All the best bits from the last two weeks of the school holidays:
:: Wearing these denim shorts lots, which I embroidered on holiday in Suffolk but forgot to show you once they were finished.
One pair of Tescos cut off denim shorts, bought in the sale in July, a set of new embroidery threads, and a few afternoons spent in the beautiful garden of our holiday let.
Wild valerian, fennel, lavender, sunflowers and daisies.
:: I've also been addressing my mending pile, patching these jeans for the twentieth time
....and mending a hole in one of my favourite long-sleeved T-shirts.
And darning holes in two pairs of handmade crochet bed socks, just in time for the cooler months to arrive.
These little projects have been in my craft basket for months, waiting for a moment when I had the head space to address them, so it felt good to get them off my mental to do list.
:: We've enjoyed many daily dog walks in a rapidly fading landscape. One of these walks was with a old friend from college who I haven't seen since Bella was a baby, but who messaged me to say she happened to be in the area visiting family and was I free for a walk? It was lovely to catch up with her. Coincidentally, I also met up with one old friend from NCT days in Leeds while on holiday in Suffolk and bumped into another in Walberswick. I hadn't seen either of them for quite a few years. Isn't it funny how that happens? I've had the pleasure of reconnecting with three friends this summer, and am off up to Leeds in the autumn to meet up with my friends from our baby days.
:: We had breakfast out to sweeten the depressing (and expensive) trip to buy new school uniform and school shoes.
:: We spent a very happy couple of days with my friend Abigail and her children.
Together, we visited Parham House in West Sussex, a beautiful place.
Angus's love of history and geography collided when he spotted this globe from the early 1800s.
The parts of the house that are open to the public are fascinating...
and filled with such treasures as needlework from 1635!
Isn't it wonderful that it is still intact?
But the real beauty of the house for me is in it's position in the heart of the South Downs, and the views from the house and grounds.
The maze is a favourite, although I did not manage to get to the middle. It was too hot.
Abigail persevered however and was triumphant.
The gardens, as you'd expect, are stunning. The gardeners used the pandemic as an opportunity to completely remove some borders, to get rid of long-standing bind weed problems, and re-plant them, so it is a work in progress in places but still very much worth a visit.
They sell bouquets of cut flowers in buckets by the ice cream kiosk, and I bought these for only £3.
:: We had friends from Yorkshire to stay, and had lots of fun planning a holiday with them next year.
We went for walks locally and spent a lot of time eating, drinking and laughing, as well as googling AirBnBs and car hire.
We got out the fire pit, made 'smores and drank cocktails. A weekend very well spent.
And that brings the summer holidays to a close. I don't want to feel that summer is over - the weather is still warm and humid here, and I hope to be outside lots more - but the light is changing and it will cool down soon. Inevitably, with the return to work, summer does start to feel like a distant memory. I have been into school most days last week getting my classroom ready for tomorrow, when the children join us. I'm feeling as ready as I can be.
Hi Gillian. Lovely late summer pictures. And what gorgeous dahlias! I just heard the news of the Queen's passing - very sad news indeed.
ReplyDeleteOur summer is ending with terrible fires in our area of N
ReplyDeleteCa.( near Foresthill,Ca) we live across the canyon and the smoke is horrendous. I'm hoping we have some relief. We did spend a lovely 4 days in Lake Tahoe before the smoke descended. Lovely pictures as always.
Lovely pictures and stories about the end of your summer holidays and how lovely to catch up with old friends again.
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