Sunday, 22 March 2026

Sunday, 22-03-26

Good morning, everyone.  How are you all this morning?  We had quite a frost this morning but the forecast is for dry weather so that's good.

The SW Buddies walk - well, gentle stroll anyway - yesterday was really good.  The sun shone, the daffodils were lovely and the swans are nesting on the little island again.  I wish I had taken my camera with me.

Once home, it was a chilled day, very restful.  Lindsey's bread is just warming after a cold ferment in the fridge overnight so I will get that finished as and when. 
And this morning the second OddBox was left on the doorstep.  I don't find that they are a saving in money but the quality seems very good indeed and it does provide an outlet for things that otherwise are unwanted.  For example, today's box had loads of small apples, the kind you get in bags for children's lunchboxes.  That size really suits me but I can see how they would be too small for most people.
I focused more of fruit this box - next time I will go more for veg.

I'm hoping to get a little bit of gardening done today - those weeds are fighting back again in the warmer, brighter weather.  Apart from that, it will be a nice, chilled day again.  After a good night's sleep, that feels just perfect.  

Happy Sunday, all.  Have a great day and stay safe and well.  xx

Saturday, 21 March 2026

Saturday, 21-03-26

Morning, all.  Welcome to Saturday!  BBC weather tells me it is going to be another really lovely day; isn't that nice?

Yesterday was one of those days when everything went according to plan - or, rather, to my Little List.  No rush, no hassle, everything got done and the food was really nice.  I've posted these on t'other blog so apologies if you see them twice.

Nibbly stuff for starters.  The hummus was a cookidoo recipe for Thermione which I adapted only slightly and the crispbread was just my own bread, thin sliced and dried in the air fryer.  
Shocking light, heavily Paint Shopped to lighten but you get the idea.  The lasagne was great and at one point I feared there would be no leftovers but there's just enough go feed me today.

It was midnight before I got to bed and I woke at five as usual but at least I slept very soundly and that is a relief.  :-)

Today, apart from unloading the dishwasher and doing a little bit more kitchen tidying, the house is clean and tidy, the meals are all prepped and I have a walk with friends scheduled for mid morning.

I've fed Bubbles for Lindsey's loaves this week so I can get that started too - as it gets warmer, the dough is more responsive and the whole process quicker.

It's going to be a nice, restful day!  Enjoy the sunshine and have a great day, everyone.  xx


Friday, 20 March 2026

Friday, 20-03-26

Good morning, everyone!  Thank you so much for your very kind and understanding comments yesterday.  I feel I've made a mountain out of a molehill really but it's not something that happens all that often (thankfully).  I think I was more shaken than I realised - I had another rough night last night but, apart from a slight hip twinge (foot on pedal???), that's the worst of it now.  I will be able to have a rest this afternoon, maybe out in the garden if the sun shines.  Wouldn't that be nice?

Yesterday was a pottering sort of day really.  In the afternoon I went round to Beth's with her loaves and we had a chat.  She came home later than me because she went to her friends - she set out just after she got my message saying I was home.
Poor Beth - by then the traffic had really built up as the M25 was still closed.  She usually gets off the M11 at Bishop's Stortford as she, unlike me, is not a wuss with complicated roundabout systems but the traffic was backing up along the M11 so she decided to go on to Harlow too.  It was a lot worse by then than it was for me so she had a very slow last part of the journey too but all's well that ends well.

(Just to add, the Bishop's Stortford junction used to be so easy and Stansted such a happy, friendly little airport until 'They' decided to make it London's third airport - we always went that way to see our friends in Mildenhall and on to Elveden Center Parcs when my two were young)

On to today!
I've pulled out of SW as I'm not feeling great but as long as I take things gently, I will be fine.  Dave and Anna are coming round this evening so I have a menu (that sounds posher than it really is) and a Little List.

I'm doing:
Hummus, olives, sourdough crispbreads and carrot dippers
Lasagne, salad, coleslaw and garlic bread
Grapes and pineapple with coffee.
See - not posh.  I have made the hummus, the crispbreads, the red sauce and pasta for the lasagne, some mini rolls for the garlic bread and the rest takes no time at all
Dave and Anna bring the drinks.

So - my little list is . . .
Sort out kitchen
Chill
Clean and dust downstairs (won't take long)
Chill
Ironing - there's not much and I can always hide it in the cupboard if I want!!!
Chill
Make cheese sauce (good old Thermione) and construct lasagne, make salads, get food onto serving plates, etc, set table . . .
And chill.

See - easy peasy!

