Reflecting on my week #132

It’s been another week of celebrations here, we celebrated our thirteenth wedding anniversary on Monday. Monday’s are a bit of a rubbish day for such celebrations, but we managed with a bottle of fizz. We’d had a nice meal, or two, at the weekend, so it wasn’t all bad.

We’d had last week off, and while it was strange, and it definitely wasn’t the Lake District, it wasn’t totally new to us as we do have time off and spend it at home. This time though there wasn’t much choice. I’ve been telling people at work that it was nice to spend some time at home! And it was, especially away from our PCs.

There was plenty of jobs to be done and we did some of them. The start of the week was lovely and warm, almost too warm to really get on with any work. By the end of the week, in complete contrast, we couldn’t get out into the garden because of the weather. But it wasn’t all bad. The plug chillies and salad were planted up, and all are surviving. I actually read the instructions, which said to pot in half coir and half compost. The coir holds water and releases it as needed, which for a lazy waterer sounds a very good thing. Even better than I’d found some coir, which was originally intended as hanging basket liners, which had become a little worn, and unused for what it was bought for.

chillies and salad in the greenhouse

Our big job of the week was to rebuild the little allotment shed. When we left the allotment it was half built, and didn’t fit in the car, so needed to be taken apart. Since then it’s been stored, in parts, behind the pizza oven. But no more, it’s now back together, some parts with some extra persuasion from MOH and it’s already being put to good use.

The greenhouse was becoming over-full and it felt hard to move in there. Much of the stuff, especially the pots, didn’t actually need to be in the greenhouse, and with a little shed in the offing, a new use was identified. I wanted shelves in this, which I did tell MOH, but probably a good year or so ago. So they were a bit of a surprise request, when they really shouldn’t have been.

the little shed is complete

Part of my plan to free up the greenhouse was to rationalise the benches in there too. An old Ikea unit, which moved from my other house, had previously had a life in the shed as a storage rack, and then sawed in half as a potting bench in the greenhouse. But now I had a new use in mind, and only for part of it - the shelves, in the little shed.

MOH and I almost fell out about where the shelves should go. He asked me, I helpfully drew on lines for the top of the shelf, which he heard as this is where the bottom of the shelve should be, which meant there wasn’t enough space for the third shelf. I compromised in the end as it’s only a shed, and found a way to get the shelf in anyway. The shelf above the blue boxes is balanced on the plastic boxes, and the plan is to cut out part of the front of the baskets to maximise storage.

Some of the wood from the shelving units were saved, because apparently you never know when you need a piece of wood. Some of the wood was rotting and so was disposed of. Apart from that all that was left was the rusty bolts.

rusty bolts on the garden table

We did head out at the end of the week with a drive over to RHS Hyde Hall in Essex. On our drive over we hit the rain, on arrival we asked if it had been raining there yet. It hadn’t and we were right to assume it was on its way. There was little shelter, especially with some of the bench areas closed off, but I knew from previous visits that our best chance of shelter was in the woodland, so off we went.

Much later I snapped this photo in the modern cottage garden, and we took it as our clue to leave.

sun and rain at hyde hall
sweet peas and raindrops

The rain wasn’t all bad though, especially as it was quickly followed by the sun, and gave the opportunity for plenty of ‘raindrops on’ photos, like the sweet pea above.

It’s amazing what some time and headspace provide isn’t it? For me last week, that meant some sewing space and I happily disappeared for a couple of hours reappearing having made an ironing ‘pad’ from some material scraps and natural wood packing, and then some shaped face masks.

thread and pincushion
handmade facemasks

I thought these would be harder to sew than the oblong pleated variety, but I was wrong. These involved much less sewing and are lighter. I followed a pattern for the blue check version for MOH, and it’s a style he’s happy with - even though deep down he doesn’t see why one of those paper ones wouldn’t work just as well…

For me the blue check one was a bit high on the cheeks, and different to the yellow one that mum sent down in the post. So being the adventurous sort, I made myself a pattern which I used for the predominantly white mask. I’ve even added some contrasting top stitching and have impressed myself with my neatness!

It’s back to work at the dining room table this week, so another chance to spend some time at home!

A change of scenery

I originally planned to share this post last week but it wasn’t to be, so here it is now. And as I said in my weekly round-up post, it was nice to have something different to photograph while I waited for MOH, and spending time (however short) in a garden that’s not your own connects you to nature in a completely different, but good, way.

I think it will be hard for anyone not to be cheered by the sun on this vibrant poppy, I know I was totally mesmerised.

poppy in the sun

Well, until I spotted the sun on the love-in-a-mist looking delicate and determined at the same time.

love in a mist

With a camera in hand, albeit an iPhone, I know I see things differently so looking down from above and trying to capture the light, for me, is key. And things that may get overlooked in everyday life become the focus, elevating them from their usual everyday existence.

sundial and pale green flowers
leaves and a concrete sphere

Even spotting a ‘water caterpillar’ on the hosta leaves was an absolute joy, and I’m so pleased the photo worked out and reflects how it looked in real life.

water droplet on hosta leaf

You’ll know I need no excuses for snapping succulents, but add terracotta and fallen camellia blooms, yeap, it was always going to happen, wasn’t it?

succulents in a pot
terracotta and fallen camellia

Colour and texture are as important in the garden, here the acer leaves add the colour and in the greenhouse the thermometer adds texture as well as usefulness stylishly - much prettier than my functional plastic one!

red leafed acers
thermometer in the greenhouse

The garden is full of geraniums, and as I waited it became a slight obsession to capture the sun shining through their leaves. It seems even the spiders are fans.

geranium and spider

We’ve booked to go to RHS Hyde Hall on Friday, our first trip out in eleven weeks, so I’m hoping for plenty more new vistas and flowers to snap and share. I’m sure our visit will be quite unlike any of our other visits there, but isn’t so much of our daily lives like that now?

