a backing to vinyl sheet flooring until the mid 80s. Great.

After consulting further on t'interweb and discussing with more knowledgeable friends, I decide the safest thing to do is go on getting rid of it. Go out to buy a mask. Come back, get it all wet (boiling water to dissolve the glue), keep it wet, scrape it off (took 3 hours), clean it all up, bag it all up, vacuum everything everywhere (including self), empty vacuum, shower, stick clothes and trainers in wash, bags waiting to go to tip. Tomorrow, probably.

Well, what I've been thinking, is that white asbestos is supposed to be not all that dangerous - besides, if it kills me off in 40 years' time, I'll have outstayed my welcome on this planet by that time anyway. But, in the last few minutes, I've just had a reply from an expert website I contacted, saying that there is “no measurable risk”. [Hot and Hormonal]

Oh well – the relevant bits of the house are cleaner then they've been since I moved in. And the 'new' floor looks nice. [Smile] Good way to spend the penultimate day of my hols. Knackered now.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Blimey, Qlib, that's even more impressive than Japes's domestic activities. And with Hazardous Substances™ too. [Eek!]

I've been a total couch-potato today. The temperature got up to 28° (36 with the Humidex) so going outdoors just wasn't an option - I'd have melted. So I cheered on the British athletes instead (and had a bit of a cheer when a Canadian lady won a gold medal for trampolining).

These Olympics (and the British athletes in particular) ROCK. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
The Olympics are beyond saturation coverage here at the moment. I'm not a sports fan, I'm happy for people to enjoy healthy exercise, even if only vicariously, but it would be nice to hear about something else on the news for once. Even the Metro is now regularly featuring no less than 32pp daily on it. I suppose it must have been much the same in Ancient Greece, with everybody wondering if Agathon would win gold for the 400 cubits race and (if he did) whether he'd been trying out that new potion from Thrace.

Meanwhile, I've been having fun trying out some online photo editing sites with fun filters. It's amusing that back in the days when film cameras were the norm, if your photo came out with an orange cast or such, you usually threw it away, but now people are deliberately recreating this kind of thing for "retro chic!".
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Mention of weather and pictures reminds me - my week's summer school in watercolours starts tomorrow. We are supposedly escaping the safe pedefinitions of working from photos into the great outdoors - or as much of it as is contained within the Edinburgh Botanic Gardens.

Forecast is sun and showers - heavy showers. There's always the glasshouses..
 
Posted by FooloftheShip (# 15579) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
AAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!

I have just had a 10 minute panic searching for my mobile phone - I found it eventually...

.

.

.

...it was in my pocket!

[Hot and Hormonal]

[Roll Eyes]

[Killing me]

I think I can top that one. I've just had a full strength panic for about 48 hours over the whereabouts of my phone. It turned out to be attached to its charger.

So yes, clearly it's not just life that begins at 40....... [Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Fool of the Ship - you reassure me, at least I have the excuse of getting on a bit [though nowhere near as old as Pete, of course!]

Firenze, if you are in the glasshouses, please remember not to throw any stones.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Firenze have fun - I am jealous! I could have gone on a similar course, especially as Mr Boogs is away for 10 weeks. But I spent the cash on my gorgeous camera instead. I won't regret it.

But I am still jealous!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
We're back after a weekend in Lincolnshire with Mrs Sioni's sisters and their other halves. Good bunch, too much good food and a very relaxing weekend leavened by a visit to Lincoln cathedral. I lived in the area for years but I don't recall seeing it before but my word, it's a magnificent building! Reading up on the history, I realised that Bp Hugh, the French Carthusian brought in to rebuild the cathedral after an earthquake and gee-up the diocese, was making a religio-political statement to put one over the king(s) when demanding resources for the house of God.

Then a rather more modest building. Ellis's mill, a very neat restored windmill. I found out that I'm not so bad on ladders after all.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Sioni, did you notice the name of the road that leads up the steep hill to square by the Cathedral and castle?

If you are still in the area the guided tour of the castle which includes the prison chapel is worth it.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think Lincoln is probably my favourite cathedral - not that I have visited them all. It is so light and airy, quite magnificent.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
HWMBO has been discharged from the appendicitis thingy but they now want a contrast scan of his liver and a liver function test - probably sometime at the back end of next week after my pension has been paid and transferred over here.

It's all fun.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Gosh WW! You and HWMBO do live exciting lives! Seriously though, I hope all goes well with the tests etc.

Guess what! its dull dank and grey here today and threatening rain. Very little wind so it will probably stay for a long time. [Frown]

Good day to cheer myself up and watch the Olympic people winning more medals [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've actually had some rain at last - quite a bit overnight and more today when we were at the hospital. It is nowhere near enough but it is something.

And yup, we live "interesting" lives but it stops us getting bored.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Guess what! its dull dank and grey here today and threatening rain. Very little wind so it will probably stay for a long time. [Frown]

We live quite near but have very different micro climates.

We have had plenty of sun with the odd shower!

I watched the dressage for a while but dozed off.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Am I allowed to wish that the Mars landing craft wasn't called Curiosity? It's one of several things I answer to, so every time there is a report, or I see something I end up noticing. It's getting wearing.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Guess what! its dull dank and grey here today and threatening rain. Very little wind so it will probably stay for a long time. [Frown]

We live quite near but have very different micro climates.

We have had plenty of sun with the odd shower!

I watched the dressage for a while but dozed off.

[Smile]

I think I have been inbetween you two today, rain in the morning but clearing around the middle of the day with sun shine this afternoon. I went geocaching with my sister and her kids, which is why I was between you two and we found our first two geocaches. Second attempt for them and fourth for me!

Jengie
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Am I allowed to wish that the Mars landing craft wasn't called Curiosity? It's one of several things I answer to, so every time there is a report, or I see something I end up noticing. It's getting wearing.

Every time I saw it mentioned on the news I thought of you. How are things on Mars? I've heard a few things about those bars...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's v. hot and sticky here - it got up to 27° with a Humidex of 36 today. It's now just gone 11 o'clock at night and it's still 22°. [Eek!]

Beginning to get excited about coming over to Blighty and meeting my new great-niece.

[Yipee]

Can you please have weather that's a bit cooler when I get there? About 18° and sunny would be the ideal conditions. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm sorry for the double-post, but after CK's comments about the Mars probe, I had to show you this which was posted by one of my Facebook friends.

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry, piglet, but neither of your links worked; both go to a page saying currently unavailable - and I am signed in.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
She's limited her page to friends, WW. I guess you know where you stand!

But having said that, I see nothing either!

[Waterworks]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
A very happy birthday to Princess Beatrice of York. I note she is engaged to Dave Clark, whom I thought was dead! [Eek!]

[Killing me]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
She's limited her page to friends, WW. I guess you know where you stand!

But having said that, I see nothing either!

[Waterworks]

Actually I suspect that they are someone elses pages who she sees because she is a friend and she just forgot that the rest of the ship may not be.

Jengie
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Is this the one?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
My apologies for my Facebook f*ckwittery - as you all know I'm not very techno-savvy. The pages were redirected from other FB friends, which is probably why you don't get them. I'll try and get pictures of my great-niece when I'm over on holiday and convey them from my mobile to the computer ...

[Confused]

As to the other link, it was this one.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
It's v. hot and sticky here - it got up to 27° with a Humidex of 36 today. It's now just gone 11 o'clock at night and it's still 22°. [Eek!]

Beginning to get excited about coming over to Blighty and meeting my new great-niece.

[Yipee]

Can you please have weather that's a bit cooler when I get there? About 18° and sunny would be the ideal conditions. [Big Grin]

I don't want to trump you but, thanks to Mrs Sioni having sisters quite a bit older than she, and their offspring being, ahem, prolific, we have just confirmed that she now has a great-great-nephew!

Essentially she is > 10 years younger than her next youngest sister and three successive generations have had children at or just under 20 years of age!

You'll have to accept the weather, like we have to. August can be anything between 10C/50F and 35C/95F!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Lovely day today, at last, proper heat and a real August day. The countryside is looking very lush and green, wildflowers everywhere. After work I stopped off to sit on the river bank for a while, watching people punting, haven't done that in ages.

You get all sorts on the river, from tourists trying to figure out which end of the punt they should stand in, to young couples, families with a dog who can barely restrain itself from leaping overboard and swimming alongside, and punts full almost to sinking with slightly more than the recommended number of students (not helped by more clambering over a bridge to drop into the midst of their friends).

Wonderful way to spend a summer evening, drifting gently past the river banks as the shadows lengthen slightly and the light takes on a more golden hue. It used to be possible to punt right up to one of the pubs (the Victoria Arms, IIRC) and stop off for a drink before resuming your journey, I don't know if you can still do that.

[ 09. August 2012, 22:07: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Congratulations to Great-great-auntie Mrs. S! [Smile]

The improvements chez Piglet are set to continue while we're on holiday; we're hoping it'll be finished while we're away. Small Bears have been moved to safety while the front windows on the first floor are being replaced, but I suspect the place'll still look as though a bomb has hit it when we get back ... [Eek!]

It'll all be worth it in the end ... I think.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely day today, at last, proper heat and a real August day.

Ditto here yesterday. I've been on an outdoor watercolour course all week, and bar Monday, when the tutor had to gamely demonstrate technique from under an umbrella, we've had fine weather.

And it's the first week of The Fringe. The craft fair tents are up around St Giles, the hoardings specially provided are already plastered with posters, the flyer-pushers and the mimes and the jugglers and the escapologists and the performers still in costume are coursing the streets. The Mile, from the Lawnmarket to the Bridges, is just one dense crowd. The Old Town is always a jumble of a cityscape, streets bridging other streets, cliffs of tenements, buildings scrambling up towards the Castle, threaded with and closes that are like windows into other cities - add thousands of people, shouting, music, dancing, images on every surface - and a fine sunlit evening, and it really is a thing to see.

[ 10. August 2012, 06:24: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Congratulations to Great-great-auntie Mrs. S! [Smile]


She says thanks ... but doesn't want to be reminded of it too much! She's not enamoured of being a great-great-aunt before she is a grandmother, which with five children aged between 16 and 29, living in South Wales, is pretty rare!
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
My niece and nephew have very strict instructions not to make me a great-aunt before I am 50.. which is looming more closely than I care to admit.

It's not that I don't want to be a great-aunt, I had fabulous great-aunts, and am looking forwards to emulating them. It's more as my godsons informed me in very worried tones the day they became uncles, aged 9 and 5 respectively, "Japes, we're really not old enough for this yet."
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Lovely day today, at last, proper heat and a real August day.

Ditto here yesterday. I've been on an outdoor watercolour course all week, and bar Monday, when the tutor had to gamely demonstrate technique from under an umbrella, we've had fine weather.

And it's the first week of The Fringe. The craft fair tents are up around St Giles, the hoardings specially provided are already plastered with posters, the flyer-pushers and the mimes and the jugglers and the escapologists and the performers still in costume are coursing the streets. The Mile, from the Lawnmarket to the Bridges, is just one dense crowd. The Old Town is always a jumble of a cityscape, streets bridging other streets, cliffs of tenements, buildings scrambling up towards the Castle, threaded with and closes that are like windows into other cities - add thousands of people, shouting, music, dancing, images on every surface - and a fine sunlit evening, and it really is a thing to see.

Oh my - I forgot about The Fringe. I'm heading to Edinburgh in just under 2 weeks for a couple of days and thought I'd be a regular tourist. I see a major change of plan.... from being planned to totally unplanned and spontaneous [Big Grin] - should be fun.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
As I have a nephew only ten years my junior and he and his wife have three sons all in their 20s I think great uncle-dom can't be far off - middle great nephew [from this set] has been "living with" a young female person for a while so I think he may be getting in some practice as to how it's done.

As to how my brother views pending great-grandfather-hood, I really have no idea but I think he may get the odd rubbing it in type comment.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Oh my - I forgot about The Fringe. I'm heading to Edinburgh in just under 2 weeks for a couple of days and thought I'd be a regular tourist. I see a major change of plan.... from being planned to totally unplanned and spontaneous [Big Grin] - should be fun.

You could catch the end of it: it finishes on the 27th. By that time, the awards will have been given out, the hits acclaimed, the hopefuls less hopeful...

The actual Festival will still be running of course: the Book Festival is co-terminus with the Fringe.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
I got back to work this week after last week in London enjoying the Olympic buzz. Monday was a bit of a damp squib, but the rest of the week has been glorious, so I have enjoyed running the gauntlet of the little bit of the Royal Mile I walk down to get to and from work and the station.

The only other time I have experienced Edinburgh during the Fringe was in 2003 when I was part of the Ship's Mad Tour and we visited Edinburgh for a few hours. I remember it then being absolutely heaving - I'm not sure it is quite that busy this year, although the Royal Mile is definitely busier than usual. A taxi driver yesterday told me that he thought that attendance at the festival was really down this year and business wasn't great - he put it down partly to the financial situation and partly down to the Olympics, he was hoping it would pick up a bit for him from next week.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
My niece and nephew have very strict instructions not to make me a great-aunt before I am 50 ...

I got a double-whammy - I turned 50 in February ... [Razz]

Much more civilised temperatures today - when I left w*rk (for three weeks [Yipee] ) it was about 21°. After doing sundry pre-holiday things (haircut, minor holiday-essentials shopping) D. and I went to our new favourite restaurant for supper (v. good again). It was lovely to leave the restaurant and find that it was actually cooler outside than it had been inside - a sensation we haven't felt for a few weeks. Bliss!
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I suppose it must have been much the same in Ancient Greece, with everybody wondering if Agathon would win gold for the 400 cubits race and (if he did) whether he'd been trying out that new potion from Thrace.

Just be thankful that it was the Olympic games not the Thracian Games that were revived.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Generations get very screwy. I'm only 14 years younger than my uncle, whose children are the same age as mine. And my grandmother's sister's youngest child is 5 years older than me and his son is the same age as my daughter - well all within couple of years.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
The children (live births) of my mother's parents ranged from 1890-1913. My mother was the youngest and before she was 10 she had several nieces and nephews. Even now, my eldest surviving cousin is 86 and there still remain several in their late seventies and eighties. My oldest cousin would be 102! He was born before Mother and one of her brothers. My youngest cousin is 2 years younger than me (I would be the youngest, except for him.)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Is there some law of self-inflicted injuries that they will affect the same part of the body? Mrs S dropped a stack of (fortunately unloaded) shelves square on her foot, right where her toes start, then the next day picked up two stacked trolleys, only didn't pick up the lower one and, surprise, surprise, dropped that on her injured toes too.

We can't decide whether it's a good thing that this isn't the foot that's been giving her trouble for the last year.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
We can't decide whether it's a good thing that this isn't the foot that's been giving her trouble for the last year.
It would be only if she has three legs. [Big Grin]

[ 11. August 2012, 13:31: Message edited by: Nicodemia ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We went to town this afternoon for a little light shopping and ended up being out three hours and spending, erm, quite a lot of money. Nothing special, just essentials that we were leaving until next week but once HWMBO gets behind a supermarket trolley there is no holding him.

We also went to see M in hospital - what was an overnighter has turned into he may be discharged Monday or Tuesday - at least they managed to get a private room rather than him being on the open ward.

We also bought a new India flag to fly on Wednesday, Independence Day here - the old one is pretty grubby after several years usage.
 
Posted by Balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Generations get very screwy.

I can't beat either of those, CK or Pete, not within my family. But I was in the same class at school with a boy whose uncle was in the class below us.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
It's surprisingly common I think - I used to think I was the only one with such young aunts. I have two aunts who are only 6 and 7 years older than me, so we grew up more as cousins (they used to come on our family holidays), and their children (my cousins) were born when I was in my mid-20s so they feel more like nieces/nephew than cousins.

I'm also what is derogatorily termed an 'Irish twin', though my sister and I did manage to avoid being in the same school year as each other, thankfully!
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
No, I think it's quite common. Trying to explain to my mum's cousin's daughter that her granddad and my granddad were brothers was very complicated.

I am 32 years older and my niece and nephew are both older than she is. But, I am the eldest of the eldest, and she is the youngest of the youngest. Granddad and Great-Uncle had a 14 year age gap.

It gets even more complex further back in the generations, as far as I can tell! But, I've not been delving into the family history much lately!!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
@Balaam - yes, I've seen that one too - but that was a very, very odd set up - not only uncle but stepbrother too.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
I spent a rather bizarre and surreal time today in the company of Darth Vader, a starship trooper and a few other characters that I couldn't name. They were wandering around a fun day for a kids' club that I help with - I'd be deep in a craft with the kids & look up to see a creature wandering past. The sight of them boogying to the disco will remain with me for a while, i'm sure. It seems that they are part of a battle enactment group - and include the parents of one of our kids.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
The uncle/brother thing can happen quite easily in a big family where the parents marry young (and start producing children) and the eldest child does the same - I have relatives in that situation.

In my grandmother's family (8 children who survived beyond infancy, of whom she was second from youngest) there was someone who was brought up as Granny's sister, but was actually the daughter of one of her eldest sisters (who gave birth to her and then emigrated to Australia, leaving her in the care of my great-grandmother).

In other news, we'll be heading over to Blighty tomorrow night [Yipee] so put the kettle on and have that nice temperate weather ready, eh?

I probably shan't be posting very much over the next few weeks, due to (a) the mouselessness of my in-laws' lap-top and (b) the antiquity of my dad's computer.

Be good while I'm away. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We're British - we don't have to be told to be good, it comes naturally!

[Razz]
 
Posted by Mamacita (# 3659) on :
 
May I barge in and ask for some advice? My nephew is being sent to London and Birmingham on business in September. He has asked me about whether to rent a car while he is there. Now, I know nothing about traveling in the UK -- only the wisdom I pick up from the Ship [Biased] -- but my impression is that he would be nuts to try to drive in or around London, given he doesn't know the area, plus that other-side-of-the-road business. Am I correct in assuming that trains and taxis will be adequate to get him around in London? And what about transportation from London to Birmingham -- is that easy to do by train? What about travel within Birmingham itself?

I've told him I would check with my internet friends across the pond, and I think he was quite impressed that his old aunt has such things. Any and all advice is appreciated!
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
In LOndon he would, indeed, be insane to hire a car. Public transport is the way forward, definitely. The train service from London to Birmingham is quick and easy too. Not sure about travelling in and around B'ham but I'd be surprised if it isn't really easy with public transport there too.

I hope he realises what a cool auntie he has [Biased]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I second Smudgie - it also costs money to drive round London due to the congestion charge. The underground is often busy but it's very efficient with trains every 3 minutes or so.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Seconded. How likely is he to have to travel extensively within the cities in any case? Business trips usually involve just getting from airport to hotel (the Heathrow Express is fast and frequent). Either the hotel will be convenient to the transport link, or be near to the meeting venue (or indeed be the venue). Pubs and restaurants are normally thick on the ground, so all in all, bar the major transits - which as Smudgie says are well supported - there's not a lot of travelling usually.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I manage very well in Birmingham without a car, and get around quickly and easily by both train and bus. Even when they're messing up the middle of the city, and changing all the bus stops. I also nearly got run over on one road, as I wasn't expecting it to have changed to be one-way in the other direction.

There are several different ways of getting from Birmingham to London by train, either from Euston or Marylebone. I usually do the Marylebone route, which is cheaper, but slower. The fastest route can be eye-wateringly expensive. That may not be an issue if he's on business.

[ 12. August 2012, 06:52: Message edited by: Japes ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Sorry, crossposted with Japes and the Delete Post option seems to have disappeared.

In answer to WW (below), yes it is easy to get around central Birmingham on foot. The train service to the outskirts was also quite good on the occasions when I've taken it.

[ 12. August 2012, 07:21: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
There is also a fairly speedy and fairly efficient coach service between the two cities but the preference has to be the train. Driving would be a very silly idea. Tell him no to be tempted by the speed of flying - the timing there is airport to airport, not city centre to city centre.

Given ok weather central London is also easily walkable, I presume Birmingham is the same. The best way to see anywhere is on foot or on a bicycle. If he cycles then there are bicycles for hire located in several places but get comfortable with the traffic being on the opposite side of the road before trying this!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
In other news, we'll be heading over to Blighty tomorrow night [Yipee] so put the kettle on and have that nice temperate weather ready, eh?

The warm summer weather ends tonight, according to the Met Office we're in for a week of showers, coolness and rain.

It's been lovely while it's lasted.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Birmingham isn't a joy to drive in either, and it's madness to drive in London unless you absolutely have to - even the City slickers use the Boris bikes if they don't use the tube or taxis. Which makes for funny photos at moments.

Hopefully he'll be most impressed by your internet savvy. My daughter's boss was fairly shocked by how fast I got recommendations for restaurants in Tampere (Finland) using a similar trick.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
In London it's worth him getting an Oyster card - it's pre-payment for bus & tube at a lower cost than paying for each journey separately. You swipe it at each end of a tube journey, but I think only once on the bus which I didn't realise for ages [Hot and Hormonal] so payed twice for my bus trips.

Edited to add that last time I travelled on Birmingham buses exact change was needed for the fare.

[ 12. August 2012, 08:16: Message edited by: daisydaisy ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Oysters can also be used on the Thames boats, which are more expensive, but a very comfortable way of travelling for some journeys
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
You still do need exact change on Birmingham buses!
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I have been to the Olympic marathon today, an 11 am start to an August marathon is a bit hard on the athletes and they did seem to suffer from the heat. I was opposite the water station for the Andorran athlete and we all gave him a loud cheer when he came past. He was 74th in about 2 hours 29. One thing about doing a bit of running myself is I realise just how good the guys right at the back of the field still are.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I remember walking in central London on a hot day being uncomfortable, but that Marathon must have been hell. There was a guy who had just finished laid flat out with someone sprinkling water on him. All the finishers had water poured on the back of their necks as they finished and I just hope they are OK.

In hindsight a 9am start would have been better, but that's hindsight for you.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
It used to be possible to punt right up to one of the pubs (the Victoria Arms, IIRC) and stop off for a drink before resuming your journey, I don't know if you can still do that.

Yes, it's the Vicky, and yes you can still punt right up to it. Well, to be more accurate you punt to the bit of meadow between it and the river, then send someone up to the bar whilst the rest find space on a picnic table. Pretty good pub IMO - personally I prefer it to the Trout - good beer and food, although the food does cost a bit...

Having got back from Cropredy, washed, and finally switched computer on, thought I'd drop in to say hello again! Had a lovely warm dry weekend, unfortunately it looks as though tomorrow may be damp - just when I need to borrow Mum's washing line to air the tent off. [Roll Eyes] We managed to meet up with Jigsaw at Cropredy as well *waves*. Great to have another face to put to a name on the screen [Smile]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Didn't you have glorious weather for Cropredy! I kick myself for not being more organised.
 
Posted by Mamacita (# 3659) on :
 
Thank you, one and all, for the travel advice for my nephew's upcoming trip. I know he will appreciate all the fast and informative replies!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I remember walking in central London on a hot day being uncomfortable, but that Marathon must have been hell. There was a guy who had just finished laid flat out with someone sprinkling water on him. All the finishers had water poured on the back of their necks as they finished and I just hope they are OK.

One year the Boston Marathon was run when the temperature was in the nineties. People who lived along the route were encouraged to bring their hoses out and spray the runners.

Moo
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Morning all.

Just back from walking the pooch - he's getting on so our walks are extremely short, but he loves them all the same.

He's very intelligent, he can be fast asleep but one sniff of poo bag (they are scented) and he's up and wagging.

[Smile]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I've had a free lunch today, paid for by my sister.

She has spent the last two weeks at the Olympics as one of the game makers, the people in the pink and purple uniforms, after having played a similar role in Vancouver two years ago. She flies back to Vancouver tomorrow.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Not having seen anything of the closing ceremony, I've now seen the BBC clip of Boris* and the PM dancing to the Spice Girls. (Where was Nick Clegg while all this was going on?)

Just the roller-skating nuns to come now and that should complete my catch-up, unless there are other highlights I missed.

*Boris was really getting into it.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Boris and David make such a lovely couple that perhaps Nick was jealous.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's Independence Day here - 65 years on from Nehru's famous "Midnight Hour" speech. In a minute we'll go on the roof and raise the flag.

I had a nasty shock in the city yesterday - the secondhand bookshop has closed! Or possibly it has just moved but the other one closed as well last year and I hope we are not faced with a city devoid of browsing places - that would be a Very Bad Thing.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Happy flag waving WW!

I am cross with the weather forecast, it was wrong wrong wrong for yesterday. I postponed a fun trip because of it - grrrrrr!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
So a couple of weeks ago HWMBO had an appendectomy then today he goes out digging the garden and is surprised/resentful that he gets pains in his stomach and has to rest! I sometimes think he doesn't have an ounce of sense!

And, of course, I would never do anything like that, ever, now would I?

[Memories of coming home from a hernia repair and feeling okay so took the dog for a walk for about an hour - well, it was a nice day and the drugs were controlling the discomfort. Next day I felt every step I had taken!]


eta: I've just realised that I was older then than he is now - only by a year but I was older.

[ 15. August 2012, 10:18: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Went for a wander with my new Canon Powershot camera yesterday evening. It took a little while to get the hang of the menus, but by the end of the evening we'd become inseparable friends. This little compact camera has manual control, as well as all the presets, so you can do the aperture/shutter thing if you want. It's a pleasure to use, the photos come out well and pleasing, and I wish I had got this camera before now.

Too much cake yesterday - there was a charity cake sale at work and someone provided quite the most wonderful mocha chocolate and walnut cake. Vegan, interestingly enough. Dark, rich, moist, utterly delicious with a coffee buttercream filling. I have no idea who made it but must get a recipe.

[ 15. August 2012, 12:24: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Good grief, Ariel - how many calories in a slice of that?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
For "walnut" read "almond". I've tracked down the person who made it and will be getting the recipe [Smile]

Don't know about the calories. All I know is, I went back for a very small piece of seconds then an equally small piece of thirds and that counted as lunch.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I'm just trying to prepare my Tom Tom Sat Nav for travelling. Updated from website so why is it not finding GPS signal now? Will take it outside in case fresh air helps but if not I will be taking a hammer to it. I love technology but it is not consistent!!!!! [Mad]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
The Sat Nag probably can't tell streets from canals if the weather is like what we have. I might venture into the street if the tide goes out.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Today I have had a Ta Dah moment.... I have managed to set up my phone as a wi-fi hotspot so my laptop can get onto the interweb where I don't otherwise have access. It took around 6 hours or trying one way and another, then.... success! It's so the Soul Survivor survivors can use the You Tube footage of week C to share with us at church their experiences.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Look what my husband got today - well done him!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Congratulations to Mr. Boog - I hope he's having a great time, because it all sounds like very hard work to me!!

And I love your drops! [Biased]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Congratulations, Mr Boogie!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:


And I love your drops! [Biased]

Thank you - I am looking for more this morning [Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Congratulations to Mr Boog and yes, wonderful droplets (although the date made me realise why I hadn't seen them)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Great achievement by Mr Boogie! Thankfully I am far too old to even contemplate such a trip.


- - - -

In other news HWMBO was given an ultrasound scan of his abdomen this morning, on top of the two CT Scans yesterday, and then pronounced problem free! I think we probably don't want to visit any more hospitals for a while.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Great achievement by Mr Boogie! Thankfully I am far too old to even contemplate such a trip.

The oldest man was 71 and the oldest woman was 76 (she used to pace for John some days).

Just sayin' ....

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I am sure that when the alarm went this morning I was at least 106!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
When the alarm went this morning I stretched out to turn it off and promptly fell out of bed.

(Not sure what lessons to learn from this: dispense with the alarm clock? Get a bigger bed?)

[ 17. August 2012, 12:13: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
My alarm is placed far enough away that I actually have to get out of bed to switch it off - the idea being that once I am up I will stay up.

There is not a lot of evidence to support this assertion.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
When the alarm went this morning I stretched out to turn it off and promptly fell out of bed.

(Not sure what lessons to learn from this: dispense with the alarm clock? Get a bigger bed?)

Erk! (Get a closer bedside table!)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's Independence Day here - 65 years on from Nehru's famous "Midnight Hour" speech. In a minute we'll go on the roof and raise the flag ...

Makes a change from what you sometimes do on the roof ... [Snigger]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
It's Independence Day here - 65 years on from Nehru's famous "Midnight Hour" speech. In a minute we'll go on the roof and raise the flag ...

Makes a change from what you sometimes do on the roof ... [Snigger]

We're currently in Colchester with the outlaws, where it is Very Hot Indeed. Heading northwards tomorrow where I hope it'll be a bit cooler ...
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Cooler further north? Don't you believe it.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
tee hee, piglet - I think raising the flag in a state of total undress might cause a little controversy locally.

Our friend M is off for his scan today - I blame his headaches on his two brain cells occasionally colliding but agree that a scan seems a Good Idea.

Have fun Up North, piglet & DD - and I hope everyone else survives whatever the weather chooses to throw at you.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The other day HWMBO and I were downtown and went in the local equivalent of the Pound Shop and bought Mrs E a couple of new aprons to replace the ones she has been using for a while and which look more than a little rammy.

This afternoon, when she wasn't looking, we confiscated the disreputable old ones and have hidden them from her so she'll have to use the new ones!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
And what if she finds them? You know she will. Cut them up instantly and turn them into cleaning rags.

Have you done that with more than a few of your shirts yet?

[Snigger]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The aprons are cut up - the shirts, not quite yet.

I have first to select the ones that deserve to go. I must confess that under the usual bad influence of you know who we have visited a few cloth shops over the last few months and I have had one or two [or possibly more] new shirts made.*

Last night young Muslim neighbour visited to ask my advice on another issue and said that he was looking forward to Eid and end of the fasting but not looking forward to the excessive feasting as he doesn't like to eat too much! This is one VERY strange 15 year old boy!


*Explanation for people unfamiliar with the culture here - it is far cheaper here to choose the cloth, buy the cloth, take it to a tailor and have a shirt made to measure to your exact specification than it is to buy a ready made shirt.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Our much valued thread was in great danger of disappearing off the page, so I thought I had better rescue it! [Big Grin]

For those who like to know, the weather has got a lot cooler and showers are threatened. Like yesterday, when I got caught in one and got hair-plastered-to-head drenched, as did the dog. And today rain clouds should come from the SW and dump their load straight on us unfortunates who live in Pennine country. (you there, Boogie - its coming your way!)

Right, that's got the weather out of the way.

I can offer coffee, tea with or without hobnobs, ginger nuts and plain digestives. [Smile] All welcome.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thanks for the rescue mission, Nicodemia - it's terrible that we should let it slip that far down the page.

Big Festival here next week so we went to do a little light shopping this morning and spent A LOT OF MONEY!!!!! It is mostly edible comestibles so we shall enjoy them later, no doubt.

15 year old maths student neighbour was telling me last night about Eid celebrations at a cousins house last Sunday and how food was appearing out of the kitchen every 5 minutes and how it would have upset the mothers assembled in there cooking and having a great time if he and his cousins didn't eat enough - he said he got to the hugely uncomfortable stage and beyond - but he is not a quitter!

I've just noticed that the little packet of tissues here on my desk has a picture of penguins on the pack! Is there nowhere safe from their pernicious influence?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
And today rain clouds should come from the SW and dump their load straight on us unfortunates who live in Pennine country. (you there, Boogie - its coming your way!)

It didn't rain here (Rochdale) but I was at my Brother's near Clitheroe and it
bucketed down. I have never seen spray so high above the car - the road was a river and the surface was being lifted up and swept away!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We get some amazing rain here, too - the best thing to do is pull out of the traffic and wait it out but sometimes the roads are not wide enough to do that safely or where you are is at a place liable to flooding so we have to carry on - the scary bit is when a bus passes in a rush and with a HUGE bow wave!

Having been up betimes the last couple of days I granted myself a lie in this morning but I was awake anyway so I stayed there for a little while then just got up. Some days I am not good at idleness.

I am now going to construct a cleaning thingy for the solar water heater tubes - they get very inefficient if the green algae or whatever is allowed to accumulate.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Some days I am not good at idleness.
You need to practise at this! I find its easier as you get older. [Smile]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
It's raining here now, as well.

I have the house to myself for a bit...it has been an exhausting week in the aftermath of our second burglary within 9 weeks, and I have had lots of police people, glaziers boarding up windows, other glaziers replacing windows etc etc etc. it is nice to be alone again, although really horrible having to tackle the mess that is my study, where every single drawer was upended onto the floor...

Someone sent me some very yummy chocolate brownies this week...seriously good ones...I might be persuaded to be a tiny bit generous if anyone would like a taste and a cuppa?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Here we are nowhere near drought conditions but we are seriously lacking in rain so send it on over!

Strange experience this afternoon when a young Muslim guy tried to give me some seemingly anti-Christian Islamic literature, which I declined - nicely I hope. I felt like saying to him that if Islam is one of the great world religions, which I think it is, why does he feel the need to denigrate other religions? A bit like when Christian missionaries denigrate Islam, I suppose. He wasn't obnoxious in the least but he was insistent I took these pamphlets and I was equally insistent that I didn't want to and wasn't going to take them. I gave him a smile and a wave as we drove away and he smiled back so I think we sort of parted amicably.


eta: I didn't take the pamphlets.

[ 24. August 2012, 16:08: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Here we are nowhere near drought conditions but we are seriously lacking in rain so send it on over!

Have some of ours, cars were sailing rather than driving across the Pennines early this morning.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
One more week to go and we're off to the Isle of Wight for a week. Yay! Just hoping we have some decent weather as it's the last major break before Christmas.
Which reminds me - I'd better start the secret santa thread before too much longer - oh, how the year flies by.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I believe the Isle of Wight is now a Penguin-Free Zone but please report any sightings to the Appropriate Authorities!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
St. E - if its not too late, I'd love a choc brownie!

And I'm really sorry about your burglary - the 2nd one?! [Eek!] Do you look especially prosperous then - hanging gold necklaces out of the windows, stacks of £20 notes in the windows? [Biased]

No, seriously, it must be really frightening and dispiriting.

And its going to rain again soon. [Frown]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
St E - sorry to hear it! Being burgled once is bad enough! I guess they were doing what they sometimes do, expecting you to have bought replacements for the valuables that they could then go off with again. I hope the police will be able to make some arrests and recover your items.

I really don't know why some people seem to think they have a right to break into someone else's home and just help themselves to what they fancy.

As for the rain - it hasn't arrived yet but last night was fun, I went off to the supermarket forgetting to pack my umbrella and timed it exactly right for getting back into the car as the heavens opened. Driving home, I could hardly see where I was going at times. We've been promised "slow-moving torrential downpours" today - well, it is traditional on a Bank Holiday - so probably not ideal weather for visiting summer gardens in the Cotswolds or motorway travel...
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
St Everild - [Tear] [Votive]

I'm so sorry to hear that. My MIL was burgled so many times she began to believe that it was the position of the house, so she moved - and was never burgled again.

Not an easy solution to a horrible problem.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
My apologies.

Not only did I mop the roof, clear a gutter, wash the outside of the windows at the back of the house, and bag up the rubbish kindly left me by a workman, I thought about cutting the grass.

It's obviously all my fault we've just had thunder, lightning and torrential rain.

So, I came in and mopped the bathroom walls and floor, and am waiting for the kitchen floor to dry before I go and practice tomorrow's hymns.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Can't you practise the hymns while you are doing all those chores?

Wash me and I shall be whiter than snow

Exits stage left.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
...Exits stage left.

Has he gone? Is it safe to come out now?
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Can't you practise the hymns while you are doing all those chores?

Wash me and I shall be whiter than snow

Exits stage left.

It's just a little tricky practising the piano, at the same time as doing the mopping or whilst up a step ladder. Especially as none of the chores took place in the room where the piano lives.

I know, a poor excuse.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I am thinking about washing the car...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We welcomed the rain here this afternoon and want more of it!

...but not in Hyderabad until after the cricket is over!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
It was lovely day in Abergavenny, and we went to have lunch. We were sitting by a window, looking out, and could see the clouds get darker and it was obvious the wind was getting up. One of the parasols outside actually blew out of its holder and nearly hit diners at an adjacent table, which caused the barman to take all the others down a bit quickish! We then had a short but energetic thunderstom with torrential rain.
10 minutes later, the streets were nearly dry and the sun was out. Lets hear it for British Weather!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Glorious day today - sun glinting on the fast-running River Wye, oaks and beeches shimmering and waving in the very stiff breeze. Absolutely beautiful.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Went shopping this morning and came out to see people sheltering in doorways as rain streamed down with tropical intensity (did nobody read the forecast and think to bring an umbrella?), creating large bubbles in the rapidly growing pools on the pavement. Small waterfalls from the gutters, etc, splashes that jumped a few inches back up. Glorious.

It's been like that intermittently but no lasting damage. Cambridge, on the other hand, had flash flooding and part of the roof of their central library collapsed, according to the BBC news.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
This weekend sees the start of the Onam school holidays and the local community association put on a kids event where two teams of kids competed to produce a Pookulam [literally: pond of flowers] and I was invited to go and record the event for posterity, or whatever. It meant me missing some of the cricket but it was good fun - HWMBO went with me then disappeared back home after about 20 minutes to carry on watching the match [Grrrrr!].

I am not really sure which team won the competition and I'm not sure anyone really cared - all the kids seem to have enjoyed themselves and it was good that the teams included all ages from about 6 to about 14 with some of the younger [4-5 year olds] ones being allowed join in for a few minutes.

It was a fun time and I got home in time to watch the end of Under-19s World Cup final, so that was good.


eta: and we had some good rain this afternoon which was a distinct bonus!

[ 26. August 2012, 14:19: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Today's forecast was for torrential rain over just about all of South Wales. We went up to Taurus at the Forest of Dean - Wodders, you may remember Taurus? - and it was reasonably dry. A quick trip to the bookshop at the Dean Forest Railway for Darllenwr, and back home in teeming rain. The cloud had come right down over the Severn Estuary and it looked pretty grim.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes, I'm very fond of Taurus - and it was a good day back in May. with my friends having their place in Yorkley I have been there several times over the years and have usually ended up spending money, which I pretty much avoided this year, as far as I can recall. The Arboretum at [?]Tetbury is also good, though all those trees do spoil the view a bit.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Well, so far the forecast is right - sun, warm, actually feels like summer!

When I was very little my Mum used to sing me a little ditty which went something like this:-

The Sun has got his hat on
Hip hip hip hooray!
The Sun has got his hat on and is coming out to play [Yipee]

So jump into your sunsuit,
hip hip hip hooray!
The sun has got his hat on and is coming out to play [Yipee]

I offer you this to welcome a bit of sun, and hopefully give you a giggle.

(PS my sun suit was one of those knitted ones that you really didn't want to get wet! [Biased] )

I can also offer coffee, digestives and hobnobs
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Digestives and Hobnobs would go rather well with a glass of warm Almond milk, I think - thank you. But please, not chocolate ones.

