Thursday, 25 June 2026

Sometimes I surprise myself!

 


The white cotton fabric (I will buy it again) arrived on Tuesday afternoon.  I set to and made up 4 6" blocks.  I was careful to cut very accurately and sew accurately too, and so most of these are spot on pieceing-wise.  I'm quite pleased with myself. After my early walk yesterday it was just too darn hot to do anything, so in between liberating bats (I think 5 was the final count) and drinking water, I sat and sewed, and cut more white fabric, and sewed again and the final count yesterday was 21 blocks!  Blimey.  Plus the 4 I'd done on Tuesday.



It is to be a simple Irish Chain.  


I had a little wander across to Temu to look at their patchwork stuff and found that the fabric I had bought from Ebay had been sourced from Temu, then sold on.  I don't blame her.  We all have to live.  It was still cheap.  I may have ordered a couple of things . . . more pink fabrics.  A pretty print with butterflies on, and some binding for the quilt I set the centre back in last week.  £16.82.  It would have cost a LOT more from Doughty's, although obviously they are selling top quality fabrics. I know, Temu and their business ethics and what have you.  I think they have cleaned up their act a bit nowadays. I will make little "I" a quilt for Christmas, and finish the yellow and blue one I also got at the auction for Rosie.

I was out of the house before 7, and it was a lovely cool misty morning.  I blew it today as that was the time I woke up, having slept until 4 a.m. on the sofa, and then upstairs to a bedroom just about cool enough to sleep in.  I didn't get up until 8 today, which is unheard of!  5.30 has been the average recently.  It was already too hot for a walk.  There is a bit of a breeze out there today.  Would love a good drenching.  You know how you often wish for a day of summer in the middle of winter?  Well, now I could do with a wet and miserable winter day !


I had problems with bats all day.  In the end I think I liberated 5.  2 possibly might not make it as they were thirsty and had been in the water bowl.  One was in the bath, and I put that out early.  Another I had to be a bit ingenious with and persuade it off the curtain and onto a length of header tape, which I then hung out of the window . . .


Gosh, I need to get the window woodwork repainted and windows cleaned . . . but that is on the half landing at the top of steep stairs, so will get one of my offspring to help out with those jobs.



And this is Bat Junior.  Only an inch or so long. It had been there a couple of days, in the folds of the curtain.  There was a bat on the curtain again yesterday - not sure if mum or not.  Anyway, worried about it in this heat and no mum to feed it, so Tam got me the number of the Bat Conservation Trust and I phoned them yesterday evening.  They put me in touch with a localish bat lady, and following instructions (wear gloves, wear a mask as they can catch germs from us) I persuaded it into a little aerated box, with a lid with a little water in it and a aged linen teatowel to snuggle inside and set off for Merthyr Cynog.  The lady was lovely, said it was a Pipistrelle, only a week old, and quite lively (which was a relief).  She will keep me posted as to its progress.  She already had a 2 week old Daubenton bat and a couple of month old Pipistrelles, and obviously knew exactly what to do - dehydrate first and then start on feeds.  Hoping it will survive.  It was a lovely evening for a drive, but unfortunately I must have taken a wrong turn on the journey back and ended up driving for miles along lanes that led ???  Eventually I got spat out in the middle of Brecon.  At least I knew my way back from there!  I was a bit worried as I had forgotten to take my asthma inhalers before leaving home and of course, high pollen levels and open car windows not a good combination.  I was VERY glad to get back home.  It was way too hot to sleep upstairs, so I slept on the sofa until 4 a.m. when it was just about cool enough to be a bit nearer the bathroom.



I had a phone call from the vet yesterday, to say that LW's ashes were ready for collection.  I was in tears on the phone, so hope I can hold it together in the surgery this morning.  The bill will be in several hundreds of course.

Right, this won't do.  Hoping it will soon cool down.  


Oooh, P.S.  Rosie had her eye test with the specialist yesterday.  No inflammation.  Eyesight perfect.  Long may it last, but the arthritis problem means she needs tests every three months to check.



Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Too hot for me

 I did my walk early this morning , setting off 7.45 but should have gone out at 7 as it was starting to get quite hot when I was out, although I did have tree shade for 3/4 of the route.


The world and his wife are cutting hay.  The nearest farm has done several enormous fields (they have cattle and sheep to feed over the winter).  



It's 22 deg downstairs and 25 in my bedroom, which faces North.  Humidity 76% which does my asthma no good whatsoever.  I have bought my sewing machine downstairs and will start cutting out the 2 1/2" pink strips I've just bought from Ebay, into 2 1/2" squares to make a start on the Irish Chain quilt I am making Danny and Emma as a housewarming gift.


