Saturday 31 August 2013

Day 243. Strattons for supper.


A rare night out and we finally made it to Strattons for supper. A boutique hotel in Swaffham this will be one of our locals when we move house and that's ok with me. Beautiful building, animal prints and local art in the lounges and a small but perfectly formed dining room. The staff took my lactose intolerance in their stride and I enjoyed pea and mint soup followed by roast belly pork with plum instead of apple sauce; an inspired pairing. Sadly the stresses of moving caught up with us and the evening ended early so we could get some sleep in preparation for another day of sorting and clearing before the removal team arrives on Monday. Next time we'll make sure we have nothing to get up for but the Sunday papers.

Friday 30 August 2013

Day 242. Between my finger and my thumb.



I was all set to post Blackberry-Picking over the next few weeks to accompany pictures of us doing just that. Our end of summer walks along a relatively undiscovered track, filling our pots with juicy berries and trying our best not to eat too many before heading home.

Then this morning I read the news that Seamus Heaney had died. I can remember devouring his poetry at school. I was never cool but unlike my 16 year old self, now I don't care.

At 6th form college I was relieved to be with other students who wanted to study the words of TS Eliot, Austen, Shakespeare, O'Casey and Heaney. My text books were easily identifiable by their broken spines, scrawled notes and sellotaped jackets.

On twitter there has been an outpouring of love for his incredible talent. His ability to keep us grounded in ordinary life with its joy and sadness, it's excitement and monotony. Taking us from the romance of expectation to the harshness of reality through simple language that's cleverly constructed.

Many people have been quoting from their favourite poems today. Mid-term break is a clear favourite with its poignant, gut wrenching final line 'a four foot box, a foot for every year'.

For me there are two pieces I have reread today (after many, many times before). Limbo tormented me for days after I first read it; the suffering of this woman driven to kill her baby because of the strength of her religion. Here's an extract.

.... But I'm sure
As she stood in the shadows
Ducking him tenderly 

Till the frozen knobs of her wrists
Were dead as the gravel,
He was a minnow with hooks
Tearing her open.

But it's Digging that I'm drawn to again and again. I'm the next generation in my family. My Dad was a grafter, toiling away as a telephone engineer, rarely to be found sitting down, always working on some project or other. Still now, in his late 70s, he keeps a list of jobs, written on a piece of paper in his distinctive script, it's comforting and constant. He never stops. My job is the polar opposite. I spend my days writing, planning and creating 'stuff'.  In fact after I graduated my Dad and I worked at the same company - with me in management and him in the field. Thankfully not in the same part of the business; he was very proud but I felt conscious of my position. Digging with its undertones of guilt and sense of alienation - I can relate to that. Not because of them, because of me.

So as the final page turns in the life of Seamus Heaney, his squat pen never again to rest in his hand, here it is. Take the time to read it if you haven't before. It really is a remarkable poem.

Digging

Between my finger and my thumb
The squat pen rests; snug as a gun.

Under my window, a clean rasping sound
When the spade sinks into gravelly ground:
My father, digging. I look down

Till his straining rump among the flowerbeds
Bends low, comes up twenty years away
Stooping in rhythm through potato drills
Where he was digging.

The coarse boot nestled on the lug, the shaft
Against the inside knee was levered firmly.
He rooted out tall tops, buried the bright edge deep
To scatter new potatoes that we picked
Loving their cool hardness in our hands.

By God, the old man could handle a spade.
Just like his old man.

My grandfather cut more turf in a day
Than any other man on Toner's bog.
Once I carried him milk in a bottle
Corked sloppily with paper. He straightened up
To drink it, then fell to right away
Nicking and slicing neatly, heaving sods
Over his shoulder, going down and down
For the good turf. Digging.

The cold smell of potato mould, the squelch and slap
Of soggy peat, the curt cuts of an edge 
Through living roots awaken in my head.
But I've no spade to follow men like them.

Between my finger and my thumb
The squat pen rests,
I'll dig with it.

By Seamus Heaney

Thursday 29 August 2013

Day 241. Just running.