It has gone very dark here so I am rather hoping we are going to get some more rain - it is so annoying when we get the darkness but the rain passes us by!

I went into town this morning to stock up on medications and with tomorrow being major festival it was crazy down there - nearly as bad as Sainsbury's on Christmas Eve.

Aha, I can hear the rain approaching, it sounds wonderful.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

I can also offer coffee, digestives and hobnobs

Yes please - I have logged in just before coffee time.

I have done the washing, ironing and two hours schoolwork, so feel ready for a break.

Next job - clean the bathrooms. We had a cleaner up to the end of July - but now that I'm semi-retired I can't justify the expense, waaaaah!

\_/D cheers!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Good luck with the bathrooms, Boogie. I bought myself a good, long handled scrubber recently which is great for the bathroom floors - all our bathrooms are wet-rooms with non-slip vitrified tiling and they need a good scrub every few weeks - I find it quite therapeutic.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Good luck with the bathrooms, Boogie. I bought myself a good, long handled scrubber recently which is great for the bathroom floors - all our bathrooms are wet-rooms with non-slip vitrified tiling and they need a good scrub every few weeks - I find it quite therapeutic.

Mmmm - I like a nice wetroom!

Bathrooms are done - no scrubbing 'tho as we have laminate floors.

Now for another coffee, then off for a swim [Yipee]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We've had a good but quite tiring week in Orkney - we did quite a lot of cooking and clearing for my dad, so I almost feel that I'll be going back to w*rk next week for a rest.

New great-niece has been met and cuddled, and is, of course, the most beautiful baby on the planet.
[Axe murder]

We're now back in Colchester and heading up to London tomorrow where we're meeting up with D's sister and niece for supper, then staying at a hotel in Osterley before getting the plane home on Thursday.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Good to hear from you, piglet - that holiday seems to have flown by! Have a good trip home.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today is Onam, probably the biggest festival of the year here and I have, as always, committed The Sin of Onam - viz GLUTTONY.

Gosh but I have eaten a lot! It is at times like this that I think I should have taken advantage of the recent name change amnesty to call myself:

Mr Creosote

I had to ask Mrs E to take the dish of banana cooked in raw sugar away as I was just taking piece after piece - after having some time earlier declared I was so full I couldn't eat another thing!

It is chucking it down so a postprandial amble seems out of the question - I think I may have a little lie down instead.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It is now getting on for 8 hours later - I had a lie down and later I had a walk for an hour and I still feel uncomfortably full!

Tee hee.

I think I'll go to bed.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I hope, WW (she says severely [Biased] ) that you decided to miss breakfast, and went for a long walk to help your poor overloaded digestive tract! [Snigger]

I could only watch a bit of the opening of the Paralympics, as Mr. N wished to see something else, and was already recording yet another programme. However, I am sure I will catch it on various news channels. I am looking forward to seeing most of the sports, especially swimming and athletic-y things.

However, for now, the dog is looking at me as though he thinks it is walks time (it is) so I had better leave this. Coffee and biscuits on offer when I come back.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yup, I couldn't face breakfast either but we have just had yesterday's leftovers for lunch - and I think they tasted even better today, as "curry" often does. I possibly ate more than yesterday as well [Hot and Hormonal]

No supper tonight!

Rather like Christmas turkey the leftovers can last a while - I think tomorrow will see the end of them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
How is getting around London now the Paralympics have started - as easy as during the Olympics or more chaotic? Any advice welcome, as I may have to be in central London at some point at the weekend so am hoping it won't be too much of a scrum.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We were in London on Wednesday, having left Colchester at lunch-time and, even though we avoided the (completely static) M25, it was still jolly slow going - we didn't get to Osterley until about 4 o'clock.

We took the Tube to London Bridge and to say it was crowded would be a serious understatement. D's sister and niece got held up too, but we eventually met up and had a wonderful feed here, sitting outside, watching the river go by. Afterwards we took a stroll across Tower Bridge, taking pictures of D. posing with one of the Wenlock statues en route.

In other news, while we were away the man who'd been doing the improvements chez Piglet died suddenly. He had been in poor health, although he seemed to regard doing the work on our house as a sort of therapy, and D. had difficulty getting him not to overdo things.

I'm trying very hard not to feel (a) relieved that it didn't happen when he was actually in the house; or (b) put out that the work we'd hoped would be finished when we got back isn't and we're going to have to find someone else to do it, but I'm not entirely succeeding.

I never actually met him - he was always at the house when I was at w*rk - but may he rest in peace. [Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Welcome back piglet - sad about the renovations man.

today was the third feast in a row but with some new dishes including a superb beetroot curry that goes surprising well with the bitter gourd one.

Gosh I love food!

I think I'll leave weighing myself until sometime next week.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Heading out in the very early hours of the morning for two weeks in Spain. Was looking forwards to it, then saw this news.

The good news is the fire has passed the resort, they were evacuating 8 km away, and we should be OK as long as the wind stays from the east.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Go well and be safe, both of you.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Gives a whole new meaning to "red sky at night."
 
Posted by beachcomber (# 17294) on :
 
This is a nice chatty thread.

Was in hail storm yesterday !

[ 31. August 2012, 18:18: Message edited by: beachcomber ]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Just got back from a fabulous few days away near Llandeilo...weather a bit mixed but it didn't spoil anything. Wishing I was still there...
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It depends when you go into London I guess - I had no problems going in on Tuesday or Thursday - but I did pick my times a bit and didn't travel at times forecast as busy. I go through Stratford to go in and was on the South Bank, around Westminster, the City, St Paul's ...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, today all 7 Olympic venues were in action, 4 London football clubs were playing matches, and the rugby was getting under way at Twickenham.

I can report that I had no problem getting to, from or around London by train, bus or tube. As the grapevine said, it was quiet. No football or rugby fans to be seen at all. All transport was on time, prompt, with seats to be had. One of the easiest days out in London I've had in years. (Marred only slightly by a malicious pigeon generously decorating me just three minutes before I was due to meet a relative, but there we go.)

Interesting day but at the end of it, good to leave London behind. I used to want to live there, but these days as the train speeds northwards and the grimy suburbs start to give way to fields, hills and farms, and the scenery becomes more rural and beautiful as you approach the Cotswolds and south Midlands, I can only say I wouldn't swop it now.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I know what you mean, Ariel - I love going to London, and we had a really nice time there the other day (it was cool enough that walking about was comfortable), but I'm not sure that I'd enjoy living there.

As for commuting in and out every day ... [Eek!]

Another nice sunny day here today - after a lazy morning, did a spot of shopping although the mall was v. busy as it's the Labour Day holiday on Monday.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Being almost a Londoner by birth I reckon I live just about close enough now!

It is a nice place to pop in for a day or two but I can't say I miss it when I'm not there but then that probably goes for much of UK - too cold and too expensive for me, I'm afraid.

The new young assistant priest who says the Sunday mass at the Latin Catholic church we got to has had the [very necessary] pedestal fan in the sanctuary slightly repositioned to point at his chair so that now, with it being quite a small sanctuary, sometimes the thurifer has to stand half behind it which means that fast moving clouds of incense waft swiftly past the priest and right over to the other side. I think the lad that is normally the thurifer sometimes puts a little bit of extra incense on to the coals just for the heck of it.

They do use a rather lovely incense.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Lived in London, in a bed sit backing onto Regents Park in my Youth, which is a very long way away now. London was OK then if you were young, capable and reasonably street-wise.

Now I would be rather frightened, I think - everything seems much faster, a great deal younger, and harder, somehow.

Don't want to go there!

Its raining again. What a surprise!

Dog is very ill, and stayed in Vet's overnight. Waiting to hear. At least he won't want a walk!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Sorry about your dog, Nicomedia, how is he getting on?

Thinking back to yesterday - I saw a car parked somewhere in the vicinity of Westminster Cathedral. Each seat was covered in a different holy car seat cover. The driver's seat had a cover with rows of large blue crosses and a portrait of the Virgin Mary, the one next to it had the emblems of the Holy Spirit (who surely ought to have been in the driving seat?) and the back seats had the Holy Family.

It beats the wimpy effort I've seen elsewhere where a few people just have a rosary hanging from the mirror and that's it, not even so much as a dashboard saint.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Votive] for Nicodemia's dog. [Frown]

Ariel, maybe they got their car-seat covers from the same place as the sofa-cover in Father Ted ... [Big Grin]

Last "small-choir" Evensong of the summer tonight - there were four of us plus D. in the choir, and we did D's responses, Psalm 74, Weelkes' Short Service and O God, the King of Glory by Purcell. Very nice it was too.

Back to "old clothes and porridge", as my dad would say, on Wednesday.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I am pleased to say dog perked up no end in the Vet Hospital yesterday, and we fetched him later in the morning. Still on antibiotics and got to go back for a check-up tomorrow, but I have never seen a more normal dog!! [Smile]

Even the Vet was surprised!

Children go back to school this week. I can guarantee we will have a long spell of fine weather!
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
Our kids went back to school two weeks ago, Nicodemia,but our weather has remained grey and damp.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I am pleased to say dog perked up no end in the Vet Hospital yesterday, and we fetched him later in the morning. Still on antibiotics and got to go back for a check-up tomorrow, but I have never seen a more normal dog!!

So pleased to hear that Nicodemia - it's so hard when they can't tell us how they are feeling.

Gavin has always had a dicky tummy and has to have anti-allergic food. Even then he yelps and squeaks for a few minutes after eating. Poor pooch, I wish he could talk!
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
I've just been playing host to my sister and her family for a few days, and we had a wonderful time going round local castles and a water mill with my seven year old nephew.
And he got the chance to hold a real Olympic torch!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Maths student has an exam tomorrow so came over for a confidence boost this evening. He, like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials and tonight I did one a slightly different way [the way I used to make sense of them when I was that age] and suddenly his face lit up and he understood - I am so glad I glanced at him in that moment and saw comprehension dawn.

In the hour we had I think we covered most of his most troublesome areas and then I sent him home as nothing would be gained by labouring any of it.

Today has mostly been dedicated to the great cricket god - hooray for retirement and the ability to fritter away a day like that!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...

I've never had trouble with polynomials until just now, when I googled them. [Eek!] [Eek!] [Eek!]

I used to think I wasn't too bad at algebra, but the equations on the Wikipedia page looked Well Scary.

I'm just back from a v. enjoyable evening with an Irish organist friend who's in Newfoundland on holiday.

Back to w*rk tomorrow - can three weeks really have gone in that quickly?
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...

Wikipedia appeared to be written in some strange language, (possibly Polish, or Chinese Mandarin) and the next reference, laughingly called "Maths is fun" was no help either.

Ah well, I've got well into my 70's without having to bother about them, and I am for sure not going to start now!!

Its raining again [Frown]

Dog seems fine now [Smile]

Back to normal, then.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
He, like most of us at some time or other, has trouble with polynomials ...

Oh ... we do, we do!


[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I had a mongoose run almost over my feet today, only a yard or two away - they are SO cute! We still have a family in the empty land next to us which we see occasionally but this one was crossing the road.

I went to The Big City today to do some light shopping, etc. but then the heavens opened so I headed home and as soon as I got on the bus back the rain stopped and it was fine all the way.

I was allowed in the kitchen tonight to cook my own supper - yummy Spanish Omelette!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I had a mongoose run almost over my feet today, only a yard or two away - they are SO cute! We still have a family in the empty land next to us which we see occasionally but this one was crossing the road.

{tangent alert}

AIUI it is illegal for there to be two mongooses in the US at one time. Apparently one of the Caribbean islands imported some to take care of a wildlife problem, and they just about wiped out several native species.

{/tangent alert}

Moo
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Being a Piglet of Very Little Brain, I googled mongooses (I knew they weren't geese - my brain isn't that little), but I didn't know what they looked like. V. cute indeed.

BTW, what went into the Spanish omelette? Inquiring Minds Need To Know.

Back to w*rk today where at first my computer refused to co-operate (maybe it was cross because I was away so long?) but my boss was delighted to see me, especially when I offered to go and get her a cup of tea ... [Big Grin]

In fact, she was so pleased that she didn't mind me asking for the day off tomorrow as we've got a big funeral at the Cathedral - it's great working for someone who's as flexible as that.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mongooses are really cute and they seem not that terrified of people as well.

The omelette was made with potato and onion and garlic [of course] and mushrooms and tomato [on top] and eggs [and a pinch of salt and a generous helping of black pepper - silly me forgot the herbs but it was good anyway.

The people who have bought the corner plot across the lane from us have been having a pooja this morning to bless the laying of the foundations and halfway through the rain absolutely bucketed down! Nobody seemed at all fazed by this and they just carried on under umbrellas.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
When we were on holiday in Sri Lanka, our tour guide Lucky told us that 'a man's best friend is his mongoose'. If you have a pet mongoose they follow you everywhere (even to the loo, I understand) and they are invaluable at getting rid of snakes! [Big Grin]

Mrs. S, full of useless information
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes in the battle between snake and mongoose the mongoose is invariably the winner - their very thick fur means they can't really get bitten and they are amazingly agile little critters, too.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Did none of you read Kipling growing up? Rikki Tikki Tavi was one of those stories I loved from the Second Jungle Book (Mowgli is in the First one).

We had books from my parents' and grandparents' childhoods so I read all sorts from the shelves, without anyone batting an eyelid. I'm really not sure I should have read Walter Scott at 8 or 9, but there were other gems like Children of the New Forest, which has since been revived and other less joyous discoveries like Little Lord Fauntleroy which I have fortunately blotted out, some horrific Robin Hood versions, which I wish I could, and some really weird forgotten children's books.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Mongoose? It's am Indian ferret, isn't it?

No mongooses, mongeese or ferrets out here on the Costa Money, where I am relaxing away from the cares of the world. The crickets are starting to get loud again, must be another hot day brewing.

At least we missed the wildfires (see sig).
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
As a child my brother was very keen on Kipling but I only started reading him in adulthood, or what passes for it in my case. I think I was probably 40+ before I tackled The Jungle Books - and now probably reread them every couple of years; and the same with Captains Courageous, Kim and Stalky & Co - the last being one of the most gloriously subversive books ever written!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Oh, yes, I love Stalky & Co. That one I still reread - it's one of several books I got banned reading as a bedtime story* to my daughter because it makes me laugh. Kim I read as a child and I'd love to read it again.

* my daughter loved bedtime stories and we were still enjoying books together until she was in her teens. In fact, I worked out she wasn't keen to learn to read because all her friends lost their bedtime stories when they could read to themselves, and promised I'd keep reading until she wanted me to stop. What finished it, other than her getting ill, was my frustration with Lord of the Rings which I started as a bedtime story with her as a way of rereading it myself, only to find that the next joint instalment was several chapters later because she'd read ahead.

She used to like reading cuddled up so she could follow the words and I used to read books at a higher difficulty level than she could read herself (garnered me some lectures that one: "You really should not be reading Three Men in a Boat to a 9 year old ..."). She reckons that she learnt a much wider vocabulary and how to pronounce it from this than she would have reading independently. And I can still remember the misery of reading militia as mil-it-ee-a in school, knowing what it was (I'd read Pride and Prejudice) but with no idea of how to pronounce it.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Curiosity Killed ... wrote
quote:
What finished it, other than her getting ill, was my frustration with Lord of the Rings which I started as a bedtime story with her as a way of rereading it myself, only to find that the next joint instalment was several chapters later because she'd read ahead.
Oh my, that stopped me in my tracks.

When The Intrepid Miss S. was bedbound in a grim Welsh hospital with a fractured vertebra (it's OK - she's fine, she's fine) she couldn't sleep at night for the snoring, the too-short bed, the pain ... I would sit and read Lord of the Rings to her until she fell asleep [Smile] . When she woke up, I would start again.

Then her friends bought her a BBC dramatisation on cassette, which made her giggle because Aragorn sounded so wimpy!

Mrs. S, wiping away a tear
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Did none of you read Kipling growing up? Rikki Tikki Tavi was one of those stories I loved from the Second Jungle Book (Mowgli is in the First one).

Oh yes - happy memories of Mum reading both of these to me. I disliked the disney Jungle book because the characters were nothing like the ones I had imagined.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
The Disney Jungle Books movie was a complete and utter abomination!

[Mad]

It has been a gorgeous day here so, heading towards evening, I had a shower and got dressed in cycling togs and went for a ride to deliver a few photos. The weather changed in minutes and it bucketed down.

I came home.

[Mad]


[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Arrived at the railway station this evening to see police vans and cars parked outside, and any number of police standing around inside on the platforms and at the stairwells. Wondering if war had broken out or a terrorist attack was imminent I approached the nearest, who was also the tallest (he must have been nearly 7' but maybe that's my imagination) to ask what sort of national emergency had happened.

"It's the Oxford-Swindon football match," he explained cheerily.

For the record, Oxford had at least double the number of police, plus mounted police in the car park, when we got there (after a very peaceful journey on a train with police on board). I've never seen that kind of response for a football match in this area before - London and Birmingham yes, but I hadn't expected it here.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:


It has been a gorgeous day here so, heading towards evening, I had a shower and got dressed in cycling togs and went for a ride to deliver a few photos. The weather changed in minutes and it bucketed down.


Is this the same person who just a week or so ago was moaning about the lack of rain? Just curious, y'know?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yup, that's me - it stopped just after I posted last night and none since so I was out delivering photos to Kaliyampilly Temple at about 06.45! Sadly the odd half hour of torrential rain does not make up for regular and steady half days of rain and certainly for a few solid days of the stuff.

...and this monsoon has almost run its course!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
... read Lord of the Rings to her until she fell asleep ...

If it were me, that would be after about half a page* ... [Snore]

The book I most associate with being read to as a child is The Land the Ravens Found by Naomi Mitchison, and I now have no recollection whatsoever of its plot - all I can remember is it was set in Iceland in the time of the Vikings.

* I'm sorry - I just couldn't get into Tolkein at all.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Piglet wrote
quote:
If it were me, that would be after about half a page*
[Killing me] I know - now I use an audiobook of it to send ME to sleep in the middle of the night!

And oh, how lovely these boards are; someone (Piglet, even) has written 'if it WERE me' [Overused]

Mrs. S, grammar maven
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Arrived at the railway station this evening to see police vans and cars parked outside, and any number of police standing around inside on the platforms and at the stairwells. Wondering if war had broken out or a terrorist attack was imminent I approached the nearest, who was also the tallest (he must have been nearly 7' but maybe that's my imagination) to ask what sort of national emergency had happened.

"It's the Oxford-Swindon football match," he explained cheerily.

For the record, Oxford had at least double the number of police, plus mounted police in the car park, when we got there (after a very peaceful journey on a train with police on board). I've never seen that kind of response for a football match in this area before - London and Birmingham yes, but I hadn't expected it here.

There's a lot of history between Oxford and Swindon, and it has been known to be a bit nasty. One match when Oxford were still at the Manor ground (in the 80s) resulted in the fences/signs on the mini roundabouts downhill by the Cherwell Drive shops/BP garage being pretty much obliterated. [Roll Eyes] These days the police don't want to take the chance...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Well, they certainly weren't taking any chances last night! I did wonder if it was a "grudge" match. Park End St was closed off as well.

Btw did anyone go to St Giles Fair this year? I thought it was actually quieter (in terms of noise) than previous years and possibly a little smaller.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have been living here for almost 15 years and only last night did I discover that they have a local equivalent of stinging nettles! It was in the dark strolling down to the village and I just brushed my hand accidentally against a plant as I walked by - and it attacked me! Or rather it defended itself by stinging my fingers.

SWINE!!

HWMBO informs me that there would have been another plant next to it and that if I had crushed its leaves and rubbed it on the sting it would have gone away, a bit like Dock leaves.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Are these the plants whose stings are so powerful they kill insects which fall to the bottom of the plant to provide nutrients, or am I thinking about a different continent?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
No, I think they are just like an Asiatic nettle. We don't have any of these, either, sadly - my favourite plant! And Steve Martin is a wonderful dentist!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Weather here took a decidedly moist turn this morning - it was absolutely tipping it and blowing a gale when I went to w*rk. I think we may be getting either the tail-end of the last hurricane or the front-end of the next one - although with any luck it'll either blow itself out before it gets a chance to make land-fall or get side-tracked and head off out into the Atlantic.

The weather in Northern Ireland may have been boring, but sometimes the weather here isn't quite boring enough ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Scorching hot day today - glorious late summer's day, the sort when your mind instinctively turns towards thoughts of the coast, sea breezes, ice creams eaten strolling along the harbour watching little sailboats come and go on sparkling, gentle waves, that sort of thing.

Or possibly sundrenched countryside, the shade of a large green tree and a beautiful view to look at as you look up from a book, with a cold drink nearby - which is more likely when you're a hundred miles from the nearest seafront...

Summer at last, it may not last longer than this weekend but it's wonderful while it's here.
 
Posted by The Weeder (# 11321) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Did none of you read Kipling growing up? Rikki Tikki Tavi was one of those stories I loved from the Second Jungle Book (Mowgli is in the First one).

Oh yes - happy memories of Mum reading both of these to me. I disliked the disney Jungle book because the characters were nothing like the ones I had imagined.

[Smile]

I love the Jungle Book. I 'inherited' my copy from the family friend who once owned our childhood home- he left lots of books. It is a lovely leather bound edition, with a swastica embossed on the spine. This worried me as a child, until I discovered it is an Eastern sacred symbol. The book is enscibed 'With Mother's love to Eric on his birthday June 1st 1924'
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Here it's deceiving: it looks cool and grey - but having just spent a glamorous morning taking old mattresses etc to the recycling centre, followed by a trip to Lidl*, it is actually very warm.

*Their Special Lines were a particular treat today: canvasses, power drills, bed linen, nesting boxes and padded bras in adjacent bins on one aisle, strong showing in clothes-horses and thing-that-fits-over-the-sink, work boots and self-assembly furniture, but desultory frying pans and blenders.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:

*Their Special Lines were a particular treat today: canvasses, power drills, bed linen, nesting boxes and padded bras in adjacent bins on one aisle, strong showing in clothes-horses and thing-that-fits-over-the-sink, work boots and self-assembly furniture, but desultory frying pans and blenders.

I like Lidl, I love browsing the 'specials' - and their cottage cheese is the best in England, and veg is cheap and super fresh.

*advert over - hehe!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Bak offday - a week on the Isle of Wight with gorgeous weather. No Wodders, we didn't see any penguins, but we nearly had a mini Wightmeet as Lord P came over on the Tuesday, and we bumped into The Weeder at Osbourne House and also at Freshwater!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... on the Isle of Wight ... we didn't see any penguins ...

I knew the Isle of Wight was south - I didn't realise it was as far south as that. [Big Grin]

The Weather Channel is tracking the path of Leslie, which at the moment is a tropical storm, but may be limbering up to turn into a hurricane. Having said that, they're forecasting sunshine and 22° tomorrow ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm not sure what some of the Eccles crowd would have made of church this morning - with the start of the build up to their patronal there were fairy lights on the side altar holding the Holy Cross reliquary and flashing LEDs on the reliquary itself - all done in the best possible taste!

Altar boy was duly punched on the arm afterwards for the SMS he sent the other night:

quote:
I am going to give you two words which, if used correctly, will open many doors for you in this life...

.

.

.

.

PUSH & PULL

Should I have punched him more than once?

Actually he is a big, strong 17 year old so I'd rather keep on right side.

Afterwards I made porridge for breakfast - I cooked it for far longer, and far slower, than recommended but I like it like it, all creamy.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and the other thing I meant to say is that yesterday Jengie Jon posted elsewhere about having a summer cold - I recalled that post this morning just before mass started when there was an inordinate amount of coughing and sneezing and throat clearing going on - such afflictions even afflict at these latitudes.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
She's in good company - I'm nursing a (so far) mild dose of post-transatlantic snuffles. Usually by the time I reach England, I'm at several sneezes a minute, and by the second day I'm using man-size paper hankies at the rate of about 12 an hour, but this time I didn't have so much as a sneeze until I got home.

I know this is going to sound daft, but D's theory is that because they no longer permit smoking on planes, they don't have to use such good air-conditioning so you breathe second-hand air for six hours and consequently get Other People's Bugs™. Also, you'd think that the bugs would survive better in the warmer summer temperatures (and in Hot Places like where Wodders lives).
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Probably an old wives tale but I've heard that you are more likely to pick up bugs towards the back of the plane than you are towards the front - possibly because First & Business Class have better systems than the great unwashed further back who are also, of course, rather closer together.

Saturday was Lord Krishna's Birthday so I was asked to pop along to the temple with my trustee Box Brownie [if you can remember them you're getting on a bit] and take pics of the kids all decked out in their finery. It was fun, as always, with lots of shouts of "Photo uncle, photo!" - I've put a few snaps up on my Flickr page and at the same time loaded some of other events since the end of July. Pete might like to look at the new corner shop, which is now open and which, I was told on my way back from buying milk in the bigger village, sells milk just 100 metres from the house!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I know this is going to sound daft, but D's theory is that because they no longer permit smoking on planes, they don't have to use such good air-conditioning so you breathe second-hand air for six hours and consequently get Other People's Bugs™.

It's a hazard of public transport. Buses are notorious, and you don't have to be on one for six hours, either.

Possibly one of the worst places for it is probably a doctor's surgery, with a higher than average concentration of unwell people sitting in the waiting room.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Possibly one of the worst places for it is probably a doctor's surgery, with a higher than average concentration of unwell people sitting in the waiting room.

And just think of the germ count on those old copies of "Hello" magazine, "Gardening" and "Proceedings of the Royal Society of Haemotologists" that every onethumbs through.

Of course, if you go private it's "Country Life" and "The Field", and they're probably sanitised daily.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Best place to pick up bugs (and gain immunity)? A primary school!

No end of snotty, uncontrolled coughs and sneezes!
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Best place to pick up bugs (and gain immunity)? A primary school!

No end of snotty, uncontrolled coughs and sneezes!

I remember my first year out teaching secondary school, I caught every bug going. Next year was much better.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
I have man in my house stripping out and replacing some windows. Lots of noise and I am a bit frightened of the damage that will be left behind. Anyone know a good painter/decorator in S Wales?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
Of course, if you go private it's "Country Life" and "The Field", and they're probably sanitised daily.

My last doctor had those, though he wasn't private. They were ancient copies, as well, a few years out of date.

The waiting room gradually accumulated more and more magazines (of several kinds) over the years until the table by the window was covered in stacks well over a foot high, at which point a new receptionist took matters into her own hands and disposed of all but the newest. It was quite disconcerting not only seeing daylight but having magazines that were published within living memory.
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Window 1 done - now trying to ignore sounds of destruction elsewhere.......
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
It's a hazard of public transport. Buses are notorious, and you don't have to be on one for six hours, either.

School buses are much worse, especially in the weeks just after the start of school. The children exchange all the new germs they have acquired during the vacation.

Moo
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Handy hint (because I'm helpful like that): zinc supplements are flipping awesome things for when your immune system needs an extra boost.

Since I've been taking zinc at strategic moments (like before getting on a transatlantic flight and the like) I've drastically reduced the number of colds I catch.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:

Since I've been taking zinc at strategic moments (like before getting on a transatlantic flight and the like) I've drastically reduced the number of colds I catch.

Ditto - I take zinc all year round.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
I take zinc everyday but despite the current cold the best one I have heard is when travelling be thorough over washing your hands before eating or drinking. My cold numbers dropped drastically when I implemented that last year.

Jengie
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
Today --- 3 new windows very well done. One fall by me on my head. Tripped!! Suggestions for getting bloodstains from cream carpet gratefully accepted (not joking this time). My head will heal but I fear for the carpet.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
Peroxide removes bloodstains, but I don't know what it would do to the color or fabric of the carpet. If you do use peroxide, shield the area from light until the peroxide is dry. Otherwise you will get a yellow stain.

Moo
 
Posted by Enigma (# 16158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
Peroxide removes bloodstains, but I don't know what it would do to the color or fabric of the carpet. If you do use peroxide, shield the area from light until the peroxide is dry. Otherwise you will get a yellow stain.

Moo

Light - in darkest Wales?? We've had our bit for this year I think. Thanks Moo I'll have a go.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Goodness, Enigma, that sounds more than a little alarming. [Eek!]

We seem to have people queuing up to complete the job left by our late lamented builder; D. got what seemed like a very good quote from a bloke who lives across the road* and another bloke knocked on the door offering to give us a quote, so we may be sorted sooner than we thought.

We're now getting red hurricane warnings from the Weather Channel, and it's just occurred to me that we've got scaffolding up against the house - perhaps a spot of securing might be in order ... [Eek!]

* He's probably fed up with the view of our house in its unfinished state. Can't say I blame him. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
At the recommendation of our pharmacist I am now taking Vitamin C with added zinc instead of just plain old Vit C - this one doesn't taste wonderful but it is tolerable; I'll see if they do a non-chewable so I can just swallow it down.

If the weather stays steady I may have my long promised but never really accomplished trip to the secondhand bookshop today but the sky is looking ominous as I type!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm having yet another Proud To Be British moment - as I mentioned on the Scottish thread, Andy Murray has won the U.S. Open - the first British man to win a Grand Slam since Fred Perry in the 1930s.

[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
I take zinc everyday but despite the current cold the best one I have heard is when travelling be thorough over washing your hands before eating or drinking. My cold numbers dropped drastically when I implemented that last year.

Jengie

I learnt that when I was a schoolboy! And it reinforced in my travels when I started spending time in South Asia and following local customs.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
quote:
Originally posted by Jengie Jon:
I take zinc everyday but despite the current cold the best one I have heard is when travelling be thorough over washing your hands before eating or drinking. My cold numbers dropped drastically when I implemented that last year.

Jengie

I learnt that when I was a schoolboy! And it reinforced in my travels when I started spending time in South Asia and following local customs.
...and apparently it's one of the measures Dave Brailsford implemented within British cycling as a way of reducing time lost from training due to illness (and we all know where that led, don't we? [Devil] )

Mrs. S, proud to be British again this morning [Snigger]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Gorgeous sunny morning here in paradise and I have to take Nephew Person's bike down to the village for repair, so it may well rain fairly soon! It is is only ten minutes walk but still I shall take an umbrella just in case.

Was cruel to 14 year old neighbour boy yesterday - over the weekend I found a photo of him taken back in 2007 so I got a print made which I then gave to his older sisters - lots of cooing about "Awww, wasn't he cute!"

He didn't hit me and he was still smiling so I reckon I am forgiven.

It is not all happy stuff here, the older of the two older sisters above was attacked the other day just 200 metres from here by two men who tried to steal the gold chain she had round her neck - she fought back and they rode off on their motorbike but she was hurt and shocked. She has two adult cousins into martial arts as well as a father and uncles and all - if they got hold of the perpetrators they might well regret what they had done. I really disapprove of mob justice but there are times...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Predictably, I suppose, as it is monsoon, the umbrella was not wasted! Nephew Person's bicycle now fully functioning again for less than 20 pence!

I also gave bicycle repair man rather nice photo I took of his son at the temple on Sunday.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Rain rain rain here in Rochdale. I have a new umbrella policy - one in every bag, that way I can't forget it. So far it's worked well.

[Smile]

(Handbag, camera bag, swimming bag, school bag, walking rucksack - yep, that's five umbrellas and me dry!)
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
I thought having three umbrellas was excessive. Mind you I still have to remember to swap between handbags.

Rain hasn't reached the sunny south east yet but it was almost cold enough to get the gloves out on the journey into work.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Umbrellas are a bit tricky for me, so when I take the dog out, I have a Hat - which is waterproof but makes me look a proper Nellie! /~\ [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Amm my umbrellas are really past their use by date and since before the beginning of this year's monsoon I have been promising myself a new one but first I have to get a round tuit and am still waiting for that event to occur.

Just had a call from my UK bank to say the transfer I made on Monday has been returned because I gave an invalid account number for my account here in India - I gave the same number I have been using for 4 years! It is a bit late today but I shall go in my bank here tomorrow morning and make my discontent known. Luckily we are not quite on our uppers this month but it won't take long. The round tuit for that has already arrived!

[Mad]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ElaineC:
I thought having three umbrellas was excessive ...

Then again, you don't live near Manchester ... [Big Grin]

No umbrellas needed here today; after the vicissitudes of Hurricane Leslie yesterday it was an absolutely gorgeous day. It was an odd sort of storm: it really seemed very short-lived. It started around 5 in the morning, and the University was closed to staff and students, so I got a day off w*rk [Yipee] , but by lunch-time the sun was breaking through and the wind had died down considerably.

Although we personally didn't have any damage (the aforementioned scaffolding slipped a few inches down the hill, but that was all), there was quite a lot of damage in other parts of the city and out into the country.

One nasty side-effect of the storm was a proliferation of wasps and assorted Horrid Wee Bugs™, one of whom decided my right arm was just what he wanted for lunch, leaving me with a v. painful and rather large lump. [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Is the Horrid Wee Bug okay?

[Two face]

Sorry about that, hope your arm gets better soon and there are no after effects, as can sometimes happen.

I'm glad you survived the storm, the forecasts didn't look like fun at all.

Off to the bank in an hour to vent my wrath. I quite enjoy these things in a perverse sort of way.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
You have rain? I wish I could feel sympathetic, but I can't. At least the changes in weather gives you something to talk about.

I'm here suffering from the monotony of the weather being unchanging. 13 days in Southern Spain. Nothing but blue skies and sun. Poor me.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Oh balaam, I am SO sorry! I hope you get through that awful ordeal with no permanent damage.

My bank here didn't know how problem happened, they phoned head office who didn't understand how problem happened - all details check out fine! Anyway, payment re-initiated and I have been sent copy of original document for my bank so they can find out what went wrong.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We have spent a while today considering which provider to go to for our next satellite TV connection - we could upgrade to HD with the one we've got but there are so many providers and different deals here it is so tough to make the choice - but it is so much better than UK where it used to be just one provider, in the shape of the Evil Empire of Murdoch - is it still the same? One of the possibilities here is linked up with SKY so I haven't even bothered looking at what they offer - I am as ruled by Blind Prejudice as anyone else!

In the end one of the companies offers a 14% discount for booking online so I think that's the one for us - if we pay up front for two years we get a free extra 4 months, too! We would get an even bigger discount if we pay for 5 years but by then we could be in the realm of the Super HD so I think we'll stick to the 2 years.

Now to work out how to block the Fox channels...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Is the Horrid Wee Bug okay?

Quite frankly, I hope he got squashed. Slowly. [Devil]

Re your TV provider, don't you have to have Sky to get the cricket?

After D. asking around a bit, and getting good reports, we've taken up the offer from the bloke across the road to finish the work chez Piglet, and he's starting on Monday. He reckons it'll only take a few days, so we should be sorted fairly soon.

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We do have a derivative or combine or something of or with Sky but Sky is owned by, or something, Murdoch and Co so I'd rather not deal with them directly although perforce some of the cricket will still be on one of their channels whichever provider we use. I will probably do the order for the other company over the weekend and have it installed next week. We look to be about to have about 400 channels with quite a few in HD - of course we will never watch most of those channels as they will be in languages that no-one in the house understands. I doubt that we will watch more than 10% of them.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Who gives a hoot what language the cricket is in?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
HWMBO baked me some spiced fish [marinated in ginger, garlic, black pepper and salt] this morning whilst I was in town and also boiled some potatoes so I then made saute potatoes [home fries, I think, to those from across the pond] and I had far too much lunch.

But it were lovely, it were.

A quick visit to the bank this morning where I was promised my money would be credited today, I'm still waiting but it is encouraging news even if it is 4 days late!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Yesterday my car battery died, which meant an emergency replacement, and time off work, and as a way of ensuring the battery was fully charged, I took the car off to Stratford upon Avon.

It was a hot sunny day, and just right for the homecoming parade for one of the Paralympic Gold Medal athletes, who was being taken around town in an open-top bus, then gave a speech from the town hall balcony along with the mayor and dignitaries, to rapturous cheers. Lots of balloons, bunting, locals and small children waving flags, bemused tourists and a lot of excited schoolboys in uniform who'd been allowed out of lessons for this.

After that it was lunch al fresco at a table in the sun (food always seems to taste better in the open air), and then waiting for Judi Dench to appear at the RSC to sign CDs. I had to leave before she got there but saw it on TV news later and even a Paralympics crowd scene from earlier!

And I'd woken up that morning thinking I'd be spending most of the day at work, as usual. You never do know.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
{Just to let everyone know, I'm opening the Secret Santa thread}
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
Who gives a hoot what language the cricket is in?

I don't even understand cricket when it's in English ... [Hot and Hormonal]

... although there's something very civilised about a game that stops for tea. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A state-wide strike here today so very quiet - I took the opportunity to cycle to another nearby and slightly larger village to go to the ATM there. It was closed down because of the strike!

Ah well, the cycle ride was pleasant, I got some exercise, met some friends and got back before it started to rain again.

I can go to the ATM tomorrow after mass and before we go shopping so still a successful day.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Still recovering from a rather late night last night - we went to Weobley to see the wonderful Gordon Giltrap in concert. Yes, it was worth the hoour and a half journey.
He's going to be touring with Oliver Wakeman (Rick Wakeman's son) - that should be a concert worth going to.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
This weekend we were down in the beautiful Peak District for a wedding (well the wedding was in Sheffield) - we drove down after work on Friday so arrived at our B&B around 10pm, I was thinking as we were driving round all these country lanes in the pitch black that we were probably missing some amazing scenery, and the next day when we drove first to the wedding and then to the reception I was certainly proved right, it was absolutely beautiful. The reception was in a picture-postcard-perfect village, in the village hall next to the village green (and yes there was a cricket match going on), with river and dinky wooden bridge that was just made for wedding photos. It was absolutely delightful, and my goodness they chose the best day for a wedding, the weather was fantastic.

The only downside was that shortly after getting into our room at the B&B on Friday night, the most enormous spider scuttled across the floor and disappeared, we never did find it, but it certainly did for peaceful sleeping! Even TME, who is used to me squawking when I see spiders and nods in a "yes dear, of course it was that big" kind of way had to admit when he saw it that it really was worth making a fuss about.

He also saw a couple of mating slugs next to our car when we left the reception. I had to reverse in their general direction, so they may have had their passion somewhat rudely interrupted.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I know the sort. Size of your hand (and what's more, it was coming from the bedroom. I may have got that one, but I always fancy it had family).

This time of year is bad too; it's when they come indoors.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Think how big we must look to the spiders, doesn't seem to worry them though.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had one in the bedroom Friday night and one in the bathroom Saturday night - both unkindly despatched with a bit of cockroach spray.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
At least spiders don't sting - I've still got a bruise from that bloody wasp the other day. [Frown]

I really ought to go to bed - I'll need to be up earlier than usual as the builder's supposed to start tomorrow morning.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Who told you spiders don't sting?

I have had stings from spiders here - the big ones don't seem to be much of a problem but the littler ones...

