Moving house, plus 4 months

We’ve been in our new house now a little over four months. It’s gone quickly, but at the same time feels like we’ve been here longer than that. I’ve said before that we both immediately felt at home here, and that’s not changed. Phew.

One thing I’m aware of is that I’ve not shared much about why we moved, the move or our new house here yet. On reflection I think that’s for a couple, or many reasons. Mostly perhaps because moving house is a lot. It’s a lot both emotionally, physically and often financially too, let alone the actual logistics of packing up one home and establishing a new one. And that’s without throwing in a Carpal Tunnel Syndrome operation less than a month before moving date, like me!

There’s also knowing where to start, and avoiding appearing in your own brag-fest.

So while I’ve already shared monthly updates from our new garden, including our rather lovely wall, there’s been little else. After four months here though, and a blog name change thrown into the mix, things are settling down and I’ve some more headspace so I’m hoping to share more. This post is hopefully where I discover where to start, and I hope it and those that follow don’t fall into the brag-fest category, that’s definitely not my intention.

We’ve mostly emptied all the boxes - though some remain in the house, and there’s still more than a few in the garage. We’ve got a date in the diary to meet up with friends in London to mark our escape to the country, as there just wasn’t time to arrange anything before we left as everything moved at about 110mph in the last month or so in our old home!

My temporary laminated house name sign stuck up with (now faded) washi tape

We still have plenty to do here. We don’t yet have a doorbell, my temporary house sign is still up albeit now complete with faded washi tape, we’re waiting for some furniture to arrive and waiting to order some more. MOH is beginning work on sorting out the garage, and although we’ve painted the trellis around the heat pump, we don’t have any further plans yet for the garden though I am sure these will follow.

From old…

We moved from a 150 year old three storey Victorian converted former coach house in South East London. Our house was on a fairly busy road, the A207 and close to the Sun in the Sands roundabout which many Londoners hear regularly on the morning traffic bulletins. For where we were we had a large, narrow and well established garden which we loved that was a place where you really couldn’t hear the traffic. Our house was well positioned for local transport with a bus stop almost outside the door, in between two train stations taking us quickly into Kings Cross, London Bridge or Cannon Street, plus it was easy to access the DLR at Lewisham and Greenwich, and the tube network at North Greenwich after a short bus ride.

Our house served us well, it was our first home together and we lived there for almost twenty one years, making many improvements and redecorating along the way - MOH vowed he would never again put a new kitchen in, and still stands by that today. We loved our house even holding our wedding reception in the garden, but with us both giving up work we knew we wanted to move somewhere out of London, to probably somewhere quieter.

That wasn’t an overnight decision, but one that brewed for a while; brewing more quickly and ferociously during lockdown, as many things did. It was then though that we started to think about where, make plans and to seriously think if giving up work and moving home was what we wanted or just a pie in the sky idea.

It wasn’t.

The more we looked into it and talked about it, along with the many ‘what-ifs’ we knew where we were heading, we were less sure about how to make it happen but we put a longer term plan together, using holidays to check out potential areas to live, without really letting on to anyone just yet. We started to implement our plan in earnest when I handed my notice in at work in January 2022, agreeing a leaving date in early May. Definitely an eek moment, as I’d not resigned from my role before.

It didn’t all go exactly to plan, but what does - there’s probably another post in here somewhere about selling our house and what we learnt - but the short version is MOH carried on contracting for almost another year which gave us the flexibility that was helpful.

…to new (literally)

We didn’t downsize when we moved and that was very much part of our plan, enabling both of us to have a ‘day space’ each. The last thing we wanted was to give up work, spend all of our time together and literally be living on top of each other too, so having space - for me that’s a craft room - was essential. We also wanted more space around us, giving easy access to the countryside but to keep journeys to family relatively straightforward. We also wanted to locate ourselves within easy reach of a larger town, so in the end our searches were based around Newark and Grantham, with Newark being our preference.

Our new house is a new build barn, which is quite a mind twister. It’s built on a small development of nine dwellings on a former farm in a small village about five miles south west of Newark-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire, and so we are the ‘northest’ of our families! The development is a mix of new builds and renovations of existing barns on the farm, work on two is still taking place. The village is quiet, there’s no pub or shop (they are both in the next village), but we do have a post box, a church, plenty of history and a choice of three/four buses to Newark, Bingham and Nottingham.

We have four bedrooms, though one of those is my craft room, a double height kitchen diner, a utility room, downstairs loo (both of those are new things to us, as is our en-suite!), a plant room (of the gubbings sort, not the green variety), a pantry and two lounges, one of which is MOH’s domain, though in reality I use this room more than he’ll ever use my craft room.

The garden, as you’ve seen, is a good size and behind the house is grass right up to the Grade II former farm wall. Closer to the garage and bin area is our border, which was planted up as part of the build along with the turf, which I know not all new builds come with, and is where I currently get my gardening fix. We also have a border outside of our garden wall, so there’s plenty to keep us both busy.

That first night we sat in our new home surrounded by boxes after a long moving day - which involved us but not our movers, getting caught in stationary traffic on the A1 - it felt like home, and exactly the right thing to do. That day we also discovered we had good neighbours, as they took care of our movers providing them with a cup of tea and somewhere off the road to park, so our movers were happy too.

Getting settled

Even though we’d moved to a new build we knew there’d be things to do - some obvious, some not so.

