Reflecting on my week #68

Brrrr. I’ve pretty much hibernated this weekend just gone and it’s been lovely, work has been pretty full on again and it was nice to just potter about for a bit on Saturday. MOH's work is also full on and he was back at work on Saturday, which is never good, but that said it meant my pottering was pretty much uninterrupted.

By the time he arrived home I was already preparing dinner, a slow cooked lamb shank with cannellini beans. It’s funny how things turn out, all week I’d been saying I’d a few tins of cannellini beans and what could we have. Then I spied lamb shanks in the butchers, after popping in for a haggis for Friday evening, and so one of our favourite dinners was on the menu. I planned to put them in the freezer, but, those cannellini beans were nagging at me…

For a change MOH wasn’t out on his bike Sunday, although there was some time spent cleaning it, so just as it sleeted here we set out to the farmers market in Blackheath village. Our aim was to leave with cakes and it was mission well accomplished with a giant size millionaire shortbread and equally large bakewell slice. In the shock of it all, there were no photos, but they were both very nice.

While there some goats cheese, sourdough, squash and apples also made their way into our shopping bag, and as I’m sure Nigel Slater would agree, they had the making of some very nice meals. In fact the goats cheese and sourdough provided an impromptu lunch, and the squash went very well with a butter bean curry. Although I’ll apologise to anyone who knows MOH in real life, as not only has there been two lots of beans, there’s been hummus and grains in the past week for lunches. I think our fibre consumption must be way above the average, but of course I’m way too lazy to work it out for real.

In other news I’m on the seventh packet (of twelve) of that vitamin D boost, so I’m definitely on the home straight. Do I have more energy? I guess so, I’m definitely less exhausted, although as you’ll know I do like to pack it all in. My hips are generally aching less, so that’s good too, so I’m hopefully that by the time my next blood test comes around my body will have remembered how to hang onto its vitamin D. I’ve also made some diet changes in the past few weeks, not just the pulses, there’s been more nuts (to eat, although I’ve encountered a fair few too) and the kefir yogurt, which I actually quite like, and will keep on with.

Having finally completed my tax return - yay! - my other task for the weekend was to complete one of the three photo books I’d promised myself I would, to bring my year books up to date. That was organised me, but organised me failed to realise that I still have unedited photos from 2016, 2017 and 2018 - oops.

I had fewest photos to edit from 2017, or so I thought - I discovered a batch of unedited photos outside of iPhoto, which I’d clearly moved out at one point to free up space on my hard drive (please tell me it’s not just me that is constantly striving to find space on my laptop).

I’d also forgotten that 2017 was quite a big year for us, and that meant many more photos than usual. As well as our big birthdays and getting our garden ready for our big party, there was also a week in Dorset with MOH’s family, a week in Suffolk and a trip to Porto and the Douro Valley and much more besides. I almost made the deadline for completing my creation, but I realised that as I was halfway through the year with less than ten pages left, it was either going to need many more pages or some refinement. Actually I think the answer is a bit of both - it was a big year after all - and so I accepted defeat and bought an extension to my credit, and so my quest - and the race against the new deadline - to capture our 2017 in our year book continues.

But along the way I’ve rediscovered some great pictures, and some memories too. Unusually this has been a photo-free post up until now, but as I’ve been reliving 2017, here’s some of the photos I’ve uncovered this weekend, which may or may not have appeared on the blog before:

PORT IN THE DOURO VALLEY

PORT IN THE DOURO VALLEY

SUN AND A VIEW

SUN AND A VIEW

A SQUASH THAT DOESN’T LOOK AS IF IT DESERVES TO BE THIS BIG

A SQUASH THAT DOESN’T LOOK AS IF IT DESERVES TO BE THIS BIG

THERE HAD TO BE SOME TILES, WHICH ARE EVERYWHERE

THERE HAD TO BE SOME TILES, WHICH ARE EVERYWHERE

LOOK OUT FOR THESE IN A FUTURE LOO SERIES

LOOK OUT FOR THESE IN A FUTURE LOO SERIES

…AND A GLASS OF PORT TOO

…AND A GLASS OF PORT TOO

A REMINDER OF OUR GABION BASKETS?