Happy Friday, everyone.  xx

Thursday, 19 March 2026

Wednesday and Thursday, 18/19-03-26 Long post alert!!

Morning, everyone!  Yesterday was quite eventful in a smallish-scale way but let's do Tuesday first.

Tuesday morning, Beth and I had a stroll around the main road through Thrapston and in the afternoon I strolled around Islip while Beth visited a friend.
A bit of info first:
Thrapston

The two villages are right next to each other, joined by a bridge across the Nene which separates the two.  There's a pub at either side of the bridge and we were staying in the Islip end one, the Woolpack Inn.
I took a few photos.


A pretty but ordinary (from the front) looking cottage on the Islip side . . .  

. . . but from the bridge - wow.
What a home - with a pool and mooring, complete with boats.  Two of them!

Such a lovely view.
 
St James's, Thrapston.  A pretty looking church but there seemed to be something on so we didn't go in.


The town sign.

And, to the side of a lovely little library, a mosaic - not in the best nick but very colourful.

On to Islip.

A horse . . .



. . . another church, St Nicholas' . . . 
(inside)

. . . and plenty of very attractive old houses.



On to yesterday, Wednesday.    Not the best day I have ever had.

After packing and loading the car and having breakfast, I waved goodbye to Beth who was spending the morning with a friend (who she saw Tuesday afternoon and with whom we both had dinner).
I started up the car: bells jingled and lights flashed.  Check your tyre pressure, they ordered, and reset the whotsit thingybobbydoo!
I had meant to check tyre pressure before driving on Monday but forgot so I got out my pressure gauge thing and - the lever that fastened the thingy to the tyre broke off.  Drat.
Fortunately, I have another one, not so swish but it does the job fine, so used that, found the tyres were perfectly OK, washed my hands and set off.
To be fair, apart from me feeling very tense and stressed (which is typical for me), the journey was fine and the Harlow junction was very, very much more manageable than the Stansted/Bishops Stortford one.

I was on the A414, heading happily for home, slowed and then stopped at a roundabout - and got hit by a car pulling a trolley with another car on it.
Ho hum!
(I may possibly have said something quite a bit ruder than ho hum)
Went round the roundabout and pulled in and a hugely embarrassed and apologetic young man got out.  He thought I would go, not stop (there was a car with right of way entering the roundabout, by the way), and by the time he clocked that I had stopped, with his towing load he couldn't brake in time.  100% his fault.

Now is the point at which I need to say that it really was just a 'gentle' bump, not a crash, even if it sounded pretty loud at the time.  I didn't even stall my car.  I was pretty shaken up and so was he but it was OK.  I have a light cover that needs replacing and he has a few scratches on his front but it could have been so, so much worse, the damage being more related to wear and tear on my nerves (and his).
We exchanged details, of course, although it's far from being something that will involve insurances, and made sure we were both OK.  I actually got a text from him later in the evening, checking that I was OK and apologising again. I think he was far more upset than I was.

Anyway, after that bit of unwanted excitement, I set off again and promptly hit (not literally) a long, long queue of traffic.
The 414 is narrow, just one lane each way and, usually, not that busy.  However, as luck would have it, there had been some sort of mishap on the M25, the motorway was closed for a while, and everything was diverting along the A414 instead.    I bet those workmen digging in the road wondered what was going on!  In fact, my bumper basher should have been on the M25, poor chap!
So that very last little bit that should have taken about fifteen minutes or so, actually took over an hour.

Not a journey I will remember with all that much pleasure really.

And just to cap it all, Matt arrived to deal with the dripping tap and found that he had been sent the wrong part!  I had to laugh - it was either laugh or cry by that point.

On the plus side, I got two loads of washing and a baking of bread done as a way of settling myself down.  And I had a message from Diane saying that the One Traveller Christmas trips were now online and she's booked the Christmas in London one that we said we'd like to go on.  I will book mine today!

I've not slept all that well so today is going to be 100% relaxation and general pottering.  I ordered a replacement tyre pressure machine which should come today and I want to make the component parts of a lasagne as Dave and Anna are coming to dinner tomorrow.

Phew . . .

Have a lovely Thursday, everyone!  Take care and enjoy the sunshine if you're getting it.  xx

Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Tuesday, 17-03-26

Morning, everyone.  So here I am in the village of Islip, staying at the Woolpack Inn for a couple of nights.