A wasp sting can be very unpleasant and so can a spider - and it seems to be sore for days afterwards.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I got a nasty spider bite in India - my first and, so far, only - and it took a week's application of an antibiotic cream to clear it up. I was startled at how fast the venom spread.
 
Posted by Mary LA (# 17040) on :
 
Watch spider bites carefully, many are necrotic and go on to ulcerate -- our local GP refers people to the vet if he is in doubt because vets deal with spider bites on animals quite often.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
That's fine by me, as a colleague of mine used to say:

quote:
It's better to be vetted than doctored!

 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
Think how big we must look to the spiders, doesn't seem to worry them though.

Yes, I was always told "it's more afraid of you than you are of it". To be honest, I doubt it.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Mea culpa for my arachnological ignorance - maybe it's just that a spider's never bitten me.

We now have one more Nice New Window than we had yesterday - yay for new builder! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Could we change the subject, please? <shudders>

Its still raining here, though its colder rain than it was. [Frown]

I can therefore offer hot coffee or tea, plus a choice of biscuits - hobnobs, digestives, choc, whatever.

And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship. [Devil]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship. [Devil]

haha!

I gave up meetings a couple of years ago. Stuff gets done or it doesn't, we don't need meetings to talk about stuff getting done.

Yes please to biccies (virtual biccies are the best for the waistline!)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship. [Devil]

May I recommend a chairman who dines later and that you arrange meetings before his dinner. At least the duration is limited. Retired officers of the right level (c Lt-Col) usually fit the bill. They detest attempts to butter-them-up, aren't afraid of anyone while troublemakers are usually afraid of them.

On reflection, I suppose that is a dictatorship.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Unsurprisingly, if you know me, I took photos of the spider in the bath last week (my current Flickr Get Pushed challenge is a triptych), it hasn't returned to star again - I really didn't kill it.

The last few days have been busy with offspring down for what was effectively her summer holidays. Changing jobs at the beginning of the month she managed to lose her holiday entitlement as time off, although she'll get paid it in lieu from the previous job this month. We saw two BBC Radio 4 recordings, John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme on Friday and the Museum of Curiosity on Sunday night, plus The Taming of the Shrew at The Globe on Saturday afternoon. The Museum of Curiosity had:
It took 2 hours to record a 30 minute programme - the same format, but more extensive conversation - and only a few retakes of questions. I suspect I can guess some of the bits that will be cut. Tickets are free for BBC recordings, but you have to apply in advance and none are guaranteed. I've applied for some others, things I'd like to see, but I'm not sure I'll get anything.

I also rebraided my daughter's hair and persuaded her to sort out the boxes of stuff I didn't move up to her studio flat in February. We're now down to one box of university notes for storage here and another (small) pile of things she couldn't manage this time.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

And having sat through a rather tedious committee meeting yesterday, I have decided there is a lot to be said for Dictatorship. [Devil]

haha!

I gave up meetings a couple of years ago. Stuff gets done or it doesn't, we don't need meetings to talk about stuff getting done.

I can one-up you [Razz] . Try sitting through a meeting with a load of French people... (like I did last night - the management of our orchestra has let us down HUGE time so we are setting up our own charitable association to make the orchestra belong to the musicians).

En France, ça discute...*

*hard to translate but means that French people like to talk a lot and disagree with what everyone said pretty much for the fun of it
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
La Vie en rose said:

En France, ça discute...*

*hard to translate but means that French people like to talk a lot and disagree with what everyone said pretty much for the fun of it


Yeah, we had one of those, but he left. [Smile] But he spoke English. Emphatically.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
'Evening all. Just calling in to say hello to everyone. I read. I'm just not posting much.

Hugs all round. Or bracing handshakes. Or a nice cup of something.

(I'm still alright, which is good)
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Hey Amber. - hugs to you too. Lovely to see you here - like you I read more than I post.

This evening on my bike ride home from town I heard this and was glad (very glad) that I live far away from it. I also saw a fox, loads of stars and smelt some scrummy apples. I do like September.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hello Amber **waves** [Smile]

Those of you attending meetings have my sympathy; I've just finished typing up the minutes of this evening's meeting of the Anglican Cemetery Committee, for which I'm the Recording Secretary*.

All the new windows are now in, although as they're only just in I'm wary of opening them. This is unfortunate as the weather here's been absolutely glorious, so the temperature is slightly beyond the comfort zone of the hyperborealian piglet ...

* Like a Recording Angel, but without the wings, halo and general angelicity. [Two face]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Hi Amber, good to see you around again - I think of you often. I'm glad your health stuff is going well.

Had a nice troll around the city yesterday but still didn't get to the secondhand bookshop. I ended up in the opposite direction, went past an ice cream shop I used to frequent but first needed to go elsewhere, which I did, promising myself a double scoop [butterscotch and pistachio] in a few minutes. I remembered the ice cream when I was walking up from the bus to home so in the end it was only a virtual ice cream, perhaps I'll remember next time I am over that way.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and another thing:

Yesterday on the way back from the city the bus I was on passed a little three wheeler truck at the roadside entirely loaded with garlic! Enough to keep both piglet and I happy for at least a couple of weeks - I'd estimate it as roughly 12 cubic feet of the wondrous herb.

Yum, Yum!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Is Virtual Ice Cream the same as Virtuous Ice Cream, ie calorie-free?

Nice to see you Amber - I've missed you!

Having been burgled twice this year, I seem to be uninsurable as far as jewellery goes...had the pieces I always wear valued and got a nasty shock, so I tried to take out specialist insurance only to have it turned down. It isn't a victimless crime... and it is the innocent who seem to have to pay the price while the guilt get away with it and (in my case) came back for more.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I've only been burgled once in my entire lifetime, that was bad enough. You have my sympathies.

As for ice creams, virtual ice cream has virtual calories. Virtuous ice cream has calories, but only puts the fat on in places that make you look good.

I'll be keeping a long virtual distance from Wodder's garlic breath for some time.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'd send Wodders a virtual Polo mint, but I doubt it would be effective against the quantities he's talking about. Oddly enough, this afternoon I happened upon the recipe for chicken with 40 cloves of garlic and thought I'd like to do it again, although not until (a) chez Piglet is restored to non-bomb-site status and (b) the weather gets a bit cooler. I did baked lamb for a dinner party once on what turned out to be the hottest day of the year - not a good idea.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had the jeep serviced yesterday - we popped into the place on the way to town to see if they could fit us in this week and they said that if we went and got the parts and brought them back they'd do it then so a quick trip to the car spares place for oil and filters, etc. then back to the workshop and a walk home. We walked back in the cool of the late afternoon and waited whilst they just finished it off and then drove home - cost for the parts and their labour including manufacturing a new bracket for the fuel filters as the other had cracked, a bit under 30 quid! We gave them a Rs 500 note and told them to keep the change.

Today we are off to a book fair in town then the monthly mega-shop!
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Is that haggling WW style, to pay less than a quarter of the bill and tell them to keep the change ?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Tee hee!

Just realised that I didn't say their charge was Rs 450, we had already paid Rs 1800 for the parts.

[Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I'd send Wodders a virtual Polo mint, but I doubt it would be effective against the quantities he's talking about. Oddly enough, this afternoon I happened upon the recipe for chicken with 40 cloves of garlic and thought I'd like to do it again, although not until (a) chez Piglet is restored to non-bomb-site status and (b) the weather gets a bit cooler. I did baked lamb for a dinner party once on what turned out to be the hottest day of the year - not a good idea.

Mint over garlic attempts to conceal the garlic, rather that counter it. There are two ways to deal with garlic
i) associate only with others who consume garlic.
ii) eat handfuls of parsley. Willie Rushton recommended this as 'how to avoid smelling like Le Metro on a Saturday night', though it does little about the stale sweat and Gauloises.

The 'chicken with 40 cloves' is surprising reasonable as the cloves aren't crushed or sliced, so the odour is comparatively sweet. If it's the lamb recipe I'm thinking of, well that's another matter!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
WW has just eaten an entire barrow full of garlic?

That'll keep any vampires away (probably a 7-mile exclusion zone).
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Tee hee!

Just realised that I didn't say their charge was Rs 450, we had already paid Rs 1800 for the parts.

[Hot and Hormonal]

According to a currency chart I've found Rs 1800 is about £20 (at almost 90Rs to one GBP)!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
When I first came here on holiday in 1995 it was about Rs 44 to the pound and last week I got over Rs 87!!

But we have high inflation, too.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's because of all that garlic.

Earlier this week while I was sitting waiting at the station, something scuttled from under a large raised flower-tub underneath the bench and shot out the other side under another flower-tub before I could figure out what it was. This was disconcerting.

The following night the performance was repeated but the creature slowed down a little and I realized it was a slightly dishevelled little sparrow, looking for crumbs.

It has now got used to me, actually makes eye contact and hops around my feet while I sit there (without any food unfortunately). But I'm curious because I've never seen the bird fly, just run incredibly swiftly in a completely straight line that reminds me very much of a rat diving for cover, then dive under the nearest flowertub; and it's always alone. Is this normal behaviour for sparrows?

I'm tempted to give it some crumbs next time, but don't know if I should encourage it, especially with the cold weather approaching (and don't want to be pulled up for littering). But it's hard to make a living these days, even for a little bird.

[ 20. September 2012, 17:40: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
That's definitely not normal for sparrows, no. Most odd. I'd put out some bird food of some sort, aye.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Is the chicken with 40 garlic cloves recipe roast?

Roast garlic is a wonderful thing. If that much garlic were stewed it would be inedible to all except Wodders.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
One variant of chicken with forty cloves of garlic.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Ariel, I blame Global Warming - as the air heats it becomes less dense so it is harder for little birds to fly!

I've seen sparrows do similar stuff here and they certainly learn quickly who can be trusted.

Garlic roasted whole then deskinned [actually the skins just about fall off] is a wondrous thing!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Is the chicken with 40 garlic cloves recipe roast?

I did it in a chicken brick. You separate the cloves of garlic but leave the skin on; put a few in the chicken cavity and scatter the rest round it, then bake it. Put a few of the cloves on each plate, and the diners squeeze out the baked garlic (which will have become almost sweet) on slices of toasted French bread.

The house smelt incredibly garlicky while it was baking, but the taste was absolutely yummy.

[Smile]
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I'm mildly allergic to garlic. I think I need to put on a hazmat suit or something for this thread not to be injurious to my health at the mo [Biased]

(no, but seriously, I quite like the taste of garlic, but it hates me. Forty cloves? [Help] )
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I reckon the only thing that would be worse than being allergic to garlic would be being allergic to wine. [Eek!]

The improvements chez Piglet were going swimmingly - all the windows are now in, and the new siding up to the top of the middle-floor windows is on and stained a beautiful, bright vermilion.

[Yipee]

However ...

There's a telegraph pole outside the house and the chaps can't build the scaffolding any higher without Newfoundland Power coming to wrap up the power cables that are tied to it. Which they can't do for another fortnight because they're busy putting things right after the hurricane last week.

Hmph. [Frown]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Alas, piglet, I am allergic to alcohol in all shapes and forms. Which is a shame, but I'm used to it now.

Not being allergic to chocolate is a pretty good compensation. Yesterday, which goes down on record as the most hideous day I have ever spent at work, was much improved by the large bar of chocolate waiting for me when I got home!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I can't have alcohol OR chocolate OR tea OR coffee.

In fact I live a very sad and deprived little life *sniff* but I try to keep cheerful.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
My daughter is allergic to garlic and mildly to onions but really allergic to alcohol and chocolate (and wheat/gluten, dairy, pineapple, most nuts including pine nuts, eggs have to be properly cooked and she's beginning to react to tomatoes).

Try cooking around that lot! I don't cook with garlic, butter or cream when she's around. When she went to university I bought a pack of butter to cook omelettes and scrambled eggs for me - and realised I didn't like the taste any more. Same for cream, although I'll use the soya cream in cooking. But I'm very happy to have garlic back in my life.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
......

Not being allergic to chocolate is a pretty good compensation. Yesterday, which goes down on record as the most hideous day I have ever spent at work, was much improved by the large bar of chocolate waiting for me when I got home!

There are times when I can measure my w*rk stress levels by the amount of chocolate I need.... or G&Ts
 
Posted by Wesley J (# 6075) on :
 
Forgive me for poking this here. It's quite hypnotic as a song, and strangely pleasing. [Ultra confused]

Nick Clegg - I'm sorry. [Paranoid]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Nick Clegg's been a good sport about that, hasn't he?

Beautiful day today - went to the Stratford on Avon Food Festival. A crisp sort of morning with bright sunshine and the smell of frying bacon and sausages wafting through the air to greet you, from those little stoves they have at market stalls. A real variety of things to look at, wonder at and sample, including French, Italian and Middle Eastern stalls as well, spanning two streets and the riverbank.

I can now say I've tried the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of balsamic vinegar (delicious), Waitrose's seriously gingery cake (it's seriously gingery), but passed on the oysters and the exotic burgers.

The weather forecast is rain for the next few days and it's noticeably colder already - might as well get out while you can.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Like the sound of seriously gingery cake....
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Hmmmmmmm - GINGER!

We like Ginger - that cake sounds fab!
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Hmmmmmmm - GINGER!

We like Ginger - that cake sounds fab!

Am about to post a recipe in heaven recipe thread for a seriously ginger ginger cake. I've made this once and it was fantastic. Took it for morning tea to a Saturday gathering of friend. Nothing left to bring home.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
After reading that recipe I have written to the Pope recommending Loth for immediate canonisation - that sounds brilliant. Now I have to adapt it for Indian ingredients and also for diabetics.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have to report an Act of Blatant Cruelty!

One of HWMBO's friends was in the kitchen and spotted the rows of Marmite™ in a glass fronted cupboard and asked about it so HWMBO, being the kid, sweet, lovable soul that he is said "Have a taste."

The friend was NOT impressed!
 
Posted by Starbug (# 15917) on :
 
As a lover of the thick brown stuff, I would take it as an act of extreme kindness if somebody offers me some. The cruelty would be failing to supply lots of hot, buttered toast to spread it on.

Making myself hungry now... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
You can keep your Marmite, I prefer the stuff the brewer doesn't throw away. Though a decent brewer will donate their waste malt products to the local pig farmer. Pigs will eat anything. I'm more fussy.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Another successful wedding cake by Mrs Sioni! I'll see if I can load some photos.

This was for a Wild West themed wedding party (wedding had taken place in Las Vegas) and it was a fine party, with the possible exceptions that i) it was a bit cool and ii) the farmhouse cider. I like farmhouse cider but this was pretty nasty, tasting vaguely 'woody'. Everything else and everyone there was very good indeed!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
... donate their waste malt products to the local pig farmer. Pigs will eat anything ...

I resemble that remark. [Big Grin]

I reckon I know someone who comes into most of CK's daughter's allergy categories (except the pineapple) but they're all different people. The idea of one person being unable to have any of those things is truly scary (and more than a tad depressing).
As for soya milk, I'd rather go without. [Projectile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Soya cream in cooking just gives a creaminess to say spinach, fish or a risotto type mix. There are also rice and almond milks. And garlic is possible in small quantities, cooked thoroughly, not lightly browned. So the three boxes of cauliflower and chick pea curry in the freezer from the vat I made this week will be fine.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
You can keep your Marmite, I prefer the stuff the brewer doesn't throw away. Though a decent brewer will donate their waste malt products to the local pig farmer. Pigs will eat anything. I'm more fussy.

The fruit and veg waste from the Basics Bank Mr. S volunteers at goes to the local community farm for the pigs and goats, but they can't eat citrus fruits apparently (I didn't know that).

Sioni Sais - Master S. was at a cowboy-themed wedding party on Saturday night and he lives in Cardiff - it surely must be the same one!

Mrs. S, amazed [Biased]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's raining. The trains are upset – looking at the live destination board earlier to see how the weather was affecting them, I saw there was one trying to get out of Wales for London that was three hours late before it even reached Bristol. The evening rush hour's going to be fun.

I think I saw somewhere this is the tail end of tropical storm Nadine or something. Not that we're exactly in the tropics. How are we all doing?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
It's not just the rain, it's the wind and the branches coming down.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Not much wind up here. But lots of the wet stuff.

Tomorrow will be a different matter, though, going to the nearest church to Gatwick Airport to see our ex-vicar inducted as their rector. I hope the southern winds die down. Don't want any planes blowing off course when we are there.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Gales all last night and this morning, but wind has quietened down now. Still torrential rain though.

We are feeling very soggy here [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It sounds like you are all having our monsoon - and we want it back!

Keep safe all of you, including flightless aquatic birds.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We're having moderately silly weather too, but not in quite the same way as you (although we did have a brief but very heavy shower this afternoon).

Yesterday (including overnight) the temperature never got below 20°C, and during the day was up to 24°, but felt like 33° with the Humidex. In late September. [Eek!]

It's supposed to cool down a bit on Wednesday, thank heavens ...
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
Wet stuff still falling from the sky here, we hope for drier spell this afternoon.

Jengie
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I think it's set in for the day, here [Frown]

I have high hopes for a meeting with a police officer tomorrow, who is going to ask me to look at some jewellery, in the hope of identifying if any of it is mine. And, oh, how I hope some of it is, and that what is not finds its rightful owner too.
I didn't have much, but what I had I liked and would prefer for it never to have been taken in the first place, so getting some of it back would be a fabulous thing. And, since I haven't actually completed the insurance claim(s) yet it will mean that I won't have to refund them, either [Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Nice sunny day with warm autumn sunshine (sorry).

Good luck with the jewellery identification, St E. I hope you do manage to reclaim some of your stuff. Monetary value is one thing, but the sentimental value of some items is irreplaceable.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Still chucking it down here as it has done all morning. [Frown]

Do hope you can get some of your jewellery back, St.E - well, all of it would be nice!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
I'll keep you posted re the jewellery...one of the awful things about these burglaries is that I have become a bore to myself and others on the subject - they are among the most outrageous things anyone has ever done to me in my entire life (which must be more than half over by now although anyone suggesting that I am "Middle Aged" will get a Look!)
 
Posted by Taliesin (# 14017) on :
 
yes, theft is outrageous, and burglery is worst.
Good luck and I hope it's all there. And not spoilt in any way.

I'm in Palestine at present, so it's hot and dry every single day. Getting a little cooler at night, hurrah. I am enjoying it though, sorry. [Big Grin] I'll just go and smooth a little more cream onto my mild sunburn...
If you're interested in why I'm here, peruse the blog!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Good luck with your jewellery, St. E. I love my jewellery - I've been collecting Ortak for almost as long as I can remember* and it would take for ever to replace it if it were nicked. And you really can't measure the sentimental value - D. has been giving me Ortak birthday, Christmas and anniversary pressies for years.

* The owner of Ortak's daughter was in my class at school; she gave very classy birthday presents ... [Cool]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
<waves>

Helloooo - I'm baaaack!

Been visiting my son in Heidelberg. It was lovely to see him, and see that he has such a good life! We did lots of café visiting, walking in forests and cycling round fields and little German villages. The weather was good, unlike back home where there have been awful floods not far from here. I am eternally grateful to live on the very top of a hill!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Ours is only a little hill, Boogie, but it still makes quite a difference - lots of run off. It is only about 30 feet from us to the bottoms 200 yards or so north of here.

Glad you had fun in Heidelberg, from the photos I've seen it looks a lovely place.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Thank you WW [Big Grin]

For those not on 365 here is a photo of my son and his GF hugging a tree in the forest above the city.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I had a shower a few minutes ago and left my specs on the window sill, facing west into the afternoon sun and half in the shade of the window frame. When I put them on they were variegated as the bottoms, tops the way I'd put them down, had been in direct sunlight and had gone quite dark whilst the tops [bottoms] were clear having been in shadow. Happily they adjust quickly enough.

Yay for Transisitons™ lenses but that was odd!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Jewellery update...only one necklace (and that was costume jewellery rather than the Real Thing, alas) but I did identify three other items, two of which I hadn't even realised had been taken [Hot and Hormonal] When I went looking for them, it was obvious that they were not where they should have been...on account of them being in an evidence bag in protective custody. So, I'll prepare the two insurance claims and get them sent off, as I very much doubt if anything else will be recovered at this stage.

Love the Ortak, Piglet - get it valued, photographed and insured if you haven't already done so!

In other news, we had a bit of sunshine here at lunchtime but it has clouded over again now, and looks like rain again.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Welcome back, Boogie! **waves back** [Smile]

I'm almost embarrassed to tell you what a lovely day it was here - high of 19°, cloudless skies, glorious sunshine and no Humidex. It seems to be cooling down to nice, proper autumnal temperatures now, which suits me just fine - I love autumn here!

[Yipee]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Humph - if it's Autumn, then Winter is not far behind, and, as I am solar-powered, that means months of feeling sluggish and cold.

I wish I could fly south, like the birds!

The kettle is on - anyone want a cuppa?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry, St Everild, too late in the evening for me to take fluids but thanks for the offer.

If I flew much farther south it would start getting colder, we are only just above 10 degrees North here.

A day of losses, happily not serious ones but a pen and a BRAND NEW handkerchief - can't really blame anyone but myself but may blame A Certain Penguin just because most things that go wrong here are her fault.

One local lad tonight taught me the Malayalam word for monster so I had fun calling a few of the kids that - I think the general opinion of the local kids is that I am daft but fairly harmless.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
My sympathy on your losses WW - I HATE losing things, although I seem to do it quite a lot.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Daft but fairly harmless. I like that, it should be your sig.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... may blame A Certain Penguin ...

I didn't realise you were that far south. [Big Grin]

I can think of a few people who are "daft but harmless". Mostly clergymen. [Devil]

We've been getting pictures on the Weather Channel of floods in Assam; my geography is so abysmal that I have absolutely no idea if it's anywhere near you. If it is, and you're in the monsoon season, isn't that what you'd expect?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sadly the Brahmaputra floods almost every year and they must have had a 'better' monsoon up there than we have - the devastation seems worse than usual this year - virtually the whole state is on a flood plain. It is about two and half thousand kilometres north east of here - compared with there we are pretty much extreme south, just about 270 kms from the southern tip.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Some time later...

HWMBO is a VERY BAD INFLUENCE!!!

We went into town this morning, each with a quite separate list of tasks so I am happily trolling along doing my list when my phone rings, it is HWMBO and I thought he was going to say he had finished his list and was waiting back at the car but no, he had gone to a Book Fair in the Town Hall and found that about a third of the books there were in English and that I was expected to attend. I wander along there expecting to be disappointed and ended up buying four more books!

Who knew there was an eighth Artemis Fowl story?

On Monday, if Customs release them, I should also have another couple of hundred books that I have had shipped from UK - this will involve completely reordering my fiction shelves.

[Big Grin]

They need a good clean anyway so I will accomplish two tasks in one.
 
Posted by Mamacita (# 3659) on :
 
Hi everyone. Several weeks ago I asked for advice for my nephew who would be traveling to London and Birmingham on business in September. I passed along all your generous comments. Here's his post-trip report. (Bear in mind this is a thirty-year-old from the Milwaukee area, where there is no public transportation outside of a few inner-city buses).
quote:
Made it back safe from England last night. Thought I would pass on that the comments you sent were dead on. It was a good help.

It took us about 5 minutes in a taxi from the airport the first night to realize that we were NOT driving at any time. That opposite side of the road thing was much more challenging than I anticipated. So was just crossing the road!

We hardly had any time to site see during the trip. We were so busy with work, and work was way out away from the cities, that we never saw any sites until the last day when we were leaving. We got to the airport about 5 hours early (came directly from Birmingham that morning) so we hopped on the Heathrow Express and ran into town. Travel is really pretty easy once you know what you are doing (first time on a subway!!) but it is really expensive. We had enough time to walk to Buckingham Palace and take a few pictures and then hop back on the subway to catch a train back to the airport.

Hopefully next time we can build in a day or two to see the sites. Anyway, just thought I would let you know the comments were helpful.

So, my thanks as well!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Tell him an Oyster card makes fares a lot cheaper for next time. Glad the advice was good.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Glad to hear your nephew's trip went well, Mamacita. The first time I travelled alone on the Tube, having made sure that I knew exactly how many stops I had to go, there was an Incident and we had to change stations ...

[Eek!] [Eek!] [Eek!]

However, when I got off I headed straight for the work of Absolute Genius that is the Tube map and discovered that if you know left from right you can get about no bother at all. So much so that a bewildered fellow-passenger came and asked for help. Before I knew it I was showing her how to find where she was going.

Mustn't faff about here for too long - I have soup to make. We're Blessing the Animals tomorrow, followed by a clean-up, and I'm making a pot of soup for the cleaning volunteers. Haven't really got much to do as I made stock and chopped up the veggies last night, so it's just a case of chucking things into the slow-cooker and letting it get on with it.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
I've been for my third blackberrying trip of the last few weeks, didn't get as many as the two previous trips but it was worth it as there were lots of juicy latecomers. And it looks like there are enough big red ones that I might be able to manage some more next week [Smile]

It's sunny and blowy out, so perfect for hanging out the washing - I am unapologetically middle-aged about that, line-dried clothes smell *so* much nicer than machine-dried ones.

It's October next week. How did that happen?!
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Somewhere I've got a recipe for red blackberry jam - which might be necessary around here - they're going soggy before they're ripe in some cases.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Animals have been blessed, church has been cleaned (not by me) and soup has been consumed to general approval. I changed the spices slightly (cayenne instead of chilli powder) and was a bit dubious about it when I first tasted it, but once I'd blended it and added in the cream it was OK.

It was another of those lovely bright, warm-but-not-too-warm autumn days; just as well, as a cathedral full of wet dogs would not have been fun. [Eek!]

We don't seem to be getting the wonderful autumn colours so much this year; according to a friend it's something to do with the salt spray that was chucked over St. John's by the hurricane a couple of weeks ago.

[Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A month or so ago I went to the pharmacy to buy some more chewable Vitamin C tablets and the guy showed me one that has added zinc so I thought I'd give them a whirl. They taste a bit different from the plain Vitamin C and I find now, after a few weeks, that they make me smell funny! Not unpleasant but just strange. I am fairly convinced that it is these tabs doing it as I smell a bit like how they taste. I am on the last strip now and shall revert to the plain ones later.

On another matter; usually I really don't mind not understanding a word that is said in church but this morning the priest said something during the announcements and everyone smiled or giggled - it was really annoying not knowing what was going on!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A couple of hours later and we have had an hour or more's visit from a group of local lads learning Chenda Melam, one of the local art/drum forms. It was fun for us and several neighbours - and it was VERY loud. I took a load of video of it and whilst they weren't at the standard of the link they were pretty good - my video is clearer than the youtube one. I also took loads of still photos which I shall print up for them during the week. We rewarded them with drinks and biccies and they have promised to come back next Sunday morning when we will be having a social event here so they can entertain the outlaws.

Now do you see what I mean when I say the heat, the dust, the flies and the constant drumming?
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
It was another of those lovely bright, warm-but-not-too-warm autumn days; just as well, as a cathedral full of wet dogs would not have been fun. [Eek!]

At our church we bless the animals in the parking lot. In addition to the usual pets, we also get a few small farm animals.

Moo
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
A month or so ago I went to the pharmacy to buy some more chewable Vitamin C tablets and the guy showed me one that has added zinc so I thought I'd give them a whirl. They taste a bit different from the plain Vitamin C and I find now, after a few weeks, that they make me smell funny!

I take chewable Vit C and zinc (separately) and I do NOT smell funny (I hope)

Rain rain rain today.

I think I'll have my chilli harvest today and make chilli paste - half are red and half green, so the time has come!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Nice day yesterday starting with breakfast out, at a table in the sun. Just on the edge of being cold enough a morning to know that this is probably one of the last days this year to be able to do this, before the weather slips into mornings of frost and darkness and the food develops ice crystals on the way to the table... what happened to summer?

No rain yet today - but cool, cloudy and uninspiring.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
we also get a few small farm animals.

Moo

[Big Grin]

You shouldn't make fun of someone's name, but this is too good.

Sorry Moo.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
I take chewable Vit C and zinc (separately) and I do NOT smell funny

Not enough for the smell to carry over the hill anyway.

Good start to the day. They started digging up the road outside at 7.30 this morning.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
A very strange day - our vicar is leaving to take up a new parish near Milford haven and this was the famiily's last Sunday with us.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We're off to the City in as minute to collect my boxes of books from Old Blighty - another 4 cubic feet [or 19 kgs] of books just to make my shelves look even more full! It will be fun, eventually, re-ordering the whole lot of them.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:
we also get a few small farm animals.

Moo

[Big Grin]

You shouldn't make fun of someone's name, but this is too good.

Sorry Moo.

Balaam, dear, you beat me to it! [Killing me]

Wodders, I think your next project will have to be building a library wing on to Woddering Heights. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
There already is a library wing in Woddering Heights. It's called All available unused space.

Trust me on this.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and just who is to blame for that? Is it me or is it A Certain Snowbirf?

Have now got the book and the photos and had to pay duty on the photos and slides - over two quids worth!!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I thought I'd better reiterate that this smell that I think emanates from my taking these tablets is not unpleasant just odd - and quite different from the sulphur and brimstone smell we get when Pete is here.

I am admitting defeat and going to bed having woken in front of the TV having slept through several overs of the cricket.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
...... googles snowbirf .....

I did a Clever Thing at the swimming baths today.

Yesterday I watched Dragon's Den, they had a shower mate thingie on - you put it round the button to stop the shower going off every few seconds. I wanted one, but when I got into the shower I have a brainwave - use the key/wristband thingie.

It works!

Happy bunny me.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
...... googles snowbirf .....

WW signs up for basic spelling and word recognition course.

[Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
It's called All available unused space ...

We've got one like that at Château Piglet. Quite a lot of it is of the "low-level" type, i.e. all over the floor ... [Eek!]

quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... having slept through several overs of the cricket ...

Not quite as exciting as the golf*, then? [Devil]

* I didn't watch it (I find golf almost as incomprehensible as cricket) but I understand it was Very Exciting and The Right Team Won. [Smile]

eta: I contemplated going over to the American thread for a minor gloat, but I'm too nice.

[ 02. October 2012, 02:58: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I am now properly awake, showered, cycle-rided [-ridden?] and breakfasted - hopefully my spelling, etc. will now improve [but no promises].

The thing about going to collect stuff from the docks is that although you have to be there you are not allowed to do anything except be present and to pay for things as required. We were not allowed inside the shed but sat outside whilst an agent did this and a porter did that and four separate customs officer did the other. We were there four hours in the end and that is actually quite boring when you can't do anything - but we sat in the shade and there was a pleasant breeze coming off the water.

The fourth customs man seemed really grumpy to start with until he gave us clearance then he suddenly became really friendly and chatty. Sadly the first customs man was a ManUre fan but I didn't hold that against him.

Having emptied the boxes last night, though not put things away yet, it was fun to find half a dozen photos of neighbour boy, with whom I go cycling, when he was a baby - I have promised to scan them for him today so he can transfer to his own PC - I will be doing a lot of scanning over the next few weeks as there must be about a thousand photos all told but I don't intend to hurry, Christmas will be soon enough to finish that task.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
You expect to have time at Christmas? [Eek!] You'll be too busy eating and sleeping.

Situation normal then.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... four separate customs officer did the other ...

[Eek!] [Eek!]
quote:
... the first customs man was a ManUre fan but I didn't hold that against him ...
Why not? [Devil]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, he was a bit of a hunk...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
All fiction books collected from the docks on Monday are now neatly on the re-arranged fiction shelves - looking good!

Actually some of them - 18 from the yellow jacketed Victor Gollancz mystery series - are now on the guest shelves downstairs, including Edmund Crispin's superb Glimpses of the Moon.

The reference books will probably be sorted today or tomorrow, too.

This has all brought to a head the need for a new set of steps for the bookcases so I may go and have a look in town tomorrow for a 5 step set with a top rail. The 4 step plain pair I have used no longer feel so secure since my fall last year, my right hand is still a bit impaired.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
That's a tall stepladder for books, they must be floor to ceiling. I can see you getting something on wheels for scooting down the walls full of serious fiction.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
When the day comes that Uncle Pete can't travel on his own, let me know. I could handle just sitting back and reading through those book shelves. Today, that feels like a Bucket List item.

This too shall pass...this too shall pass. My new mantra for the day. Okay, not so new lately.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm not so sure about serious fiction - there are a lot of kids and teenage novels and some serious fiction. We have the standard, for here, 3 metre ceilings and two sets of bookcases are floor to ceiling.

Lilypad, you would be welcome anytime - we can even put a comfy care for you up on the balcony, which, being upstairs, is a Pete-Free zone.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
If lilypad wants to come with me in 2014, I probably could use some help by then.

Rod, you know that I am a gentleman.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Well, he was a bit of a hunk...

That's no excuse. [Snigger]

It's almost beginning to feel autumnal here today; it was 14° and somewhat moist. Not sock weather yet though.

Spoke to the builder this afternoon and he's been in touch with Newfoundland Power again about tying the cables; they said either Friday or early next week (that'll be Tuesday at the earliest as Monday is the Thanksgiving holiday). So, with any luck the outside stuff might be done by the end of next week.

After that we've got to get the gyprock replaced that the first builder removed, then we'll have to do a spot of interior painting. [Eek!]

After that we'll have to do a lot of interior cleaning - very [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A true gentleman NEVER says that he is gentleman - it should be obvious to all from his demeanour!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
piglet - my reorganisation of the books meant I had to use the vacuum cleaner - this is true desperation time!

Shortly we are to have the builders inside the house to split the big upstairs hall to create a new bedroom and bathroom for me for when HWMBO, hereinafter referred to as Himself, gets married at the end of the month - this will then allow me to call his bride to be Herself. I am dreading the mess they will create but perhaps it won't be as bad as I fear.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Would that be the mess that Himself and Herself will create, or.... [Confused]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry - I meant the builders - if Himself and Herself create a mess I hope I have the capacity to keep quiet about it!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Builders always make a mess.

Even the good ones, though these will make a good attempt at clearing up after themselves. Even so it will be way off spotless, little bits of dust will be turning up in crooks and nannies for months afterwards.
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
I just got back from Joe Jackson's concert. If I were inclined to smoke, I'd be having one right now.

No kidding. Imagine a two hour music- gasm. I just wanted to come on this thread and personally thank you guys for producing him, because I will coast on this for the next week. Who needs heroin?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Kelly Alves:
I just got back from Joe Jackson's concert. If I were inclined to smoke, I'd be having one right now.

No kidding. Imagine a two hour music- gasm. I just wanted to come on this thread and personally thank you guys for producing him, because I will coast on this for the next week. Who needs heroin?

You are welcome, such a lot of thanks for so little effort [Biased]

Mr Boog is the drummer in a covers band. One of his USA bike riding pals came to visit this weekend and to attend one of the band's gigs last night. He was on one long music-gasm too - never has Mr Boog had such plaudits! He was positively glowing when the evening was over. I think it's because his friend knew him in one context (cycling geeks) then saw him in another, and was bowled over.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Is this the guy from the early '80s?

Isn't he about 103 now?

[Razz]
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
Pretty close-- I think he's a year or two younger than you.

[Angel] [Razz] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Killing me]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Kelly. Are you really going out with him?
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Kelly. Are you really going out with him?

I came straight home last night and posted a gushy "thank you for the show" glurge on the band's Facebook page. I added a further gushy comment two minutes later. I then noticed a horrible typo in the first post and added a gushy apology for the typo. By now I'm sure my photo has been dug up from the Internet and is being passed around by his Security team.

Which is close enough, right?
[Axe murder]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Glad you enjoyed yourself, KA. [Smile]

I'm going to have a fairly busy Thanksgiving holiday on Monday - we've got an ordination on Tuesday and there's an order of service to be produced. I've just finished most of the typing, but the printing and assemblage is going to be a giant pain in the @r$e, especially as the Cathedral's photocopier is playing major silly-buggers.

[Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Himself's outlaws-to-be will be visiting this morning - for some reason the bride to be is never in the party, which strikes me as odd but...

They estimate they are bringing about 20 people and the family have been cooking almost all night*. The "tent" is up, the tables and chairs are out and we have even laid on some entertainment! We will have family and friends and community people here and there will be a little paperwork and then general socialising then we will give them lunch then, hopefully, they will depart and all the rest can have lunch.

The wedding is three weeks tomorrow in The Big City.

*Already there is a bit of oneupmanship happening as when we went there for the official engagement they had caterers bring food in whereas Himself's mum is determined to give them home cooked food - and she is a superb cook.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Yes, I remember the superb cooking. Is she going to stand over each one bullying them to have more rice and curries? Just wondering, you understand.

[Biased]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
That was a long and tiring day - good fun but I am completely whacked. The kids that came to do the drumming were great and they loved the photos and the video that I took.

The official bit went well with a bit of a hiccough when the community document had to be rewritten as a mistake had been made - a slightly larger and longer hiccough when the cooks realised they hadn't yet cooked the popadoms - one take seconds but 200 take a bit longer!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
...and as for the cooking, it was excellent BUT Himself definitely makes better Rasam than his mother.

Just don't tell her I said so!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Harvest Thanksgiving services safely dispatched - we did Britten's Jubilate in C as a motet this morning to much Decanal Grinning™ and the Cathedral was beautifully decorated, as always. Nice Tudor Evensong (Smith, Gibbons, Batten).

Result: happy piglet. [Smile]

Going to v. hospitable friends for turkey and all the trimmings tomorrow evening ... may need to take Tuesday off w*rk ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Himself definitely makes better Rasam than his mother.

Mmmmm.... Rasam sounds lovely. After two days more or less horizontal with severe cold/mild flu, sounds like just what I need.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
You must come and visit - we'll make you very welcome.


eta: the mystery smell has been identified! [Hot and Hormonal]

I was in the shower a few minutes ago and thought that the soap I am currently using smells really like that smell I can smell sometimes...

Those that can't laugh at themselves shouldn't laugh at others.

[ 08. October 2012, 07:11: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
It was my SILs 60th this week so we went to a very posh restaurant. The food was lovely - but such small portions! The soup came in espresso coffee sized bowls - I kid you not. A good thing I'd made lots of cakes for our return to the farm.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
SEVENTY QUID PER PERSON!!!! [Eek!]

We don't spend that a week on food for a houseful!

[not sure of my facts there but...]

For that price I want a tureen of soup each!

I can take you to a place in Mysore where for about 70 pence you can eat as much as you want for a fab lunch eaten with fingers off a banana leaf and wonderfully delicious. And if you don't say enough they will keep coming round and refilling the banana leaf every time you empty it. I think my record is three and a half times [Big Grin] but that was when I was a bit younger - and no, Pete, I don't mean last week!

Sorry about that, I told our guest this morning that I'm practicing to be a grumpy old grouch.

[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I assure you WW, it wasn't my choice. SILs brother is a well off dude and paid for all the wine and drinks - which was quite a relief on our pockets!

I'd much prefer the banana leaf place!
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
It looks and sounds delicious, Boogie, but just a tad overpriced!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
25 quid charge for a non-attendant, having booked! Credit card details beforehand! [Eek!]