I've just bought down my small cutting board and the fabrics, which aren't the best quality (not Moda, that's for sure) but will look good with the white fabric I'm awaiting delivery of.  I was hoping to combine a trip to the Hereford Racecourse Antiques Fair with a visit to Doughty's, the patchwork shop, but it's Sunday, not Saturday.  Ah well, I will combine the trip with a visit to the Car Boot Sale at Madley instead, and still go to Doughty's another day, as my patchwork group trip to the huge Festival of Quilts at the NEC in Birmingham, has been cancelled as it costs so much to rent even just a 12 seater coach.  That would have been £40+ a head just for that, and then £22.20 to get in, plus a leetle spending money, would have been one heck of an expensive day out!  At least I can go to the Malvern Quilt Festival in the Autumn - I didn't go to the Spring one because I thought I would save my money for the NEC trip . . .


I am sat here with the windows wide open in the kitchen, listening to birdsong and planning my afternoon.  I don't need to cook as I made myself a four portion pizza last night.  Dough made up in breadmaker (45 mins cycle), then the last portion of some tomato, onion, mushroom, and courgette sauce from a pasta dish last week, with some extra fresh courgette fried up and added.  I had some ham left over from the pack for my lunch rolls on Sunday, so I tore that into strips.  Then used the last piece of Cheddar which needed using up to top it.  I will heat a slice up tonight and have frozen the other two portions.  I far prefer my home made ones to the boughten sort.


It really hit the spot and was such a cheap dish to make.


If you are thinking, what did I buy at Malvern?  Not a huge amount, a Beswick Deco vase in the right colourway, a metal Scottie dog, a painted stool to display things on and a funny little "seat on wheels", once upholstered, and probably the base of an early child's toy pram.  It had a look . . .  Lots I should like to have bought, but they were already High Street retail prices.



Oh and a little foal which could be Sylvac but I think is a copy as not the detail and not stamped.


Keep cool everyone.  Oh and if you live anywhere near Glastonbury, that was QUITE the storm!!!  Talk about a cloudburst . . .


One last field waiting to be turned and then baled this afternoon.  Right, let's hope I can do some cutting without involving my fingers getting in the way!

Sunday, 21 June 2026

Breakfast with a bat on a Malvern Sunday

I did a double take and thought it was a Tarantula at first!

 Even Pipistrelles look quite large when flying round in a smallish room.  My alarm WAS indeed set at bat-o'clock, 4.45 a.m., and when I came downstairs, there was a blardy bat doing circles of the kitchen.  I opened the half landing window open wide but would it go up the stairs?  Nope . . . Eventually it flew into the Library and holed up in there.  I have just found it, covered in cobwebs and possibly mauled by a cat, on the kitchen floor, so I have given its liberty outside, under the shade of a bush.  I use those foil topped Muller yoghurt pots for rescuing both mice/voles and bats. This hot weather always brings the bats out from under the roof tiles, who can blame them? They manage sometimes to come down the attic stairs and as I had had to remove a pee'd on towel which was blocking the gap beneath the door, can currently make an escape bid.  I will have to put clean towel back down now it's been boiled.

This was one of 12 prop Angels from a church for a recentish production.  They must have auctions as someone else was selling film props too.


The window bottom left was a film prop, can't recall which film though.


A few lesser quilts . . .


Another on the same stall, slightly more desirable.




Something I know nothing about, teddies and distressed soft toys.  I imagine they sell though.


I cannot get excited about rusty/galvanized watering cans.  One chap had his camping trolley full of them.



I know I like the unusual, but carrying this from Fair to Fair would be a bit of a challenge - not easy to pack around!!


Pine cones anyone?


One of my favourite stands, as usual.


I never find little dollies like this when I am going round the Fairs.


I'd love to get Rosie a doll's house like that one.


Round the Avon Hall.  I don't think I'd like the "thing" far right eyeballing me from my wall!  Or the thing on the left either!  Tailor's dummy with a strange mask on it (below).


I liked this antique cherub but not the price tag (think it was around £350!)


From the sublime to the ridiculous - ok, this old farrier's hand-made toolbox really DOES have the look but at, wait for it, £300!, I think he will be looking at that Look for quite a while.


A nice French look on this stall outside.


Now this antique wholecloth Durham quilt I really would have liked to bring home with me.  The palest Primrose yellow, and beautifully hand-quilted.  £250 and worth it.


An American quilt here from 1906. I haven't seen one anything like that before.  The panda is a very early one too, made when Ming was given to London Zoo in 1938. The open book beside her shows a photo of her there.



Another lovely old hand made and hand quilted quilt.




This is a Russian quilt.  It has a big opening in the back (to the left) where you can add a blanket in winter.  This is summer mode.  What an unusual thing to find.  However, talking to the dealer, she gets round a bit more than I do.


Jennie-envy here.  Keith and I always wanted one of the primitive rush light holders/early candle holders you can see here in the centre.  Prices prohibitive, and this isn't quite the right house for them.