The journey was quite stressful, mostly because I really don't like driving among huge lorries, etc.  I have to admit, most of the stress was self inflicted and next time I would know what to expect in terms of roads, junctions, etc.    There was a road closure but it was home end and I know exactly how to get round it so no worries and, going home, Beth said the Harlow junction was so much easier than the Stansted one so I'll go further down to Harlow on the way home.  I do like a simple left turn!

Anyway, this is a lovely place to stay.

This is part of the accommodation.  The rooms are rows of little own-front-door things (mine is the middle door in the photo), converted from stables, I believe, and recently done up so they are warm, comfortable but not huge. 


 The bed is though; one of those beds that can be separated to make two singles.

The shower/toilet room and also very nice.  Clean, neat, not posh but good quality and with plenty of good hot water.  I had a lovely shower this morning!

I arrived, Beth was already here and we had a good chat over a hot drink before separating to chill, unpack, etc.

I make no apology for this.  It was absolutely delicious!

Both Beth and I 'know' someone who lives round here which whom we have both virtually cheated (later edit - chatted, not cheated.  Ooops!!!) for a long time.  She was an OU student when I was and we had things in common.

Anyway, she came over from her home and we had dinner together and it was the loveliest time.  We laughed, talked, caught up, shared stuff and - well, it was one of the nicest evenings I have had in a very long while.

One of the horses in the field at the back saying 'good morning'.

After a lovely night's sleep, I woke early and the sun is shining.

No apologies for breakfast either - it was so good!

A really pleasant dining room . . .
. . . and fresh flowers on every table.

Today, Beth and I want to have a wander over the bridge and into Islip/Thrapston before we part company, she to go to her friends while I drive down to Rushden Lakes, a retail shopping park.
Later on, she will be back to collect me and go back to her friends for an evening take away.

And then, tomorrow, it is home again.  I probably won't post tomorrow morning but might post later, depending on how the journey went.  :-)  As Beth said, going home always seems easier - and she is right, it does.

Have a lovely Tuesday, everyone.  Take care and see you again soon.  xx






Monday, 16 March 2026

Monday, 16-03-26

Morning.  Welcome to the second half of March.  Sorry this is a bit late - I was expecting a visit from the water board and they/he arrived nice and early.  He's gone now and life resumes.

I've heard about the council tax and car insurance for this coming year.  The council text hasn't gone up that much but the car insurance - ouch!  I remind myself that it actually went down last year and while the car is older, so am I!  Ho hum, I'm very grateful that I can absorb this with minimal pain.

It was lovely and sunny yesterday morning but but later afternoon it was pouring again.  Ho hum!  It's Sunny again this morning and a bit cold too but what's a jumper for, eh?  I'm wearing the multicoloured jumper I was making over a polo neck and it's nice and cosy.

I'm also packed and ready for my little jolly with Beth and most disinclined to start any housework so I'm just going to take things nice and easy before I set off.

I think my Stratford trip will have to wait - I might get it done later or tomorrow and I will definitely have photos of where I'm staying.

Have a lovely day, everyone, and I do hope the sun is shining for you too.   Bye.  xx


Sunday, 15 March 2026

Sunday, 15-03-26

 Hi, everyone!  What a gloriously sunny morning here in mid-Essex.  We've had a frost though - isn't it just typical that as the new growth gets going, we have one of the few frosts of the last few months?

It was frosty yesterday too.  I was so glad I checked early because the car needed scraping and I needed to be at the pick up to catch the coach.
It was a really lovely time at Stratford-upon-Avon but I will write about that separately.  Quite a long time in the coach - three hours each way with a 'comfort' stop off.  It was nice to stretch my legs and back!

Now it is Sunday.  I have Beth and Alex's bread rising nicely and a mushroom soup prepping in my second Thermione bowl (the dough is in the first).
While I'm thinking of it, Vorwerk doesn't make a specific dough hook (yet, anyway) but there is one that is compatible and I'm thinking of getting it.  There is a knead function and it works fine for yeasted bread which is a more robust dough, but it would be good to have one that folds rather than cutting for my sourdough.  It's not very expensive so  . . . yes.

Today I need to pack for tomorrow - or start packing anyway.  It won't take long, it is only for two nights.  I've worked out my route.  It is just off the A14 so very straightforward from here, the worst bit being getting on the M11 from the A120 - it's the Stansted roundabout and it is fiendish!  I've got a work around though!
After that it is just three roads.  Even I would find it difficult to get lost!

Well, the soup is smelling - er - soupy so I will leave you with just one photos from yesterday.  More to follow.
Bye xxx



Saturday, 14 March 2026

Saturday, 14-03-26

Hello again, everyone.  Welcome to the weekend and, I hope, slightly better weather.  It's forecast to be sunny but not too warm today which sounds perfect for a trip out.