It's a scam for gullible diners.

And I second the place in Mysore. Of course, it's a two day trip, but the hotel we use is nearby and not more than IR 300 a night. Just a few years back, it was IR100, but now they supply blankets. [Razz]

Quite comfortable!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Which menu are you looking at? The a la carte and the seasonal look reasonably priced, you could get away with £20-30 a head. You can usually rely on restaurants like this to have an affordable lunch menu. They make it up through dinners, Sundays and the wine list.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Yes - we got away with £30 a head - erk!

The food was absolutely delicious - but truly not enough of it! Pud was a lemon tart thingie - TWO inches square with a few berries tastefully arranged and a teaspoon of ice cream (cleverly tear drop shaped)

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Reminds me of the days of "nouvelle cuisine" which could be very minimalist. I really hope that's not making a comeback.

Sounds delicious, otherwise.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'd be teardrop-shaped as well, I reckon!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Reminds me of the days of "nouvelle cuisine" which could be very minimalist. I really hope that's not making a comeback.

Sounds delicious, otherwise.

It hasn't gone away: "Waiter, have we eaten yet?"
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Thirty quid per head I could live with BUT I would want to feel pleasantly full afterwards - I used to frequent a place in Rusholme [Manchester] and these days something like:

* Popadoms with pickle
* Dahi Bahalay
* a couple of veggie curries
* a couple of garlic naan
* pistachio kulfi

and a jug of lassi

would cost over twenty quid - but I would be stuffed!

Talking of which, have any of the Manchester folks here tried the Dosa place in Withington - Dosa Express?

Recommended.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Boogie's place looks a bit mysterious, but then what would you expect from the Freemasons?? Wodders' banana-leaf place sounds much more fun.

We're just back from eating quite a lot (although I truly didn't over-indulge as much as I might have done). Turkey and the trimmings (when I opted for dark meat the host asked me if I'd like a leg, but I was wise enough to say no - turkey-legs are huge), good company and probably rather more wine than was necessary.

Probably not quite enough to justify taking tomorrow off w*rk though ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
piglet, you obviously showed admirable restraint - well done!

Off to the city again later, if I can get myself organised, as I have promised myself a l-o-o-o-ong mooch round the secondhand bookshop, now that I know where it is again. I popped in briefly with our guest last Friday but I like to mooch alone so I am not worried about them being bored waiting for me.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Morning all, early start today. I'm off to Manchester to the hospital to see if they'll have me for a clinical trial (psoriasis) - it's competitive, meaning I may not have it badly enough, hmmm. If I get on the trial I'll be genetically engineered - how exciting! (Unless I end up on the placebo which would mean injecting nothing for 5 years, ho hum)

4 hours of tests coming up, erk. (Worse than that - nil by mouth until they are done - double erk!)
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Have fun (?) Boogie. I'm trotting off to the Unemployment Office this afternoon - I should be gathering my papers and info together, but hey! Look! I'm on The Ship.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Good Luck, Boogie (though you've probably gone by now!) If you are accepted, I do hope its the drug group!

All this talk of curries, banana leaves, etc. are making me rather sad. Both Mr.N and I have discovered our elderly tummies don't appreciate food we happily gorged ourselves on in our youth [Frown]

Anyone for gruel? [Help]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I failed the test by two points, this is the first test I've failed for not being BAD enough! - disappointed but never mind. I discovered it was a looong journey to the hospital (well over two hours) so lots of time saved there.

I have virtual lemon cake to share - the best sort with lemon drizzle topping.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Ooooh, CAKE!

Yes please!

- - - -

Still not been to the bookshop [Roll Eyes] - I was down near the ferry jetty and a ferry came in so I got on it - I had no idea where it was going so I have no idea where I've been but I went there and then came back and in the process took one or two photos - over a hundred in fact but...

Anyway it was a very pleasant way to spend an hour or two, about a dozen stops there and a dozen stops back and a nice breeze and friendly people.

FAB!

Oh, and the return journey cost less than 10 pence.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Yes please! Lemon drizzle my favourite!

Two hours travelling each time you went to the hospital, Boogie would have been very hard over 5 years or whatever!

Maybe someone up there was looking out for you! [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Himself has returned from doling out invites to the wedding of the year and tells me that I went to Mulavukad North on my little ferry jaunt today. For the travel minded I caught the boat at 9.984530N, 76.272398E and went up as far as 10.029905N, 76.259273E. It was very scenic and some of the photos were pretty good, even if I do say it myself.

If you look on Google Earth you can see what looks like a ferry boat of the same design at 10.026418N, 76.258348E. You can also see how much water there is in the delta.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That sounds like a really nice jaunt, Wodders. I like the idea of just getting on a boat to see where it goes, although I probably wouldn't have the nerve to do it for fear of getting lost (my sense of direction would give Captain Slow from Top Gear a run for his money [Big Grin] ).

On the subject of spicy food, D. and I went to a scruffy wee Chinese restaurant up the road from Château Piglet for lunch today, and we'll be putting that one down to experience. He ordered butterfly chicken, which he'd had before and liked, but they gave him something quite different and scarily spicy. I had cumin beef, which I thought would be more "earthy" than "hot". I was wrong.

Oh dear. [Eek!] Did someone mention CAKE? [Smile]

Ordination service went v. well - Cathedral well filled, congregation and visiting clergy suitably impressed, Dean grinning like Cheshire Cat at the end.

Everything as it should be. [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I admit to having been a little trepidatious but it worked out okay.

- - - -

How long did the Dean's smile linger after he had left the building?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
On the subject of spicy food, D. and I went to a scruffy wee Chinese restaurant up the road from Château Piglet for lunch today, and we'll be putting that one down to experience. He ordered butterfly chicken, which he'd had before and liked, but they gave him something quite different and scarily spicy. I had cumin beef, which I thought would be more "earthy" than "hot". I was wrong.

It wasn't Szechuan Chinese by any chance? Chillies and lots of pepper are a way of life in their cooking: there's a Szechuan Chinese restaurant locally that I once tried and had a similar experience at with a dish I had had elsewhere and had ordered expecting it to be much the same. If you're prepared for it, it's an interesting twist but if you aren't, it can be a bit of a jolt.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yes, Szechuan cuisine can be a bit of a challenge even for spice stalwarts like me.

We've been to the City to buy stuff and then round various relatives on the way back delivering wedding invitations - they are normally delivered personally here rather than by post but some of the folks weren't in so we left the cards with neighbours so I can't see the difference but then what do I know?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
There was a great programme about Chinese cooking on television recently with Ken Hom and Ching He-Huang, a young Chinese woman who's also a chef. They were travelling to different regions of China trying out regional culinary styles and seeing the country (it was a great travelogue with some appetizing food thrown in). One of the places they visited was Szechuan. I was taken aback by the amount of chilli powder, chilli oil, chopped chillies, chilli flakes and peppercorns that might go into pretty well any dish.

Fascinating programme, I hadn't realized just how diverse a country China is.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've just been having a little read lying on the bed and nearly dropping off to sleep and it occurred to me that I have gone 6 consecutive days without a day time nap!

This hasn't happened for a very long time!
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
Reminds me, I once ate in a street cafe somewhere in Sichuan. I'd wandered in a bit late for lunch and there were just a a couple of old men in there. I ordered about the only dish that appeared to be on offer - some kind of potato/meat stew (yes, Chinese cooking is more than stir fries).

They clearly disbelieved that any foreigner would be capable of eating it and I was determined to prove them wrong.

My oh my that thing was spicy. And had Sichuan pepper as well so my lips were a tingling. I remember using up almost all the toilet roll that was on the table to wipe the sweat from my brow. (Mind you it was summer so the temperature was pretty hot as well.)

But I finished it. (Well I left a little for politeness sake. Very rude in China to totally finish your bowl.)

I like to think they were impressed. I was quite possibly the only non-Chinese person ever to have eaten there.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Yangtze, sometime when you are over here in India you must take a detour to Andhra Pradesh and have a standard Andhra meal - we had a night in Guntur once and stayed in a little lodge by the bus stand and ate in their eatery and it was - erm - interesting! This is the chilli growing capital of India and POW!

Himself's crushed shallot and chilli condiment would be mild by comparison.

[ 11. October 2012, 02:04: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... How long did the Dean's smile linger after he had left the building?

Probably until he had to attend the clergy conference that was being held at the Church Centre out in the country today ... [Big Grin]

I don't think the menu specified if the dish was Szechuan (I'd probably have been more wary if it had), and there was no "chilli-pepper" warning. As I said, it's a funny, scruffy wee place that looks more take-away than eaterie, but when we were there yesterday the other diners were talking animatedly in Chinese, which is always a good sign. I don't think it'll put us off ever going there again; we just won't have those things again.

Mind you, we were both suffering from slight colds, and it didn't half clear out the tubes ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Nephew Person came to see me last night - he is in a bit of a dilemma as he is in a job he hates that pays not much but sort of enough for the moment but it involves lousy hours and a lousy boss and has no real prospects for advancement but he has been offered a trainee-ship with a firm of accountants which has better hours but worse money initially though that would improve - and also would fit him for other work later so better prospects.

He has to make his mind up by this morning and call the guy back to accept or decline.

In my usual non-directive way I didn't give him any advice on the direction he should take [though I was itching to!] but suggested he make a Cost-Benefit Analysis chart and think it through more logically.

Being young ain't easy, is it?

In other news we did a costing of this wedding over breakfast - crazy and frightening but I have decided not to take it seriously and that somehow we will manage.

Now I am going to have a read and, just possibly, a nap.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I used to do cost/benefit analyses, but I called it Pros and Cons.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Not Szechuan but a Chinese meal LRP &I had today included fried chicken with orange sauce. We weren't warned that the ginger was hot. Delicious though. You can have hot and spicy without chillies.

We were in Bradford, home of the British Curry, and eating Chinese. We were looking at the Garden of Light installation in City Park. Worth seeing if you're near Bradford around or after dusk before Sunday night.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
... You can have hot and spicy without chillies ...

Sorry - I meant those little "chilli-pepper" symbols that some eateries (Chinese, Indian and Mexican) put on their menus - one for cowards up to four for Wodders ... [Big Grin]

The only time I've been in Bradford was for a curry. We were on the A1 (or is it M1?) and as we passed signs for Bradford I thought "curry" but didn't say anything, and as we got closer D. said, "we'll need to eat and that was a sign for Bradford - what about a curry?"

We ended up in an odd little place with no licence (but the owner sent us to his brother's offy across the road for a bottle of wine) and had a v. good (and not scarily hot) curry. I can't remember what particular dishes they were (probably korma or dansak) but I do remember them being delicious.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I've had some fab meals in Bradford over the years - little cafes with formica-topped tables and nothing matching but exquisite food for very reasonable prices. I had friends who lived there and knew all the best spots.

Nephew Person got a 24 hour extension on his decision making and now appears set to take the new job with less money but more prospects - he will call this morning to arrange. His current boss is a clear example of the Peter Principle, in way over his head.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I don't think the menu specified if the dish was Szechuan (I'd probably have been more wary if it had), and there was no "chilli-pepper" warning. As I said, it's a funny, scruffy wee place that looks more take-away than eaterie, but when we were there yesterday the other diners were talking animatedly in Chinese, which is always a good sign. I don't think it'll put us off ever going there again; we just won't have those things again.

Mind you, we were both suffering from slight colds, and it didn't half clear out the tubes ... [Eek!]

You might find that the rest of the menu is similar. I'm just wondering if it's one of those places that isn't labelled as a Szechuan Chinese restaurant but in principle pretty much is?

If it has a lot of Chinese customers, as you say that's a good sign that the food's authentic (but also that it's not intended specifically to please Western tastes).

Yes, nothing like chillies to sort out a cold. I discovered this by accident when I unintentionally had a ferocious Malay curry one night during an episode of bronchitis and a streaming cold. The next morning was a revelation. Curries are the way to go when you have a cold.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Himself does a fearsome condiment with smashed shallots and chilli powder with a little salt and a little coconut oil - that is all there is and it is POWERFUL!!!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have put up a few photos from my ferry trip the other day here.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I found them as you were putting them up [Razz]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry for the delay in getting the set organised, lunch intervened.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Himself does a fearsome condiment with smashed shallots and chilli powder with a little salt and a little coconut oil - that is all there is and it is POWERFUL!!!

Those of you who were at the last Wightmeet [Tear] will remember a modified version of that.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
A great afternoon leading a PhotoWalk about a village nearby - lovely people and a common interest so a fun time for all.

There were a couple of early attempts to designate me "The Leader" but I wasn't having any of that! Himself did most of the leading and I kept an eye on the clock but apart from that the event ran itself.

...and it didn't start raining until we were just packing up to come home!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Glad the photo-walk went well, WW.

The weather here's taken a decidedly chilly turn - at the moment it's 3°, which is a bloody sight colder than it's been recently. However, I've been a slightly productive piglet - I made Pancetta Pasta for (v. late) lunch, and then turned the bones of a roast chicken into veggie soup (ready for virtual tasting - help yourselves).
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Do you make your own pasta, piglet? I used to in the 1980's - early 80s at that - but haven't done it for a long time.

Stomach cramps all night so didn't get to mass this morning - Mrs E made me a big glass of ginger soda just now which will, I hope, solve the issue. There was about a 1 centimetre measure of ginger juice in the glass before she added the soda so it was STRONG!!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Mmm, ginger soda sounds great. Do you have a recipe? I think I'd like to try it - not for stomach cramps but I do like ginger.

Just waiting for the dawn now. Yesterday morning I woke up early and looked out of the window to see a beautiful sickle moon and bright star above the horizon. Annoyingly, I then discovered I'd mislaid the crucial bit of the tripod, so wasn't able to get the kind of photo I wanted - will try again today. There's some wonderful luminous mist on the horizon where the sun should come up in due course.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think what Mrs E does is peel a lump of ginger than chop it up a bit then crush it, you could use a pestle and mortar but I think she just bashes heck out of it on the [granite] worktop then scrapes the juice into the glass. Alternatively you could put the bits in a blender then strain the gloop through a fine-ish strainer. Nothing else added apart from soda water.

When I lived in UK I occasionally got hold of a bottle of ginger cordial - try your local health food or wholefood type shop. That is nice with soda but is a bit sweet for my taste these days.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
That sounds easy enough, I'll give that a go. I used to make ginger tea that way - an infusion with hot water, which is warming on a winter's day.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
I have a friend who brought a bottle of Ginger and lemon grass cordial over from the UK made by Bottlegreen It is delicious. However on this site there's a recipe should you wish to try making your own.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
That sounds ridiculously easy, I think we may have a go but will try with Equal™ as Himself is diabetic.
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
That reminded me that I have an old unopened bottle so my latest "cold-tonic" is a spoonful of that in with a strong cup of coffee.

Not I think for Wodders, but the caffeine helps cope with the lows while the lemongrass and ginger help with the other symptoms.

Yes it ruins good coffee but a cold does anyway so I suffer no loss and it may actually make me feel better.

Jengie

[ 14. October 2012, 10:41: Message edited by: Jengie Jon ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We can actually buy Ginger Coffee here, it seems to be quite popular - no idea what it tastes like.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Lord PO has been home for the weekend so we had the congas played during the last hymn this morning. He's due home for next weekend as well - we're going to our ex vicar's induction near Milford Haven. He has realised how much he likes the Valleys [Smile] , although he is quite fond of Horsham.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Songs of Praise was from the Methodist Central Hall in Stoke today - I have just had a memory stirred and a big sniffle.

It was the hymn 'God be with you 'till we meet again'. The memory was leaving Johannesburg, aged 11, with the certain knowledge that I'd never see my friends again - and the sound of beautiful African voices singing that hymn as we left for the train then the coast (we sailed home, air fares were well beyond our means) in the back of a minibus.


[Tear]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Do you make your own pasta, piglet?

Never tried it; we must have been about the only couple who got married in the late 1980s and didn't get a Pastamatic as a wedding present. At the time it didn't matter, as D. wasn't particularly partial to it, but since I've been doing the pancetta thing, it's grown on him.

As it happens, he mentioned the idea yesterday, but I pointed out that (a) it would be another machine for which we haven't got space; and (b) I'd probably be just as rubbish at making pasta as I am at making bread ... [Roll Eyes]

eta: I wonder if not being very good at bread is genetic? My mum was a v. good cook who would try anything, but the one thing I remember her really not getting quite right was bread.

[ 15. October 2012, 02:15: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
At long last we are getting some rain - so far not very much but every drop is welcome! As is usual this time of year it is mostly in late afternoon/evening/night - I love falling asleep to the sound of rain on the trees.

Morning now and bright and sunny and a list of things to do a mile long! I'm not at all sure that I will manage my planned trip to the city tomorrow, there is just so much to do here.
 
Posted by Barnabas Aus (# 15869) on :
 
Welease Woderwick wrote -

quote:
When I lived in UK I occasionally got hold of a bottle of ginger cordial - try your local health food or wholefood type shop. That is nice with soda but is a bit sweet for my taste these days.

Here in Australia we can purchase a cordial called Ginger Refresher, made by the Buderim Ginger Factory. It is the clarified and bottled syrup from the preserving process, so reducing waste products and providing us with the base for some very refreshing drinks. A little goes a loooong way.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We can actually buy Ginger Coffee here, it seems to be quite popular - no idea what it tastes like.

I bought some one year. It tasted off, is what it tasted like - and I quite like ginger.

I tossed it. It was a disappointment.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've been to see our friend M in hospital - M is known to Pete as well. It was a motorbike accident caused when a dog stepped into the road yesterday evening. M is a right mess right knee and shoulder have abrasions and half the right side of the face as well. It looks not too deep and I think it will heal all right but it will take time. Currently they are cleaning the wounds with peroxide a couple of times a day [Eek!]

He has another 2 or 3 days in hospital then home for more recovery. Knowing his mum I have been imagining the things she is going to say to him when she has him home again [Snigger]

Just last week he was telling me that he had no intention of going back in hospital for at least a year and now look at him!

He also complained that there are no cute young nurses in the small nursing home he's in, so he can't be feeling all that ill.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
[Eek!]

Also knowing his Mum, I expect he may wish he were back in the hospital!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
how is the dog ?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Snigger]

I haven't had the nerve to ask yet, but I shall do so tomorrow!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Is the motorbike a write off?

Seriously, if the bike is OK the injuries to M are unlikely to be too bad.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Being an ex-biker I asked about the bike yesterday but he didn't seem to know - it isn't his bike, he was pillion. I shall ask again when I see him today, after he gets home - the Dr saw him last night and said he could be discharged this morning so I think that is good news. His face looks nasty but it is mostly just road rash - painful but not really serious - and nothing broken. He was lucky.

I have told him that when he is able I am going to take him to buy him a helmet to which his reply was that he doesn't have a bike! I told him that if he rides, even as pillion, he needs a helmet!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Votive] for M. Mind you, if he got away with the injuries you're describing without a helmet, he's one lucky chap.

D. made some v. good raisin bread today - why does it work when ordinary bread doesn't?

(Virtual tasting available - help yourselves). [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
What I don't get about bread is why, when I lived in UK I could make good bread even though in the winter I had to create warm places for it to rise but here where it is warm all the time so should be perfect I just can't get it right!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
What I don't get about bread is why, when I lived in UK I could make good bread even though in the winter I had to create warm places for it to rise but here where it is warm all the time so should be perfect I just can't get it right!

Humidity?

My bread is not so good on hot, humid days.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Boogie, you're a genius! I think you've hit the nail on the head.

...and there's nowt I can do about it except make soda bread instead - now there's a hardship for you [Big Grin]

I have now been promised that my bank transfer from UK will be credited tomorrow afternoon so it will have taken a week instead of the usual 24-30 hours - NOT happy!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Boogie, you're a genius! I think you've hit the nail on the head.

...and there's nowt I can do about it except make soda bread instead - now there's a hardship for you [Big Grin]

I have now been promised that my bank transfer from UK will be credited tomorrow afternoon so it will have taken a week instead of the usual 24-30 hours - NOT happy!

Sorry about the lousy bank transfer but on the subject of the other kind of bread, is it sufficiently less hot and humid at night to bake then? Maybe that is why bakers work in the small hours.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Most, if not all, of the bread here is factory bread, and some of it is very nice but still it is factory bread. Factories, presumably, have access to other ingredients and additives and can control their environment more than we can in our domestic kitchen.

Sad but true.

I will carry on with the Hindustan-Lever produced 7 grain bread, it is rather good.

In other news M is home, battered and bruised but home - from the chat I have just had with him when I popped in for 20 minutes he is aware how very lucky he is. His mum is still cross with him so he will probably go and stay with his grandparents for a few days, just across the fields from here.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
D. made some v. good raisin bread today

Why would D. do that?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That would be telling. [Biased]

We're having Odd Weather again - the temperature at the weekend having gone down to 2°, it's suddenly gone up like a sky-rocket and it was 21° and sticky* this afternoon.

[Confused]

The father of one of the girls in the choir died suddenly last week, and we went to the funeral, which was out in the country today. She had asked D. to play the organ for it, and the two Cathedral clergy and about a dozen people from the congregation and choir went too, which I think was much appreciated.

* Hurricane Rafael is threatening to head this way, which might explain things ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
You certainly seem to get some interesting weather over there, piglet - I'm not sure if that is a blessing or a curse - but once it drops towards freezing I would certainly see it as a curse!

Our friend who was here a couple of weeks ago is now helping at an orphanage about40 kms from here and reports huge daytime torrential storms whereas we have had some moderate for a few hours each evening - we are wildly jealous!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Heavy showers interspersed with sunshine here. As long as the bits of sun keep coming I don't mind so much!

I have ordered some gorgeous flowery short wellies for 'clean' trips. My other, more robust wellies and walking boots wouldn't do for wet but clean expeditions - like to the swimming baths, where they frown on mud.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Sunshine breaking through the rain here too.
I need some new flowery wellies. I'm very short (4 foot 11) and long wellies never fit my short fat legs properly. Can't get my pretty ones with roses on anymore, I might try trimming them down.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Although I've got a pair I haven't actually worn wellies for years, probably7 or 8 years! They are just the standard black, though, nothing very exciting - and although I usually take size 9 or 10 for wellies here I use 11 otherwise they are just not wide enough in the leg bit for me to get my foot in.

And here's a thought for piglet - I have had a low level tummy bug for a couple of days, nothing bad, just uncomfortable, so I have mainly been eating boiled rice and yoghurt with a bit of salt, so a fairly bland diet. At lunch today I tried a variation and didn't bother with the salt and added some Marmite™ instead - it were lovely, it were!
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I've ordered a pair of wellies like this.

Wellies are surprising popular with chic Parisiennes - it tips it down here, and they (a) keep your feet dry and (b) stop you ruining your good shoes.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Marmite and yoghurt? Sounds.... interesting.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I've ordered a pair of wellies like this.

Wellies are surprising popular with chic Parisiennes - it tips it down here, and they (a) keep your feet dry and (b) stop you ruining your good shoes.

Very posh! Mine are similar but shorter.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Lovely wellies there but neither are my colour. I might buy these http://www.amazon.co.uk/LADIES-SHORT-FLOWER-WELLIES-WELLINGTONS/dp/B004S12G4K/ref=sr_1_20?s=shoes&ie=UTF8&qid=1350470014&sr=1 -20
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Also gorgeous.

I am enjoying this wellie fest.

[Smile]
 
Posted by ElaineC (# 12244) on :
 
These wellies are similar to mine.

Only had to wear them once so far...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Don't go near RooK wearing those, he might try to eat them!
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Lovely! [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
I've ordered a pair of wellies like this.

Wellies are surprising popular with chic Parisiennes - it tips it down here, and they (a) keep your feet dry and (b) stop you ruining your good shoes.

b) is especially necessary with all those leetle doggies. Filthiest pavements anywhere!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It looks as it I have just knackered our new printer! There is half a piece of paper stuck inside the toner cartridge block thingy so I'll have to call the man out from the City.

[Hot and Hormonal]

Oh tish, he says euphemistically, how very annoying! I'm just glad it is still under warranty.

Considering how many feral dogs there are around here our streets are remarkably free of such mess - the cows are another matter altogether!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
These are my "best" wellies - I have a pair of green dunlops for the allotment.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
These are my "best" wellies -

Wow! Now that's what I CALL a wellie!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
These are my "best" wellies -

Wow! Now that's what I CALL a wellie!
Ah well, it takes all sorts [Big Grin]

Okay, I'm sorry, just couldn't resist [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Killing me]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
[Killing me]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
What's wrong with black? I can remember when even green wellies were seen as an innovation (and priced to make them elitist.)
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
b) is especially necessary with all those leetle doggies. Filthiest pavements anywhere!

Whilst that may be true today, growing up in a village close to a large town there was always dog mess, in various states of decay.

Things are better now. You hardly ever see white dog poo these days.

Apologies to those reading whilst eating.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Mine are black, the only colour available here.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Mine are black, the only colour available here.

I think I must be getting tired, I read the last few posts, and balaam's immediately before this, and assumed for a couple of seconds you were referring to poo rather than wellies.
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
Jack, I did that too. Blinked rather at the oversharing before I worked it out.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
What's wrong with black? I can remember when even green wellies were seen as an innovation (and priced to make them elitist.)

I remember those days - and the green ones had buckles like my "best" ones do but at a fraction of the price. My posh green ones (i wore them all day for weeks on end, and the ladies fitting meant they were more comfortable than the cheaper ones, so I felt it was a good buy) got nicked when my car was joy-ridden, and I think that I mourned the loss of those more than the car. Nowadays the only place around here you can get black wellies is a builders merchant - they have steel toe caps which aren't too practical for allotmenteering. Most people around here get theirs from a farm supplies shop where you could only get green the last time I needed some for "every day".

[ 17. October 2012, 21:26: Message edited by: daisydaisy ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I've always hated wellies with a passion; when I was a very small piglet in infant school I was made to wear horrid plain black wellies if it rained heavily and all I wanted in the whole world was a pair of what were known then as "kinky boots".*

Having said that, the chocolate or liquorice-allsort ones could almost convert me - they're verging on "cool". [Cool]

Wodders dear, why on earth would putting Marmite in your yoghourt make you think of me? [Eek!]

* Not at all what you're thinking [Snigger] - to us "kinky boots" just meant any boots that weren't black wellies.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry for the confusion I caused above [Hot and Hormonal]

piglet, I made the Marmite™ comment because I know you sometimes rail at me about the lovely stuff.

Over the weekend I have to move everything out of our bedroom so that it can be repainted before the wedding to become their bedroom - I shall move myself down to Pete's room for a little while as we haven't yet even engaged a builder to build my new room!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by daisydaisy:
Nowadays the only place around here you can get black wellies is a builders merchant - they have steel toe caps which aren't too practical for allotmenteering. Most people around here get theirs from a farm supplies shop where you could only get green the last time I needed some for "every day".

Yes, I have green wellies, so do most people here. The choices available for women were a) green or b) horrendous patterns like red and beige zebra print, fake leopardskin, twee floral. It really wasn't a difficult decision and I don't regret it.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Pardon me everyone whilst I giggle to myself but I just love the notion of everyday wellies and best wellies!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
When I was a child, back in the Dark Ages, you could only get black wellies for children. Mum had some narrow white tape, and she cut out daisy petals from it and stuck them on the wellies to pretty them up a bit.
I loved my daisy wellies.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Eigon:
When I was a child, back in the Dark Ages, you could only get black wellies for children. Mum had some narrow white tape, and she cut out daisy petals from it and stuck them on the wellies to pretty them up a bit.
I loved my daisy wellies.

Awwwww - what a lovely Mum!

And, exqueeze me Ariel, but there is nothing wrong with twee floral!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
And, exqueeze me Ariel, but there is nothing wrong with twee floral!

Well, they're all much the same really, once you're up to your knees in good honest country muck/one of those agricultural shows that's just been deluged with rain and turned into a quagmire...

[ 18. October 2012, 19:04: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
would anyone really wear fake leopardskin wellington boots except Dorien from Birds of a Feather ?
 
Posted by Starbug (# 15917) on :
 
I much prefer the jewel-encrusted wellies that Dame Shirley Bassey wore at Glastonbury a few years ago.
http://hunter-wellingtons.blogspot.co.uk/2009/07/dame-shirley-glams-her-hunter-wellies.html

Apologies for not embedding the link - I haven't worked out how to do this on an ipad touchscreen.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
moonlitdoor - yes, I've got photos of people wearing the most amazing wellies - all heading for the Hyde Park Festival this summer. I'm sure if I can be bothered to look I'll find some leopard skin ones.

Mine are green, came from the agricultural suppliers.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... piglet, I made the Marmite™ comment because I know you sometimes rail at me about the lovely stuff ...

[Big Grin]

I'll have you know that last time I was home I brought back a huge jar of Special Extra Strength Marmite for an English friend.

You see what a kind, tolerant, understanding piglet I am, pandering to the inexplicable weaknesses of my fellow-man?

[Two face]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
piglet, you're a star!

...as is Dame Shirley - those boots are FAB!!!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

I'll have you know that last time I was home I brought back a huge jar of Special Extra Strength Marmite for an English friend.

Nom nom, it's years since I had Marmite .... must put it on the shopping list this week.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Huia (# 3473) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:

I'll have you know that last time I was home I brought back a huge jar of Special Extra Strength Marmite for an English friend.

Nom nom, it's years since I had Marmite .... must put it on the shopping list this week.

[Big Grin]

Wow - a lot of New Zealanders would be very jealous. No Marmite has been made here since the February 2011 quake destroyed the factory that makes it. The taste is different from English Marmite otherwise I can envisage care packages being sent across the world - but not to me, I prefer Vegemite - one of the best products to come out of Australia.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
These people will ship British foods just about anywhere - but I presume it costs an arm and a leg.

Mmmmmm, Branston Pickle™!!

I see they will even ship Salad Cream, abomination though it generally is - but it is wonderful on beetroot!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Today is, I believe,

NATIONAL PICKLED ONION LOVERS' DAY

Eat those crunchy delights and think of those who love them but can't access them - but who found some simple recipes for them yesterday and may soon be making their own!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... Salad Cream, abomination though it generally is - but it is wonderful on beetroot!

I was beginning to worry about you* when you used the words "salad cream" and "wonderful" in the same sentence ... [Eek!]

Doesn't the beetroot impart the most alarming of pinkness?

The first time I used Newfoundland Blue potatoes in Piglet's Patriotic Potato Salad I was worried that they'd turn the mayonnaise purple, but they didn't, Deo gratias. Having said that, out in the country here ("round the bay" as they call it) they mix beetroot juice into mashed-potato salad, which makes it very pink indeed. [Ultra confused]

* more than usual, that is ... [Devil]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...Doesn't the beetroot impart the most alarming of pinkness?...

Oh yes, it looks pretty awful but [if memory serves me right] it does taste good, the over the top acidity of the Salad Cream really balancing and enhancing the sweetness of the beetroot - and worry not, I have no intention of buying a jar for that purpose and anyway I haven't looked at the ingredients for it for at least half a lifetime and am sure I wouldn't be impressed.

We have just agreed that next time neighbour girl comes round to watch a movie we will give a kilo of shallots to peel then we're going to have a go at our own pickled onions! I got a bunch of recipes of the interwebby thing last night and some are really simple. We have already [pretty much] agreed on the [gentle] spicing we will use: a few chilli flakes, a few cloves and a few black peppercorns.

[Thinking about it I don't think I have bought a jar of Salad Cream for about 40 years and more!]

I suddenly had a rush of sympathy for Herself this morning, even though the marriage is still a week away and her moving in a day or two further away, just because she has to cope with the shock of moving into a complete madhouse! But then she is a cook by trade so she may appreciate the culinary experimentation that goes on at times here.

...and, lets face it, the guy she is marrying is a bit crazy as well!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's the vinegar that puts me off pickled onions - too much of it. On the other hand, I do like rollmops. When is National Rollmop Day?
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
In my childhood Brownie Guide book it told me that if you put a daffodil bulb inside a beetroot and plant it you get pink daffodils. I have some beetroot here from my veg box (I hate the stuff) and am sore tempted to buy some daff bulbs today. Though the beets look a bit weedy so it would be more planting them together.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
...When is National Rollmop Day?

I've had a quick search and can't find a Rollmop Day, which is a bit sad. Perhaps you should start a campaign for one.

[ 20. October 2012, 08:23: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Raw beetroot is amazing and delicious and I miss getting it in boxes or growing it. I eat the leaves too.

The equivalent recipe to salad cream is roasting beetroot with olive oil and onions, adding feta or a salty creamy cheese, balsamic vinegar and walnuts, serving hot with green salad.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Ooooh, Curiousity, that sounds so YUMMY!!
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
It's so autumnal today - I'm gazing out of the window at the hedge coated with dew-spangled cobwebs and it's already the middle of the morning. The cat is curled up cosily on my box of chocolates (botheration!) and I have a steaming mug of coffee and no desire to do anything whatsoever.

Any chance the kitchen will clean itself?

One thing's for certain, I'm not going to be cooking any beetroot, even if the boy does love it. I have to admit to a strong temptation to make some flapjack, though. This kind of weather sort of demands sticky warm flapjack, don't you think?
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Beetroot and balsamic vinegar mentioned in one sentence.

Yes.

Put a fried pigeon on a piece of black pudding. cubes of beetroot around the black pudding and serve with rocket leaves and balsamic.

Great as a starter.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Defintely my husband's idea of a great starter, I'm tempted to make it for our anniversary next week (without the black pudding and beetroot for me).
But warm, buttery flapjacks, what a good food for a Saturday [Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
These people will ship British foods just about anywhere - but I presume it costs an arm and a leg.

I will look into it - there are things (like baked beans) which my son can't get in Germany. We take ooodles of them out when we go.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Sometimes it just takes a bit of looking/travelling Boogie. When I lived in a little town in Austria I found a shop that sold baked beans. It was a tiny supermarket-style shop hidden away and it sold other luxuries such as instant coffee, too - an abomination to the Austrians who thought me quite insane for drinking it. Either that, or they simply thought me quite insane full stop! I think the shop I bought those things at was Spar.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Raw beetroot is amazing and delicious and I miss getting it in boxes or growing it. I eat the leaves too.

The equivalent recipe to salad cream is roasting beetroot with olive oil and onions, adding feta or a salty creamy cheese, balsamic vinegar and walnuts, serving hot with green salad.

I was with you until you mentioned [Projectile] balsamic
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
quote:

posted by Balaam

Put a fried pigeon on a piece of black pudding. cubes of beetroot around the black pudding and serve with rocket leaves and balsamic.

Great as a starter.

For the pigeon it's more of a finisher.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Smudgie:
Sometimes it just takes a bit of looking/travelling Boogie. When I lived in a little town in Austria I found a shop that sold baked beans. It was a tiny supermarket-style shop hidden away and it sold other luxuries such as instant coffee, too - an abomination to the Austrians who thought me quite insane for drinking it. Either that, or they simply thought me quite insane full stop! I think the shop I bought those things at was Spar.

There is at least one very perceptive bit in that post!

[Razz]

We can actually get tins of baked beans here but:

a] they are terrifyingly expensive; and

b] frankly they are not very good.

I think they are Danish in origin, they sure as heck ain't what beanz meanz - or Sainsburys, as I used to buy back in dear old Blighty.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
I am looking forward to cooking a yellow beetroot that I harvested today - this is the 2nd one; the first I thought was a swede until after I cooked it & noticed the lovely golden rings. I don't remember planting any, but I must have because there is a block of about 5 more to harvest soon - one day I'll label what I've planted.
I microwaved the first one before peeling it - that was successful, so I think do it again. I rather like beetroot with no dressing at all.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Beetroot, salad cream, baked beans and black pudding are my idea of gustatory hell! [Eek!] ***

But flapjack now - that's a different matter. I have a lovely sticky recipe that calls for all sorts of seeds, like pumpkin seeds, which taste lovely but do make it terribly crumbly.

*** separately or together.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Flapjack is indeed wonderful but when I made some here Himself and I were about the only ones who liked it - folks here aren't used to Oats. It is also very sweet so not suitable for Himself with his diabetes.

...but we have some pumpkin seeds and I can also recommend the addition of some crushed cashews - not expensive here.

Hmm, perhaps I'll try again soon when Herself is established, she looks like she might enjoy it.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
I make japflack with millet because I can't eat oats - it's a reasonable substitute, and I've not turned into a budgie yet [Biased]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... We can actually get tins of baked beans here but frankly they are not very good ...

Same here - they're edible, but Not Quite The Same. Unless we have a brain-fart and buy the molasses ones, in which case they're not even edible ...
[Projectile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'm very chuffed with my little self this morning - after Mass we were chatting to the 5 Altar Boys and I managed to get all their names right, unaided!

I also spoke to the priest and got a name of a place from him where I might be able to do a private silent retreat for a few days - I have Googled and written to them and now just have to wait for a reply.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...but we have some pumpkin seeds and I can also recommend the addition of some crushed cashews - not expensive here.

Whereas here, it's getting to the stage where you need to take out a mortgage to buy nuts in any quantity. [Frown] My mother used to make a version with cornflakes and peanuts, which we called 'nutty slack' - incredibly sweet - a wonderful memory, but not a taste to try to re-capture, as I discovered when I attempted it.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... We can actually get tins of baked beans here but frankly they are not very good ...

Same here - they're edible, but Not Quite The Same. Unless we have a brain-fart and buy the molasses ones, in which case they're not even edible ...
[Projectile]

Have either of you tried making your own?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Do you have a recipe for homemade baked beans that tastes like Heinz? I've made variations on baked beans without anything like as much sugar as that and they are not the same.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Do you have a recipe for homemade baked beans that tastes like Heinz? I've made variations on baked beans without anything like as much sugar as that and they are not the same.

It's the sugar that makes the difference, sadly.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
If you google "Heinz baked beans recipe", there are a couple of things that might suit, by people who've also tried to recreate the flavour. It might be worth having a look and seeing how they correspond with your own take on the recipe. I've never tried them myself - my own efforts were in pre-internet days and a complete failure (I soaked those beans overnight and gave them long slow cooking and they were still crunchy.)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
In the factory they may well be cooked under pressure, which would probably make a difference.

A tin of baked beans emptied into a pan and heated slowly with a sprinkle of mixed herbs and a dash of Worcestershire Sauce - and just slightly overcooked so they are a bit mushy.

BLISS.

In fact here we have so many different dal dishes available that I don't really miss baked beans unless I think of them - and the home made ones are a darned sight healthier than the tinned stuff!

Talking of pressure I was putting a box on the top shelf in the kitchen just now and I found, hiding itself up there, the trivet for the big pressure cooker - I have been looking for it for ages.