When you're a kid you just run. And skip. And jump. Hop. Dance. Move with no purpose other than the mood taking you. The last time I did this was early July. We were at Thetford Forest to see Paul Weller. It was getting dark and we were making our way back from the stage when Bea and I just started running; then flying on the ground, just like this. For a split second I felt foolish, mainly because I hadn't been drinking I think, but then the moment passed and it felt... liberating.

Why do we stop this? Why do we stop running like we did as children? Arms outspread, shouting gleefully. Well obviously in the gym this wouldn't be ideal. The treadmills would have to be much further apart for a start. On the road would be ok but only if you run on country lanes. City streets not so good. You could quite easily take someone's eye out or more likely be knocked down as you zigzagged from pavement to road and back again.

Reunited with her best friend today, they did what all children do. They ran. Just because. I'm going to try it again very soon.

After dark.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

Day 240. Pretty in pink.


After two days away visiting grandparents Captain Chaos is home.

Looking at this you'd think she likes pink. She doesn't. Like many girls she is often in receipt of gifts that are pink because after all pink is for girls and blue is for boys. Andie Walsh may be the one person, above the age of 4, who is happy with this. Then again she's a fictional character so that argument doesn't stand either. I loved that film. Jon Cryer as Duckie, very cool. Tiny crush on Andrew McCarthy. Looking back he was a bit wet wasn't he? More a John Cusack kinda gal; then and now.

Give Bea some credit though, she's happy to use these and is thankful (in an eight year old's way) for the thought.

In September she's off on her first school trip. I think I'll buy her some luggage she really likes. Preferably not covered in flowers. Or cherries. And definitely not pink. I'll leave that for Andie.


Tuesday 27 August 2013

Day 239. The train for Kings Cross is...


... not stopping here today.

First day back at work after 10 days off and my plans were thwarted - what a great word, thwarted, thwarted - sorry, my plans were thwarted by this ^. All trains to London cancelled. For the whole day. I briefly considered driving but then factored in the psychotic mood I'd be in by the time I arrived and decided it was better to work from home.

For those of you who still think working at home means sitting around in your pjs, watching Jeremy Kyle pause melodramatically before revealing yet another paternity test result, eating chocolate HobNobs and waiting until the last minute to make it look like you've had a really busy day, well yep that just about captures it. After all, the alternative of me sat at my desk for 9 hours pausing only to eat a low calorie lunch is far less interesting.

Tomorrow normal service should be resumed which is no use to me. I'm working at home.

I wonder if we have any HobNobs in?

Monday 26 August 2013

Day 238. Sunday Sunday.


Except it's Monday and as usual an uneventful bank holiday throws our routine out of kilter.

The day has been spent ferrying our daughter here there and everywhere - friend's birthday party and a visit with Grandparents for a few days. When you live in the sticks 'parental taxi' remains a key job role up until the point your kids pass their driving test.

As the sun continues its descent I am sitting here with a coffee and planning my week. Seven days and counting.

Sunday 25 August 2013

Day 237. The long goodbye.


We're counting down the days to our house move and savouring every moment in this heavenly piece of Norfolk where we've lived for the past three years. This oak tree in our garden will be missed as it's the perfect support for a swing. The other oak behind is the start point of the zip wire. Walk north of this tree and you reach our charming neighbours; south and the Ouse Cut Off Channel awaits.

Although we're all looking forward to moving into our own home again after renting for so long - we didn't think we'd want to stay when we first moved here - it will be with a heavy heart that we say goodbye.

Saturday 24 August 2013

Day 236. Collector or hoarder?


If you ever need table linen, glasses, tea light holders, sofas, chairs or cut glass vases then give me a call as I have all of these things in abundance. The tea light holders I stopped buying several years ago, the linen purchases have slowed down, there is no more room in our house for sofas or chairs but glassware I cannot resist.

During our week away we popped into an antique and collectors fair where I picked up this beautiful vase. It's not dissimilar to another one I own, but it's different enough. The good news for me is that this type of vase seems to have waned in popularity so I can generally pick them up for an unbelievably low price. It's not the deciding factor though. I think I'd buy them anyway.

Friday 23 August 2013

Day 235. Timber cladding to flat packs.