Yesterday was a low-key busy day:  pretty much everything got done and the loaves worked out fine this time.  I took them round to Lindsey's still warm and the car smelled amazing.  I decided I didn't need to get anything from Morrisons after looking around at home - one doesn't NEED sucky sweets, after all.

Slimming World was fun.  It was a taster session and I took some fresh pineapple.  Morning tasters are harder than evening ones - no-one really fancies meatballs, say, or a casserole at half past nine.  There was a lot of fresh fruit so that was perfect.

I'm up bright and early today having dusted off the alarm.  I hate the sound it makes but it is perfect for a deffie like me;  it's very penetrating and there's a shake-awake pad linked that goes under my pillow.  I defy anyone not to wake with all that going on.

The bags are ready, dinner this evening is out of the freezer, I have fruit to eat on the coach - all ready, in fact.  I have my camera and a spare battery, because last week I needed one and didn't have one with me.
Fingers crossed for a nice day ahead.

See you tomorrow!  xx

Friday, 13 March 2026

Friday, 13-03-26

Hello, everyone.  
I reckon Spring came, took  look round, didn't like what she saw and decided to leave again.  It was dull and so blowy yesterday and it felt colder than it probably was.  Mind you, it dried a load on the line very well so can't complain really!

Since I changed to mostly decaf coffee, I'm sleeping extremely well and waking a bit later (thank goodness).  I need to adapt my morning routines a bit as I'm finding I'm often rushed.  I guess it is a nice problem to have.

There's a few things on the list today
Slimming World
A few things to buy for the coach tomorrow
Get the coach bag ready.
Some tidying
Some meal planning (Alex is not over today so I can use some of that time)
Finish the bread
More tidying . . . 

Nothing difficult, it just all needs to be done.

Do you make a list when you have a lot of 'little' things on?

Happy Friday, all.  See you tomorrow for a short one before I leave to catch the coach for Stratford-upon-Avon.  xx

Thursday, 12 March 2026

Thursday, 12-03-26

Afternoon, everyone.  Apologies for the lateness - I overslept and had to rush.  There's not a lot to say anyway.
I did go to P T and Lindsey put me through plenty of gentle stretching stuff which really helped.  No aches or twinges today.

Apart from that, it's just another normal day - chat with Chris, no shopping (no need after earlier in the week) and an online chat this evening.

Hopefully, there will be a bit more to wrote about tomorrow.  In the meanwhile, take care and stay cosy and warm.  xx

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Wednesday, 11-03-26

Morning, all!  We have sunshine.  So lovely and cheering.

Thanks to everyone for being so understanding about my somewhat unnecessary stock up on Monday - these price rises are hitting us hard, some more than others, and it's a big cause of the current feelings of unrest everywhere. I think.  Everyone is worried.
Having said that, I got an email from my electricity provider saying the price cap is dropping.  Such a shame it goes up in the colder months and down in the brighter, warmer months when usage is less anyway - imagine slightly cynical tone of voice here!
Still - every little helps!

Chris and I got our walk to Groove and back again and now I look forward to our chat on Thursday.  Apart from that, it was just another day.
No, it wasn't - that sourdough that looked so promising decided to just die -  Lindsey's loaf dough, not Bubbles.  I gave it over 24 hours for it's last prove and zilch.  So I baked it anyway and it was heavy and stodgy, like bread pudding.  For once, I had to chuck them  and I rarely do that!

That's life!

Today is another stay at home until personal training and, to be honest, that's in doubt as my back is playing me up at the moment.  I'll see how the day goes.

Have a lovely day, take care, enjoy the sunshine if you have it and I'll see you tomorrow.  xx

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Tuesday, 10-03-26

Good morning, everyone.  How are you all.  It's still dull out here although we did have a very small amount of hazy sunshine and I even put some washing out - too optimistic really but one has to try!

I hadn't been able make Lindsey's loaf over the weekend.  I was out all day Saturday and on Sunday Bubbles the starter was a bit sluggish and needed a bit of TLC.
So yesterday late afternoon, I started, timing it so I could leave it on its cold ferment overnight.  It worked well and now I have a lively dough shaped and in tins for the proofing.  I might be able to bake before Groove or I may have to pop it in the fridge and finish it afterwards.  We will see.  But the slightly warmer weather is having a noticeably positive effect on the dough and, as this current one is more white than wholemeal, there might be some bigger bubbles.  We will see.