A REMINDER OF OUR GABION BASKETS?

AND FINALLY DECREPIT, BEAUTIFUL AND FULL OF CHARACTER!

AND FINALLY DECREPIT, BEAUTIFUL AND FULL OF CHARACTER!

That last caption is quite apt and made me smile when I realised its significance. It feels a bit like me at the moment, somewhere along the way of not doing anything very active at all I’ve tweaked my lower back. Having remembered it’s entirely possible to get a massage in Greenwich in my lunch hour, guess what I’m up to tomorrow?!

Post Comment Love 25 - 27 January

Hello there and welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo a friendly linky where you can link any post published in the last week.  If you were here last week, it was great to see you - and an apology, I will catch up with myself -and if you’re new here this week, then you’re very welcome.  Both Morgan and I know you’ll find some great posts to read, and encourage you to pop over to some of the posts linked and take the time to leave a comment or two so that everyone benefits from some extra love.

The big news this week is that I’ve finally stopped procrastinating and started my tax return! Not one to go half measures, it’s completed and submitted too, but it’s always a worry that you’ve done it right, isn’t it? I’ve learnt lately that I’m becoming much more of a last minute kind of girl than I ever have been before. While part of me respects the ability to be so chilled and relaxed about deadlines, the planning part of me (which is strong) is in utter dismay. I’m not sure the rushing and being just in time is my preferred modus operandi, but at the moment it seems to be working. I’ve a feeling that it’s a necessary because I’m still trying to do as much of everything as I can, and I can’t see that changing, as I can’t obviously see what I should stop. I’m sure I’ll figure it out at some point…

This week my focus has been editing photos from 2016. Yes, quite random I know but in a spate of efficiency I decided to create some more photo year books, and the deadline for the first voucher is approaching - well hello, last minuteness again!

It’s meant I’ve rediscovered some gems though. And it’s prompted some happy memories from our cycling trip around the Loire. Which I’m struggling to believe was so long ago.

So it was only natural that this week’s photo is one of those. This one’s from the gardens at Villandry, which was amazing - I’m sure it won’t be long before I’m sharing more of the photos here. I can’t believe I haven’t shared them yet.

SYMMETRY AT VILLANDRY

SYMMETRY AT VILLANDRY

Blogger Showcase: April Alyce

April Alyce is a relatively new blogger and already she’s loving it, having fallen in love with writing and like many of us has ideas swirling around her head most of the time. And as a native New Yorker, how can she be anything other than a coffee and cake kind of girl?

You can find out more about April Alyce on Morgan’s blog this week, but before you go pop over and say hello to April Alyce on her social channels: Instagram - Pinterest - Twitter.

Sculptures that sum up January for me

These sculptures made me smile when I saw them at RHS Rosemoor in the autumn, but they also have a touch of January about them, so let’s have a light-hearted look at how they sum up January for me.

This one has clearly reached at least the 44th of the month, and realises that there’s still at least half the month left…

Sculptures in the gardens at RHS Rosemoor

And there’s a mascara mishap or two happening. And it still amuses me how the plant is growing around the sculpture, adding a modesty covering that couldn’t have been better placed.

Further along our jaunt around the garden this small sculpture caught my eye. I’ve said before I’d happily hibernate in January, though with slightly more clothes on that this statue, and hopefully without the ornithological audience.

A sculpture relaxing in RHS Rosemoor

Clearly time has moved on for the sculpture below, and it’s obviously the 91st of January, which calls for a celebration…

Dancing for joy or despair who knows

….The only thing though about the end of January, is the start of February - and well, that’s not usually exactly full of Spring.

Roll on March, I say - and when January gets to me (as it often does) then I’ll remember to dig out this post, as it’d have to be pretty bad for these not to make me smile.

PoCoLo