Time to leave our idyll at Lower Mill Estate in the Cotswolds and head home via Ikea. Yep, if ever there was a glass of ice water in the face end to a holiday it's a trip to the home of flat pack furniture; the place where people from Sweden have made Allen and his key famous.

After five days of lying by the pool, sitting on the deck and relaxing on our balconies - this is Bea's balcony top right - the perfect way to keep that relaxed holiday vibe is to head into the one-way system of a store that has more square feet than the entire hobbit race.

You might think we're bringing this on ourselves, and in some ways we are, but this visit is a necessity due to the incompetence of the staff at the Warrington store and the call centre. More than 12 months ago we purchased four book shelf lights. We're big readers. We still buy books. We feel our books shelves need illuminating so that visitors to our house can enjoy a spotlight on the knowledge we have consumed.

The lights we bought are on a single power lead but you have to buy this separately. We weren't told that when we first bought the lights in Warrington so when we arrived home 4 hours later and tried to set up our lights we couldn't as there was no way to connect them to the mains.

A call to the help desk and we ordered the necessary additions - this was after many email exchanges via the online help function - and several days later our power cable arrived. Singular. We have 4 lights. I explained this on the phone. We now had the means of firing up one of the lights. But which one? The shelf that includes English Passengers and Bill Bryson's History of Everything or perhaps Bear Grylls' Facing Up and John Peel's A Life in Music are more worthy.

So today, we broke the spell of five days of relaxation by spending 90 minutes in Ikea to pick up three connectors to make use of lights we bought in 2012. Let's hope they all work as I'm fairly sure my receipt won't cover them if they don't. Allen didn't serve us.

Thursday 22 August 2013

Day 234. Cheese 'n' wheels in the Cotswolds.


We have been introduced to the joy of Cheese 'n' Wheels. Think eye spy with an annoyance multiplier to the power of 10, to the power of 10, to the power of 10, ad infinitum. Essentially, whilst on your travels, you have to spot yellow vehicles. The vehicular bit is very important as is the yellow. Not gold. Shout out 'Cheese 'n' Wheels' for a gold car and you lose a point. Equally if you see a vehicle that isn't totally yellow - tractor with machinery or lorry where only the cabin is yellow - you also lose a point.

Basically for each yellow vehicle you claim with the aforementioned shout out, you earn a point with the points system restarting each day.

So why the rainbow coloured car in the picture? Well like any good (?) game, there is a wild card. The rainbow coloured vehicle earns you 10 points. Imagine Bea's delight when she spotted this in Cirencester today, complete with B licence plate. The perfect end to our lunch at Made by Bob's and the car that won today's round of Cheese 'n' Wheels for Bea.

I bet you think Cheese 'n' Wheels next time you see a yellow car.

Wednesday 21 August 2013

Day 233. Lounging by the pool.


No need to jump on a plane. Foreign currency isn't accepted here. Vaccinations against tropical diseases are not required.

When the weather is good in this country, a staycation is the perfect choice. Such a shame that luck is the deciding factor. This week however the lady is on our side. Here in the Cotswolds we've spent most of the day lounging by the pool, sitting on our deck and .... that about sums it up. We did leave the house for dinner at The Potting Shed in Crudwell but were soon heading home again with a bottle of wine.

Tomorrow the plan is pretty much the same with a different venue for supper and perhaps a visit to the source of the Thames - the point where the river starts, nothing to do with a supergrass or a bibliography.

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Day 232. Bordering on the inane.


I'm not a huge fan of wildlife parks. In general the enclosures are too small and whilst I'm all for conservation sometimes I struggle to see past the vulture that can't fly because its aviary roof is too low or the wolves that can't run as a pack unless they create a relay team taking individual legs of the perimeter fence. Despite my aversion to zoos and safari parks I seem to be a regular visitor - at least annually - mainly due to my 8 year old wanting to be the next Steve Backshall.

A trip to the Cotswolds Wildlife Park did little to change my opinion with the exception of the rhinoceros area which was large, well designed and contained a male, two females and a seven week old calf. We sat with our sandwiches in the gardens overlooking their paddock and watched them lie in the sun. Thrilling. Actually it was pretty relaxing until the male began to show more of his impressive physique than we had expected so we decided to make a move. Careful what you wish for.