Prices are rising alarmingly - have you seen petrol recently? - so I decided to top up and I think I might be doing that for the near future.  Does that make me good, bad or sensible, I wonder?
Then I went to Morrisons and did a bit of stocking up there too.  I needed some meat - chicken and mince - and they had some sides of salmon not too expensive (although £2 more than the last time they had some) and I got some shelf stable stuff too.

What with all that, circuits and general housework, I was tired by the evening!  

I've noticed my joints are getting very 'clicky' recently.  I've always had clicky ankles but it's all a lot more noticeable and more widespread.  I looked it up and, cutting a long story short, I've started tasking some collagen.  I've never been much for taking supplements but this seems a sensible way to go and it will be easy to judge if it is helping much.  Do any of you take collagen - what's your experience.  Has it helped.

I've also cut out caffeine to a considerable degree, even changing my Wonky Pods subscription to decaf.  That could be why I have slept so much better recently, couldn't it?

On to today.  Tuesday is Groove-day and I am hoping we can walk there and back.  I need to blow the cobwebs away.  Once home there might be bread to bake and there's certainly washing to do, ironing and various other chores.  The bathroom needs a good old sort out too.   There's plenty to do today!

Have a really good day, everyone.  Stay warm and as relaxed and chilled as possible!  xx



Monday, 9 March 2026

A trip to Cambridge.

On Saturday, March 7th, I went on a Broomfield Coach trip to Cambridge.  I've been there before but stayed on the outskirts as I was on a willow weaving course over two day and before then not for decades.  It's really not that far away, less than an hour in the car, but even so . . . I just haven't.  SO I was really looking forward to this trip.

Rather than bombard you with loads of history stuff, I will post links that you can follow up, if you're interested.

It wasn't the nicest day - very dull and a bit chilly, but it didn't rain so no complaints and it certainly didn't deter the visitors - us and thousands of others!
The bus dropped us off behind The Backs - a really pretty part of several universities and we should have been able to cut through onto King's Parade but it was blocked in preparation for the Cambridge Half Marathon on Sunday.
I'm quite pleased because I might have missed this if I'd cut through (I don't know, it's possible).

The very famous and attractive Mathematical Bridge, supposedly designed by Sir Isaac Newton (it wasn't, that is a myth)

Even on a dull day, it was very attractive.

I had booked a ticket to go into Kings for twelve o'clock so first I stopped off here:

A very attractive little cafe where I intended to have a coffee but also fell for some avocado on toast which was so delicious.






Once satisfied and with a visit to the loo before leaving, I wandered up and down, finding things to tick off my list.

Here's the Corpus Clock, a modern and intriguing timepiece that one could just walk past without really noticing.
Here's a link to a YouTube video about it.

I walked past Great St Mary's on the way to look round the market.  You can climb the stairs to the top for some wonderful views but I didn't.  Maybe it's on the list for next time.  
https://www.cam.ac.uk/public-engagement/news/spotlight-on-great-st-marys-church

The market was . . . OK.  Not as proper-market as the St Albans one was, more touristy, I think, with loads of street food stalls which all looked and smelled pretty delicious!

This was right in the centre and the stall to the back-left was where I later bought a Cypriot chicken and lamb wrap, which I thoroughly enjoyed while sitting on one of the fountain steps.

The market goes right back to the Middle Ages and here's a YouTube video about it.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OF4mAs2l2U

One thing I really loved was how you can glance down a side alley and go from modern to historical in twenty paces!
Just look at those chimneys!

When it was time, I walked into the King's College grounds.  I took so many photos but, fear not, I will pick and choose carefully.



The chapel is a reverse Tardis - it seems so much bigger on the outside but when you walk in, apart from the height which is most impressive, it feels smaller and almost intimate.
A poor photo of the absolutely amazing fan vaulted ceiling.


Evidence of the Tudor dynasty is everywhere you look.  Tudor roses, the Beaufort portcullis (Henry VII's mother was Margaret Beaufort, the don't-know-how-many-great granddaughter of John of Gaunt and his mistress, then wife, Katherine Swynford, one of my favourite ladies of history) and coats of arms galore!
R A - Regina Anna - or Anne Boleyn, carved during the brief time she was queen and lucky to still be there.  Most were defaced/removed shortly after her death.  A really good bit of dating evidence!

There's also just one memory of Kathryn Howard's brief reign too - in a stained glass window, I believe but I couldn't see it.
Where the world famous choir sits - one side of it anyway!
There's a number of side chapels, all of which are interesting.  This particular one memorialises those from the College that dies in both World Wars - in the photo is the wall for WW1.