[ 21. October 2012, 13:12: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
OK, so it's 3:25 in the afternoon. The sun might not be shining, but it's definitely daytime. And someone not far from me is having a firework party. Admittedly, I fancy having a bonfire, but I'd not thought of fireworks at tea time!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Strangely, since I've lived here a few years, such a thing doesn't strike me as odd at all. Paul the priest at Holy Cross Church here has fireworks any time, before mass, during mass, after mass - and at Easter first mass is at 3 a.m.!!
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I think using the word "fireworks" to describe what Fr. Paul sets off is a complete understatement.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
...I also spoke to the priest and got a name of a place from him where I might be able to do a private silent retreat for a few days - I have Googled and written to them and now just have to wait for a reply.

I've had a reply and they say I'd be welcome to have a few days there so I think I'll ring in the morning and see if I can go and see the place tomorrow as I'm heading that way anyway to see the Registration man at the airport. Hopefully I can make a date then, possibly for December.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Baked beans (even Heinz ones) are hugely improved with the addition of a dash of Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco, or even (sorry, Pete!) a dash of balsamic vinegar!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Do you have a recipe for homemade baked beans that tastes like Heinz?

Not tasting the same as the ones in the tins, no. You can sort of get near there if you use a pressure-cooker, and start with the right sort of beans. It wants ones that are slightly smaller than most red or black kidney beans we see in shops, with white or pale green shells. Even if you are using a pressure cooker you want to soak or preboil the beans, and then drain them and change the water.

The nearest I ever got to tinned-bean-taste was when someone gave us a glut of tomatoes which I peeled and used to cook the beans in so the only water was the water in the tomatoes.

Tedious and a lot more expensive than buying a tin! Peeling tomatoes is above and beyond the normal call of culinary duty. Removing the seeds a step too far - I left them in. I'm talking about some litres of medium-small tomatoes. Maybe thirty of them.

A bit of garlic helps as well.
 
Posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider (# 76) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Baked beans (even Heinz ones) are hugely improved with the addition of a dash of Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco, or even (sorry, Pete!) a dash of balsamic vinegar!

The first and last of those make an acceptable BBQ bean sort of fake-up.

Fools the kids, anyway.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Baked beans (even Heinz ones) are hugely improved with the addition of a dash of Worcester sauce, or a dash of Tabasco, or even (sorry, Pete!) a dash of balsamic vinegar!

Or curry powder.

The best mushy beans are the ones which have been cooked once, left to go cold then reheated. Like Mexican refried beans only with baked beans. Yum.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
A lot of people here bake their own beans, but they use the dreaded molasses, so the result is probably more than moderately horrid.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We will be having green dal this morning for breakfast in just a few minutes - mung beans soaked overnight then [over]cooked in the pressure cooker before frying with garlic and a little spice then served with steamed cakes made from red rice flour, oats and grated coconut.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well, that was not exactly what I'd call a good morning - I went to find out the new procedure for applying for my annual extension on my visa to find that I won't be granted one this time because of various changes in regulations so I have 39 days until my current extension expires, in other words to leave the country then I can apply for a tourist visa to return then do various other stuff if I then want to remain.

At least by going there today I found this out today, more than a week earlier than I would have found it out if I had waited until the end of next week when I was due to submit my application.

Do I scream now or later?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Start screaming now, and continue later?

Welease Woderick, that sounds very frustrating and difficult, and going to mean a lot of bureaucracy and red tape to battle with. [Votive]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Well, that was not exactly what I'd call a good morning - I went to find out the new procedure for applying for my annual extension on my visa to find that I won't be granted one this time because of various changes in regulations so I have 39 days until my current extension expires, in other words to leave the country then I can apply for a tourist visa to return then do various other stuff if I then want to remain.

Oh!

I don't know what to say!

Can this be sorted out?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
[Eek!] So sorry - how unsettling (to say the least) - but as you say, at least you found it out with a bit more time. Hopefully it will just be a question of unravelling some extra, unforeseen layers of red tape but what a pain. Really hope things will work out for you.

[ 22. October 2012, 07:32: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Hope things work out for you, WW. Indian red tape sounds a bit more horrendous that British red tape!

Grey days are back again. [Frown]

Still, the weekend was lovely, even if we did overdo it with a VERY long and VERY muddy walk. Too far for me, and the mud was the gloopy sort, not easy when I rely on a stick to walk. [Help]

However, the dog had a marvellous time [Razz]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope things work out for you, WW. Indian red tape sounds a bit more horrendous that British red tape!...

After the fiasco of Himself applying for a tourist visa for Britain I beg to differ!

After lunch I took up my machete and have cut down a few noxious plants in the hedgerow that inhibit the growth of the hibiscus so that made me feel a bit better.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope things work out for you, WW. Indian red tape sounds a bit more horrendous that British red tape!...

After the fiasco of Himself applying for a tourist visa for Britain I beg to differ!

After lunch I took up my machete and have cut down a few noxious plants in the hedgerow that inhibit the growth of the hibiscus so that made me feel a bit better.

Didn't Himself apply in India for a British visa?

We British brought bureacracy to the sub-continent and appointed and trained willing students. As in a number of industries, it looks like India now out-performs the United Kingdom!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
India has sort of specialised in highly bureaucratic states for the last 5,000+ years - the Indus Valley civilisation [Mohenjo-daro, Harappa, etc.] was highly closely administrated as was the empire of Ashoka and virtually all the empires since - the Brits just added a bit of polish!

Anyway, plans are in place to deal with things but the morning has altered things quite a bit - we'll deal with it all somehow. I point-blank refuse to be panicked by it all.

This afternoon we have been to a Jesuit sort of Ashram place where I intend to do the odd private silent retreat - idyllic or what? Sadly the happenings of the morning preclude me being able to stay there until, possibly January or perhaps even April after Pete leaves - but stay there I shall!
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Oh Wodders! [Frown]

Coming late to the baked bean debate... I use black treacle and English mustard. Works OK, but I tend to prefer something that is more cassoulet than baked beans.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I point-blank refuse to be panicked by it all ...

Good for you, Wodders - don't let them grind you down. Having ploughed through seven years of Canadian red tape and endured much moving of goalposts before getting Permanent Residence (and done more than enough panicking) I can sympathise completely.

Have you got an easy way of doing the "leaving the country" thing without having to go back to Blighty? We're lucky to have St. Pierre & Miquelon, which is part of France but just off the coast of Newfoundland, and a short flight away.

Hope it all works out. [Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sri Lanka is about an hour away - not my favourite place in all the world but I have friends there and can see a bit more of the place than I have in previous visits.

Went into town early this morning by bus then walked back to give me some exercise - I still feel a bit down about things and have just discovered that the other office I need to go to is closed today and tomorrow so no more info towards The Escape Plan until Thursday - I reckon I might book the flights today as the price is only going to go up - and if, by some miracle, we manage to get everything done in time for me not to leave the country [highly unlikely] then the loss will not be that great, less than a hundred quid which is enough but...

Coming back past the airport yesterday afternoon after our visit to the Jesuit place there was a small but INTENSE storm just tracking across the airport - we saw a helicopter approaching from the west and I had just said to Himself that I didn't envy people in it heading into that storm when it turned tail and scuttled away north west and presumably circled round for a few minutes as the storm headed off south west.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Of course the offices are closed! It is a holiday!

Now that I'm retired I don't fuss much about it, but it seems that India has a month of holidays all told! Here, I used to treasure my 10 or so holidays a year!

Deep breaths, Wodders!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had a walk around the Mookambika Temple neighbourhood this afternoon and it was HEAVING! As I remarked to Himself this will be being repeated near just about every Saraswati/Mookambika/ etc. temple across the whole of India. That's a lot of temple goers.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Back to work today after a long weekend. Most of the weekend was spent looking out at the fog, and yesterday was spent feeling flu-ish. It is that time of year, though:

Season of mists and colds and sneezes
Close-bosom friend of the nose that doth run
Conspiring with it to bring coughs and wheezes,
Lassitude, and - oh, enough, this verse is done.

The sneezes should be pretty good by tomorrow - I've been practising.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Ariel, [Frown] , hope you feel better soon.

For me, that was Saturday. I got soaked to the skin on Friday getting lost somewhere I didn't know, in conditions too wet to find anyone to ask or read maps.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
For most of the last week or so I seem to have been doing an inordinate amount of sneezing. No other symptoms (so far) except the concomitant runny nose and it seems to have lessened a bit today, but I really felt as if I was keeping Kleenex in business. All by myself.

On a brighter note, D. seems to have cracked the bread-making jinx. Having used the "basic white loaf" recipe and had the loaves sink in the middle, he tried a French bread recipe, which doesn't use skimmed-milk powder or oil, and uses a different setting on the machine, and got a dome reminiscent of St. Paul's Cathedral.

Tastes jolly good too. [Yipee]

Any ideas as to what I can do with an unwanted box of skimmed-milk powder? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Any ideas as to what I can do with an unwanted box of skimmed-milk powder? [Big Grin]

Keep it in case war breaks out and you can't get any of the fresh stuff?

Or you could donate it to charity if you don't want to keep it for that day when guests arrive, the milk's gone off and you have nothing else.

You could always just use it. Reconstitute and use up, it should be fine.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
If you make your own yoghurt then you could whisk it with the cooled hot milk when you add the starter for an extra creamy product.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Gulab jamon are made with skimmed milk powder in the recipe I use. It's the only reason I ever buy skimmed milk
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
I've just (20 mins ago) had the oddest experience. I'd popped out to our garage, foolishly just wearing smooth soled flip-flops on my feet, and I slipped on moss or mud and ended sprawled full length on the concrete path. Almost immediately I heard my daughter's voice asking if I was ok (school holidays here) and I replied and we spoke while I picked myself up and confirmed no broken bones. I assumed she'd heard me fall and was talking to me from her bedroom window. But she wasn't. She was surprised to see me limping into the house, hadn't heard anything and certainly hadn't been leaning out of a window talking to me.
I'm still shaken from the fall, and now I'm shaken by the idea that I was talking to thin air.
Rational explanation? Please??
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Demonic possession?

[Two face]
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
Me, or my daughter? Or the flip-flops of slippy-soled doom?

Feeling better now I've had a hot shower and washed the mud off.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I fell headlong down our flight of stone steps in the back garden last week. I was alone in the house, which was locked up and I had no phone with me....... [Help]

Fortunately like you I hadn't broken anything and eventually picked myself up and hobbled indoors.

But I didn't hear any voices talking to me...... [Devil]
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
I don't think I banged my head....
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I'm still shaken from the fall, and now I'm shaken by the idea that I was talking to thin air.
Rational explanation? Please??

Just one of those things. As you say, you were shaken. And I'm guessing you and your daughter are very close - that she's one of the first people you instinctively think of. In a moment of shock when conscious, rational thought is stilled the unconscious comes to the fore, and the mind can work in odd ways sometimes. You needed to reach out to her and at the same time reassure her and this is how that manifested itself.

This is likely to be a one-off, if that reassures you. Odd things can and do happen; all's well that ends well. I hope you're feeling a bit more settled since this morning!
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
Me, or my daughter? Or the flip-flops of slippy-soled doom?

Feeling better now I've had a hot shower and washed the mud off.

Hope you feel better today. Falls are nasty. Lots of shaking and often stiffness the next day too.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Another one here, NEQ, hoping you feel better this morning.

I hope to have a meeting this morning that could possibly resolve some of my visa issues - if this meeting is positive I think I'll then have to head off back to the airport to see the other guy and see if what I have done is sufficient.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Goodness, NEQ, that's a bit scary - I was assuming you'd temporarily knocked yourself out a bit, although sometimes you can have a fall and sort of miss out the next bit without actually hitting your head. Hope no serious damage was done.

I'm feeling rather sad today; the Supervisor of the Anglican Cemeteries (for whose committee I take minutes) died this morning having been diagnosed with cancer in the spring. He was only 52, one of the nicest men you could possibly wish to meet and will be very hard to replace.

May he rest in peace and rise in glory. [Votive]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
After the difficulty of the earlier bit of the week the officials we saw today were completely reasonable about things and they now look hopeful IFF we can get some forms filled in and witnessed and ready for submission by Saturday morning AND my trip to the High Commission in November is a success AND nothing unforeseen happens to put a spanner in the works.

Second set of officials spent ages looking in the big book of regulation before they found the bit that would/will allow them to allow me to stay, if the other bits all work out smoothly.

I am taking a BIG chance and not booking flight tickets out.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
As I said before, WW, hope it all sorts itself out. [Smile]

We're girding up our loins for the bi-annual irritation that is the Cathedral Sale (or Fête Worse Than Death) on Saturday. D. has set a currant-loaf to bake (and we'll put another one in tomorrow) for the morning coffee (the choir's bit), and tomorrow I'll make some tablet for the sweetie stall and a potato salad for the cold turkey suppers. Why do the churches here persist in such out-dated activities?

With the funeral of my late colleague on Saturday afternoon, it's really not going to be the best weekend of my life. [Frown]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sorry about your colleague, Piglet. [Votive] Fifty-two is so very young.

Presumably your fete raises money for something or other. There must be other ways of raising money, what would be choice for the the Second Millennium?

Or is eating cold turkey obligatory in the chilly north??
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
My son has reassured me that I can't be losing my marbles, if only because he doesn't think I have any marbles to lose.

I'm a bit bruised, but I'm fine, thanks.

It's snowing here! First snow of the winter!
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
My son has reassured me that I can't be losing my marbles, if only because he doesn't think I have any marbles to lose.

I'm a bit bruised, but I'm fine, thanks.

It's snowing here! First snow of the winter!

[Killing me]

Mrs. S, reflecting that all sons are the same really...
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I'm a bit bruised, but I'm fine, thanks.

It's snowing here! First snow of the winter!

The stiffness should disappear after the bruises have faded to yellow.

It has snowed here this evening, if you count half a dozen flakes as snow.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Presumably your fete raises money for something or other ...

Only sort of. The two sales (spring and autumn) between them bring in about $20,000; unfortunately that's nowhere near enough to cover the upkeep of the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.

The sales are the only events that really use the entire space (which is vast), and apart from them, a couple of post-ordination bun-fights, the Patronal Festival barbecue and the odd congregational meeting it's hardly used at all. The ground floor is rented out to a dancing school, but the whole complex is in a pretty bad shape and we're currently trying to work out what's the best thing to do with it. We really don't need a hall that size, and the site (prime downtown area) could be put to much more profitable use.

Any flashes of inspiration would be welcome ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sell it!

You could insist that whatever is built there includes a hall of suitable dimensions.

What is most needed where it stands at present Commercial use? Apartments?

What is standing in your way of doing that?

[Smile]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
If you don't want to sell it, then renting it out is the obvious thing until you've got enough cash to be able to upgrade it.

How about some pro-active marketing of Space To Rent, possibly aimed at (external) groups like:


Obviously you'd know what would fit within the terms of your current local legislation, but just thought I'd float a few ideas. The rooms above might be useable for classes, temporary offices for visiting businessmen, etc.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I agree, sell the land or lease it out long term with a requirement in the sale/lease that a suitable hall is built for the use of the Cathedral, preferably with good acoustics and a small but succulent chamber organ [Big Grin]

- - - -

We fell at the last hurdle today - we were short one required certificate and no chance of getting hold of it in time for me to avoid a trip to at least Sri Lanka at the end of next month so I came home and booked my tickets and got my visa thingy - and only later discovered that the offices will be closed the day after I arrive [Poya Day, a public holiday there] so I can't apply for my next visa for here until a couple of days later!

Oh well, hopefully it will all be through in time for me to fly home on the day I am booked in for.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
You are in the wrong script Wodders - The guests at Best Exotic Marigold Hotel didn't have the challenges that you have been having [Biased] seriously though, I hope it all goes smoothly and you have a lovely time in Sri Lanka.

Bitterly cold wind here today, but still I was surprised to notice that the roads have been gritted & salted.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:

We fell at the last hurdle today - we were short one required certificate and no chance of getting hold of it in time for me to avoid a trip to at least Sri Lanka at the end of next month so I came home and booked my tickets and got my visa thingy - and only later discovered that the offices will be closed the day after I arrive [Poya Day, a public holiday there] so I can't apply for my next visa for here until a couple of days later!

Oh well, hopefully it will all be through in time for me to fly home on the day I am booked in for.

Double-dang Blast with a side order of Grrr.

Hope the re-entry visa comes through OK PDQ and that your next attempt is fruitful. The only time I had to do anything like this, Mediterranean bureaucracy saved us from unpleasantness. Manana there being a synonym for extreme urgency!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Whatever happens the thing is that it won't be the end of the world - and if I am raptured before my flight date I won't be too worried, either. A date change for the flight back might cost me a tenner or so but what the heck?

No cold wind here today, daisydaisy [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
That sounds so difficult Wodders, hope you sort it all out soon.

There was a discussion on Radio 4's Feedback yesterday about BBC tickets for recordings of shows, how unfair the system was. I found it interesting as although I haven't (so far) managed to get tickets for the NewsQuiz, Now Show, Infinite Monkey show or a few other things both my daughter and I tried for and did want to see, I have seen Old Harry's Game, John Finnemore's Souvenir Programme, the Museum of Curiosity, NewsJack and have a pile of tickets for shows coming up. One of the real problems is the notice, tickets are only sent out two to three weeks before and you don't know if you're going to get anything until they arrive, so it's all very short notice

As my daughter can't get time off to come I currently have one spare ticket to something on Sunday night (tomorrow) and Monday evening if anyone is interested - both in London. PM if you want to know more.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
[Votive] Wodders

I'm just back from a happy and fruitful day in Liverpool with my friend. Fabulous new winter coat bought, coffee consumed, lots of photos taken and a windswept walk round the waterfront.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I love the Pierhead - and some great photos to be had down there! I was an adopted scouser for a long time, most of my career was on Merseyside and I still love the place, despite its many faults.

But I don't miss the cold wind blowing off the river at all.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Just a reminder that the clocks fall back tonight. An hour extra in bed - yay! Unfortunately, it means that it gets dark an hour earlier - not so yay.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Nearly had heart failure - we have tickets for a Max Boyce concert at Abergavenny and I couldn't remember the date and panicked it had been this week. Phew! It's on Monday!. [Overused]
I'd have been seriously cheesed if we'd missed it!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Just a reminder that the clocks fall back tonight. An hour extra in bed - yay! Unfortunately, it means that it gets dark an hour earlier - not so yay.

Thank you for the reminder - I'd forgotten [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Just a reminder that the clocks fall back tonight. An hour extra in bed - yay! Unfortunately, it means that it gets dark an hour earlier - not so yay.

Let me see if I can work it out: does that mean some will arrive for morning services an hour late or an hour early? ISTR somebody arriving a whole two hours late, but I'm not sure that was spring or autumn: they must have moved the clock the wrong way!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Very likely. If you're accustomed to waking up at 8 am, that will now be 7, so you get an extra hour in bed. It's surprising how quickly you get used to the change, though: and are then faced with the deduction of the hour in March.

(Most people don't seem to make the early morning train that first Monday after the change in March, and those that do look grumpy.)
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
The clocks went back when we got married, we got an extra hour in bed on our wedding night [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... tickets for a Max Boyce concert ...

Good Lord, is he still doing concerts? Used to really enjoy his TV show back in the 70s. [Big Grin]

Thanks for the thoughts about the hall. Selling isn't an option as there's some ill-conceived Diocesan rule that if we sell any of our glebe land, the Diocese gets the money. [Mad] Some sort of leasing situation is probably more likely, but we shall see ...

Sale went off fairly predictably today; it was a filthy wet day, which may have brought people scuttling in from the rain. We certainly felt fairly busy doing morning coffee and there was a goodly crowd at the turkey supper.

The funeral was very well-attended; it was held in the chapel at the Anglican funeral parlour which was full to overflowing. The liturgy was unfortunate (Book of Alternative Services - ugh!) but executed with as much decorum as can be expected and we were glad we had gone.

Requiescat in pace. [Votive]

PS Wodders - hope the trip to Sri Lanka works out - think of it as a holiday with photographic possibilities. [Smile]

[ 28. October 2012, 01:08: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
... tickets for a Max Boyce concert ...

Good Lord, is he still doing concerts? Used to really enjoy his TV show back in the 70s. [Big Grin]


Max Boyce has revivals whenever the Wales has a really good year in the Six Nations! A friend of mine, born in Pontardulais, has been dreading this latest one since the middle of March.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Himself is now a married man - it all went swimmingly apart from the usual Indian attitude to time where the Spanish attitude of manana [with an accent somewhere that is beyond my powers to recreate] is seen as being in a rush! Something above 300 photos yet to be downloaded and sorted.

...and much sleep needed!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Good to hear the wedding went well.

As for mañana, or at least the ñ, I google words with accents, then copy and paste. A lot easier than searching in Character Map.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
If you type & ntilde; but close up the space after the ampersand, you get ñ as in mañana.

Congratulations to Himself and Mrs. Himself. [Smile]

There's a pot of veggie soup on the stove ready for virtual tasting, if anyone needs warming up.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
balaam, yes, I usually google as well but last night was too tired - but now mañana from piglet! I will forget this by lunchtime, of course.

...and carrying on about the wedding of the year, I managed to download the photos and they looked so happy! It was lovely.

...and as we left the reception her mum was having a little cry - the last of her brood leaving the nest.

...and I still got a phone call from Himself last night just checking I was okay! People seem to forget I lived alone in Britain for nearly 20 years and I coped quite well - and here I have Mrs E to spoil me rotten*.

...and I feel sorry for the bride at a Hindu wedding here - she arrives at the event in one saree and is then taken on one side to change into another saree just for the ceremony then after the ceremony is taken on one side and changes into a third saree for the reception then after the reception travels to reception number 2 at the groom's house where she changes again into saree number 4 before the reception begins! She looked lovely in all of them, particularly the one I chose, of course! Actually the best one was the last which was not a colour I'd have chosen for her but it looked fab.

Today they will come and disassemble the marquee, etc.

*which I thoroughly deserve.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
An opportunity (indeed, a duty) to get four new dresses - what's not to like? [Smile]

shopaholic piglet
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Here are a few of the wedding photos - we go to collect them in the morning and their room isn't ready yet and won't be ready on time! We may get the new curtains tomorrow but if they have to be made to order it will be next week.

Ah well, they'll cope - worse things happen at sea.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Lovely photos, Wodders - many congratulations to Himself and Herself.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Nice pictures Wodders. They look very happy.

What are the buckets with newspaper lids for?
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Under the newspaper lids were clingfilm type lids and they were full of some great curries! I don't normally like fruity curries but their pineapple and grape was superb!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
That is my portion size.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Well with all that cycling and other exercise I reckon you need the calories.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
They look so happy in the picture together (and she has a lovely smile). Blessings on them both!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I know I've said this before, Wodders, but you really do live in the most colourful place imaginable (and the bride's dresses were beautiful). Cracking photies as ever!

Hallowe'en has come and gone, and despite a last-minute dash to buy sweeties (we forgot), not a single guiser or trick-or-treatist crossed the drawbridge of Castle Piglet.

I suppose we'll have to eat them* ourselves ... [Big Grin]

* the sweeties, not the trick-or-treatists. [Devil]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I suppose we'll have to eat them* ourselves ... [Big Grin]

* the sweeties, not the trick-or-treatists. [Devil]

You're turning vegetarian?
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Great photos Wodders - what a fabulous marquee!
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I suppose we'll have to eat them* ourselves ... [Big Grin]

* the sweeties, not the trick-or-treatists. [Devil]

You're turning vegetarian?
Good grief, they were trick-or-treating on an industrial scale round our way, [Mad] despite howling winds and rain coming down like stair-rods. An executive-style housing development of detached homes is perfect, you see - big enough to have money, but the houses are still fairly close together so you don't have to walk half a mile up a drive to find out there's no-one home. Mr. S and I snuck out for a curry with half a dozen friends - we could have bought a sweetshop for what it cost us, but it's the Principle of the Thing!

Mrs. S, the Hallowe'en equivalent of Scrooge (Bah, sweeties?)
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Bah, mint humbugs! perhaps?

- - - -

They are home! We went and collected them - there was a lovely Brahmin who cooked a special Brahmin Payasam that involved cashews and chopped bananas and a whole big jar of ghee [clarified better, 1 kg] and about 3 kgs of cracked wheat and 4 litres of milk and raisins and 3 kgs sugar and cardamom and then some more sugar but in big crystals like Preserving Sugar used to be in UK.

Then there was a big Puja then we ate bits of the payasam - which was lovely but very rich! Then lunch then we came home.

Then I 'rested my eyes' for a bit and when I got up wondered why I couldn't sign into the Ship but was still half asleep and using the wrong password!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... a whole big jar of ghee [clarified better, 1 kg] and about 3 kgs of cracked wheat and 4 litres of milk and raisins and 3 kgs sugar and cardamom and then some more sugar ... lovely but very rich

You don't say! [Big Grin]
quote:
Originally posted by Qlib:
You're turning vegetarian?

Me? Vegetarian? Wash out your mouth with soap! [Devil]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Ten to seven AM and I'm all ready for work (bar the clothes) and playing on the Ship. (Quoits anyone?)

Being semi-retired is great, I recommend it! You get the pleasure and camaraderie of the workplace without the stress. Yesterday we were making bonfires and fireworks with sparkly tails for a display. Today we are going swimming, followed by play writing, followed by a science investigation into sieving and filtering.

Every Wednesday I make cakes to take in on Thursday. So my arrival is greeting with big smiles and enthusiasm (Cupboard love, I know - but any love is good imo, ask anyone who keeps pooches)

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Sitting here on the sofa with the cat nestled into a tiny gap between my leg and the sofa armrest and thinking that I could happily sit here all day. But I'm out for coffee with a friend in a bit and then off to work.. if you can call a trip to Pizza Express work!

Anyone got the kettle on? I could do with a nice hot cup of coffee to take with me into the bathroom while I get ready to go out. A cup of coffee and a good book, but I've already got the good book. It's looking a bit wrinkled, though - a bit like its owner (thought I'd get that in before Weasel!) - seeing as I left it in the bathroom and my beloved son decided it needed a shower!
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Plenty of coffee spare here... help yourselves.

I am thoroughly enjoying a few gentle days without travelling to work.

Trip to the cinema was somewhat marred by the inability of about 20 different people to refrain from checking their phones at regular intervals throughout the film, and the rudeness of the couple in front of me who informed me I had no right to ask them to stop checking their phones. I think I will cross cinema visiting off my occasional treats list - the constant, regular flickering of phone screens is obviously not going to go away as a problem, and staff in the cinema seem to be powerless to stop it.

Today is lunch with a friend, and shoe shopping!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Thanks for the coffee - I've got a few home-made shortbread biscuits left if anyone wants one........

Managed to get into a few shops on Wednesday and came out with far more than I intended, of course. But enjoyed myself - haven't been shopping like that for ages, as I usually do it on-line.

On-line hasn't got quite the same pizzazz!

(is that how you spell it??)
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
Day off yesterday here (All Saints is a public holiday).

My friend T is a legend. He works selling photographic equipment in a well-known electronics chain. The store where he was working just got closed down (not a drama, they've transferred him to a different store) so on the last day they held a party for all the employees. It featured a prize draw for various items out of the shop. T won a 54" [Eek!] flat screen TV.

So yesterday's day off featured sitting on T's sofa all day watching DVDs on the Biggest TV in the World™ [Big Grin]

[ 02. November 2012, 09:50: Message edited by: la vie en rouge ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
T won a 54" [Eek!] flat screen TV.

So yesterday's day off featured sitting on T's sofa all day watching DVDs on the Biggest TV in the World™ [Big Grin]

Blimey. It must have felt like sitting in a cinema! Sound quality to match I expect?

Sounds fantastic - I have a 15" tv and have been wondering about getting a (slightly) larger one when this one bites the dust. I've had it for 20 years or so, but it still works pretty well.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We've had a Grand Day Out - but without the trip to get a moon full of cheese!

I went to the local temple with the newly weds this morning, but I waited outside as I hadn't showered early then we had breakfast then I was told that we were going on a Grand Tour and that I was going along!

We went to a temple in a nearby big town where newly weds go to pray for fertility, etc. - and at other times of year there are various festivals which we tried to take PeteC to once but there were just too many people! Then we went to the first ever mosque in India [that has its own museum, soon to be expanded] then to another temple that is also a protected ancient monument then to a nearby church where Himself usually goes every Tuesday then, after a break for lunch, we went to the beach for a walk along a rather splendid breakwater then we went to visit our friend of the recent motorcycle accident [where I ended up giving him some maths coaching as he has an exam tomorrow] then we came home and I had an hour's much needed kip. I now have 139 photos to download and sort!

Gosh but it's a busy life.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:


Sounds fantastic - I have a 15" tv and have been wondering about getting a (slightly) larger one when this one bites the dust. I've had it for 20 years or so, but it still works pretty well.

Goferit. And get one that is HD. Your life will then drain away unregarded as you sit enraptured by the hyper-reality before you.

[ 02. November 2012, 17:01: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Goferit. And get one that is HD. Your life will then drain away unregarded as you sit enraptured by the hyper-reality before you.

I get the same effect from my computer.

Moo
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by la vie en rouge:
... a 54" flat screen TV ...

54"? That's nearly five feet! [Eek!] I haven't got a house big enough to accommodate that.
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I've had [a 15" TV] for 20 years or so

These days that's positively ancient for a television. My parents' first TV lasted about 20 years (although it was really superseded by colour rather than completely going phut), but they never had another one that lasted nearly that long. We're on our second one since coming here, and that was less than 10 years ago (although again, it was rather brought on by having a wee bit of spare money and going for a flat-screen one).

I earned a bit of pocket-money this afternoon; the Curate phoned me this morning to ask if I'd act as verger for a wedding. Not really an onerous task: put on a cassock, light the candles (not easy for a vertically-challenged piglet), smile in a vaguely official way at the guests as they come in and then tidy up the orders of service afterwards.

Is it my imagination or are heel heights getting really vertiginous? There was a girl acting as an usher whose heels must have been about 8". [Eek!]

However, because it wasn't a very nice day, they came back into the church to do a load of photographs, and D. and I had to wait and lock up after them, so I felt as if they'd got their money's worth.

Someone mentioned lunch and shoe shopping ... [Cool]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
These days that's positively ancient for a television. My parents' first TV lasted about 20 years (although it was really superseded by colour rather than completely going phut), but they never had another one that lasted nearly that long. We're on our second one since coming here, and that was less than 10 years ago (although again, it was rather brought on by having a wee bit of spare money and going for a flat-screen one).

Yes, I quite like the idea of a flat-screen one. My TV was an expensive-ish one at the time, but I wanted a good make that would last for a while, something light and easy to carry if I had to move flats, and the picture quality (reception apart) is very clear with good colours. It was also one of the first to have a Scart socket so can still be used now we've all gone digital.

I do still have the electric kettle I had at university, which my mother bought in 1974. It still works, though you can sometimes see a bit of a green flash when the switch is flicked. At present I use the one that came with the flat, which is pretty definitely on its way out after only a few years, so it'll be back to the old one in due course.

If something still works well, age is no barrier to it still being used IMO.

[ 03. November 2012, 08:33: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I'd forgotten about SCART sockets. Our new flat screen thingy has all sorts of inputs but the set top box from the satellite company has an HDMI socket amongst others so we use that in HDMI input 1 [of 2], purely because it was less effort to wire!

HDMI 2 is reserved for the video cameras, I think, with the DVD player going in on A/V cables.

I know there is a heck of lot of wire back there somewhere that waits until we are all in bed then tangles itself in all sorts of knots.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
You may notice I never touch your teevee, Wodders. Even the multiplicity of remotes drives me around the bend.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We still have remotes lying around when the device itself is long gone...

...go figure.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
OOOH, I have a job in January, then.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Just got in from my monthly OU tutorial, today we looked at health as a social construction, how body image influences health and the effect of housing/environment on health (we explored a news article on hurricane Sandy to apply the practical implications of this). Nice chatty group of students too.
This afternoon I need to make a skirt as a gift for a friend's little girl - the fabric is fabulous, it has bright flamingos all over it.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
We don't have a TV and whenever we are on holiday I get terribly confused by the remotes. But a huge screen must be great for watching films, definitely popcorn time.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Churh fireworks party tonight - I know it's just burning money in effect, but I love fireworks. We've bought a huge "cake" with about 100 shots - Darllenwr has his reputation as the church pyromaniac to uphold! (Mind, for any one who knows Lord P in rl, his facebook pictures make him seem a pyromaniac)
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Just got in from my monthly OU tutorial, today we looked at health as a social construction, how body image influences health and the effect of housing/environment on health (we explored a news article on hurricane Sandy to apply the practical implications of this). Nice chatty group of students too.

Ooh, are you an OU tutor? I am too! (also in HSC faculty). I tutor on K203 and K218, and used to tutor on K101 as well. I just sent a load of essays back - always a nice feeling, although the next lot arrive on Friday so there's not much respite [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
I teach K101 and K203, I was doing K203 this morning. It's my second year teaching K203 but I've done K100/ K101 for several years.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Cool, I thought from your description of the tutorial contents that it sounded like K203! I'm going to miss it - just weighing up whether to apply for K213 or not for next year.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Churh fireworks party tonight - I know it's just burning money in effect, but I love fireworks. We've bought a huge "cake" with about 100 shots - Darllenwr has his reputation as the church pyromaniac to uphold! (Mind, for any one who knows Lord P in rl, his facebook pictures make him seem a pyromaniac)

Last April, at Vishu we laid a string of one thousand firecrackers out on the road and let her rip.

I think the neighbours were impressed. I left town the next day.
 
Posted by John Holding (# 158) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.

The sales are the only events that really use the entire space (which is vast), and apart from them, a couple of post-ordination bun-fights, the Patronal Festival barbecue and the odd congregational meeting it's hardly used at all. The ground floor is rented out to a dancing school, but the whole complex is in a pretty bad shape and we're currently trying to work out what's the best thing to do with it. We really don't need a hall that size, and the site (prime downtown area) could be put to much more profitable use.

Any flashes of inspiration would be welcome ... [Big Grin]

Christ CHurch Cathedral in Ottawa and the diocese have just demolished the cathedral hall in preparation for a massive (well, as massive as the local bylaws will allow in a heritage area) commercial development that will, when complete, include condominiums, offices, a floor (or more) for the cathedral, a floor (or more) for the diocesan offices and archives, and a regular source of revenue for both the cathedral and the diocese. It has taken many years to get this far, given the need to demolish or move several buildings, negotiate with the city how high and where the tower can be built on the site, etc., etc.

I'd suggest you guys talk to the people here -- first point of contact at the cathedral would be the Dean, who could put you on to the key people in the diocese and the cathedral.

Best wishes.

John
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
The fireworks were fun, and "son of armageddon" (the "cake") lived up to expectation. Apparently it was 500 shots. We nearly didn't go as there was a massive hailstorm a few minutes before we were due to leave - Darllenwr had to clear the path to our car, and the roads our end of town were white. Amazingly, the other end of town - about half a mile away - was just wet. I hope that the hail isn't a harbinger of bad weather this winter.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Thanks for the thoughts re: the hall, JH - I'll bear them in mind when we have the next congregational meeting on the subject.

I rather miss fireworks. They used to do a really good municipal firework display for Hallowe'en on the river in Belfast, but fireworks don't seem to feature in Hallowe'en here (and Guy Fawkes doesn't feature at all). Mind you, there were a couple of fairly decent lightning flashes and a rumble or two of thunder about 10 minutes ago, so I'll have to make do with that.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had a few firecrackers on the wedding day and will have more on Diwali on the 13th but the big ones, although not here at the house, will be at church for First Mass of Christmas - the string will be several metres long and will have ordinary sized country crackers interspersed with large round ones bigger than a cricket ball - light the blue touch paper [at the stroke of midnight] and run like the devil himself was after you!

Come to think of it Fr Paul looks suitably demonic.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Glad we're back to chatting in English (I got bitten by a K9 in my youth [Biased] ).

Second day of fireworks going off here, I'm not bothered, after running quality control at a fireworks factory some years back I've seen enough fireworks for several lifetimes.

The cat is interested, she sits in the window watching them. She's not scared by the bangs, having grown up listening to me drumming.
 
Posted by lily pad (# 11456) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by John Holding:
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...the Cathedral hall, which is a great big money-drain.

The sales are the only events that really use the entire space (which is vast), and apart from them, a couple of post-ordination bun-fights, the Patronal Festival barbecue and the odd congregational meeting it's hardly used at all. The ground floor is rented out to a dancing school, but the whole complex is in a pretty bad shape and we're currently trying to work out what's the best thing to do with it. We really don't need a hall that size, and the site (prime downtown area) could be put to much more profitable use.

Any flashes of inspiration would be welcome ... [Big Grin]

Christ CHurch Cathedral in Ottawa and the diocese have just demolished the cathedral hall in preparation for a massive (well, as massive as the local bylaws will allow in a heritage area) commercial development that will, when complete, include condominiums, offices, a floor (or more) for the cathedral, a floor (or more) for the diocesan offices and archives, and a regular source of revenue for both the cathedral and the diocese. It has taken many years to get this far, given the need to demolish or move several buildings, negotiate with the city how high and where the tower can be built on the site, etc., etc.

I'd suggest you guys talk to the people here -- first point of contact at the cathedral would be the Dean, who could put you on to the key people in the diocese and the cathedral.

Best wishes.

John

The new building to house the offices of the Diocese of NS and PEI and the Cathedral Church of All Saints is about to open. It is also a shared project with the Diocese providing the land and a private company building and occupying an eight storey building. Seniors' houseing will be provided on six floors and has two floors will be for nursing care. If you ever feel the need for a field trip, come on over!

The Diocese of Montreal has done something similar. It is very cost effective.

[ 04. November 2012, 23:11: Message edited by: lily pad ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We have received the DVD of the wedding and it is all very tastefully done - except for the shots of penguins walking across an ice floe! It is part of the generally artistic editing that goes into these things here.

But PENGUINS!?!?!?

Presumably on their return today, they have stayed overnight at Herself's mum's, they will bring the other DVD so we can see the whole thing again from the Bride's perspective. Can I hope for a penguin free experience?

[Two face]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Where on earth did they find an ice-floe in Wodderland? And possibly more to the point, how did they stop it from melting? [Big Grin]

We were in the Octave of All Saints today, so we did the Furry Requiem. I suppose it's a good piece (despite being French) and the punters love it, but I'm glad we don't do it too often.

Made up for it at Evensong - Farrant's Short Service and I heard a voice from heaven by Tomkins (which we hadn't done before). Much more my preferred era and nationality ... [Cool]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I like the Furry but then I quite like choral requiems from Mozart on down.

I, too, wondered about the inspiration for the penguins and I think it is just stock footage to which folks have access to pad out and prettify their wedding videos - whether the videographers have to pay a licence fee for the use thereof I have no idea. Anyway the video is actually quite tastefully done.

Busy day today as I have to go to local town and also to not quite so nearby but larger town this morning then collect the Happy Couple from somewhere as yet unknown this afternoon. And I have to move myself downstairs to Pete's room until either my new room is finished or until Christmas, whichever comes soonest.