Having paid the £40 entry fee we spent a not insignificant amount of time discussing these herbaceous borders; which flowers we liked, what would work in our garden and how the simple colour scheme worked so well.

Several miles up the road is a National Trust property which I'm sure has stunning gardens and as members we could have visited for free - or at least reduced our average trip price from £90 to £45 - we would however have missed the horny rhino.



Monday 19 August 2013

Day 231. Peace at last.



We move house two weeks today. Not a single thing has been packed. Actually I did bubble wrap a couple of paintings a few weeks ago but that's pretty much it.

As we're at T-14 days it would perhaps be sensible to spend the coming week creating order where there will soon be chaos. Or we could head to the Cotswolds with a spring in our step and a two-finger salute at our house as we drive away.

Obviously we chose the latter and here I sit looking out over a lake playing DJ on the iPad and looking forward to reading a book with actual pages. We’ve already taken a dip in the heated outdoor pool, played Top Trumps and Tic-Tac-Toe. That’s more uninterrupted leisure time than I’ve managed in the whole of this year so far.

Even though I know when I get home the panic may well set in, I’ve mastered the art of getting things done in the time available and know full well that you fill the time you have. Better to fill my time here than at home surrounded by boxes.*

*Actually we have a removal company coming in to pack for us. What? It will take a lot of directing!

Sunday 18 August 2013

Day 230. Reclaiming the minutes.


Tonight I am deactivating my Facebook account. The last few months I have struggled to find time outside of work to do all the things I'd like to and I'm fairly sure the time I spend reading about other people's lives could be better spent on my own.

Gary Bainbridge recently declared he was verbally incontinent, I am from the same mould, orally and digitally, so this move is significant for me. I haven't made any time commitments. I'm just going to flick the switch and see how I get on.

One thing I am looking forward to is being able to meet up with friends and ask them the question "What have you been up to?" without actually knowing the answer already.

Deactivation in 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.........


Saturday 17 August 2013

Day 229. Gotta love a selfie.


Spending a final few hours with one of my oldest friends and his family we took the obligatory photos of the kids and each other. The photo taken by Will of Andrew and I was a bit crap so instead we resorted to the selfie.

I'm a big fan of this conceited, egotistical image capture where you have the ability to review the photo before you take it. So here we are. Two friends, almost twenty-two years after we met, celebrating Andrew's 40th birthday.

A great weekend, and dare I say it, a pretty good photo.

Friday 16 August 2013

Day 228. Not everyone is an equalist.


The term equalist is significant in my circle of friends. It was used to justify a nonsensical argument in a way that only fools seem able to do. From that day on we've loved the phrase.

Tonight a bunch of us met up in London for a surprise dinner in celebration of a friend's 40th birthday. Seven adults and five children travelled from Kent, Norfolk and Newcastle to reminisce, catch up and share another landmark in our 22 year friendship.

Dessert wine was ordered. The glass on the left is the measure my husband poured for me, on the right, the measure he poured for himself. Clearly we do not conform to the idea of equalists when wine is in the equation. Next time we'll apply the pour or choose rule and equality may once again be a cornerstone in our group. For alcohol at least.

Thursday 15 August 2013

Day 227. Fifteen years on.


Fifteen years ago I got married to Will in a tiny village in Cambridgeshire, in a redundant church. We then strolled down the lane to the reception, in a marquee, in a field. It was a perfect day. Not smooth. Not without it's frustrations but perfect nonetheless.

A lot has happened since that day. Too much to cover in a short blog post but at the last minute we decided to mark the occasion with a dinner for a few friends. Nothing fancy, a bit like our wedding, but a celebration of all that we've experienced since that day. Like our wedding the evening didn't run exactly to plan as two of our guests ended up stuck on the river bank in Downham trying to rescue one of their cows that had fallen into the river; when you're friends with farmers you become accustomed to this sort of thing.

Rather sentimentally I looked through a few of the photos from our big day; this one is my favourite.


Let's hope the next fifteen years are eventful but in a different way to the last.

Wednesday 14 August 2013

Day 226. Sometime what goes around, shouldn't come around again.