Lastly, aren't these cats (and animals) fun?  Can't remember the ceramicist who makes them, but collectable at about £60 a time.

So, a really lovely day was had.  I saw lots of friends and chatted to them.  Made a new friend in the dealer with the quilts (our friend of 10 years +, Lesley, has a few things on this stand and helps out.  

On the way home I bought myself a double cherry Magnum ice cream - I was NOT going to pay £5 for a Mr Whippee on the showground!

I stopped at the little (an understatement!) "Antiques Fair" I was going to do until I realized that it clashed with Malvern.  Just as well, it would have been a total waste of time and money, and the live music would have driven me mad after just 5 minutes!  I met up with the lass who was selling a corner cupboard I need for my Unit.  Just what I wanted, and we had a lovely natter.  She sells Heritage and  Welsh fruit trees, so I have taken her business card and will go and visit her nursery near Brecon.  


Just what I wanted.

It was pretty hot today, but not as bad as the 29 deg. threatened.  I changed out of my jeans and trainers after the first hour, when I had to go back to the car anyway to unload Heavy Things from my trolley.  I sat and ate my breakfast/lunch roll, clad in my t-shirt and knickers and with a cooler pack stuffed into my bra!  (Perhaps best not to dwell to long on the picture this may evoke!!)  I had bought my jersey skirt and some sandals, just the thing for further strolls round the Fair.  I clocked up over 15,500 steps,  burned 708 calories and was energetic for 102 minutes and less energetic for nearly as much again!  I have been SO HAPPY today :)

Friday, 19 June 2026

Battling Procrastination and down memory lane

 I have taken myself by the scruff of the neck these past two days.  Yesterday I finally took photos of and listed Keith's brand new all-terrain wheelchair (hardly used), telescopic ramps (used only in the house at bedtime, just before he was in hospital), and his mobility scooter and expensive 7 ft ramps for the car.  I put them on E-Bay.  However, being in Wales, they probably won't sell.  No-one can sell "medical items" like these on Facebook Marketplace, so if they don't sell on E-Bay, the only place I can think of is Gumtree.  I found it hard to do as it is drawing a line under the final year or so of Keith's life, but I need to move on and do not need any of these items.


Today I baked another Apple Gingerbread cake (for Sunday, though I had a piece for lunch) and I have just been up in the polytunnel - again first time in a couple of years - to cut down the brambles and dead grass which had grown in there from under the edges.  I need to get the cucumbers and Tam's Cantaloupe Melons up there.  It was hot in the polytunnel - the sunshine and higher temperatures have returned so I have just come down and eaten the last icelolly which really hit the spot.

Shortly I intend to go and cut back the Geranium microrrhizum as I have some plants grown from seed which desperately need to go in the ground, as do my Sweet Peas, which were sown late to start with!  Ah well, better late than never.

I received my Journal of the Mortimer History Society today.  I was right about thinking twice about trying to research/write/submit an entry as all the winners have PhD's and access to the sort of documents I cannot access, nor translate (early Latin and Medieval Welsh not being my starters for 10).  The essays will be interesting reading anyway.

Today's podcasts - more from Uncanny - end of programme about Borley Rectory, which was very good.  When I was in my late teens and 20s I was very interested in spooky stories and this was one which stayed in my mind.  Lots was written about it although it's hard to say how much was credible.

I can remember buying books of horror stories (e.g. the 12th Pan Book of Horror Stories etc).  I read one on the train down to Beaminster in Dorset, when I went on a working interview weekend to see if I was suitable for a job as a groom at a Shetland Pony Stud.  I stayed in this big old manor house, and was given a bedroom up towards the attic, with a bed like a plank and a tree branch scraping the window like something from Wuthering Heights!  Reading spooky stories on the way down did little to help my nerves in a strange place.  The stud owner was clearly from a moneyed family and got the family silver out for tea, and in the drawing room there were "hairy rugs" thrown over the backs of the sofas.  When I finally twigged that they were the pelts of past dogs, which they then had skinned and cured so they could be with them after death, I really DID NOT want to stay long.  How bizarre is that?!   There was the current groom, pale and called Beth, with a Pyrenean mountain dog. Things weren't helped by my having a really ghastly asthma attack - my first proper one ever - I thought I was going to die.  I had to phone my dad and get him to drive down and collect me after he finished work on the Saturday (couldn't face a 2nd night in the ghastly bedroom either).  He was not best pleased as he was driving into the sun all the way down there and of course, no-one used sunglasses in those days unless they were a filmstar!  Poor dad.

 Well, with that memory to sit with me all afternoon now I'm sure, I had best go and get my Sweet Peas properly planted on.



