Tuesday 30 November 2021

November, gone in a blink.

November highlights:

Bonfire night, with fireworks and parkin.

Picking dahlias from the garden right through November. The plants look awful as the leaves die off but they are still producing beautiful flowers.

My current book club read. I am enjoying it, but I am also desperate to finish it because it is almost December and it is time to pile up the Christmas themed books beside my bed


Whippets scampering across sandy beaches. 


Craft projects that keep you going when life is exhausting. I have recently bought both pattern and yarn for a pair of socks, a jumper and a scarf, and not managed to start any of them. Just the thought of reading an unfamiliar pattern and beginning something new seems too much of a stretch at the moment, surely a sign that my brain is tired. On those nights, I work on my patchwork quilt. 


Misty autumnal mornings, transforming the most boring, everyday view.


Mushrooms the size of my hand.



Watching the woods change over the course of the month, becoming less green and more brown with each week that goes by.



Finding family time when and where we can, often on walks, or sat around the kitchen table. Life is so busy right now, the walks in the woods - long or short - really keep us all sane.



Watching the trees creep from autumn towards winter.


I hope you are all well. We have just experienced an early cold snap in the UK with snow in some places. None here - we hardly ever get snow, we're too near the sea - but some bitterly cold winds and a real need to hunker down, light the fire and find extra blankets. It seemed to mark the transition from autumn to winter quite appropriately. I have resisted all Christmas-related activity (apart from shopping - I'm not leaving that until the last minute!) but am really ready for December and looking forward to it so much. December in a primary school is always fun, if exhausting, and you can't help but feel a bit festive. We have so much planned and booked including not one, but two trips to London, tickets for a pantomime at the theatre, and lots of plans to see family and friends. But more than anything I am looking forward to a rest. 

Saturday 13 November 2021

A Stitch a Day: October

October's section of my Stitch a Day sampler is complete and I think it was my favourite so far. All those warm oranges and browns, plus October does gives lots of inspiration for different things to sew. As ever I am trying to capture the personal, everyday parts of my life but also the more generally seasonal things, useful for those days when nothing happens apart from work and sleep. I always start at the outer edge and work towards the centre, and we have: 

  1. acorn
  2. carrot
  3. hedgehog (he lives in the garden under the decking)
  4. toadstool
  5. butternut squash
  6. pine cone
  7. sycamore seed
  8. bracken
  9. oak leaf
  10. squirrel
  11. sycamore leaf
  12. books (ibrary visit)
  13. burgers (a parents' evening well done treat)
  14. toasted marshmallow
  15. rake sweeping up leaves
  16. clementine
  17. ginger and white chocolate cookie
  18. pumpkin
  19. wood burning stove (first fire of the autumn)
  20. roasted squash soup
  21. billy button dried flower
  22. boots (my new pair of Doc Martens)
  23. pint of beer (London)
  24. carousel horse (again, London)
  25. pumpkin pie
  26. macarons (bought in Greenwich market)
  27. shopping bag
  28. tulip bulb
  29. bat (Halloween)
  30. branches (from our gardening and trimming bushes)
  31. popcorn (cinema trip to see the new James Bond film)







Sunday 7 November 2021

A Break


Two weeks ago this weekend, John and I spent a very nice weekend in London with our friends. Children and dog spent the weekend at the luxury five star accommodation that is my parents' house where they were all completely spoiled and had a wonderful time, while John and I enjoyed some child free time doing the kind of things the children don't always want to do, like visit art galleries.


We arrived Friday evening, straight from work and, after dropping off bags at the hotel and a quick change of clothes, met up with our friends for a drink then went a wonderful meal here. The food and service were excellent but the best thing was the atmosphere: a restaurant full of the sound of people talking, laughing clattering cutlery - that sound I missed so much during the lockdowns of people just enjoying being together.


On Saturday morning we caught a boat up the Thames from Westminster to Greenwich.


This was a lot of fun and I did think the kids would enjoy seeing London by boat. 


We spent a very happy couple of hours wandering around Greenwich village, looking at the market and buying food for lunch from the street food stalls. There wasn't time to see the observatory or look around the Cutty Sark boat but, again, I did think Bella and Angus (especially Angus!) would enjoy Greenwich and mentally book-marked it for a future trip to London.


We spent the rest of Saturday exploring central London, stopping now and then for coffee, just enjoying not having a particular destination or small children to entertain.


We spent Sunday morning in the Tate Modern. We probably saw about a tenth of the exhibits but it was so good and I did think the children would enjoy it too - lots of talking points with the different exhibits and installations. 

The views from the gallery windows are so good.


A few souvenirs did find their way home with me, including these fingerless gloves (wrist warmers?) which I bought at Greenwich Market. They are incredibly warm and I have been wearing them all week.


I also bought this excellent tea towel from the Tate Modern gift shop. I love the names of all the colours, so full of history.


It's hard to read the names from the photo but if you go here to this link for the poster, you can see it in more detail and with a much better quality photo too.


The rest of half term was spent battling germs and trying to impose some sort of order on the house and garden. We don't have a cleaner and I don't have much free time, so the most cursory housework gets done during term time. The essentials: changing beds, cleaning bathrooms, vacuuming, mopping the kitchen floor. So during the holidays I do like to try and have a good sort out and clean, the kind of cleaning where you move objects and furniture, rather than dusting around them....


Both John and I came down with a shocking head cold which left us feeling really quite wiped out and low on energy, but as always there were walks to be had with out little four legged terror. 



He only sits for treats. Don't go thinking he's well trained. 


But the woods really are glorious at the moment. Being around trees in the autumn (and the spring, for the bluebells and wild garlic) is one of my favourite things. 



With the help of my endlessly kind parents, we did a lot of work on cutting back bushes and shrubs in the back and front gardens over half term. I also planted up this flower bed (the old shed used to live here) with a fig that had outgrown its pot and a camellia for spring colour, plus a bay tree because I like to have one in the garden for cooking. I really wanted a border that would attract pollinators, so back in August I planted an echinacea and a couple of lavenders. Then, over half term, I moved some of the dahlias I grew from seed last year which have almost finished flowering. Our garden always looks its best in early summer so I really wanted plants which would do well in August and September. I have planted the dahlias quite deep, and plan to over-winter them in the ground, cutting them back to about 6 inches when the leaves start to blacken after the first frost and leaving the tubers there. I'm not sure what to do about the dahlias in pots, whether to leave them or take out the tubers and store them in the shed. But at the moment they are still flowering. In November!


There was baking, including this very good apple and ginger cake. It uses a lot of ginger, which is fine by me, but does need to be eaten up fairly quickly as the apples on the top of the cake go mouldy if left in the tin for more than a few days. 


I have started - tentatively - to think about Christmas althought that's all I've done so far, think about it. I recently bought a really wonderful book called Zero Waste: Christmas and have found it to be one of the most inspiring craft books I've seen for a really long time. It's brilliant. This advent train reminded me so much of the toilet roll nativity set the children and I made when they were really little (that seems like a different life!). I don't think I'll make this but there is a whole section with "scandi-inspired" crafts and decorations that did really speak to me....