The obvious included getting light fittings - bare bulbs aren’t my thing, and those paper shades are a big no for MOH - and window coverings to replace the temporary stick up Ikea blinds were high on our list, as was painting the trellis around the heat pump for me at least (we tackled that in the nice weather at the start of October in the end). Less obvious to start with but increasingly important was to kit out the bathrooms with loo roll holders, and changing the name of my blog!

We had family over the first two weekends we were here, and managed to have somewhere not too box heavy for them to sleep, so that was good. Since then we’ve emptied many more boxes, but a few ‘boxes of doom’ remain. These are the boxes of things you’re not quite sure you need, and if you do you’re not sure where they should go, and if you don’t need them then there’s the question of how to actually get rid of them! Some are now on our growing pile of things to eBay, along with things that we thought we’d need, or wanted to keep but are no longer important to us.

We’re waiting on shelving for the pantry and utility room, which in turn will free us of some more boxes and help get things straight(er) in the main downstairs area. I’m currently using the dresser, which we had in our conservatory in London, as a food cupboard so many of the things that usually live there are displaced. Thankfully it’s a large dresser though!

We’ve started to get the garage straight but before we can do too much the floor needs sealing and we want to paint the breeze block walls. I’ve further plans here but we need to get this done before we can sort out some shelving, which in turn will help empty those boxes.

Back indoors we have to sort through lots of pictures and bizarrely rugs. Only a few pictures from our old house have made it onto the walls here so far and I’m still not sure everything that once was on a wall will find a space in our new house. As for the rugs, we came from a house with wooden floors with only one room carpeted. Here only one room doesn’t have carpet, and rugs on carpet is definitely not going to happen.

I’ve got my eye on a console table or two, but after some not very successful online shopping for units for the dressing area, I’m being a little more cautious and want to see the quality for myself before I commit. We’ve a new TV unit on order which we’re hopeful will be here before Christmas, and if all goes well will house a new TV to replace our existing TV which didn’t enjoy the move as much as we have. It’s still watchable in the evenings, which luckily is when we mainly watch it, but sport and any daytime viewings are a hard watch on it, sadly.

So that’s where we’re at so far, and I think a good summary and introduction to our Bosworth Life. I plan to start to share more about our new house and how we’re making it our home, and maybe I’ll share more about what we learnt selling our last house, and maybe, just maybe at some point we’ll even get a door bell, or some pictures on the walls!

Post Comment Love 17 - 19 November

Hello there, and welcome back to this week’s #PoCoLo - a friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any blog post published in the last week. Please don’t link up posts which are older as they will be removed from the linky. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked, comment and share some of that love. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here this week we’re pleased you’ve joined us.

It’s been a quieter week over here, but one with contrasting weather. We’ve had brilliant blue skies one day, to misty foggy mornings the next. And then it was a bit windy again! There’s most definitely a feeling that winter is closing in, but there’s also sunny spells which was good news for me as it gave me the opportunity to get out into my makeshift planting area to get some bulbs into pots, finally!

While I haven’t started my Christmas shopping yet - I think perhaps I should - I have started to think about festive plans, including making some cards. And my photo this week confirms that once again my cards will be tree-focussed, nothing new there then!

Have a good week.

Scissors, Christmas tree templates and a coaster on a white circular table

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Eight colourful cards for autumn

My card deliveries seem to come around more quickly, but that’s ok as I’m still enjoying receiving them - and using them. And even more so now that we don’t have a shop around the corner it’s handy to have a selection of cards to choose from. The Card Boys also do a Christmas selection, but once again I’ve decided against that hoping that I will make most of ours, and supplement those that I don’t with charity cards.

Once again though for my homemade cards I’ve gone for Christmas trees - it’s definitely a theme of mine, which also seems to have slipped into the charity cards I’ve bought unintentionally. It’s not something I’m sad about though!

As before the eight cards in the quarterly subscription box are all blank inside, and usually only a couple of the cards in each box have determined use, in this box two are for birthdays, but in previous boxes there has also been a thank you card.

ARTIST: CLAIRE PAUL

This month I’ve photographed them on a colourful, tropical background which works well for many of the cards which also have vibrant colours, but also works with the more muted colours in the mountain and valley scene above.

ARTIST: LAURA BARNES

The three cheeky monkey cards is one of my favourites in this box and may just have influenced the background - if you look in the top left corner you can just spot part of another monkey! I’m not sure if this was an intentional plan of mine or not.

A simple white figure wearing a pink swimming costume on a blue background with white squiggly waves

ARTIST: MARTHA DUNCAN

I like the simplicity of this swimmer shot, and the squiggly ripples that they’re making. It has a calm about it and I can see this card having many uses. The asterisks with faces card below is cheery and it’s clear what its intended purpose is from a single glance.

multi-coloured asterisks with faces around the colourful text 'happy birthday!'

ARTIST: ABBIE INGLEBY

ARTIST: MARTHA DUNCAN

The cards in these boxes often feature flora and fauna, and these two are no different but their approach in entirely different. Above you have the punchy oranges design, and below a more delicate line drawing of flowers.

ARTIST: REBECCA DIGGLE

Cheery blue, orange and pink flowers on stems with leaves, with the happy birthday banner across them

ARTIST: MELISSA DONNE

The final two cards are by the same artist, and you can see that they’re related both with (and I mean this is a good way) splodgy flowers, which have an almost folklore feel to them.

A pink and white dove with a floral pattern carrying an olive branch on a pale blue background

ARTIST: MELISSA DONNE

My other favourite in this box is the dove card above, it just has a special feel about it and I think could be used for many occasions and correspondence. It also symbolises peace, which I’m sure we all agree the world could do with a lot more of right now.