In the 80s and 90s this was a very popular piece of clothing. On the plus side, it didn't ride up out of your trousers and there was no visible clothing line either. On the down side, it did ride up elsewhere and the poppers were a bugger to refasten after a few drinks. Had there been overhead cameras in the girls' toilets of clubs and bars across the country they would have witnessed women wrestling with these over-sized babygros, bouncing gently off the toilet walls before finally managing to snap two of the studs together - although of course it would be the upper left to the bottom right. If you were lucky the two sides would hold for the rest of the evening, rather than popping apart while you danced to Sit Down by James, necessitating another trip to the ladies and a further uncoordinated dance in the cubicle.

So please, tell me I'm imagining this. If not, they should come with a health warning: 'This item of clothing will result in you spending most of your evening in the toilet. Wear at your own risk.'

Tuesday 13 August 2013

Day 225. Churchill's War Rooms and an interactive date board.


On a recce for a client Winter party today I visited the Churchill War Rooms. Located beneath The Treasury, I managed to squeeze in a quick tour while I was there and was completely captivated by the Churchill Lifeline Table featuring events that took place between Churchill's birth and death. Click on 6th June 1944 and the 50 foot long table fills with poppies or the 14th April 1912 sees the board flooded with water.

It's a splendid digital addition that sits neatly alongside the original rooms used by Churchill and his cabinet. If you haven't been, take a trip there, you won't be disappointed.

Monday 12 August 2013

Day 224. Joining the club.


The inevitable has happened. I have succumbed to the peer pressure of the two runners in my family and started the Couch to 5k programme. I'm on week 5 and despite my scepticism I'm totally hooked. As you can see, I'm a treadmill runner hence the bright and shiny condition of my trainers compared to the off road runners belonging to Will and Bea.

I'm using the C25K app with a personalised playlist that includes Eye of the Tiger, You're the Best and Survival by Muse - a whole heap of cliched motivation that works like a charm for an inexperienced exercise novice like me.

Less time on the couch now for sure; still some way to go to hit 5k.

Sunday 11 August 2013

Day 223. Go Go Gorillas.


Pay a visit to Norwich this summer and you'll come across 53 life-sized and 67 baby gorillas decorating the city. Painted by artists, schools and community groups there's Optimus Primate, The Ape'd Crusader and Bling Kong. This is Iron Ape and like the swans in Wells, Somerset last year they're making quite an impression on us. When we're back from our holiday I think we'll spend a day trying to track them all down.

Saturday 10 August 2013

Day 222. Who's got a brand new combine harvester?


My neighbours I think. This rather splendid machine is carving its way through the field behind our garden like Harry Styles hitting any provincially located Costa coffee midweek; with speed, ease and barely considering the path left in its wake.

Its a thing of beauty, this machine not Master Styles, bringing neatness and order to what had become an unkempt field of rapeseed.


Friday 9 August 2013

Day 221. Pub.


It's sunny, it's Friday and I'm having a G&T in a pub. A pub!

I'm also having supper here. Most evenings at this time I'd usually be enduring the bedtime routine experienced by most parents of primary school age children. On those nights sometimes I need the G&T much earlier but not tonight. Tonight pre-dinner drinks are timed to coincide with food. Sadly the food was below par but still it was a night out. Next time I'll stick to crisps.

Thursday 8 August 2013

Day 220. Summer school rocks.


Which is good news when your daughter spends 3 out of 6 weeks there during the summer hols. Finding this picture on the whiteboard in our kitchen (I know but I make no apologies for it) made work a little easier.

Wednesday 7 August 2013

Day 219. Making the most of the view.


We are now counting down the days until we leave this house. As the sun rises over the misty fields I am reminded how lucky we are to have lived in this tiny part of West Norfolk. With open space all around us there is always something to look at, a place for thinking and reflection. Despite being excited about our new home I can't help but feel a little sad that this will no longer be my view.

Tuesday 6 August 2013

Day 218. Just three and a half miles.


150 years ago, on January 9th 1863, the first tube journey took place between Paddington and Farringdon, a journey of 3.5 miles beneath the streets of London. In the first six months approximately 26,000 passengers a day used the service. There are a number of installations around Kings Cross marking the 150th anniversary, this one is particularly striking.