It's all go!
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
We have received the DVD of the wedding and it is all very tastefully done - except for the shots of penguins walking across an ice floe! It is part of the generally artistic editing that goes into these things here.

But PENGUINS!?!?!?

Presumably on their return today, they have stayed overnight at Herself's mum's, they will bring the other DVD so we can see the whole thing again from the Bride's perspective. Can I hope for a penguin free experience?

[Two face]

But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on. If I'd known you didn't want me at the wedding, I wouldn't have come! [Waterworks]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
we did the Furry Requiem.

Someone's cat had died?

code:
(")> As for penguins, there are glaciers in the far north of Wodderland, they could live there.
Just for you Wodders I have given this paragraph penguin bookends. <(")

Good day today, the sun is up, the sky is blue, but it is c c c c cold.
 
Posted by ArachnidinElmet (# 17346) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Smudgie:
quote:
But PENGUINS!?!?!?
But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on.
Ruskin certainly thought so, so it must be true: "I find penguins at present the only comfort in life. One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous; one can’t be angry when one looks at a penguin." [Smile]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
Don't swell Smudgie's head!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Take no notice, Smudgie - be brave! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Zacchaeus (# 14454) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ArachnidinElmet:
quote:
Originally posted by Smudgie:
quote:
But PENGUINS!?!?!?
But why would you want a penguin-free experience? Penguins enhance absolutely anything they appear on.
Ruskin certainly thought so, so it must be true: "I find penguins at present the only comfort in life. One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous; one can’t be angry when one looks at a penguin." [Smile]
Well I might think the same myself if we were talking about this sort of penguin

http://alex.woodruff.de/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/penguin.jpg [Biased]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Eventually a day in the city today - I didn't get moving very early and I was standing in a shop chatting with the staff saying that I knew I had to go somewhere else but couldn't remember where then I went for some lunch then I caught the bus back to local town, collected my bicycle and cycled home - halfway home I remembered what I had forgotten [Mad]

Tomorrow I shall head to larger local town and get what I need - 15 minutes walk to bus stop, 30 minutes on bus, 2 mins walk to shop, choose birthday cards, 2 mins back to bus station, 30 minutes on bus back to village, 15 minutes walk home!

Cycled past the home of one of the local lads tonight and heard a shout of "UNCLE!!" so I stopped and the lad rushed out dragging his dad behind him - dad returned from working in Gulf yesterday and lad thought we should meet. It was very touching.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... halfway home I remembered what I had forgotten ...

Have you ever considered a rather handy device called a Shopping List? Doesn't even need batteries! [Big Grin]

I say this in complete sympathy; I sometimes have to go back downstairs in order to remember what I came upstairs for ... [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
...Have you ever considered a rather handy device called a Shopping List?...

Yes, but then there is the "I've only go a few things to get, I don't need a list, I can't forget so short a list" syndrome!

[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Yes, I suffer from that syndrome, too. It partly comes from living within relatively easy distance from some shops - what I'm not dealing well with is the special trips into town to get the stuff those shops don't sell. But then that tends to be for stuff I can live without....

...except bread. My sister tells me that only freaks like thick-sliced bread, and my local shops seem to share that same philosophical standpoint. I'm beginning to feel persecuted. [Frown]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Oxford Street lights this year feature Marmite. I kid you not. I'll put some pictures up on Flickr later, when I've sorted through them all, partly because I don't quite believe it either. Interspersed with stars and another bizarre light across the road that comprises an umbrella with a pair of dice (well, they might mean to be presents) are 5 or 6 large changing light tableaux with Marmite featuring strongly. These lights feature
There's a caption under a number of them that says Marmite love it or hate it
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
I sometimes have to go back downstairs in order to remember what I came upstairs for ... [Hot and Hormonal]

My problem is that after I have gone back downstairs, I frequently still can't remember.

Moo
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
QLib - get yourself a little badge that says

PROUD TO BE A FREAK!

- - - -

Curiosity - I wonder much it costs these days to sponsor the Oxford Street Lights - will it be that other great British institution next year: McDonalds?

- - - -

I still haven't been to bigger local town, after breakfast tomorrow seems a good time, but I have remembered the other, other thing I meant to do in The City yesterday but I managed to pay that bill online.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
[*]Father Christmas trying and enjoying / spitting out a Marmite sandwich

I had to google this (sorry, it was too good to be true). Apparently his face turns green when he bites into the sandwich. Brilliant.

Courtesy of the Evening Standard.

I can't resist - I'm going to have to come and see these for myself.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
I have photos to prove it, I just have 300 odd photos from yesterday, or did before I started going through them.
 
Posted by ArachnidinElmet (# 17346) on :
 
I remember MacDonalds lights at the Blackpool Illuminations (and weirdly Coronation Street stars) some years ago and thinking it was going to be downhill from there. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Christmas lights sponsored by Marmite
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I far prefer your shots to the "professional" ones from the Evening Standard that seem flat and lifeless.

Your umbrella shot is just fab.

- - - -

eta: Late last night one of the local lads and his dad arrived to get some exams results of the interweb but we couldn't get it to work so he came back this morning and he hasn't done at all well. As he was leaving he held up the printed results sheet and said

This is my life, and I just failed

I felt so sorry for him! He feels better as we checked several of his friends results and they all did as badly so possibly the college needs to think about that - but really we have always thought that he is not cut out for academia and would be far better on a technical course and go at things from that direction.

Ah well, blessings to A and his colleagues.

[ 08. November 2012, 01:34: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
WW, your friend has my sympathy; I hope he can find a vocation or career-path that'll suit him better. When I left school I started out doing a teaching course, and made a complete b*ll*cks of it - mostly my own fault for not working hard enough, but with 20/20 hindsight I probably wasn't cut out for it. Although I regret failing (and in particular failing to get a degree) I'd rather be a good secretary/research assistant/whatever than a bad teacher.

Love the Christmas decorations - especially poor Father Christmas turning green - don't blame him! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
The poor boy, he must feel so low. I hope and pray that he can find a way to turn this round, perhaps, as you say, find a path more suited to his abilities.
I always wanted to be an English teacher but kids on Luton council estates in the 80s didn't go to University and I ended up on a YTS scheme. Expectations were low and we lived down to them. It wasn't til years later after I qualified as nurse (not a degree profession in those days) that I studied for a degree as a mature student. I'm just about to finish my second degree. Opportunities are available at different stages in life and doors open and close at different times. May he find the right door for this stage in his life.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Those Christmas lights! What were they thinking?!
 
Posted by Gill H (# 68) on :
 
I can hear a thousand Christmas sermons now:

"And Jesus is a bit like Marmite, isn't He? People loved Him or hated Him..."

(Copyright Gill H, all proceeds to the Ship...!)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
There's a pot of veggie soup* available for virtual tasting, if anyone's feeling cold and/or hungry. [Smile]

* Guaranteed 100% Marmite-free. [Snigger]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I've been slightly Domestic-Goddess-ish today; I made a cinnamon-and-raisin loaf this afternoon (not entirely successfully; I put the stated amount of yeast, which is too much [Frown] ) and the lamb shanks for tomorrow's lunch have been marinated and are now bubbling merrily in the slow-cooker.

Memo to self: don't forget to turn it off before going to bed and then on to "low" before leaving for church tomorrow morning.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Yum, slow cooked lamb, my favourite [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It came out quite well, if slightly over-seasoned. I probably should have taken the rosemary and thyme twigs out after it had marinated instead of leaving them in for the whole cooking time.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Off to the airport this morning, as soon as our guests leave, to try to sort some tickets to UK and then get clearance to leave the country. If I manage all that I still have to cancel the train tickets I have for next week and then sort my travel arrangements for UK.

A lovely weekend with great nephew and his lovely partner - she is such a sweetie! It was good because there was a family wedding over the weekend so they got to see a real village type event, albeit not in our village but somewhere nice and remote across The Backwaters. They are off to the hills after breakfast and I reckon they might fall asleep in the car - it has been a VERY full weekend.

I reckon I might sleep my entire three weeks in UK!!
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
....I reckon I might sleep my entire three weeks in UK!!

Will you be waking up for a Shipmeet at some point?
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Boogie or I could possibly organise 365 meets too!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Shipmeets would be good, if I can sort something - I think I will be in Farnham this next weekend - is there somewhere convenient nearby daisydaisy or somewhere between? I will be on public transport and not too fussed on spending a lot - but I am coming back down before I fly [from LHR] as well. Later meets can possibly be organised later. Can't get my head round such a sudden departure yet!

I have my flights but can't get my clearance to leave until Wednesday as tomorrow is a public holiday here - the clearance people were none to friendly today but agreed in the end to grant me clearance when I come back with a confirmed ticket.
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
OY! *waves frantically*

PM me.

It's your turn to buy the coffee!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry Ma'am, my 'umble apologies ma'am, would I DARE not to come and see you? I know the wrath of the penguin to be terrifying.

We'll organise a time, I hope. We could see if they undercharge us for lunch again at that rather nice garden centre.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
p.s. e-mail on its way.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Boogie or I could possibly organise 365 meets too!

I don't think he'll have enough time for that many meets - one would probably be enough [Biased]

[ 12. November 2012, 15:00: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
Did Sri Lanka not want you or was England in late November just too good to pass up ?
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
Qlib - ignore your sister, get a big knife, and slice your own bread!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Any chance of coming Forest of Dean way again?
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Eigon - I've been corrupted by big city ways, I'm afraid. Slicing real bread is too much effort when it comes to making lunchtimes sarnies at 6 a.m. Though I might consider it if I ever get round to getting a breadmaker.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by moonlitdoor:
Did Sri Lanka not want you or was England in late November just too good to pass up ?

Any response I could make to that would be too Hell-like for the Hosts here to permit it [Big Grin]

St G - I think I'll be in The Forest towards the end of next week but probably moving on to Cheltenham [or thereabouts] for the weekend.

Meets may or may not happen as so little notice but I'd be pleased to see people if it works out - my own schedule is not fixed yet so little chance for planning.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... I know the wrath of the penguin to be terrifying ...

I don't think I've ever seen the words "penguin" and "terrifying" in the same sentence before. [Big Grin]

Lucky old you, going back to Blighty, even in November. We used to go over for Cathedral Organists' Association meetings; the November ones were usually within hailing distance of London (wives ... shopping ... [Cool] ). We usually managed to fit in the Cambridge Sprint*, and IMHO Cambridge in November is one of the glories of England, so long as you have warm clothes with you.

* Evensong at King's followed by a quick walk along the road for Evensong at St. John's - church music heaven. [Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I could wave at you WW, if you sort of pass by Greater Manchester!

My sister made an apple cake to die for - must get the recipe. I ate it on the train and picked up every single crumb!!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Just for you piglet.

[Biased]

Yes please to apple cake recipe Nicodemia!

I have lots of freshly made raspberry cake here if anyone is interested.

Coffee machine question - we have a decent(ish) one, but the coffee is never hot. Any ideas? I may pop over to heaven to ask this question ...
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
The thingy that heats the water is dying. Bite the bullet and buy a new one... unless you want to wait months while the shop repairs it.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
The thingy that heats the water is dying. Bite the bullet and buy a new one... unless you want to wait months while the shop repairs it.

Ah! Well, we've had it and ages ages ...

Now for the fun bit (researching coffee machines [Yipee] )
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have, as yet, had no word from Their Honours [our two judge friends household] so am not at all sure what will be happening re staying in Manchester but I certainly hope to be there at some point. As ideas get firmed up I'll try to get online and post here.

I spent almost a tenner tonight on a new GSM mobile phone to use over there - thankfully they managed to get a white one in during the day otherwise I'd have been stuck with the Shocking Pink that was the only colour they had in earlier.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
St G - I think I'll be in The Forest towards the end of next week but probably moving on to Cheltenham [or thereabouts] for the weekend.

Well, if you should chance to meander over in an easterly direction, us Oxford and Cotswolds residents would be pleased to see you. (Though I appreciate it might be a bit out of your way.)
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
well it is warm and wall to wall sunshine in London today, as close to WW's idea of a nice day as you are going to get in mid November. Not sure if it will last as the BBC forecast says that is is cloudy now, when there isn't a cloud in the whole sky.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Yes, a glorious day - had a really lovely train ride down to Bristol - the English/Welsh countryside putting on its finest. So warm, I left my coat in the library and didn't realise until two hours later.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I think it is getting it all out of its system before I arrive to blizzards and freezing fog on Friday evening!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It was 16° here this afternoon [Cool] but as it's now 6° it looks as if normal service has been resumed.
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think it is getting it all out of its system before I arrive to blizzards and freezing fog on Friday evening!

It was indeed very foggy here in inner London this morning. Though has lifted now.

The colours of the leaves this year have been glorious, you should catch the end of them.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Cloudy, but no fog to be seen. I was hoping for some misty, photogenic scenes, but nothing so far.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Fog here, but too bleugh and grey for much good in the way of photography. However lovely droplets on webs.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We've got rather a lot of droplets here - they're forecasting many millimetres* of rain between today and tomorrow.

Can't say I'd call them "lovely" though ... [Frown]

* Millimetres? Millilitres? One or the other.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Lovely clear sunny day. (Isn't it always in Yorkshire?) But the sun is setting, and as the sun goes down so does the temperature.

Can you bring some Indian warmth over with you Wodders?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Lovely and sunny this afternoon. But a bit wasted in the city at this time of year as in most places the sun is hidden behind buildings.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
I think it is getting it all out of its system before I arrive to blizzards and freezing fog on Friday evening!

May you have an uneventful journey today.... and pleeeeaaaase bring some of that lovely sunshine with you.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Dull grey and miserable here - opposite side of the connurbation.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Cloudy, but no fog to be seen. I was hoping for some misty, photogenic scenes, but nothing so far.

Take a photo of some grey card out of focus and tell people it was a pea-souper.

If Wodders is landing in the North it will be to bright sunny/dark starry* skies (*delete as appropriate) another cycling day for me.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Today I am wearing bear ears to work - they're the ones with a little bow on, sold in aid of Children in Need.

I've just spotted myself in the mirror and they look (I can't help myself here) kinda cute. I might wear them to church on Sunday morning.

Hell, if Monday's as horrible a day as it is today, I might wear them then as well, to the funeral I have to drive the Dowager Mrs. S to. [Devil]

Mrs. S, still admiring her reflection...
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Take a photo of some grey card out of focus and tell people it was a pea-souper.

Would they believe it, though? The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away, and the air was acrid and difficult to breathe, like a clammy hand squeezing your lungs. Haven't seen one of those for years, probably because people don't use coal as much now.

Children in Need Day today, which always means a cake sale at work. Someone made one in the shape of Pudsey's head, which nobody had the heart to cut into. It wasn't until I turned it round to admire the craftsmanship that I realized people had been hollowing slices out of the back.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away

1957 or thereabouts: opening the front door in inner Belfast on a wall of grey - visibility in inches, if that.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I remember proper fog.

One night a friend and I travelled back the 6 miles or so on his motorbike with him driving and me hanging over the side of the bike in order to see the kerb and shout instructions. Right turns were interesting.

Fortunately those fogs are a thing of the past.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Behind my house there used to be open fields and an unmanned railway crossing. This was my morning route to the hospital and I remember arriving at the crossing in a thick fog one morning and being very surprised when a train appeared out of nowhere in front of me!
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Having a awful day today, eldest so left his gym bag on the bus and if it doesn't get found we'll be forking out for new football boots and official school kit.....again! Then just after that my other half phoned to say that the car failed the MOT and wasn't worth saving. We now have no car and might not be able to buy a new one for a few weeks as his driving license is being renewed [Roll Eyes] As for the added expense...
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That sounds like a real bummer of a day, HA. I made raisin CAKE this afternoon - do have a piece, and a nice cup of tea. [Smile]

On second thoughts, what you really need is GIN.

We had fairly proper fog this morning; St. John's isn't called Fog City for nothing.

[ 17. November 2012, 01:48: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Yesterday just wasn't your day, was it, HA? [Votive]

Grey, mizzly, semi-foggy day here. Hopes for clearance later.

Any of that cake left, Piglet??
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Red wine sufficed.
No fog here (it's been foggy for 2 days) but the sky is very grey and overcast; the rain will be coming soon.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Ugh HA that does sound like a rotten day. Makes my getting-on-the-wrong-train-and-ending-up-in-Perth adventure pale into insignificance (though funnily enough I did recover with wine too, strange that).
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Grey overcast day here too, after yesterdays grey overcast day, which ended in the sort of rain that gets you thoroughly wet...

I am longing for some sunshine. Still, it's only a few weeks to the shortest day, then the world will gradually turn light again.

Coffee, anyone?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
First time I've seen my flat in daylight for a week now. It's going to be like this for about four months now, I suppose; during weekdays I leave home in darkness, arrive home in darkness. The view from the train window has completely disappeared, nothing to be seen but impenetrable blackness punctuated by lights as we rush past stations and the occasional village.

I'll be getting a fair amount of practice at night photography in, if nothing else.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Grey overcast day here too, after yesterdays grey overcast day, which ended in the sort of rain that gets you thoroughly wet...

Another bright day after yesterday's bright day. Though the night was wet. Got up this morning to make two cups of tea to take back to bed (I love Saturday mornings) and let the cat in. Dressed in a dressing gown, I was trying to pour water on to the tea bags while the soggy moggy was trying to dry herself on my bare legs.

I hate wet cats first thing in the morning.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
quote:
I hate wet cats first thing in the morning.
Cat Flap?
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
No cat-flap, I open the window: she has to leap nearly six feet to the window ledge. She was on the window ledge when I got down to the kitchen. There is a shed she can shelter in though.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
When I had cats they often came in soaking wet in the middle of the night and got under the duvet to warm up.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Yeuk.
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
Re: fog. We had some about 5 years ago here that was so thick that heading home along country lanes I couldn't see the edges of the road. Thankfully I was pretty familiar with the route, and going very very slowly! But yes, this is quite rare.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
... it's only a few weeks to the shortest day ...

That's all very well, but as my dad says, "as the days get longer the cold gets stronger". He's never been to Newfoundland, but that saying could certainly apply here. The longer I have to wait for weather you have to shovel*, the happier I'll be.

We sang Evensong in the chapel of an old people's home this afternoon (the mother of one of our tenors is in the home). Wonderful place to sing - really high ceiling and great acoustics. Enjoyable experience all round.

PS There's loads of CAKE left - help yourselves. [Smile]


* About another 60 years would be about right ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I have posted my sisters recipe for her best ever spicy Apple Cake on the Recipe thread in Heaven.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I have posted my sisters recipe for her best ever spicy Apple Cake on the Recipe thread in Heaven.

[Smile]

Thanks Nicodemia! I bake a cake to take to work every Thursday and I've set myself the challenge of doing a different one every week this year, no buns, no cookies, no brownies ... just cut-able cakes. I will add yours to the list.


[Yipee]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Boogie - here's my cherry cake recipe. For variety, you can substitute the grated rind and juice of a lemon for the cherries and vanilla extract, or a cup of raisins that have been soaked in port or Pimm's, with a teaspoon or two of the soaking liquid and half the stated amount of vanilla.

I had a busy Evensong today - I had solos in the Weelkes Service for Trebles and in the anthem - Out of the deep by Thomas Morley. Quite fun though, especially as between the two, they spanned nearly two octaves.

They don't call me Piglet the Versatile for nothing* ... [Big Grin]

* Actually they don't call me Piglet the Versatile at all, but they could.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Thank you Piglet the Versatile!

[Overused]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
They don't call me Piglet the Versatile for nothing* ... [Big Grin]

How much do you pay them?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It would, sadly, be more than I could afford. [Disappointed]

It's not often that I remark on how cold it is here, but it's definitely beginning to feel a bit winterish - it was -4° (-11° with the wind-chill*) last night, and they're forecasting a wee bit of sn*w tomorrow.

**brrrrrrrr**

* I assume it's safe to mention temperatures like that while Wodders isn't listening - I wouldn't want to upset him ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I imagine it is a tad chillier where he is than his old bones are accustomed to, piglet dear.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I here they measure a "bit" of snow in metres out your way [Eek!]

We have had our first light ground frost of the year, but only about +3C no minus temperatures yet, but they'll come. Its rare to leave November without at least one hard frost.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
They played 'Frosty the Snowman' on Radio 2 this morning.

[Waterworks]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Ahem. "hear" not "here"

D'oh. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Frosty is a winter song, nothing wrong with that.

At least they're not playing anything that mentions Chr*stm*s.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
... At least they're not playing anything that mentions Chr*stm*s.

As we were getting into the car after singing Evensong at the old people's home the other day there was a car stereo blaring out an awful, wailing version of Silent Night. If I never heard that carol again, it would be too soon.
[Projectile]

The sn*w didn't come to much after all - there were wet flakes falling when D. picked me up from w*rk but it didn't lie and by evening it was dry again.

**phew** [Smile]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
You're safe from snow (yes, name it and shame it!) for another day then, eh, piglet?
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Raining. We're getting reports of surface flooding and some roads closed, trains cancelled etc, but nothing like as bad as it sounds further west. Am keeping an eye on it though. How is everyone else?
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
It was my Bristol (half)day today. The trains weren't running from Newport, but the coach service was fine - very scenic, and it's lateness was irrelevant to me. And I was lucky enough to get a lift back to Newport, so actually arrived home a good half-hour earler than usual.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Hopefully no snow for a wee while yet - they're forecasting up to 11° early next week. At that rate, the socks'll have to come off again ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Part of the roof seems to have fallen in overnight at the train station, so a bit of a detour to the platforms this morning, past a darkened area full of cloths and paper towels pressed into service. The canal's higher than I've seen it for a long time – normally you look over the bridge and there’s a 6-8’ drop to the water, this morning it was only a foot away. Any more heavy rain is going to be er interesting.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Hope my son gets to college ok, Ariel - it's his final exam at Oxford today.

He'll be home on Sunday for a few days then he's off to Gatwick to complete his training.

Time flies!

(And so does he [Smile] )
 
Posted by Tree Bee (# 4033) on :
 
Very windy and prematurely dark here in MK.
Wheelie bins are being blown over.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Getting home was interesting tonight - it was dark by about 3.30, and there was a tremendous amount of water on the roads - some of it in unlikely places.There were several places where the wayer was right across the road, and deep at that. I think it's going to be the "long way" tomorrow morning - a bus route on the other side of the Valley, and all main roads.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Very damp in this part of South Wales too. This isn't helped by motorists, cosy and dry in their cars, driving through roadside puddles splashing/drenching pedestrians. [Mad]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Not too bad here, it's been raining but on the whole Cambridge is too flat to flood, though the Cam does a bit of spreading out. I can hear the wind though and am hoping it calms down as I'm a terribly bad sleeper. my other half is away on business in Italy and I find it even harder to sleep when he's not here so if we have a storm I won't get a wink of sleep.
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
The younger generation haven't seen a proper pea-souper. The sort of fog we got when I was at school was the sort where cars would loom up suddenly a yard away, and the air was acrid and difficult to breathe, like a clammy hand squeezing your lungs. Haven't seen one of those for years, probably because people don't use coal as much now.

I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.

Moo
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
So was I, but I don't remember it. I was 2.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I don't think I ever experienced a London fog; the ones I remember from elsewhere in the country were very grey and very thick.

Raining here. The canal was already only inches away from overflowing when I passed by tonight, and there are some minor floods already where the river has broken its banks. No idea what the light of dawn will disclose, but it probably won't be a day for travelling far. The Christmas Markets start this week, too: hope they won't be washed out.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
Wet here this afternoon but no floods I could see apart from a few large puddles. Despite being in one of the dampest parts of the UK, we seem to have got off lightly compared to some places. Yesterday afternoon was beautifully sunny. And not cold.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Yet across the hills there was a real downpour, the sort that soaks you in seconds. It's gone now though.

Earlier part of the town was cordoned off by the police, we were wondering what had happened, with all that blue tape and blue lights. It turned out to be loose slates on a roof and high winds. A safety measure. It still looked like something off Inspector Morse.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Balaam - I just spotted your sig line -

Women can wait

and for some reason it reminded me of

'When like stars his children crowned
all in white shall wait around'

Now I finally know what they are waiting around for! [Killing me]

(unless what you really meant was 'Women can wait at table...'
[Confused] )

Mrs. S, saddened but somehow not surprised
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Women can wait

When I followed your link, Balaam, I read the sub-title as "Treading the tightrope between doubt and uncertainty.........."

Now that, I thought, I can understand!

But then I looked again. Ah well, I live in hopes.

Beautiful day here, frosty, sunny clear sky. But I gather its All Coming Back tomorrow. (Though we don't do floods up here - it all drains off to somewhere else!)

[ 23. November 2012, 08:19: Message edited by: Nicodemia ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Now that is a better subtitle, off to change it.

Thanks. [Smile]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Hmmmm, cheese and broccoli risotto tonight, I'm always surprised how good and creamy risotto tastes.
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.

The old London fogs were smog, not natural fog. Doesn;t happen any more. The Clean Air Acts have helped a lot.

"Smog" is one of those words that sounds so American and 20th century its almost disappointing to find out that it was originally British and Victorian. Like "christingle" and "brunch".
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
On the other hand I can assure people that really thick fog does still occur but is normally localised. I have driven through stuff where I cannot see the edge of the pavement of the road on which I was driving.

Jengie
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
The Wye was (only) up to the brim this morning, so I got into work without problems, but the path I cycle home by was under water tonight. With more heavy rain forecast for tomorow, I'm a bit apprehensive - I haven't even written my flood plan yet. [Frown]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Your rotten weather's making me feel guilty: it was 9° and sunny here today - a lovely autumnal day. We've been having very odd weather lately - the daytime temperature's been fluctuating by as much as 10° from one day to the next, flowers are beginning to bloom when they shouldn't and we're being plagued by horrid little flies.

[Confused]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Well, it seems I'm off to a woodwork show in Halifax today - not sure how I got talked into that. Apparently we'll be there from 9am to 3pm - seems a long time to look at wood!

Still, my lovely camera will be with me, there should be plenty of photo opportunities.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Good moment to do some street photography, Boogie - find a nice spot to sit and take pictures and just get on with it
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Good moment to do some street photography, Boogie - find a nice spot to sit and take pictures and just get on with it

I will! And now I'll pop off to the 'snap' thread for advice! (First must plug in the camera batteries to charge)
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
The ducks are having a whale of a time on the flooded meadows. The swans have more sense of propriety and are sticking to where the river should be.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Curiosity killed ...:
Good moment to do some street photography, Boogie - find a nice spot to sit and take pictures and just get on with it

Sit?

As if there'll be anywhere dry enough to sit.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
She's going to be inside! And some of my more entertaining street shots are in the rain.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Rain has well and truly settled in now. The temperature isn't far above freezing, either. I'm staying in now, waiting to see how things go - very grateful for the local chippy, there's nothing like coming back from shopping on a dark, cold wet day with a parcel of fish and chips, ready to eat as soon as you get in. (And the way that wonderful smell wafts up at you as you unwrap the packet.)

Anyone heard from WW lately? I can't imagine he's enjoying our November.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
No, and he was going to be out in the rainiest bit too.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
I'm baaaack - thanks for all the tips, everyone was really friendly and happy to be photographed ('tho I tended to ask after taking the shot - hehe!)
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
....And the rain came down in torrents, splish splash...
Glad we live quie a height above the river - the Rhymney is one of the quickest to rise.
 
Posted by Yangtze (# 4965) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Anyone heard from WW lately? I can't imagine he's enjoying our November.

I've spoken with him*. He says the weather's delightful and he can't imagine why he chooses to live in India.

*I really have.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Yangtze:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Anyone heard from WW lately? I can't imagine he's enjoying our November.

I've spoken with him*. He says the weather's delightful and he can't imagine why he chooses to live in India.

Sad to see a fellow Host descend into insanity, but there you go.

It's been face-chewingly cold here today. I was at a workshop today and while the meeting room was warm, other parts of the building weren't. Lunch was a sandwich and a drink from Tesco's chill cabinet, consumed in an unheated basement.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's beginning to rain here now; we've got Red Alert weather warnings for wind and rain tomorrow - where did that come from?

I haven't been over the door today, but after a lazy morning I've been moderately productive. D. had to go to a meeting and I was i/c lunch. Racking my memory, I recalled a dish Mum used to make with left-over chicken in a cheese and sherry sauce with macaroni. I used port as I didn't have any sherry, but it really came out rather well, and more to the point, D. liked it, which I sort of didn't quite expect. I'll post the recipe upstairs.

I'm still having fun with the pasta-cooking pot I bought last week (it comes with its own drainer, like the TV cooks use) and I'm currently making a double batch of chicken stock in it - I'll report back on the success or otherwise of that ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Lunch was a sandwich and a drink from Tesco's chill cabinet, consumed in an unheated basement.

Boy, you guys up there clearly know how to have a good time.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Lunch was a sandwich and a drink from Tesco's chill cabinet, consumed in an unheated basement.

Boy, you guys up there clearly know how to have a good time.
Indoors is luxury enough y'ken.
 
Posted by Alex Cockell (# 7487) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
quote:
Originally posted by Moo:
I was in London in early January, 1956. The fog was thick and yellow with a metallic taste.

The old London fogs were smog, not natural fog. Doesn;t happen any more. The Clean Air Acts have helped a lot.

"Smog" is one of those words that sounds so American and 20th century its almost disappointing to find out that it was originally British and Victorian. Like "christingle" and "brunch".

"Smog" was British,
"Typhoons, huwwicanes, earthquakes, SMOG!" was American (specifically Mel Blanc) ;-)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
... Indoors is luxury enough y'ken.

To quote Lady Whiteadder: "Two spikes would be an extravagance". [Big Grin]

Mixed success with the double-quantity-stockpot experiment - I kind of lost count of how many kettlefuls of water I'd put in [Hot and Hormonal] and ended up with gallons of rather insipid stock. However, I grated a stock-cube into it (cheating, I know) and bubbled it off a bit and I now have a pot of (I hope) moderately decent soup simmering away.

We had a very nice "away gig" this evening - we were invited to sing Evensong at the church in St. Philips; they fed us beforehand with a very decent pot-luck supper and everyone seemed pleased with our singing.

Have any of you stirred up your puddings? [Smile]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
First "proper" casserole of the season consumed - I don't count Pork, Cider and Apple Casserole as I make that all year. This was real comfort food, with dumplings, made for yesterday's lunch and finished off tonight, and very nice it was too!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I've yet to make mine. I bought some quinces when I saw them in the market: there's a venison and quince casserole I've made in the past which works beautifully, if you can get the ingredients. It can be made with beef or lamb instead.

It's going to be casserole weather later this week as we've been promised sub zero temperatures. What jolly fun. I hope poor WW isn't suffering too much wherever he is, if he's still in England.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Our puddings were made a few weeks ago and that was late! They are usually made in September.

We had the taster a couple of weeks ago and it was delicious. Eldest son, who doesn't like Xmas pud had some, so it must be good.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I've been contemplating turning a rather large lump of moose in the deep-freeze into a casserole; I've done it before with a beef casserole recipe and it worked beautifully.

Trouble is, our house is still in building-site mode (although slowly getting better) and it's the sort of thing that would be nicer with friends round to help us eat it.

This week's culinary adventures chez Piglet will be focused on the annual pain in the @r$e that is the Cookie Exchange. [Help]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
I would gladly exchange my eternal gratitude for some cookies. [Tear]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
there's a venison and quince casserole I've made in the past which works beautifully,

That sounds orgasmic (and we have easy access to quinces and venison) - could you post it on the recipe thread, please?

A drooling AG
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Will do when I get home – whenever that will be: the railway line's now flooding, some roads are closed and it's disruption all round. They're trying to keep the Botley Road (Oxford) from flooding, not sure how successful that will be. The Thames is set to rise through the next 48 hours. It's not raining (or only lightly) but it sounds as if the waters coming through haven't peaked yet.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
I've got a pork and apple casserole in the slow cooker at the mo. I love slow cooked meat and make casseroles all year round.
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
I guess I could go for casserole for my dinner guests on Saturday night, but I think I am going to be a caricature of my English self and serve roast beef and Yorkshire pudding.

I am also going to make a REAL crumble (crumble is quite trendy in France but 'taint the real thing). Don't know if I have time to make custard tho. I may have to resort to the blessed Marks and Spencers (there are not words for how much I love having Marks and Sparks in Froggyland [Big Grin] ).
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
there's a venison and quince casserole I've made in the past which works beautifully,

That sounds orgasmic (and we have easy access to quinces and venison) - could you post it on the recipe thread, please?

A drooling AG

Done! You'll probably want to double the quantities and adjust seasonings as you go along.

How are you doing btw - webbed feet yet? A section of one of the railway lines had a flowing stream running down it tonight and lapping towards the rest of the railway lines. Lots of submerged scenes generally in the local news. I don't think it was this bad in 2007.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
That recipe looks lovely, Ariel. Although our last house came with a quince bush, I don't ever remember it producing anything that looked useful (and I wasn't as inclined then to Domestic Goddessishness as I am now), so I have no idea what quinces taste like.

I now have the ingredients for the first attempt at "caramel almond nut-jobs" which is what I'm planning for the cookie party - I'll try them out tomorrow. I know I moan about it, but it's really because the hostess invites so many people that we all have to make over 100 of whatever it is, and you end up with 100 wee buns, most of which you don't actually like ...

PS Hope you're all keeping safe in that soggy weather you're having - the pictures we're getting over here look well scary. [Eek!]

Do you think Wodders brought the monsoon over with him? I hope he's not doing his roof-top rain dances over there ... [Devil]

[ 28. November 2012, 02:51: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
How are you doing btw - webbed feet yet? A section of one of the railway lines had a flowing stream running down it tonight and lapping towards the rest of the railway lines. Lots of submerged scenes generally in the local news. I don't think it was this bad in 2007.

Currently above water... There's been a heap of sandbags on the corner of the road since we went onto full Flood Warning on Monday night. Not much use to most here, seeing as what tends to happen is that the groundwater comes up through the floorboards! The meadow still had green bits on it this morning, so hopefully it won't get too much higher. [Votive]

Casserole looks to be a Good Thing, will try recipe as soon as I can get quinces from parents (think they had some this year - if not, Covered Market!)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I got some quinces in the Covered Market, but that was a couple of weeks ago. They came from France, which I hadn't expected.

Good luck with the sandbags. This was yesterday - it's looking rather better today, though parts of the countryside still look like a swamp.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
There's a football field 4 miles from here where the goalposts are now visible above the water. That is what a flood plain is for. Flooding.

Yet the local council are constantly getting requests from people who want to develop the site.

In other news, I have got a busker permit.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Ooh, where are you going to busk?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Good luck with the busking, Balaam (and with the drying-out, everyone else).

We now have sn*w. [Waterworks] About four inches of the bloody stuff. We have sn*w-tyres for the car, but they're in the boot, waiting to be fitted, and D. couldn't get the car-jack to work because it slipped about in the fecking sn*w. [Mad]

First batch of caramel nut-jobs done - they taste fine but the caramel spread out too much and has made the undersides all sticky. Will have to address the problem (possibly filling in spaces with bits of broken biscuit). Virtual ones available for tasting - help yourselves.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
They sound wonderful piglet [Yipee]

At the Southampton City Mission AGM last night we had (among others) cranberry and white chocolate squares. Oh my [Overused] I have requested the recipe - but in the same way that some links aren't work-safe, I'm sure this one won't be 'Safe from Kidnapping'-safe!

There was also a most wonderful sponge, and chocolate brownie-things (and no-one tried to coerce us into being Treasurer or Secretary - unique among AGMs!)

Mrs. S, still tasting those delights [Axe murder]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Thanks, Ariel, that looks wonderful!

Today is great fun. Early start to light the boiler at work, then it all went pear shaped. Currently we have a broken down and immovable in the one usable entrance, the Grundon lorry is waiting for a crane to come to remove the industrial-size bin it's dropped off the forks onto its roof (which will have to come through the gateway with the car...), and the area round the bin looks like a bomb site because Grundons didn't come yesterday, the waste piled up, and the foxes found it.

Happy happy joy joy!

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Ooh, where are you going to busk?

On current form, from a boat.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Sn*w now seems to have given way to rain (lots of it this afternoon - par for the course when I've arranged to have my hair cut ...) and wind, but not quite enough to get rid of it all. [Frown]

Second batch of caramel nut-jobs made and hiding in cooled-down oven from small scurrying creatures.* First 42 bagged up - only another 60 to go ... [Roll Eyes]


* There are quite a few cats in our neighbourhood, none of which is ours, and the local mice regard our house as a convenient cat-free zone. [Mad]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Huge relief that the train's running properly again. Commuting has taken the best part of 5 hours in total daily with all this flooding disruption. I'm very grateful for the replacement coach, which I discovered on the second evening: the journey was comfortable and quite interesting. We passed by the flooded streets and you could see the forecourts of flats looking like a swimming pool, not a car in sight, the side streets looking like lakes, and the allotments with garden sheds here and there in the middle of a vast expanse of water, the odd wheelbarrow sticking up, but no plots or plants to be seen. Then through one of the flooded streets, very carefully with waves of water still splashing to the sides.

Once it all recedes it's going to be a real mess, with the possibility of rot and damp as well. For now it's still going to be a problem with freezing over before it dissipates and the prospect of more rain next week. But such a beautiful morning today with the frost, the clear skies and the rosy clouds: the beautiful side of November.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Oh, Sandemaniac, that sounds awful! Hope you get Grundons to clean it up properly. At least its not hot weather, I hope the frost keeps the smell down. (though not to the foxes, obviously!)

I feel really sorry for those whose homes have been flooded. They might have gone from the news, but the mud and filth remains for ages, and people are still evacuated.

[Votive]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Absolutely, Nicodemia - [Votive] for everyone affected.

Our temperature's taken a bit of a plummet - it's -3° at the moment (-11° with the wind-chill), so the snow that's still about (admittedly not a huge amount yet) isn't going anywhere.

Last of the caramel nut-jobs all bagged up and ready for tomorrow - I hope they appreciate the blood, sweat and arithmetic* that they entailed. If the habit of cookie-exchanges crosses the Pond, resist it.
[Devil]

* My oven won't accommodate the size of baking tray specified in the recipe, so I had to work with the trays I have and faff about a lot.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Has anyone seen Wodders recently? He's been gone a long time....
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Has anyone seen Wodders recently? He's been gone a long time....

He's on a plane back home as we speak.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Good news mid week. My chances of imminent death from heart attack/stroke are only 3.5%, apparently.
Celebrating a high 'good cholesterol' reading with bacon and black pudding for breakfast; crumpets with jam and syrup for tea. [Smile] More crumpets (and more tea) if anyone wants to join me.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
While I utterly sympathise with the desire for bacon and black pudding, are you quite sure it's the right thing with which to celebrate your Good Cholesterol? [Big Grin]

Not that I've got anything to feel superior about; I now have a bag with somewhat less than 102 (or whatever the hell number it was) wee buns of varying sorts. So far the ones I've tasted have been mostly quite good (although I really don't like rum-balls - wouldn't Drambuie-balls be nicer?) but the temptation to consume bazillions of nutritionally-useless calories is something I could do without. Oh, and somebody else also made caramel nut-jobs, but made a better job of them than I did. [Paranoid]

Maybe I'll be able to burn some of them off tomorrow as the choir walks around the Cathedral during the Advent Procession (which includes Gibbons' This is the record of John with solo piglet).

