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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.



15 comments:

  1. Great news about Rosie's eyetest, one less thing to worry about. Iris has to wear glasses for schoolwork and reading, she is long sighted in one eye and short sighted in other. Fortunately her bf wears glasses and so do quite a lot of her class. Miss Sheva has spent the day lying on the landing floor - laminate as its cool and shady up there. She's not eating very much either, but as she's quite tubby, not too worried. Take care and stay cool. Xx

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  2. Quite a relief as it was her first test and not ordered as speedily as we would have liked. We didn't know what they would find.

    My girls are under the beds and Alfie (a cold morsel) is on a woolly cushion on the chair beside me. Tell Sheva I'm not eating much this weather either!

    Poor Irish - one long sighted eye and one short sighted. I had to wear glasses for distance, esp. driving, but then it changed almost overnight when I was in my late 60s and now I need them for reading instead and have good distance vision.

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  3. Poor IRIS that should have been!

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  4. You really have been having fun with Bats!
    I've done nothing as industrious as stitching. just reading, watching tennis and waiting for evening to go out and do garden jobs.

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    1. I kept the windows shut today and none inside. I had the kitchen windows open though, and now the front door and kitchen door and it's much cooler. There's meant to be incredible storms tonight - we look right in line for them. Rain would be good but not sure about millions of lightening bolts . . .

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  5. It was over 35 here again today and from the look the same down there so no relief at the caravan if we had gone, looks like a couple more days before it is comfortable

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  6. It was about 31 here, but felt worse! Don't blame you for not coming down to cook in your caravan!

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  7. Wonderful news about Rosie's eye sight. Umm, I don't like bats in the least. The ones here seem to be the carriers of rabies so I stay as far away as possible from them.

    God bless.

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  8. Gosh, I would be in a state if we had rabid bats here! Just one, in the kitchen, this morning. Removed to cool dark stable.

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  9. Good news about Rosie's eye test. :-)

    I feel for you, this is not the weather for relocating bats all day long. That quilt is going to be beautiful.

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    1. Just one bat today, on the kitchen floor. Simple lift to the cool stables in a Muller Light tub (empty!).

      Yes, such a relief about Rosie's eyes.

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  10. Good news for Rosie and you're a wonderful bat caregiver. They re so tiny! Why did I believe they carry disease, is that -incorrect?

    The quilt is lovely. Sometimes the classic patterns are the very best. I asked you in next but previous, [reading backwards] for the quilt design, you can obviously ignore that.

    lizzy gone to the beach....

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    1. Sadly, the little baby died. I think he had been too long without mum. They do carry diseases (rabies in Europe) but also we can give them colds etc which would kill them.

      I've not sewn a big quilt in this pattern before. Slightly hornswoggled to learn it will take over 500 6" blocks! Yeesh!! Glad I bought some more fabric then!

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  11. Be very careful with liberating the bats - over here, there are some scary bat-borne things to dodge.

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    1. We don't have Rabies here, thank heavens. I scoop them up in a plastic yoghurt pot with foil lid and pop them in the middle stables until it is dark and they can come out.

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