Monday 5 August 2013

Day 217. My new intern.


No summer school until Wednesday so it was 'come to work with Mummy' day. Quite happy with her iPad and a whole heap of programmes downloaded on iPlayer, she sat quietly at the end of the table as I discussed marketing plans with one of my clients. When I asked her what she thought after the meeting she said "You talk a lot in your job don't you?", that pretty much sums it up to be fair.

Tomorrow she's with Daddy. I suspect the same comment will be used.

Sunday 4 August 2013

Day 216. The great escape.


I have recruited two partners in crime in a bid to escape the camp. We started work on Tom, Dick and Harry before most of the residents were awake; our plan to hit Ainsdale beach by 10am. It was slow progress to start with as neither of my recruits wore long trousers making it difficult to dispose of the soil from the tunnels without drawing attention to ourselves. At one point a chance encounter with Nanny outside the adventure playground almost foiled our plan but we distracted her with an errand for milk and plasters - after all Nanny's love to feel needed and need to feel wanted.

Work continued and soon we were free. Ainsdale beach was ours. We built sand volcanoes, drew names in the sand, jumped and ran around in the fresh air. Watched the lifeguards set up for the day, the dog walkers; a few other families had followed our lead making use of Tom, Dick and Harry and were now liberated for a short while.

But all good things must come to an end. We were back in the camp by lunchtime.

Saturday 3 August 2013

Day 215. Hi de oh no.


I will openly admit when I go on holiday I have certain standards. Good food. Pleasant accommodation. Good food. Ok it's generally about the food, and the location, but mainly the food.

At short notice I decided to head up to Southport to join my Mum, two sisters, five nieces and nephew for a long weekend. They were staying at Pontins; a holiday camp I had stayed at as a child and had always enjoyed. I was prepared for the fact this was not going to be Center Parcs, that there were fewer places to eat and the apartment (who are they kidding it's a chalet) would not have ensuites, patio doors through which to view the deer and squirrels or a handily positioned blackboard for prolific wall scribblers. After a three hour journey turned into six I was feeling just a little tired and in need of a blue curaçao (the first alcoholic drink I had tried there as a teenager).

Driving through the gates, I began to fear that I had entered some other world, something reminiscent of Dante's nine circles of Hell where I would remain caught in the first circle with, to be fair, some of the other guests, watching various other guests work their way through the remaining eight.

Unlike Dante I was sure there was no way to reach paradise. Our rooms hadn't been cleaned, the fish and chip shop ran out of fish, and then sausages, by 6pm on the first night and the trampolines in the children's play area cost £1 for five minutes. I was staggered by the number of parents I overheard swearing at their children. The problems and poor management were stacking up higher than the climbing wall that sat centre stage outside the main doors but was not in use due to staffing issues.

Then I had a G&T. The children watched the Bluecoats perform a show. Bea was delighted to be with her cousins especially as Alex was going to be staying with us for the weekend. It wasn't a place I'd head back to in a hurry but when you don't see your family very often it's easy to quickly put aside the superficial factors and just sit down, have a catch up and laugh the night away. So that's what I did although I totally forgot to order a blue curaçao.

Friday 2 August 2013

Day 214. Small scale pyramids.


This is Bea almost atop a rather small human pyramid, marking the end of a week at sports club. I was late for the presentations and missed her reading out the rhyme she/we had written about her week. She seemed pleased with how it went plus she'd won the talent show that day with her ditty so all good in her eyes.

When I feel guilty about her spending her holidays in various clubs and camps I try to remember that life for me wasn't so different. Vernon Sangster sports hall in Anfield was my destination and where I learnt to play softball, tennis and squash.

Maybe in years to come Bea will remember that at SAS she was sometimes top of the pile.

Thursday 1 August 2013

Day 213. Masterwarmer.


Dinner al fresco is the only option on a day like today. Squid and chorizo is so easy to cook, it doesn't really count as cooking; more heating a couple of ingredients in a pan. Greg and John would tut at the thought. It's basically a warm component. I'm a Masterwarmer not a Masterchef. (Don't go there...).

Tasty though.