PoCoLo

Reflecting on my week #131

For a short work week, last week was a long week. But, isn’t that so often the case? As well as the bank holiday, I had some additional time off - and taking leave right now, is still weird, but then again, who wants to be left with plenty of leave to take in winter - not me! I knew that only working two days ahead of a week off would make for long days, but the lure of a week off would make it bearable. It’s also reassuring that MOH also encounters the same before taking leave too, but I think being at home exacerbates this, as you don’t see and regulate your own behaviour, and hours, against colleagues.

This week we were supposed to be in a holiday cottage in the Lake District, following my brother’s wedding in Yorkshire over the weekend, which you’ll not be surprised to know didn’t happen either, though we did still celebrate the day. We’ve also delayed our Lake District visit, and our plans are now for June 2021, but even as someone who likes a plan, we’re usually not advance bookers for holidays. So in some ways it feels odd, in others entirely normal and we were both certain that delaying, rather than cancelling completely, was the right thing to do.

That was a decision needed at the start of May, and at the start of June although some lockdown restrictions are changing, travelling from London to the Lakes for a holiday, still isn’t the most sensible thing to do.

It has been a week of deliveries, including online shopping and a vegetable delivery and some birthday presents and plants. I ordered some squash and courgette plants as I was too late to start my own from seed, and some lettuce as we’re currently ‘eating Salad for England’ and our local supermarket majors in bags of leaves, which we’re already tiring of.

salad and squash plugs
chillies to plant and grow

They were joined by a selection of chilli plug plants - the chef’s collection, some chillies of the week and a padron pepper plant from World of Chillies. I’ve not used them before, and wasn’t aware of them before either, but have been impressed by their speed, the selection and importantly their plants. I hadn’t had any luck germinating my own seeds, so these are another welcome addition, though I am fast running out of space in the greenhouse.

birthday cake

For the first time I think ever, MOH made me a birthday cake so he’s finally joined the lockdown baking gang, with a very good Victoria Sponge, which is quite often my cake of choice on our National Trust cafe visits. And well timed, as our cherry flapjacks are coming to an end.

There were birthday deliveries too, a bottle of rum with a note that rum is the new gin and an accompanying spice pack, which smells divine (and useful to test that it seems I’m Covid-19 free) and some cabbages.

The porcelain sort. Finally.

cabbage on the dresser

Usually when I’m pondering new crockery MOH is the voice of reason asking if we really need it, and where it would go. Not this time though, possibly because he’s a fan of the cabbage range, or because he’s spent too much time looking at cabbage crockery in shops which haven’t been fruitful (or cabbage-ful), or because there’d been some extensive cabbage research in advance, I’m not sure.

He definitely remembers the time in Portugal where I’d chosen which piece I wanted and our plan was to head back to buy it the next day to avoid carrying it around all day. Only to find the shop closed when we returned, and using Google translate discovered it wouldn’t reopen for the rest of our stay. So, so close to my first purchase!

But cabbages arrived, were admired and were quickly found homes on the dresser. You can see the cabbage plate, behind the domed cabbage cheeseboard (which is huge) in pride of place, and it’s fair to say the cabbage collection is well and truly started.

There is, it seems, a lot of cabbage porcelain out there. Both the plate and cheeseboard are by Bordallo Pinheiro and are from Arket and Divertimenti respectively. I also looked at a flat plate, from Liberty (and reasonably priced considering), a cabbage tureen (less reasonably priced!) and plenty more. Marks & Spencer have some cabbage salad bowls, two sizes both less than twenty quid, but weren’t quite what I was after, at least just yet.

We’ve also had a bit of a family week, with a fiftieth birthday (the second this month), a baby announcement - I’m going to be a great aunt, and an online ring ceremony to replace the postponed wedding. For the latter our usual video conferencing higgedly-piggledy setup was enhanced with some relatively healthy snacks, and a bottle of fizz.

ring ceremony & snacks

As only fitting for the occasion, we donned hats - a flat cap for MOH, and a straw sunhat for me - and washi taped roses from the garden to our t-shirts, as buttonholes. We wore shorts of course, as did the unofficial bride and groom - I suspect none of us will be wearing shorts for the ceremony proper next April!

There is one final delivery that can’t go unmentioned, and that’s the poppadums which arrived as part of our online shop.

poppadums - how many?

I’d ordered two packs, as we’d run out and they’d been particularly hard to source and were out of stock for our last online shop. Two packs, each containing ten packs of most likely at least ten poppadums arrived, so safe to say they’ll last us a while, and it could explain they’re unavailability!

Poppadum anyone?