[Yipee]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
While I utterly sympathise with the desire for bacon and black pudding, are you quite sure it's the right thing with which to celebrate your Good Cholesterol? [Big Grin]

Well, the thing is, I had eaten two-thirds of the bacon and half the black pudding before the cholesterol test (though I must admit the bad choleterol was just a smidgin above desirable levels). I daren't even ask for your recipe for caramel nut jobs.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
It's another time of transition for Boogielet2 and the rest of us. He has finished at Oxford Aviation Academy and is off to Gatwick today to complete his pilot training. He'll be a jobbing first officer at the beginning of March. He was the only one of his group to get a first.

We are proud enough to burst - and even putting up with his stuff all over the house. He'll be setting up home in March, wherever his career starts (Likely Gatwick or Luton with an outside chance of Manchester).

[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Well done Boogielet2 - he has done wonderfully well! I'm impressed [Overused]

Is the Boogie household going out for a celebration?

Sometimes the sun comes out here. Mostly it doesn't, and its perishing cold! Ducks slipping about on the frozen lake don't look very happy, either.

And now its time to take the dog out again, as Mr.N has a Really Bad Cold. [Frown] [Frown] [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Here I am back again - but not up to hosting until tomorrow as I'm still knackered and wouldn't like to trust my judgement.

England was COLD and WET! Amazing number of flooded bits I passed during my [brief] stay. There was also fog on Friday morning on the way south to LHR.

As usual I put on weight over there but then I did eat VAST amounts! Thursday's supper, for just four of us, was 1.25 kilos of dried pasta, a big wedge of Gorgonzola, ditto of Parmesan, a couple of good lumps of butter, a large tub of double cream and a small box of mushrooms. It tasted fine.

We followed it with cheesecake - LARGE helpings - with Creme Fraiche.

Gluttony is right up there with Lust and Sloth as one of my favourite sins.

For anyone Liverpool way I can recommend the Akshaya South Indian/Sri Lankan restaurant on Kensington between Holt Road and Shiel Road - good food, some of which is very authentically south Indian, combined with reasonable prices and cheerful service.
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
Good to see you back, Wodders, and also glad you neither drowned nor starved on your trip!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
(Do they have authentic South Indian prices?)

Good to see you back Wodders. Happy Advent.
 
Posted by Curiosity killed ... (# 11770) on :
 
Glad you made it back Welease Woderick and yes, very cold, wet, miserable, and occasional fog.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:

For anyone Liverpool way I can recommend the Akshaya South Indian/Sri Lankan restaurant on Kensington between Holt Road and Shiel Road - good food, some of which is very authentically south Indian, combined with reasonable prices and cheerful service.

Thanks WW. I'll check it out some time. If you were there recently why didn't you organise a shipmeet?
(Kensington is changing! Though Londoners had better be aware it is not at all like its namesake.)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
... Sometimes the sun comes out here. Mostly it doesn't ...

Well, you do live near Manchester ... [Big Grin] The sun was out here today, but it didn't stop it being -6° and feeling like -13° with the wind-chill. Even I was feeling cold. [Eek!]

Welcome back, Wodders - glad to hear you had a good eating holiday.

Congratulations, Master Boogie, and good luck with the next stage! [Yipee]

Advent Procession successfully dispatched, to much Decanal Grinning™ (it's so nice to be appreciated) and several kindly comments about my efforts in the Gibbons.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
It's been mostly sunny here recently (rain at night). Though this morning I was caught in a heavy shower coming back from the newsagents. (I was coming back from the newsagents; the shower was coming towards it)

[ 03. December 2012, 10:59: Message edited by: Angloid ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Thanks for the clarification, I was wondering why a shower would want to go to the newsagents.

Cold here, and the weather is wet, yet there is blue sky. That's what comes from living over the hill from Manchester.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
...Thanks WW. I'll check it out some time. If you were there recently why didn't you organise a shipmeet?...

Sorry, friend and I only decided to eat there about 10 minutes before we headed in that direction - but it may well be on my list for next time!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
As one of my colleagues had something she needed me for, I did a few extra hours at w*rk yesterday and today. I normally only work until 2 o'clock, so it felt very odd leaving work in the dark, especially as my office has no windows, so I didn't notice it was dark until I got to the door where D. picks me up.

The Cathedral ladies' groups were having their Christmas party tonight, but I copped out; I hadn't made anything for the pot-luck and after the extra work-hours I just couldn't face it.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
First snow of the winter in this corner of the world! A light dusting making the fields and rural areas look very pretty, but turning to slush in the towns. Wasn't expecting that – they said sleet and there was no sign of that when I left home.

This is great – looks seasonal and pretty and you can still get around easily. [Cool]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
All the mornings for he past week or so have been whiteish - either very light snow or very heavy frost. Today is frost and I have to admit I am cutting my Tai Chi class because I know the little brae up to the bus stop is going to be icy and slippery.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
There's been snow in parts of New South Wales and Victoria over the last few days.

It's summer here and temps at the weekend were around 40°C in much of the state.

But
who would have thought of this happening?


[ 05. December 2012, 08:41: Message edited by: Lothlorien ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It's great to be back in the warm [Big Grin]

About the closest I got to Nicodemia's neck of the woods was heading down the M6 last Friday past some standing water in fields that had then frozen overnight. I hope it wasn't too bad in the towns.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Oh dear, what a morning!

The window cleaner left the gate open and Gavin got out. I have spent the morning running round the area in a blind panic. The main road was my biggest fear as he is blind and deaf.

When I was returning home empty handed I hear his barks reverberating round the area - he was outside the back door.

Phew phew phew!

It was a new young lad who did the windows - I tore a strip of the poor lad and he went searching too. We have a big sign on the gate but I will check it much more carefully next time.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
I foolishly took the bike this morning, though the roads are wet and the forecast is frost by 8. I won't be home till 9. [Frown] Maybe they'll have dried out by then.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Have safe journey.
Snow here too, enough for snowballing on the way to school. Other half finally picked up our new car yesterday after over 3 weeks without one, so he was lucky he didn't have to cycle today in the snow.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Went to a brilliant concert last night - Maddy Prior and the Carnival Band doing nearly two hours of music like this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CC5Ixae8ezo
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I an now jealous, St G.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
Have safe journey.

Thanks - it was fine.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I think I'm jealous too, St. G. - we have a couple of CDs of the Carnival Band doing 18th century hymn-tunes - wonderful stuff. Liked her with Steeley Span too.

I've got All Around my Hat as an earworm and now so have you. [Devil]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I loved that Tidings track, I've always loved her voice.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
In ase, you might like this!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qAf7su7psw
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
oops! brain is working faster than the fingers!Meant to say "In that case, you might like this" Hopefully this will now post. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qAf7su7psw
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
The football field by the river, the one where the goal posts had been underwater, now has grass on it. Good news if you want to play football. (Unless you want to bring a sub on. Joke provided by Huddersfield archiological society.) There is something yellow and bright in the sky. The roads are ice free, but I daren't try the cycle tracks yet.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Nothing yellow and bright in the sky here. It started off raining heavily, attempted to sleet, and has now settled into chilly with a gale blowing.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's really variable here - one minute sunny, the next overcast and/or raining. No sleet yet.

Off to a Victorian Christmas Fair after work - they seem to be the in-thing this year, lots of them about. Fun, but in no way historically accurate; still, nice to look at.

I wonder if in a century from now people will be holding "Twenty-first Century Christmas Fairs", with people dressed up in T-shirts, hoodies and jeans, getting all nostalgic about the recession?
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Beautiful day here - bright, sunny, but cold. No ice. Which was a good thing as driving head on into a low sun was Very Difficult.

Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!

Boogie should be OK, I think? Or have you got the Lake District ice??
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Boogie should be OK, I think? Or have you got the Lake District ice??

Thanks for asking. Cold, cold, cold and icy - but the roads are very well gritted.

I'm ensconced on the settee for the evening now, after two whole days of work (this semi retired lark suits me down to the ground!)

Looking forward to a little RW later.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jengie Jon (# 273) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Beautiful day here - bright, sunny, but cold. No ice. Which was a good thing as driving head on into a low sun was Very Difficult.

Oh Good I should be over your way tomorrow, hope it stays around!

Jengie
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!

On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We've got what a friend calls "fat rain" when she's in Sn*w Denial™; it's getting a wee bit treacherous underfoot, but not really expected to amount to very much.

Just back from the Christmas bash held by the theological college where D. does the music teaching: turkey and all the trimmings and some rather good wee buns and most of the bottle of wine we brought with us (D. only had a couple of small glasses, as he was driving).

Really must try and do some Christmas shopping tomorrow ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!

On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
Rain comes mostly on Atlantic winds from the South West. Snow is mostly on winds from the North East. The row of hills between us means that you in the the North West have the worst of the rain and we in Yorkshire and the North East have the worst of the snow.

If you like both wet and snowy weather, try moving to Scotland for more of both.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Despite all my moans about NW weather, we have had some lovely days lately, and today looks like another one.

So I shall enjoy it, even if the grass parts of the park squelch underfoot, and the usually damp bits are large ponds. Ducks and swans enjoy it all, anyway, and the paths are mostly ice free, so who am I to complain!!
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:

Sorry if you've got snow and ice, but its so rare for us in the NW not to have nasty weather when you've got it!

On the contrary! We have nasty weather from May to November, but winters are milder than the rest of the country on average. Though having said that it will probably snow tomorrow.
Rain comes mostly on Atlantic winds from the South West. Snow is mostly on winds from the North East. The row of hills between us means that you in the the North West have the worst of the rain and we in Yorkshire and the North East have the worst of the snow.

If you like both wet and snowy weather, try moving to Scotland for more of both.

Which is probably why East Anglia, despite being the driest region due to flatness, gets a good amount of snow. I love the weather here [Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
It is very confusing when there are THREE different Catholic communities in one area - we have Latin Catholics [Western rite], Syro-Malabar Catholics and Syro-Malankara Catholics [two different Eastern rites.

It turns out that one fairly large and general area of the city has TWO churches of St Sebastian, 3 or 4 kilometres apart, different communities. My friends told me to meet them at St Sebastian's this morning, no problem I said and went to the one I knew and waited, and waited, and waited - then I got a phone call

- Where are you?

- Outside St Sebastians Church.

- No you're not.

- Yes I am, I am right by the sign that says Church of St Sebastian.

- Well we're there and you're not.

Different church of St Sebastian so I walked to the other place, my sandal falling apart on the way - and they wonder why I'm tired!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
That's interesting - I wouldn't have thought you could have two churches of the same name in the same denomination so near each other, but there probably isn't any reason why not, other than social convention.

Went to a Victorian Christmas Market last night, and found it very much like any other 21st century Christmas Market, except for the owls. A bitterly cold night where the stallholders were dressed in as many layers (of 21st century clothes) as they could fit on, and still looked frozen. The owls seemed fine, though. Not many people about, but it was that sort of weather.

[ 08. December 2012, 15:05: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Wodder's churches are not quite the same denomination, being different rites of RC. Huddersfield, however, has two Church of England churches, both called Holy Trinity. Only three and a half miles between the two.

Confused? You will be.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I've just about finished my Christmas shopping thanks to a craft fair in Abergavenny and another in Hereford - I've got to get som small "top up" presents - probably food, and then get wrapping. About half the posted cards are written and posted, so I'm not doing too badly!
 
Posted by Moo (# 107) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
We've got what a friend calls "fat rain" when she's in Sn*w Denial™; it's getting a wee bit treacherous underfoot, but not really expected to amount to very much.

Someone once phoned a television meteorologist and said, "I thought you would be interested to learn that I have just finished shoveling seven inches of 'partly cloudy' out of my driveway."

Moo
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Moo - [Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me]

It was a beautiful but cold day here today, although I didn't take advantage of it at all - I was a very lazy piglet until late afternoon, when I turned into Domestic Goddess Piglet and made a few jars of red-pepper jelly (some of which will be given away as Christmas presents). I had intentions that involved Christmas shopping (see previous post) but they didn't come to anything.

Oh well, the jelly's a start ... [Help]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Sorry, my post lacked clarity, he says euphemistically - I knew what I meant when I wrote it but re-reading it [Hot and Hormonal]

I was waiting outside St Sebastian's Syro-Malabar Church and they were waiting outside St Sebastian's Latin Catholic Church - the former being quite utilitarian and latter being a lovely modern edifice.

We went to Syro-Malabar mass this morning at Holy Cross, a lovely 16th century Portuguese church a few kms away.

Another gorgeous day here but we all wish for a few rainy days!
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
WW - you can have our rain and welcome! I'll parcel it up and sent it next-day delivery! [Biased]

Foul morning here, though forecast said sunny intervals. Still waiting, though 'tis quite early yet.

Most Christmas presents bought and wrapped, but it will be a difficult Christmas one way and another owing to family problems. We may go, we may stay, we may be two or we could possibly be 6.

I shall just take things as they come. [Help]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
The sun is peeping out here - hope it comes your way soon Nicodemia!

[Angel]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
We have our Christingle service in just over an hour's time. Normally, we have a sort of work party after the morning service to make them. This year, part of the service will be a workshop for individuals to make their own. This could be...interesting....and possibly very sticky.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Bought what purported to be a Roman pork pie at a Christmas market this morning, made to an ancient recipe which apparently fed the legions on Hadrian's Wall.

They said they left two of the ingredients out in recreating this. One is eyeballs(!), and the other is a word I didn't catch so can only guess at what other delight I must be missing. I can only say that the cleaned-up version, made with uncured pork, is the best pork pie I've had in a long time, and I'm not normally a fan of pork pies.

The sunlight's now faded, it's been raining and the temperature's dropping in preparation for the Big Freeze of next week. Staying in with a cup of mulled wine.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
You'd better not learn what goes into a modern pork pie then. All I can say is that it all comes from the pig.

Melton Mowbrey pork pies are made with uncured pork. The ones from round here used cured pork. Both are good if you get the proper ones from a butcher who makes his/her own, rather than the mass produced supermarket stuff.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
What's the pastry like on a Melton Mowbray? I've been put off by the sort that shatters on impact and lacks flavour, or the sort that disintegrates and has to be thrown away.

(Not to mention rubbery grey fillings of unidentified "meat" surrounded by air and chewy jelly; but I'm prepared to believe that a Melton Mowbray pork pie might be genuinely edible.)
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Thanks to the wonders of technology (Skype) - I've just been speaking to my American "daughter" for the best part of an hour, and it sounded like she was making a local call. Amazing! Now I've got to work out how Skype works.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
I have no idea how a computer works, never mind how Skype works. I don't really care, I just use them.

As for pies. Hard crust is usually a sign that the pie has been made a while ago, such as supermarket pies. Melton Mowbray pies are grey, the pink meat is cured pork. As for the jelly, it is gelatine from the pig trotters, it often has more flavour than the meat.

Get your pies from a butcher not a supermarket.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
As it was D's birthday today, we had a v. good lunch (which I'm delighted to report didn't include any form of pork pie) at Saltwater, a newish restaurant in town. For the benefit of Those Who Need To Know, he had a chicken-and-veggie stir-fry, I had a spicy pasta con pollo and we shared a cheeseboard. Really couldn't fault it, and as cheeseboards are very rare here, it gets at least 50 extra points just for having one.

[ 11. December 2012, 02:56: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
I have no idea how a computer works, never mind how Skype works. I don't really care, I just use them.

Same here, and I work in IT.
quote:


As for pies. Hard crust is usually a sign that the pie has been made a while ago, such as supermarket pies. Melton Mowbray pies are grey, the pink meat is cured pork. As for the jelly, it is gelatine from the pig trotters, it often has more flavour than the meat.

Get your pies from a butcher not a supermarket.

Keep the pie in the fridge but take it out at least twenty minutes before you eat it. The jelly melts into the crust, which does wonders for the flavour.

I don't necessarily agree about getting pies from a butcher. Just get a genuine Melton Mowbray Pork Pie, which has to be made by the specified method in that area. They do vary but they are all better than any pork pie that isn't a Melton Mowbray Pork Pie.
 
Posted by leo (# 1458) on :
 
when I was in Yorkshire, it was a common delicacy to eat port pies hot with mushy peas.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Cold, cold, cold. Freezing fog this evening. You can see some interesting light effects with all this mist, but my fingers started to go numb within minutes of starting to take photos. I gave up when I couldn't feel the buttons on the camera any longer.

Quite pretty and atmospheric though. The little particles of fog looked like tiny silver flashes under one of the street lights, and had frozen into what looked like a light dusting of snow by the time I got home.

ETA thanks for the info about pies. I'll have a look for the Melton Mowbrays.

[ 11. December 2012, 19:24: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Could be a fall of rime? We had one a couple of years ago - got us a mention from the weatherman on the national news.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Occasionally we get a spectacularly beautiful phenomenon called a silver thaw. If you get a low winter sun casting its light at just the right angle, every individual twiglet will sparkle and the effect is utterly magical.

It may be that everywhere that has trees and snow can get it, but I've never lived anywhere else that had both. Orkney would get a modicum of snow, but has no trees, and Northern Ireland has trees but for the whole time we lived there it hardly had any snow (we got about half an inch one Christmas and the entire province ground to a halt). [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Lamb Chopped (# 5528) on :
 
We had it a couple years ago. We call it an ice storm (American Midwest). Silver thaw sounds prettier.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by leo:
when I was in Yorkshire, it was a common delicacy to eat port pies hot with mushy peas.

Tha must 'ave been posh. Port pies indeed! Mebbe in Harrogate...
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I have been into town each day this week - and I still haven't managed to remember to go to the pharmacy for my tablets!

Too late today now but I will go in the morning. Today when I was in town I was perhaps 50 metres from the pharmacy [Mad]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Dunno what Ariel will spot, but it's been beautiful here in the cattle crossing today. There was a very localised fall of snow - maybe a square mile across - on top of the freezing forg, and very little if any thaw today so the trees around the centre are under thick coat of rime. The best light was, of course, this morning when it was clear if somewhat hazy (there was even a sundog) before I got out but hey, I've burnt the sensor a few yimes.

AG
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Sod the freezing fog (and the freezing forg even more so). It majorly buggered up Heathrow. Practically everything out of Linate was cancelled - beloved just managed to get a seat on a delayed earlier flight. Currently sat in Heathrow waiting to see if Embra flight remains the only one uncancelled.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Dunno what Ariel will spot, but it's been beautiful here in the cattle crossing today.

It's been really pretty, although, as with last night, my fingers went numb within seconds while trying to take pictures early this morning (see Flickr for the best). The frost was amazing: it transformed normally peaceful plants and leaves into the sort of vicious-looking spiky vegetation that you wouldn't want to mess with. The spiders' webs were pretty powerful, too: you don't realize how many spiders there are normally until something like this happens, and they're all outlined in vivid white.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
I love the thick frost on webs, my youngest and I were out this morning before school looking at the frost.
(Actually yesterday morning, it's very late and I've just finished my marking.)
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Another whiteish morning. Every one for weeks now has come with a heavy coating of hoarfrost or - as this morning - a light fall of snow. This pattern of a prolonged spell in which the temperature stays around freezing is what gave us the Great Winter of 2010-11 (except it was even colder then, in the -10C+ range). And we haven't had the precipitation. I see it's set to soar to 5 or 6C next week - which may be less pretty to look at, but rather more comfortable to live in.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Brrrrrrrrrrr Firenze! My eyes always skip over numbers so when I went back to see the dates I realised that was last year [Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Bitterly cold here! Brrrr!

But a heat wave is forecast for Friday and all next week - temps will soar to at least 7 C up here. Accompanied, natch by rain. [Frown]

As though the ground actually needed any more moisture, reservoirs are full, aquifers overflowing and rivers running high.

And they (weather pundits etc) say that we can expect a lot more extreme weather as the earth warms up.

Yes, you've guessed - I'm a Grumpy Old Woman

I'll put the coffee on.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
We now have 71 (71) bottles of red wine in the cellars at Boogieville mansions - that should keep us going for a little while!

[Smile]
 
Posted by la vie en rouge (# 10688) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
71 (71)

I assume you saw it twice because you're going cross-eyed? You sure you haven't cracked some of it open already? [Biased]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
C. 105 assorted red, white and fizz. I take it we're not counting whiskies, brandies, rums, eau de vie, liqueurs, sherries, port and other assorted strong waters?

[ 13. December 2012, 11:20: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Only 1 bottle of wine here, it never lasts long in this house [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
We've not been to France for a couple of years so we don't have our usual pre-Christmas stock. We have a couple of dozen bottles which will be enough for a modest celebration and we'll also be topping up the cocktail cabinet because Christmas Day is traditionally, cocktail day. This starts with Buck's Fizz at breakfast and on one occasion ended with very Bloody Marys at 5 am!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I think I have 7 bottles of wine left. That doesn't include the Campari or Calvados, and I need to get some more of the latter. The one I bought has matured into a deliciously mellow version over the few years I've had it.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
I think I have 7 bottles of wine left. That doesn't include the Campari or Calvados, and I need to get some more of the latter. The one I bought has matured into a deliciously mellow version over the few years I've had it.

Calvados does that! Years ago we bought some 20 year old and that was absolutely magnificent. 5 years ago we got six bottles of ten year old on a good offer. They were OK then, but given time Calvados improves more than any other spirit. There are two half bottles left [Frown]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
As someone with 5 litres of Bombay Sapphire GIN (it was on offer, honest!) 2 dozen M&S premier brut cava (yes that was on offer too - to the extent that it cost us about £2.24/bottle) and various other cases of wine... [Devil]

Mrs. S is sayin' nothing! (and thanking Hot Deals UK.com)
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
The Knotweed bought me eight bottles of Brain's Dark for my birthday. [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] The number has fallen since!

AG
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
We have a rubbish collection of alcohol which includes-
1) a half-empty bottle of Mailibu bought in 1985 when I split up with ex-boyfriend, so that I could drink it while listening to Bonnie Tyler.
2) most of a bottle of bacardi we bought duty-free on the way home from our honeymoon in 1989.
3) a third full bottle of Canadian whisky which we acquired in 1992.
4) several small bottles of Vodka, with Russian labels.
5) an unopened bottle of Nepalese something.
6) another unopened bottle, which appears to have a sprig of Rosemary in it, labelled "Spis Borovicka 40%" and then, in English "All natural brand name desilate. Consuming this drink initiates an exhilarating feeling that motions a joyful association."

I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Fortunately we had a delivery from a Well Known Wine Merchant on Saturday, so we are all set with wine for The Day.

However, I must check sherry, brandy, calvados etc etc...

(St E wanders off to check...I hay be shome time hic!)
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.

Oh dear - that reminds me, I still have a bottle of champagne I was given in 1990-something. I've been keeping it for a future occasion when there'd be something wonderful to celebrate. This too has gone through several house moves; I don't know if it's even drinkable any more.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St Everild:
Fortunately we had a delivery from a Well Known Wine Merchant on Saturday, so we are all set with wine for The Day.

So did we - probably the same Well Known Wine Merchant. It wasn't needed, but Mr Boog was taken in with the offer!

(And it came with free knives [Roll Eyes] )
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Not even good spirits will keep indefinitely once opened. So as for the Malibu, I'd pour it down the sink. Sealed, they're probably OK, with the proviso that they may very well be disgusting to start with.

Ariel, the champagne... Depends. Could be OK. I would break it out this Christmas anyway. And then you can replace it for a tenner with Lidl's finest (which is very gluggable).
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Oh dear - that reminds me, I still have a bottle of champagne I was given in 1990-something. I've been keeping it for a future occasion when there'd be something wonderful to celebrate. This too has gone through several house moves; I don't know if it's even drinkable any more.

I had a bottle like that, a decent champagne which was given to me as a leaving present in the mid-90s. I too was keeping it for an occasion, and it followed me round a few house moves. Then in my last London house the last time I got burgled it was the one thing that was nicked (it was near the kitchen window so he obviously just grabbed it on the way out, and left huge muddy footprints on the work surface while he was at it) [Frown]
 
Posted by ArachnidinElmet (# 17346) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.

I have this problem. I've had several bottles of Malibu given by a much-mistaken aunt. The blessed Nigella suggests using it as coconut essence in baking. Coconut sponge with pina colada icing: yum.

Re: christmas drinking. Cider, as usual. I've got my bottles of Aspalls in and am a happy woman.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
So did we - probably the same Well Known Wine Merchant. It wasn't needed, but Mr Boog was taken in with the offer!

(And it came with free knives [Roll Eyes] )

With knives? If wine needs cutting it is probably not quite at its best.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Unless you're doing the thing with the champagne bottle and the cavalry sabre.

We haven't actually done the holiday wine buy yet (the 100-odd bottles are just current holdings).
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Boogie - it sounds like the same WKWM....but we didn't get the knives. Boo.

My champagne stash got stolen in the summer. B******s. hope they got a headache.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Our current booze collection is woeful - half-empty bottles of port, Drambuie and GIN, a few drops left in a bottle of Highland Park that was given to D. as a thank-you present for giving a free organ-lesson years ago, and an (I think) unopened bottle of Some Other Sort™ of malt whisky. I must address the GIN issue as we have a tradition of opening our pressies on Christmas afternoon with the help of a G&T ... [Big Grin]

Need to go to the offy tomorrow anyway, as we're going to friends for supper after carolling at a local old people's home, and I ought to bring a bottle; also our wine collection is even worse than our spirit one (half a tetra-pack of white in the fridge and half a bottle of red in the larder).

I wish wine was as cheap here as it is at home ... [Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
piglet, I'm shocked! The evil GIN does would be hard to assess!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Now that I've had a chance to check, it seems I have at least twice as much booze in as I thought I had, including a mulled wine kit I'd forgotten about. If the weather's going to be like this (cold, dark, rainy this morning) over the festive season, mulled wine is going to be the flavour of things.

Might hold off on buying any new champagne for the time being, given the rate I seem to be getting through it. I love the stuff but there is rather a lot in one bottle and it doesn't keep. Well, not when opened, anyway.

[ 14. December 2012, 07:39: Message edited by: Ariel ]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by North East Quine:
I should be posting this on the "decluttering" thread, shouldn't I? The half-empty Malibu has gone through 6 house moves.

[Killing me] that ought to tell you something!

A friend of ours travelled widely (in leather, actually [Devil] ) and their booze cupboard always included what they referred to, generically, as liqueurs made from 'fossilised reindeer droppings' [Killing me]

and honesty compels me to admit that we have chilli vodka, raki (16 years maturing in our cupboard) and tequila (upwards of 20 years ditto). Mr. S's late Mum used to have to be regularly dissuaded from pouring away bottles of brandy 'because they'd been there years and would have gone off'! [Ultra confused]

Mrs. S, sticking to GIN [Big Grin]
(edited for spelling - honestly!)

[ 14. December 2012, 07:48: Message edited by: The Intrepid Mrs S ]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Champagne doesn't keep in our house once it's opened either... You can get one of these dinky little stoppers. They do work.
 
Posted by North East Quine (# 13049) on :
 
When I was in student halls of residence, the CU had announced they were going to be up and about at dawn on Easter Sunday morning. So when my flatmates and I heard someone in our kitchen at 6am we didn't investigate, but just muttered "Bloody Christians" and went back to sleep.

Alas, when we got up we discovered no CU leaflets on our kitchen table - and no alcohol in our cupboards either. Some thieving ******* had been raiding student flats for alcohol under cover of the CU activity.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Bitterly cold wind bringing driving rain today in my little bit of earth. And it hasn't got properly light, yet, possibly due to the thick grey clouds, which match the ones in my brain.

Hot drink, anyone? I need caffeine....
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
Champagne doesn't keep in our house once it's opened either... You can get one of these dinky little stoppers. They do work.

That stopper would need a lock and throwaway key for champagne to keep at daisydaisy Towers. It seems to evaporate quickly once the cork is out.

My Grannie was a great traveler, and from each of the countries that she visited she'd bring home the local tipple as a gift for my parents, who were unable to drink more than a thimbleful of something weaker than any of these. On Christmas morning, after she'd got home from church and before lunch, Grannie would sit down with a sherry, and then gradually work her way back through these souvenirs. Let's just say that she was very mellow for the rest of the day [Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
My, oh, my! What a lot of souses (scousesÉ) you all are. As for me, for the first time in years, I will have alcohol in the house. I won 750ml of wine in a raffle. I will use a lot of it for cooking, and maybe share out the rest, before taking one snort for myself.

[Angel]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
My, oh, my! What a lot of souses (scousesÉ) you all are. As for me, for the first time in years, I will have alcohol in the house. I won 750ml of wine in a raffle.

I had to look this up. That's a bottle. What did you get, red or white?

And Scouse to you too, I've never been to Liverpool. (Well, maybe once but it was dark and I was very young and we were getting the ferry to Ireland, so it doesn't really count.)
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
Since when has souse = Scouse?

Though some Scousers may be souses, not all souses are Scousers. Or something.

[ 14. December 2012, 10:35: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
That was kinda my point, Kingsfold!
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
It's been a long week.
Actually come to that, it's been a long month...
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Things are looking a lot less scenic. The white, a mixture of light snow and hoar frost, has gone to be replaced by dullness and rain. Before the rain though the view from the window was interesting. The pavements had snow/frost on but the roads were black. So many pedestrians tried walking on the road, which was covered in black ice, rather than the much safer pavement. How they slid.

Somehow no one fell over. Not bad as a teflon coating couldn't have made it slippier.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kingsfold:

Though some Scousers may be souses, not all souses are Scousers. Or something.

Most, in both cases, though. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
My, oh, my! What a lot of souses (scousesÉ) you all are. As for me, for the first time in years, I will have alcohol in the house. I won 750ml of wine in a raffle.

I had to look this up. That's a bottle. What did you get, red or white?
Red wine. And I apologise for missing out the key word "bottle". I will use a part of it to make "Burgundy Beans*" a staple in my household since the 60s.

* So named before Burgundy became a trademark. It is dead simple to make, and tastes really posh.
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I have no opinions about whether gin does good or evil but I concur with Flanders and Swann's encouragement to have Madeira. Not sweet Malmsey Madeira, best kept for drowning any dukes of Clarence who might be around, but dry Verdelho Madeira; I cannot understand why it is not better known or more widely available.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
... The evil GIN does would be hard to assess!

[Killing me] Even if I only drink it (a) on Christmas Day and (b) on aeroplanes? The amount they charge for air-fares, if they're going to throw in free GIN, I'm taking it. [Big Grin]

I don't think I've ever actually drunk any Madeira, m'dear. We did have a bottle of Sercial Madeira in the drinks cabinet chez Piglet in Northern Ireland, left over from when I made Pheasants in Madeira one Christmas. Sadly, the (not inconsiderable*) contents of said cabinet had to be given away when we moved here, as we weren't allowed to "import" it. [Frown]

Carols have now been sung, food and drink (rather good potato-and-leek soup followed by chilli con carne) consumed. Good time had by all.

* People (usually the parents of choristers hoping to be promoted) were always giving us potable pressies, and one year we won several bottles of assorted spirits in a Christmas raffle.

[ 15. December 2012, 01:59: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
All Christmas pressie shopping - well, with the possible exception of small stocking fillers - has now been accomplished YAY!!!
All presents and cards to be posted have been posted - just the local presents and cards to be done. Guess what I'll be doing this week?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I'm even more behind than usual this Christmas, but I went to the shopping centre today and got started. Most of the rest will be done either on the interweb or will be edible pressies, which I'll make this coming week: I can't make pâtés too far in advance as they'd go off, and I can't make tablet too far in advance as it'd get eaten. [Hot and Hormonal]

D's been working on The Letter, but when it'll actually get sent ... [Confused]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Our house is much more festive than usual. Both boys are home for Christmas so an Effort has been made.

I have an 'Xmas drawer' and buy presents through the year, my aim being no shopping in December. It works well and I enjoy looking for gifts all year round. They tend to be in the nature of lots and lots of (appropriate) 'stocking fillers' as we have no children left in our family - even our extended families. But the adults still love opening their 'stockings'.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
All my bought presents are done but I have a lot of sewing to do next week; a couple of tiered skirts, a bag and a patchwork cushion. I also want to make new jammies for the boys to wear Christmas Eve.
Unfortunately I now have some extra marking to do too [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I am eerily ahead of the game. Possibly because my Christmas preparations are fairly minimal in any case. Pressies are sorted: cards sent: tree up: cupboards stocked.

I have an uneasy feeling I've missed something. Surely I should be more stressed than this?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
I am eerily ahead of the game. Possibly because my Christmas preparations are fairly minimal in any case. Pressies are sorted: cards sent: tree up: cupboards stocked.

I have an uneasy feeling I've missed something. Surely I should be more stressed than this?

Don't do as friends of ours did years ago. They too were well ahead, so to make sure their children didn't find the presents they wrapped them* and put them in black plastic bags. You know, the kind the rubbish goes out in .....

*the presents, not the children. We've all been tempted though.

[ 16. December 2012, 17:05: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
All but one present bought, and as it's perishable I'm leaving that until the last minute. No cards sent, and only two written, though.

Carol service at the local church on Tuesday evening. Haven't been to one since I don't know when - might be fun to go to. There's no mention of anything afterwards, though, which suggests that it won't be a way of meeting new people.
 
Posted by Campbellite (# 1202) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
I will use a lot of it for cooking, and maybe share out the rest, before taking one snort for myself.

[Angel]

Did any of it makes its way into the food? [Biased]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
It's still unopened, dear boy!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Such restraint, Uncle Pete! I'm impressed. [Overused]

We got about 8 inches of sn*w last night* [Waterworks] which led to a somewhat depleted choir this morning. However, we Battled On, and sang the Hassler Missa secunda and Purcell's Rejoice in the Lord alway, which lasted a lot longer than it took the congregation to take communion ...

We even got a few refugees from churches that had wimped out and cancelled their services; they were very impressed with the "special music" and even more so when it was explained to them that we do that kind of thing all the time.

* What's the use of sn*w at the weekend when you don't get a sn*w day? [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
Had you still been living in Essex, of course, the merest thought of 0.00008 inches of snow would have been enough to keep at least half the congregation at home.

Especially the Young and Sprightly.

[ 17. December 2012, 07:08: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
It was our Carol Service last night, I am delighted to say the church was full - the other church in the parish is much more Picturesque and is regularly crammed to the rafters for a CS, ours not so much.

I sat there thinking of all the places I have sung carols - the local motorway services, supermarkets, shopping centres! - and when my friend and I snuck to the front to do the tambourine accompaniment to the Calypso Carol, I realised that it's usually a collecting box instead of the ol' tambo [Smile]

I'm sure there used to be a protocol for CofE vicars to select the readers at CS's (does anyone remember that?) but every year Mr. S and I reflect that it's a bit like not achieving salvation through works! 'He always gets to read and I don't know what he does to deserve it ...' and so on ... [Killing me] I suspect it's just the vicar's favourites - like the carols, cos I'm quite sure no-one else put a vote in for 'God from God, the uncreated'!

Anyway, it was really a lovely service, featuring a flute quintet and string quartet [Angel]

Mrs. S - reminding herself 'it's NOT all about me'
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
'He always gets to read and I don't know what he does to deserve it ...'

Good gracious, in our place people wonder how they can manage NOT to get asked, and run a mile when they are!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
Had you still been living in Essex, of course, the merest thought of 0.00008 inches of snow would have been enough to keep at least half the congregation at home ...

I've never lived there - just go for holidays; my Better Half comes from there and my in-laws live there. You're right though - it doesn't take much sn*w to bring the south of England to a standstill - a fact that makes our Canadian friends chortle rather a lot.

Things are looking up re: the renovations chez Piglet - we now have interior walls where we didn't before, and our Clever Carpenter has got the pull-out larder working. It's one of those self-assembly jobs at which D. is normally brilliant, but there was something not right with the runners, and he couldn't get it to close. Now it does, and has been filled up with Assorted Things.

happy piglet [Yipee]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Baptist Trainfan:
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
'He always gets to read and I don't know what he does to deserve it ...'

Good gracious, in our place people wonder how they can manage NOT to get asked, and run a mile when they are!
One truly hysterical year, Mr. S got asked to read at a local church which was using premises we had a connection with. He wasn't at that time familiar with the whole reading in church lark, and went to great pains to practise, mark up his lesson in the correct Bible, etc etc. His was a bit just after the birth.

Imagine his shock/horror/disbelief when the Very Old Lady doing the one before got up and read 'his' lesson!
[Killing me]
Mercifully there was a short nativity play just afterwards, so he had time to look up her lesson and read it when his moment came. It was completely out of sequence but no-one seemed bothered - I think the playlet had distracted them.
Still [Killing me] at that...

Mrs. S, chortling quietly ...
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Friday should be interesting, I have a dental appointment, mother-in-law is coming for Christmas and, if the Mayans are right, it's the end of the world. Trouble always comes in threes.

If you know ant Mayans can you arrange for the world to end before the dental appointment.

Before that, tomorrow is a job interview. And I really need a job.
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
I have a dental appointment, mother-in-law is coming for Christmas and, if the Mayans are right, it's the end of the world.

But are you sure you have them in the correct order? That might make a difference to your priorities.

[ 19. December 2012, 14:54: Message edited by: Baptist Trainfan ]
 
Posted by ArachnidinElmet (# 17346) on :
 
The way I understand it the Mayans believed in cyclical time, so 21st December is not the end of the world, but the beginning of a new one. Good for job hunting, not so much for dentistry. [Two face]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
... Before that, tomorrow is a job interview ...

Best of luck! [Smile]

I'm beginning to get a bit more organised; I did the supermarket shopping for stuff that will be turned into Edible Pressies today. We saw a recipe on a TV cookery show the other day for marinated goat's cheese (you put it in a jar with olives, herbs, garlic and olive oil) and reckoned it would make a very easy present. Being a Piglet of Very Little Brain, I was in the queue for the checkout when I looked in the trolley and realised I'd got everything except the goat's cheese ... [Hot and Hormonal]

It could have been a lot worse: at least I was still in the shop and despite it being early evening less than a week before Christmas the place wasn't at all busy, so I didn't have to queue for too long.

There will be Much Cooking (and possibly Much Swearing) chez Piglet this weekend.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
Mr. S and I are going carol-singing this evening, with others from our church, in aid of 'his' Food Bank - I'm sure that vocally we are not worthy to mess with the latchet of Piglet's sandals, were she wearing them in this season! but we do have fun (and, not incidentally, raise a bit of money and awareness). At least these days we are under cover in a supermarket entrance as free-range carol-singing is not profitable!