Thursday, 18 June 2026

An Enriched Life

 I went to my patchwork group yesterday.  As always, I went to my friend Pam's for lunch and a natter (took cheese and home made bread and I'd baked an Apple Gingerbread cake for them all).  At the class, Alex told me how to repair the hole in the middle of the quilt and whilst it is a bit of a lash up as I didn't have the materials to make a centre to follow the concentric pattern around the "hole", I had taken a strip off the side and just had to go with the fabrics I had in that, a difficult combination of different weights from polycotton to a heavyweight cotton.  Done - not perfect, but when put together it will be rehomed.  I need to get some batting from Doughty's now, and some yellow fabric to make a border for the other unfinished quilt I bought (Rosie will be having that).  My friend Pat was making a stunning quilt - just on the final border so it is all but finished bar quilting and binding.  Must ask her where she got the fabrics as I will need to make a quick new housewarming quilt for Danny and E.

Pat has horses, and Sheri too, so we all talked horse for a while as I unpicked the rows ready to place them in the quilt.  It was like old times, pre-Covid, when I went every week.  I only lived about 4 miles away then.

The Dog Roses are in full bloom at the moment.


On my journey, I listened to my podcasts.  Excavations at Knowth on the way home, and In Our Time (Melvyn Bragg) on the way there, a podcast I wouldn't have chosen probably, but it followed on from another of his I had been listening to, and was about the Barbary Corsairs and was really very interesting.  I learn so much through these podcasts.  Then on tv in the evening I watched another History Hit, Witchmen Trials in Iceland, which was fascinating too.  I never knew there were big chunks of Europe, Iceland included, where it is men who are the ones accused of Witchcraft.  Tonight, it will be Histyory Hit: Edward II I am watching.

Ground Elder has such pretty flowers.

I am so glad to have my life enriched by these programmes.  Driving through the beautiful Welsh countryside, my knowledge of the past and visits to Welsh churches, make sense of the scenery - especially when you have a short stretch of Roman Road and in Llandovery there is a field where there was a Roman fort (no excavations done there though).  The next ones along are Brecon and in the opposite direction, Llandeilo.  Old Drover's Roads have become modern roads today and the first bank (Black Ox) in Llandovery, was established in 1799 by the son of a drover, a drover himself, David Jones.  He married advantageously (his wife had a fortune of £10,000) and with his earnings from droving, aged 40 he started the bank there.  The Abergwesyn road, which joins the A483 at Beaulah, was a drover's road, and from Llandovery, the drover's road followed the line of the Roman road to Trecastle.  History just brings the landscape alive, makes it 3-D.

My knowledge of wild flowers and birds brings me satisfaction when I see the more unusual examples too.  

White Bedstraw with Cleavers stretching over it.


I have been berating myself for the state of the garden and yard - esp. the latter which desperately needs weeding, but then when I came down this morning, there were four Greenfinches helping themselves to the seeds of Black Medick and Shepherd's Purse and the like, and last night I watched Bullfinches on the seedheads of the Tormentil on the bank.  So I tell myself I garden for wildlife . . .

We have two Swallow nests in the stables this year, and a full house of Housemartins - 6 nests along the end wall facing East.  They are such a joy to watch.

Well, this won't do.  I need to pack the car for a Tip Trip (long overdue) and get some laundry on.  





Tuesday, 16 June 2026

An unusual visitor

 


THIS - a Horntail Sawfly or Giant Woodwasp)-  Urocerus gigas - nearly flew into me yesterday afternoon.  Fortunately it landed on the Fig tree instead, and did a rapid turn around and flew off.  Jeepers.  It's a big bugg*r!  Fortunately what looks like a sting, is its Ovipositor for laying eggs in pine trees.  Many thanks to wobam.co.uk for their photograph.  They sell it dead, and mounted, for collectors.

Yesterday I had a busy day, stripping the bed, putting washing on and hanging it up, the usual vacuuming upstairs, and sorting out the central repair block for the quilt I got at auction.  I will take that along to my patchwork group tomorrow and get Alex's advice on how to put it back in!  Then out in the garden, potting on cucumbers and tomatoes, deadheading roses, cutting back spent Aquilegias and weeding then putting down some bark chippings.  My right knuckles are sore this morning.  Then suddenly at 7.30 p.m. I suddenly realized I hadn't finished making up my bed (did half in the morning).  Hate it when that happens!  I also embroidered another little square in my intuitive daily stitching - planning some more later.

I wiped down the tea caddy, ready to be polished when my order of Boiled Linseed Oil and also Danish oil arrives.  I glued the stretchers on both the WIndsor Chairs, and pulled them tight with zip ties, which can come off this morning.  They have been in the dip tank, which hasn't helped them, so will need a good oiling to feed them and bring some colour back.

I booked for a local Antiques Fair for Sunday, then realized an hour later that it was Malvern, so have had to cancel.  It hadn't been advertised locally - just on their Facebook page, so don't know about footfall. Father's Day though, so may have been ok.  Anyway, Malvern takes presidence.