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.



29 comments:

  1. I had the full set of the Pan Book of Horror Stories, my Dad treated me for a birthday when I was about 12. I was fascinated by horror at the time. But I think actual real-life dog skins would have been a lot of steps too far, I would have had nightmares for years.

    Could you mention that you are selling Keith's mobility aids on your local Facebook Group, or would that be prohibited too? Alternatively, an advert in a local shop window or community notice board might work.

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    1. Yes the dog skins were definitely creepy. I'm not sure if Facebook would prohibit that? I have had them advertised locally for a year, but no interest. Just one man who thought he could take the mobility scooter to pieces to put it in his tiny car . . .

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  2. Oh my, you did make me laugh with your Beaminster weekend interview. It reminded me of those 1970s horror films that almost always starred Peter Cushing. I was constantly amazed as to why the 'victim' didn't turn tail and run at the first creepy sign. A good job you got out of there! If they did that with past dogs what did they do with past grooms! Have a good day in your garden best wishes T.

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    1. Yes, I was 17 and it was quite an awakening to the real world! Hadn't thought about the grooms - perhaps she had them stuffed!

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  3. I used to love horror stories as a child. I will still purchase the occasional book of "True" ghost stories or hauntings.

    God bless.

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    1. I have a book about Welsh Ghosts out from the library right now. They aren't too scary though.

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  4. Glad you got out of that horrible place. Your experience might make a fine horror story.

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    1. I was SO glad when my dad arrived in the stable yard :)

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  5. Don't think I would have stayed either - very creepy! In my teens a group of us would go to our local disco, Top of the World, pile out at midnight and go across to the cinema to watch horror films, all dressed up mini dresses or shorts with long waistcoats and knee high boots. We must have looked a sight sitting there, cinema has long gone but the nightclub is still there. Good luck with the sweetpeas, mine gave up and died. Take care, don't work too hard in the garden. Xx

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  6. I've never been a fan of horror and ghost stories - they don't appeal at all. I have Radio 4 on when I go to bed - it's boring enough to send me to sleep. But if I don't nod off before 11 then Uncanny comes on one night in the week - no fun listening to that at that time of night!

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    1. I only discovered Uncanny as a podcast. I wouldn't be listening late at night either!

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  7. I used to go to the all night horror show (Boris Karloff, Peter Cushing etc) at the Cinema with my boyfriend, coming out at 4 a.m. He would then walk me the 6 miles home . . .

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  8. If after a reasonable time the mobility iten=ms do not sell, can you donate them to a looocal charity and get a tax credit. It would be a big $ loss but they'd be out and gone.

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    1. No, that would represent a huge financial loss. I don't think I would get a tax credit in UK for doing so.

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    2. Google AI thinks you'd get a credit: 'the market value of the gift can be deducted from your taxable income"...The items, expensive as they were/ are/ have no value gathering dust. The scooter[wheelchair] needs maintenance to keep it in good condition? I hope you get a buyer, good luck. PS How about a flier at the flea markets you're doing, a For Sale - Ask Me kind of thing?

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  9. You could be lucky with your items on ebay, people do need those items, would you have them to be collected or delivered because that might be a problem with being in an out of the way place?

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    1. I am selling the big ramps with the mobility scooter as you have to have those to load it into a car. I am happy to deliver 50 miles or so (fuel paid) but other than that . . .

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  10. I have never been a fan of horror films and that certainly sounds like a plot for one. I have a couple of pieces of taxidermy in my house, so am not squeamish about preserving things after death, but the thought of having a family dog skinned when it dies is just horrendous.

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    1. It was my first time ever away from home too, so you can imagine it was a bit scary! Taxidermy is one thing, but I agree, skinning your dogs a bit stomach turning.

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  11. I like spooky stories too and I hope you get to sell some of the items you have there, have a lovely weekend.

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    1. I can listen to some of the Uncanny programmes, but recent ones which were written up in the newspapers are a bit too recent for comfort. Spring-heeled Jack is one thing, modern Poltergeists another!

      Looking forward to Malvern.

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  12. We were at our caravan for a couple of days only to have a bad dose of hayfeaver so went home a day early only to find I left my blood pressure pills and wallet in the caravan so I did 7 hour round trip to get them back today, mind you I did bother a church on the way home., Glad to see they have finished working at the roundabout at last. Not easy getting rid of mobility equipment, we ended up donating it but it did not cost a lot of money so we did not mind. Hope you are successful in selling the stuff

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  13. Oh how annoying. I am glad though, that I am not the only one to have ditsy moments where I leave things behind! (Apart from always leaving the shopping list on the kitchen table - that's a given!) Not much fun driving for 7 hrs in a day though. Glad too that we don't have road works on that roundabout anymore, though I noticed they had moved up to the Hundred Houses road instead.

    We paid full whack for Keith's mobility aids - £650 for the mobility scooter, £400 for the brand new wheelchair, £170 for the big ramps and about £100 for the smaller ones . . . My prices are nearly half this amount.

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    1. The work on the Hundred house road has been going on for weeks,

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    2. I believe you. I rarely go that way but was off to auction, hence I found out about it.

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  14. I suppose there aren't any mobility places that would buy them back and sell on as secondhand. I spent some of my childhood reading ghost stories, a couple of which still haunt me. The dog skins could make a story as well I think.

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    1. For a pittance. This all cost about £1400. The wheelchair was £400 on its own. I have sold the wheelchair ramps anyway, so that's a start.

      The dog skins would definitely make a creepy tale (or tail!)

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  15. The skins of their dogs???!!!!! Dear God. What horror! i would have real questions about why the pale groom was leaving.

    I do find ghost stories interesting, although I am not at all interested in horror.

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  16. Yes, it seemed very strange, and to me, who had never had a night away from home before, pretty horrific!

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