We do only sing 'proper' carols, apart from 'We wish you a Merry Christmas' which finishes each 20-minute set, and every year our challenge is to get the timing right for 'The Virgin Mary had a baby boy' [Biased]

Mrs. S, dusting off her reindeer hat
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
I hope you did really well for 'your' food bank, Mrs. S. I think you are very brave. If I sang outside a Supermarket, I think I might get moved on!

It just couldn't be wetter today. So, of course, the dog wants to go out! Oh happy days!
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Pouring with rain here.
I'm not sure what to do today, I think I've made all the pressies and my OU forum keeps locking me out for some reason so can't do anything online with my students. I might wrap my other half's presents and plan a tutorial. I might even update my very neglected blog.
Oh, I could bake some cakes and pies - I do love a free day [Smile]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
My OU forum (from Our Mutual Course) (sorry, Module) is really quiet - I'm the only one who posts in it, nearly! I'd love to do more online work with the students, but they never engage (to be fair, the forum for the other module I teach is much more active, so at least I know it's not me!). Hope the bouncers let you in to yours again soon, HA.

Chucking it down here too. I'm working from home tomorrow (last day before work shuts down for a couple of weeks) so at least I won't have the regular drenchings at each end of the train journey.

We have just bought our food and drink for next week. I think we were rather restrained in the circumstances, but have no doubt that we will still be twice the size we currently are by the end of the week (well I will be anyway. TME has hollow legs so may escape the worst of the great girth expansions).
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
... Before that, tomorrow is a job interview ...

Best of luck! [Smile]
The short list is now a lot shorter. and I'm still on it.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
That's great news! [Smile]
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Brilliant news Balaam - everything crossed for you! [Smile]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Thanks, but you can uncross the eyes if you're driving.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Great news balaam!

On my night bus trip from Mysore the other night we came down the Ghat road [scary enough coming down in the light!] and I looked back from the road along the bottom and it was fascinating to see the lights of traffic weaving across the hillside - quite ethereal.

It was an air conditioned luxury bus so they then hand out blankets for us to wrap ourselves in - it was certainly cold enough to need them but why not have the a/c not as fierce and then we wouldn't have needed them and would all have been quite comfortable?
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Intrepid Mrs S:
... Piglet's sandals, were she wearing them in this season ...

You've never been to Newfoundland in December, have you? [Big Grin]

Balaam, that's excellent news - still crossing that which can be crossed. [Smile]

Some of the cooking/swearing has been accomplished; I've made some smoked-salmon pâté for my boss, who likes it, (not much swearing) and a batch of tablet for the people in the lab and sundry others (lots of swearing - tablet really is a faff, and I've still to cut it into wee squares*).

* wee splats, more likely. [Help]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
I hope you did really well for 'your' food bank, Mrs. S. I think you are very brave. If I sang outside a Supermarket, I think I might get moved on!

Nicodemia, it went well - no idea how much we made, but the supermarket staff were very welcoming (and put money in the buckets too!). There were around a dozen of us, including an accordion and bass guitar, two tambourines ( [Hot and Hormonal] ) one soprano to do the descants, and the obligatory Small Cute Child with Bucket. I think live carol singers may be quite rare now - and the closest we came to a secular song was 'We wish you a Merry Christmas' which I think means the activity can be termed 'outreach'.

We had a great time, and people seemed more 'engaged' this year - they were stopping to take photos of us, and asking about the charity as they put money in.

Mrs. S, putting away her reindeer hat for another year
[Smile]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Sounds as though you made a very joyful noise, Mrs.S! Think even I could sing, provided I stood next to the accordion, so I couldn't be heard! [Big Grin]

Hope you made a lot of well-earned cash for your charity.

It has stopped raining [Smile] but still dull and grey [Frown]
Have done all my shopping, waiting for Tesco delivery of the rest, so that when the world ends, I will go, surrounded by goodies! [Devil]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Glad the singing went well.
I seem to have developed a large neurological 'aura' in my eyes in the last half hour, I suspect it is just a minor migraine-like affect due to my cold and not a full blown migraine coming. But it's making it very difficult to read the boards, I'm having to use the eccentric viewing I used to teach my patients (the art of looking beside what you actually want to focus on). But the rainbow zigzags seem to be dispersing fairly quickly so hopefully it will go soon.
Lazy day today, other half has finished work and is at home, my eldest breaks up at midday and my youngest at 3pm. I might make a Moshi Monsters cushion for my youngest.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Perhaps it isn't an aura but a preview of the world collapsing in brightly coloured lights.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
Great news balaam!

On my night bus trip from Mysore the other night we came down the Ghat road [scary enough coming down in the light!]

twitches

Not to mention going up in the light! clutches rosary in automatic reflex

Glad you landed safely.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Rain rain rain here - not a good time for our roof to decide to spring a leak and start pouring into the bedroom [Frown]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Well - they did say the world would end today, they just didn't mention the roof falling in! (I blame chicken licken!)

On a brighter note my son arrives home from Germany at lunch time - he hasn't visited home for twelve months.

[Yipee]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Well - they did say the world would end today,

11:11 GMT is the time I heard. Meanwhile Twitter is posting like there's no tomorrow.
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nicodemia:
Hope you made a lot of well-earned cash for your charity.

Well, we managed £89.16 in an hour - a bit down on last year but still well worth having.

Mrs. S, grateful for small mercies [Biased]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Well done Mrs S - a goodly sum!

Chicken Licken was right - the builder called this afternoon and we need a new roof. Erk! He's going to do it at the end of January, meanwhile buckets r us [Paranoid] [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Chicken Licken was right - the builder called this afternoon and we need a new roof. Erk! He's going to do it at the end of January, meanwhile buckets r us [Paranoid] [Roll Eyes]

Oh Boogie - how deeply un-Christmassy! [Eek!]

Mrs. S, used to buckets at w*rk but not at home
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Buckets? Hasn't he jury rigged a tarpaulin over the roof?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Is anyone making food hampers for friends & family this Christmas? I've got news for you; they are doing the same!

Mrs Sioni's store stocks cellophane (patterned and plain) which is an essential part of hamper packaging, but they cannot get enough of it. Their central warehouse is empty and the last delivery, three boxes of 24 rolls, went in about an hour, leaving disappointed customers.

So watch out! The New Yer could see you well stocked for jams, pickles, fancy sweets and chocolates and the like.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Well done, Mrs. S.! Proper in-public carol-singing is fun. We used to have a regular booking when we lived in Belfast with Northern Ireland Railways: we'd go along to Central Station and sing carols and they'd give a donation to the Dean's Sit-Out and we put a hat out for collections from passers-by as well.

Boogie, that's a real bummer - it puts our dusty building-site rather into perspective. [Eek!]

Sioni, I'm afraid I'm rather guilty (although I haven't bought any coloured cellophane - yet). I've just finished making chicken-liver pâté, some of which will be given away, and I've still to do sundry other edible pressies, although they're not big enough to count as hampers - more jars and plastic bags.

Finished w*rk now until 7th January, and glad to note that the world doesn't seem to have ended - all that culinary effort would have gone to waste ... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
Up early and off to the 24-hour supermarket this morning at the ungodly hour of 7.30 am. When I got there, the car park was almost full: the Saturday Before Christmas is here.

So nice to be indoors on this wet, dark day and know I don't have to go out again. The roads already have their share of small lakes and the hilly bits have mini-waterfalls, getting around's going to be tricky later on.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Piglet - my niece makes foody Christmas presents - I think they are fabulous! They branched out into sloe gin last year - marvellous!

I'm glad to report that our dripping ceiling stops when the rain stops, so now all we need is a dry spell.

The boys are both home and it's really great to catch up with them - especially the eldest who hasn't been home from Heidelberg since last Christmas. he's losing his English! He couldn't think of the English for 'jug' yesterday - erk!

<edit typo>

[ 22. December 2012, 08:00: Message edited by: Boogie ]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ariel:
Up early and off to the 24-hour supermarket this morning at the ungodly hour of 7.30 am. When I got there, the car park was almost full: the Saturday Before Christmas is here.

I'm about to go out to the shops. Definitely. Any minute now. I'm going to huddle on the waterproof jacket, trudge to the bus stop, go the length of the fishmonger, work my way back via Sainsbury's and the Polish deli. Really. Imminently.

[ 22. December 2012, 09:04: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We did a shop yesterday and I was expecting chaos in the bakery but it was amazingly quiet, yet had been, so they said, very busy a few minutes before. I imagine it will be hell on wheels in there today - and they will be open tomorrow as well, of course.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Well, that was every bit as exhausting, exasperating and expensive as I thought it would be.

However, I'm in and slurping a coffee with a good jigger of the Ben Bracken in it, and, bar going to collect the duck on Christmas Eve, that's me done until at least the 27th (when the social life kicks off again, and I have to plan a dinner party and substantial - but portable - nibbles).
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:

The boys are both home and it's really great to catch up with them - especially the eldest who hasn't been home from Heidelberg since last Christmas. he's losing his English! He couldn't think of the English for 'jug' yesterday - erk!

A German friend spent several years living the UK but eventually decided to move back home after she went home for Christmas and discovered she didn't remember the German word for cupboard.
Pouring down again here, the poor postman was quite soaked. We're having a quiet day at home, though my husband did pop out to Waitrose earlier. He said it wouldn't have been too busy but today was turkey delivery day and there was a huge queue curling around the store and blocking the aisles.

[ 22. December 2012, 11:56: Message edited by: Heavenly Anarchist ]
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
Sioni Sais - I usually make mini food hampers for my relatives who live at a distance. At the end of November, we have a Food Fair here, with stalls full of all sorts of goodies that just aren't available elsewhere. Local producers, local food, all of extremely high quality.
It's a lot better than buying something from a multinational that my relatives could have found for themselves.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I've bought decent cheese and chutneys for friends for several years now - the Christmas market in Cardiff is very useful for that.
We have started our card "run" - delivering to friends we don't see very often, so spent time with two friends this afternoon. The nice thing was that the present we had bought for one was exactly and answer to prayer and an encouragement.
Then home, to await our food order. Did I really order all that? I seem to have gone overboard on cream.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
I've bought decent cheese and chutneys for friends for several years now -

What a good idea! I will keep that in mind for next year - my husband is a woodworker so I can feel some fabulous cheese boards coming on too.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Just had an automated flood warning. [Frown]

I'm relying on the fact that they admit their information about height above sea (river) level is a bit lacking in detail for my area.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
We've got a rainfall warning on the Weather Channel at the moment too - they're threatening us with 1-2 inches, which strikes me as quite a wide margin (one is a Very Wet Day, two is a deluge). Having said that, most of it usually gets dropped on the west side of the island, and by the time it reaches us it mightn't be so bad. It would be nice to get enough to get rid of the sn*w though, as we may be in for more of that next weekend. [Frown]

Made another batch of red-pepper jelly this morning, and roasted the garlic for the goat-cheese thing - I'm definitely beginning to feel a bit more organised. I'm contemplating making small French sticks to go with it, but not very confident about how they might turn out - will go and consult the bread-making book shortly.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Cheese and chutney would be my idea of present heaven - I love cheese. We've often had relatives send us a huge Stilton.
I used to mod on a parenting site where we had regular organised swaps; tea and homemade biscuits, crafts, postcards, that sort of thing. The cheese swap we had last year was one of our most popular.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
Just had an automated flood warning. [Frown]

I'm relying on the fact that they admit their information about height above sea (river) level is a bit lacking in detail for my area.

Praying everything will be okay.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:

I used to mod on a parenting site where we had regular organised swaps; tea and homemade biscuits, crafts, postcards, that sort of thing. The cheese swap we had last year was one of our most popular.

Anyone feel a Ship cheese swap coming on?


[Smile] [Cool]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
You're not getting your hands on my newly-bought piece of Taw Valley Extra Mature Cheddar. I had to queue 5 whole minutes to pay for that this afternoon.

OTOH, if anyone has a Roquefort they don't want, just let me know, I'm sure I can help out.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
We don't have any cheese to swap. (We're keeping the wheel of Brie.)

But being the son of a (retired) fishmonger has it's plus points, hr still has contacts. Dad has given us half a salmon, and another half of smoked salmon. Looks like were in for a fishy Christmas.
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
quote:
Originally posted by QLib:
Just had an automated flood warning. [Frown]

I'm relying on the fact that they admit their information about height above sea (river) level is a bit lacking in detail for my area.

Praying everything will be okay.
Yes - i think it will be, thanks. Due to peak at 7pm, and nowhere near us at the moment. Locals say this road has never flooded. Mind you, it is due to start raining again tonight.

eta: I have managed to run out of cheddar. How is that even possible? I buy it two packs at a time. Not up for a swap, though. Other cheeses in stock include Camembert in Calvados. Yum! (I hope)

[ 23. December 2012, 17:05: Message edited by: QLib ]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
Cheese free zone here, although my one definite guest has offered to bring an assortment.

A festive wondering..... as angels have wings, do they hatch?
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Dunno. Never seen an angel's egg.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:

I used to mod on a parenting site where we had regular organised swaps; tea and homemade biscuits, crafts, postcards, that sort of thing. The cheese swap we had last year was one of our most popular.

Anyone feel a Ship cheese swap coming on?


[Smile] [Cool]

It was very successful [Smile] we bought cheeses for our swappee up to a cost limit and then posted them out well wrapped first class. We did it in the autumn so it wasn't too hot and nobody got listeria.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Best not to use non-pateurised cheese then.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
... by the time it reaches us it mightn't be so bad ...

... then again it might. It absolutely p*ssed down and blew a gale today; I got drenched going no more than a car's length between the Cathedral and the car.

I've now done up the marinated goat's cheese jars, and they look very pretty. I overestimated (by 100% [Big Grin] ) how much cheese I'd need, but as I've got plenty of olives and the other flavourings left, I'll just have to do some for ourselves.

Quality control, you understand. [Cool]

I'm getting there; another couple of weeks and I'll be sorted. [Razz]
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Originally posted by piglet:
I've now done up the marinated goat's cheese jars, and they look very pretty.

Tell me, when you marinade the goat, do you include the horns?

And are you sure it will like the cheese jars? Have you asked it?

[Cool]


[coding]

[ 24. December 2012, 07:38: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I'm envisaging the goat being marinaded in an enormous white ceramic jar that says "Best Mature Stilton" on the side, with whole bulbs of garlic and bunches of thyme bobbing around on the top, so that all you can see is its head (with the horns) poking out.

Very wet here - some flooding on the railway line and on the roads. Went to have a look at the canal, which was up almost to spilling over, then someone decided to sail through the lock and the water level dropped to reasonable.

Interestingly, he appeared to be sailing the narrowboat single-handed - and I mean single-handed: with an umbrella in one hand, he still managed to open both the sluice gates, steer the boat through, tie it up on the other side and come back to close the gates. Watched by a father with two small children who had no umbrellas, and the children were getting soaked (none of them were bothered or even put the hoods of their jackets up) and me. I've wondered whether it was possible to sail a narrowboat by yourself; he's the second person I've seen doing this so I guess it is, but looks like really hard work.
 
Posted by ArachnidinElmet (# 17346) on :
 
It might be more efficient with one of these . Two hands are better than one.

Persistant precipitation here too. Am hoping for a let up, otherwise Christmas Eve Carols/Mass is going to be two people and a dog [Frown]
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Wet and soggy here too...Bethnei is low lying and boggy anyway, and the water has no where to go as the sand and gravel on which the town is built is saturated. However, if we flood here where I live, the town centre will be under 20 feet or more, as they are lower than we are...
The DH has gone out (working) so I have had a lovely quiet dinner and am now about to wrap his presents before writing sermons for tonight and tomorrow...think I shall listen to the Carol Service from Kings while I do so.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I seem to be surviving my re-entry into active church life and organ playing! Though, will be quite glad to close the lid on the organ after tomorrow morning's service for a few days break.

Just pondering what to do to stay awake now until time for the bus to go to Midnight. But which bus? Do I risk the one an hour bus, which takes 20 minutes, or the three an hour, and then change on to the four an hour. Decisions, decisions. The first option goes from one side of a dual carriage way, and the second the other side.

Still, I am grateful there are options!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's got much colder here again today, and there were wee squitty flakes of sn*w floating about just now, although not enough to make anything like a white Christmas.

Pressies all wrapped, decorations put up in bits of house that don't look too much like a building site, just waiting for D. to come and pick me up for the midnight Eucharist (Charpentier Messe de minuit, if anyone's interested). I believe it's one of Uncle Pete's favourites; if we sing really loudly and the wind's in the right direction ... [Big Grin]

Merry Christmas, all. [Smile]

edited for grammatical bollocks

[ 25. December 2012, 00:17: Message edited by: piglet ]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
[Hot and Hormonal]

Went to sleep last evening and was woken at 11.35 so said it was too late to get to Mass and went back to sleep. I think Himself and Herself have gone to Church as no sign of anyone when I eventually woke up and the car is gone, too.

I've done a bit of tidying and now am just having a look in here and then possibly a bit more tidying.

eta, some time later: I am not normally allowed to do much around the house so when I am alone like this it is good to be able to actually do something! I quite enjoy pottering.

[ 25. December 2012, 03:55: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by QLib (# 43) on :
 
Flood warning officially rescinded yesterday afternoon.

Currently up and waiting for the offspring to appear. Biggest problem so far: no room in the fridge for the champagne (and at what point should I tell them I don't actually like champagne that much? Or am I obliged to go on drinking champagne and pretending I like it for the rest of my life?).

Merry Christmas!
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
QLib, an old soak once told me that champagne tastes better after the 10th glass.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Don't think I've ever met a glass of champagne I didn't like, whatever its place in the batting order.

Rummaging in the big cupboard that serves as our cellar for a Canard Duchene 2000 we thought we had, but don't, and came across all sorts of fizz we didn't think we had, but do. Including 3 bottles of Methode Ancestral from Limoux, which really need to be consumed.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Happy Christmas Perfidious Albioners.

I have Mince Pies for you.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Eigon (# 4917) on :
 
I've just noticed daisydaisy's comment about angels hatching, which reminds me - in Barbarella, Pygar the angel lives in a nest.

And Qlib - you could always tie a bow around the neck of the champagne bottle and give it to someone else! (not that I recycle presents at all....)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
In the slowest start to Christmas for many years we have just finished breakfast (croissants & Buck's Fizz) at 12:20. The turkey is now in the oven, complete with a potato up its bum (but I doubt it cares).

I've done my Ship's rounds, so Merry Christmas/Nadolig Llawen to you all.
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Joyeuses fetes,mes chers amis. Have a lovely day. We've had fizzies and smoked salmon, present pause, foie gras and talk, now it's games before roast forerib of beef, and then the Doctor (Who, that is, not medical emergency!)
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
Happy Christmas everyone [Smile]
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
A good day.

The salmon is going down, but there's so much of it. Scrambled eggs and smoked salmon for breakfast in the morning, yum.

Oh and I've got the job. Well as soon as someone receives the return email on Thursday. I start on Monday 7th January.
 
Posted by Lothlorien (# 4927) on :
 
Great news about the job, balaam.

Breakfast sounds lovely. I like smoked salmon done in many ways but with scrambled eggs it makes a delicious breakfast.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Oh and I've got the job. Well as soon as someone receives the return email on Thursday. I start on Monday 7th January.

Ooh, congratulations - great start to the new year!

Enjoyable day here too. Just great to read books, watch TV, unwind, eat, and not feel that I ought to be doing anything in particular.

(Is there a support hotline for people suffering from Christmas Telly? What with the end of Merlin yesterday and now Downton Abbey, am feeling slightly shattered.)
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
...The salmon is going down, but there's so much of it. Scrambled eggs and smoked salmon for breakfast in the morning, yum ....

Us too - we had sherry, mince pies and sausage rolls after the morning service, so didn't feel the need for the SE/SS brunch that we'd planned.

quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Oh and I've got the job ...

[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] Congratulations!

Good day here too: morning service v. small but perfectly formed (the Bishop sang the service very nicely), followed by goodies as detailed above, then GIN with one of the tenors followed by family phone-calls, pressie-opening and then turkey and the works with friends.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Congrats on the job, balaam!

I really shouldn't be sitting here, I should be heading into town to get some photoprinting done and a little light shopping - but I was up and out at 6 a.m. for an hour's cycle ride, lovely at that hour of the morning.

And the days will be drawing out now for all the folks in UK, it always felt a little better for me just knowing that.
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Congratulations, Balaam - hope it all goes splendidly.

Happy Christmas, Shippies, little late but didn't touch my computer yesterday. Actually got to a Christmas Morning service, first time ever, I think. Unfortunately the church (not my usual one) had very strange acoustics, with a slight echo, so I had great difficulty in hearing anything. Still,I belted out three carols with the rest of them. But found the service a bit perfunctory.

Didn't seem like Christmas, just the two of us, instead of a big family gathering, and rather sad.

I've got some home-made stollen left over - it actually tastes like stollen, though if you don't like marzipan, it won't be your thing!
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Congratulations indeed, Balaam. Always good to have good news from someone on the job front. I hope it all goes very well for you.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

Congratulations, balaam!
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:

Oh and I've got the job. Well as soon as someone receives the return email on Thursday. I start on Monday 7th January.

Well done - marvellous news! [Yipee]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Congratulations!
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Balaam, congratulations on getting the job [Big Grin] As someone who is in the limbo situation of seeking new employment (and repeatedly coming second in interview!), I know how precious that news can be and I will be thinking of you with your new beginning on January 7th.

Nicodemia, it must have been strange having a quiet Christmas when that's not what you're used to. My sister found the same, I think, with all her family struck down with the flu! We were planning to go up and visit her but had a last minute change of plan as my brother was still here after his operation. He'll be going back to Scotland later today. I love Stollen, by the way [Biased] You've just reminded me I have a box of them in the cupboard - my secret store!
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
Congratulations, Baalam!

Christmas Day started well (in spite of the incipient cold I had been aware of since Christmas Eve) but the cold really took hold in the afternoon and I retired to bed early....no presents, not much lunch......with a headache, earache, temperature, and sore throat.

I hope everyone else's day was better....
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
I had the beginnings of a migraine but kicked out friend visiting and went for a lie down so just about caught it in time - other than that really quiet - BLISS!
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
It's a slightly adapted version of something I posted elsewhere.

All the shopping was completed in time and without hassle. My neighbours on both sides are away for Christmas. The place is silent, and in the evenings it's been good just to sit with a cup of mulled wine, enjoying the warm glow of the halogen fire: it's like firelight, and bright enough to read by, so I can catch up on favourite Christmas stories. The Christmas tree is sparkling behind the fire, and you can smell the spices from the mulled wine. Mince pies and dark chocolate to hand. Not doing anything in particular: just enjoying the evenings.

I'm going to miss the peace and silence when the world starts to gear up again and the new year begins - especially when it's time to take the tree down.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Big Grin] I've just had my Christmas Dinner.

Veggie nut roast, leeks and mushrooms sauteed in butter, and a massive amount of home-made bread sauce.

Yes, I know I'm a day late, but as I only had myself to see to, I decided to delay lots of cooking until today, having spent the week in between end of term and Christmas Day playing for lots of services or carol singing. I had lots of easy grab-out-of-the-fridge festive food available for yesterday and until I felt energetic enough to cook.

Then, I've had my annual Christmas domestic drama. A lock has decided to die on me. Luckily, it's an internal door, and it's one I can do something about without having to call out a locksmith. But, I am currently separated from the washing machine and the vacuum cleaner whilst I slowly saw through the bit of metal. (I am about three/quarters of the way through.) That will teach me to (a) forget that lock has been dodgy ever since I moved in, and had been meaning to do something about it before now, and (b) be over-zealous about locking up when away overnight. It seemed sensible to accept an offer of a bed for the night between Midnight Mass and Christmas Day 10.00 a.m., given I live three miles away from church, and there would've been no public transport.

What is also lucky is that I'd done a huge pile of laundry, and vacuumed everywhere over the weekend, so I do not feel at all guilty at not rushing to liberate both machines.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
I've also spent Christmas with a cold, sore throat and a chesty cough. I suspect I have my annual chest infection (I'm asthmatic) but it feels viral so I'm sure it will eventually go of its own accord.
We went to the Grantchester barrel race today. It's basically a tournament between the Grantchester pubs with a local inter- village league as well. They run in relays pushing huge barrels down a road. We live in the next village so we always go to watch. Alas, our team came third.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Smudgie:
... I have a box of [Stollen] in the cupboard - my secret store!

Not exactly secret now, is it? [Snigger]

We were heading to the Cathedral today for D's weekly organ recital when we noticed that someone had left a small drawer unit outside their house; people do that here, in the hope that someone will take it away, so we did. It's exactly what we need for the kitchen/dining-room, and with a lick of paint and some new drawer-handles it'll be just right. I'd never really thought about the existence or otherwise of Father Christmas, but now I'm not so sure ... [Smile]

There's a pot of veggie soup on the stove if anyone's in need of Inner Comfort.
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
The veggie soup sounds yummy but we have just partaken in a light lunch of some freshly baked baps with rashers of smoked venison topped with Stilton (goat's cheese for the youngest who, rather oddly, doesn't share the same blue cheese genes as the rest of us), served with baby salad and accompanied by sparking organic orange and lemon juice. It felt quite relaxed and almost healthy compared with the large dinners over the last couple of days.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
... baby salad and ... organic orange and lemon juice ...

Oh for goodness' sake! [Big Grin]

I'm just back from a 60th birthday/retirement bash for one of the tenors in our choir. There was an open bar (he likes his wine) and a huge buffet done by a local Chinese restaurant.

Good food, good drink and excellent company. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
For the first time in too long we had friends round in a vain attempt to polish off the Xmas leftovers. Some hope for these reasons:
Kitchen now resembles the field after the Feeding of the Five Thousand.
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
I think our invitation must have got lost in the post, Sioni. I have a very handy teenage boy which sort of makes leftovers a thing of the past. Though we do still have some Stollen hidden away [Biased]

Taking cat to the vet's for a checkup today. He's doing rather well for a cat that's so poorly so I am confident he'll be coming home with us, though it looks like our daily routine of me sticking my fingers in his mouth, liberally spread with butter and tablets, and him making tiny incisions into them with his razor sharp teeeth, will be continuing for a while.

Rather nice to discover I'm on annual leave today. Hadn't expected that on my first day back after sick leave! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Heavenly Anarchist:
... baby salad and ... organic orange and lemon juice ...

Oh for goodness' sake! [Big Grin]
I'm making up for it now with bacon, eggs, sausages and bubble and squeak [Smile]
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
These Twixmas days are turning out to be very pleasant and productive - today I've had a major potter with results that really belong on the Decluttering Support thread and that included de-gunking the street gutter and (hic) bottling this year's blackberry wine ready for next Christmas - anyone fancy having an early sample of it?
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Blackberry wine sounds delicious [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I don't know - I think blackberry wine sounds rather scary. My dad used to make blackcurrant wine which was a very pretty rosé colour, and tasted sort of OK-ish but engendered a hangover with a half-life of about a fortnight. [Eek!]

Absolutely filthy day here today - it sn*wed for a good bit of the morning, but it didn't really accumulate very much and then turned to rain. Serious rain. We went to the local shopping centre and after we'd had a bite to eat and a wee look round D. left me to get on with it. I got soaked just walking from the main building to one of the "box stores" across the car-park - a raft wouldn't have been a bad idea.

Still, you don't have to shovel rain. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
Duvet day for me today - stinking cough - grrrr!

[Mad]
 
Posted by Nicodemia (# 4756) on :
 
Hope you soon feel better, Boogie, and that it doesn't turn into the dreaded Norovirus!

With the weather as it is here, under the duvet sounds like a good idea!
 
Posted by Jenny Ann (# 3131) on :
 
Ah, Boogie. That's probably my fault as I was up in boogieland over Christmas and had the cold then. I introduced the germs I think.

Sorry...

Jen
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Had a lovely afternoon with the boys at the Fitzwilliam museum (we even had a contest to count willies in the Greek section). Afterwards we popped into a small Japanese restaurant for an early dinner which we finished off with deep fried green tea ice cream. When we got back home we played Carcassone before watching 'How to train your dragon'. A lovely family day and it was good to get out of the house for a few hours.
I hope you're feeling better Boogie and the rest of you are having a good week [Smile]

[ 29. December 2012, 21:28: Message edited by: Heavenly Anarchist ]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Duvet day for me today - stinking cough - grrrr!

Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey. Then go to bed.

I've had a moderately busy day today - I was acting as the verger for a wedding (money [Yipee] ). Fortunately the mounds of snow with which we were being threatened didn't materialise, and they were even able to have a few photographs taken outside the West doors - the bride very sensibly had a fur-lined cape to put on over her dress.

I've made my potato salad for the Choir party, which is after the carol service tomorrow night, and the spinach, mushroom and orange one is just a last-minute assembly job.

quite organised piglet [Cool]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
We had a couple of hours of heavy and much needed rain overnight, the only problem being that a sack of cement got soaked so we may have to buy another one - ah well, it's only money.

Now if we could have the same every night for the next couple of weeks we'd be well happy, though doubtless the farmers would find something to complain about.

Off to the local equivalent of a stag night this afternoon a few kms up the road.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
You want rain? Have some of ours. About to get up for church for the last time this year.
 
Posted by daisydaisy (# 12167) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
Duvet day for me today - stinking cough - grrrr!

Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey.
....

Add to that the wonder-ingredient - a good pinch (or small teaspoon) of turmeric. It really helps.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
Here, have some whisky. Add it to a large cup of Lem-sip or similar made up according to the instructions, with a couple of teaspoons each of lemon juice and Manuka honey. Then go to bed.

Thank you. It did help [Smile]

You can tell I was poorly - I didn't visit he Ship all day after that!

Glad the snow stayed away for piglet and the rain came down for WW.

Remember me whinging in Hell about the hosepipe ban and that it falls out of the sky and (in the UK) if it isn't doing so now it will soon? I was right. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Smudgie (# 2716) on :
 
Much as I appreciate the good advice being shared about cold remedies, I have to say that the best thing I read all winter was the advisory remedy for post-viral cough. I was getting quite fed up of my post-viral cough until I realised that the best known cure for it was.... believe it or not.... chocolate [Big Grin] [Big Grin] *cough cough* [Big Grin]

Now I'm almost disappointed that it's getting better!
 
Posted by Kelly Alves (# 2522) on :
 
HALLELUJAH!

I mean, good to know.
 
Posted by Ariel (# 58) on :
 
I usually recommend a good strong curry in such cases - works for me, though not everyone likes curry.

Sunny this morning - very odd and unusual. We're back to normal weather later. Meanwhile am enjoying some lovely old black and white films - "Notorious" with Claude Rains, Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman was on TV recently which was pretty good, am thinking of getting a DVD of it. You can't beat the old classics - "Casablanca" and "Brief Encounter" are still good, and I'll watch anything with Leslie Howard in it.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
I once tried to make a home-made remedy when I had a cold - I found all the hottest spices, sauces etc I could find and fried them up with onions, garlic etc. It all looked a bit unpalatable, so I decided to make it a bit more bearable and mixed it with baked beans. I don't think I even finished the plate before I needed an urgent loo visit (let's just say I would have left Usain Bolt standing) and any cold-curing goodness exited way before it could do any good. I had that cold for weeks! Chocolate sounds far more sensible [Smile]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
[Killing me]

Sorry.

Once I had a chest cold and I needed not to have a cold. It was the evening before my first university graduation (way back in the dark ages).

I had about 6 ounces of white rum the night before. I slept like a baby. On wakening, I coughed once, and appeared to bring up one whole lung. But I didn't have a cold.

The only reason I went to graduation was because my mother wanted to see me graduate. I never told her that she had come close to seeing an empty seat.
 
Posted by Boogie (# 13538) on :
 
My son is home for Christmas and brought a few bottles of Underberg - well, it certainly tastes like cough medicine!
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:

Remember me whinging in Hell about the hosepipe ban and that it falls out of the sky and (in the UK) if it isn't doing so now it will soon? I was right. [Roll Eyes]

Another government u-turn, they declare a drought and then it rains for most of the year.
A cold but dry day here, quite sunny. After church we played games again, we're trying to limit the computer a bit during the holidays as my kids are somewhat obsessed ( my 12 year old already does some programming and is designing basic games).
Handmade (but not by me) ham and leek pie with baby salad for tea.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
What the heck is a "baby salad" and aren't the neighbours suspicious, yet?

[Confused]
 
Posted by mrs whibley (# 4798) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
[Killing me]

Sorry.

Once I had a chest cold and I needed not to have a cold. It was the evening before my first university graduation (way back in the dark ages).

I had about 6 ounces of white rum the night before. I slept like a baby. On wakening, I coughed once, and appeared to bring up one whole lung. But I didn't have a cold.

The only reason I went to graduation was because my mother wanted to see me graduate. I never told her that she had come close to seeing an empty seat.

I wish I'd known that for my second (PhD) graduation! I had a terrible sore throat and when it came to singing the National Anthem (do they still do that?) I stood up, opened my mouth and no sound came out! Not wishing to be taken for a republican, not because that's a terrible thing but just because I'm not one, I ended up miming like a Top of the Pops star. After that the day just went downhill. [Frown]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
What the heck is a "baby salad" and aren't the neighbours suspicious, yet?

[Confused]

[Smile] should be baby leaf salad, you know, spinach, radish leaf etc. But I was typing whilst pretending to join in the family conversation at dinner [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Starbug (# 15917) on :
 
Just making some snowballs if anybody would like one. Maraschino cherries are optional. [Smile]
 
Posted by Heavenly Anarchist (# 13313) on :
 
Do you want brollies to go with those? [Smile]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
No, but Wodders, Boogie and Balaam could probably do with one. [Big Grin]

I don't understand the principle of chocolate for a cough. Don't get me wrong - I love chocolate - but it's the last thing I want if I have to sing: it dries my throat up something horrid.

Talking of singing, I'm back from our Nine Lessons and Carols, which went very well indeed - much Decanal Grinning™ and the punters (of whom there were more than usual) seemed to enjoy it.

Afterwards we had the Choir party, which was a slightly less liquid affair than usual: it was held in the Cathedral crypt, and there wasn't the same free-flowing wine as there used to be when we had it at somebody's house. Very enjoyable all the same - a nicely-balanced pot-luck supper and good company.

When I got home I decided I fancied another drink, and opened a bottle of home-made "Chardonnay" that was left in the song-room for D. (without any indication who it was from) and I have to say it's really rather nice - not oaky or oily the way "real" Chardonnay sometimes is.

I wonder who it was from ...
 
Posted by The Intrepid Mrs S (# 17002) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Boogie:
My son is home for Christmas and brought a few bottles of Underberg - well, it certainly tastes like cough medicine!

We have an American friend who adores Underberg, and Mr. S always used to have to take some when he travelled there. Jagermeister is another thing that tastes like cough medicine would, if it had been compounded by Severus Snape!*

*Can you tell I watched the first Deathly Hallows film with Miss S,on Boxing Day?
[Smile]

Mrs. S, sticking to white wine or GIN
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Ominously the charging light in the jeep didn't quite go out yesterday on the way back from the marriage thingy so first thing this morning we went to the auto-electrician - having first checked and discovered the battery [a great clunking thing as it is a diesel] is just a month out of warranty! Jeep batteries are not exactly cheap and we feared the worse. The very helpful guy pronounced the battery to be quite sound but the alternator was faulty. Happily here they repair things rather than demand the purchase of a whole new thing - an hour and about 12 quid later we drove off with it all working just fine and with the alternator having been taken out, taken apart, a part replaced and the rest cleaned and serviced, put back together and so on.

Excellent!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
What would I do without Doris to transport me and my luggage from the aeroport?

Stay well, Doris! Pats her rump, fondly.
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
What would I do without Doris to transport me and my luggage from the aeroport?...

You'd probably take a taxi which would be a lot easier to get into!
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by piglet:
No, but Wodders, Boogie and Balaam could probably do with one. [Big Grin]

The hills are not tall enough, unfortunately, to stop the rain coming over from where it belongs — L*nc*sh*re — if it's this bad here Boogie must be snorkelling over on the wet side of the hills.
quote:
I don't understand the principle of chocolate for a cough. Don't get me wrong - I love chocolate - but it's the last thing I want if I have to sing: it dries my throat up something horrid.
Grapefruit juice. Don't shake the carton. The thick stuff in the last glassfull is great for coating the tonsils.
quote:
When I got home I decided I fancied another drink, and opened a bottle of home-made "Chardonnay" that was left in the song-room for D. (without any indication who it was from) and I have to say it's really rather nice - not oaky or oily the way "real" Chardonnay sometimes is.
I prefer the oaky stuff. LRP (who reads this thread, so no talking behind her back) likes unoaked. Vive la diference.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Welease Woderwick:
quote:
Originally posted by PeteC:
What would I do without Doris to transport me and my luggage from the aeroport?...

You'd probably take a taxi which would be a lot easier to get into!
Chugging up to the house with my wheelchair and my bags tied to the top of a three wheeler? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
That's fine, no need for us to come and meet you, then.
 
Posted by PeteC (# 10422) on :
 
No-one to hear the invective I toss at all and sundry when I see what they've done to my wheelchair?

[Frown]
 
Posted by Welease Woderwick (# 10424) on :
 
Just remember that the arrivals hall is like a barn with a BIG echo and a shout of "WHAT THE F***!!!" can be heard all over.

[even this Host can't code properly!]

[ 31. December 2012, 11:22: Message edited by: Welease Woderwick ]
 
Posted by Dormouse (# 5954) on :
 
Are we getting a shiny new thread for 2013? Who (apart from the Host In Charge) will be the last person to post on this one?!
 
Posted by moonlitdoor (# 11707) on :
 
I suggest something more positive as none of the posters here are at all perfidious that I know of. Something along the lines of 'the English, the English, the English are best, I wouldn't give tuppence for all of the rest.'
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I know it's early, so I certainly won't be the last, but a very happy new year to all my perfidious shipmates! Here's to another year of weather,food and general goings on.
 
Posted by St Everild (# 3626) on :
 
We have already had "This sceptre'd isle", haven't we?
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
How about 'Mad dogs and Englishmen...[and women]'?
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
I think we were Mad Dogs and Englishmen etc a couple of years ago, IIRC.

Plus although there is a Scottish thread (isn't devolution marvellous? [Smile] ), MD&E doesn't exactly cover the whole UK.

Not that I can think of anytihng better, mind you [Smile]
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
I was vaguely aware of both points. But then nor does Albion. The problem of finding a UK-inclusive title is the same as finding UK-specific patriotic songs: apart from the horrendously jingoistic Rule Britannia (let no-one suggest that...!) there ain't much.
 
Posted by Angloid (# 159) on :
 
I'd go with 'Land of Hopeless Tories...' but it might be felt a tad partisan.
 
Posted by Jack the Lass (# 3415) on :
 
Haha - I'd go with that too! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
The suspense is over - it's here.

And a Happy New Year.

Firenze
All Saints Host

 


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