From the looks on people's faces, we were all finding it a very sombre place as we teeter on the brink of a third world war . . .
Another bit of Anne Boleyn.  H A - Henry Anne
View from the bridge over a wild flower meadow towards the chapel.  
No, I didn't!

I loved this little market - lots of hand crafted stuff, not cheap but not shockingly costly either.  This was where I bought some nice earrings and a little coffee mug.
So many lovely old dwellings.
And my final destination, the Round Church.  Absolutely lovely, not the least bit fancy, built around 1130 and only one of four round churches still in use in England.  Another is Little Maplestead, here in Essex.  Must look it up as I go pretty much past it on the way to Center Parcs.

https://roundchurchcambridge.org/

The columns and arches
It was an active church until the congregation grew too large, proving very popular with students
There's a lovely 'social' area to one side.
Standing in the middle of the round bit with the church history of Cambridge displayed around the outside.  It was very interesting.
These stone faces were added by renovators in the 1840s.  Some were the stonemasons' faces but, somehow, I think someone was playing a joke with this one.


That's all I had time for - I had to walk back to the coach with so many things still on my list.  I hope they do another trip next year - I'd love to go again.

Coming up - Stratford Upon Avon this next Saturday!




Monday, 09-03-26

Morning, everyone. 
No, this isn't the Cambridge post, really sorry.  I this, that and the other yesterday but was just too tired to settle to it in the end.  I'll get it done today and post it later!

Have a lovely day, everyone.  Back later.  xx


Sunday, 8 March 2026

Sunday, 08-03-26

Good morning, all.  It's a damp and dull start to the day again after some beautiful days last week.  Come on Spring.
Mind you, to be fair, I prefer to count the start of spring from the astronomical date rather the the meteorological one so that's not until March 20th.

Google tells me that "Astronomical seasons are dictated by Earth's orbiting position around the sun. Meteorological seasons are dictated by the Earth's temperatures, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information." so, perhaps, the meteorological one is more accurate but less flexible and, given that global temperatures are changing, perhaps that should change too?

Anyway - it's a bit chilly and raining!!  We got lucky yesterday, I think.  It wasn't warm but it was dry in Cambridge.  It was also very, very crowded - I should have expected it but I was surprised just how many groups of students, tourists, UK and from overseas there were.  So many languages in the air!

It was a lovely day.  I have to upload and sort out the photos I took and I will do that today and, probably, post it tomorrow morning.  Suffice it to say we had good journeys both ways and I came back with the mandatory fridge magnets - I have quite a lot now and I need to tidy them up on my fridge door.

Today is a day at home (thankfully).  I need to start Lindsey's loaf and I must do a quick tidy up as downstairs is more than a bit of a mess.  It's all surface mess really, shouldn't take long.

Then I can get on with some crochet  I took a look at my supply of yarn scraps - you know, those little balls that are too small to do much with apart from  few rounds of a granny square - and started joining them all together into one big ball with that magic know one of you lovely people told me about.  I've started a top down granny cluster jumper, a pattern I have used several times but it's a quick make, no seams and, in this case, I've already done the joins.  It's jolly useful to pull over a think jumper or a T shirt for a bit of extra warmth and I'm often wearing the ones I have already made so, yes, a good use of my scraps, I would say.
It will be a right ragbag of colour but that's OK, I don't have to wear it when I go out if I don't want to!  And the scraps are pretty much gone.  Yay!

Time to tackle that kitchen!  Wish me luck and have a good day, whatever you have in the diary.  xx

Friday, 6 March 2026

Friday, 06-03-26: update!

Morning, everyone.  I'm a bit pushed for time so will just post this and do it properly later on.  Back asap!


Phew, home again and have a bit of time before Alex arrives.
Sorry about that, everyone. 

Right - yesterday. 
Lovely chat with Chris followed by a shop where I stuck very much to my list.

I got an email from Broomfield coaches asking for a payment for a trip in May - the Poppy Factory and then a river cruise.  Lovely!

I found some YouTube videos of walking tours round Cambridge - not that I'm doing one but it gives me a familiarity with the streets and where things are.  I do like to be prepared for these trips - I think I get so much more out of them with a bit of background understanding.

And now it is Friday.  I'm just back from Slimming World and, as already mentioned, Alex is round for some cooking.  Today he's making gardener's pie (veggie version of cottage pie) for him and Beth to have this evening.

And then the rest of the day is chilling, reading (I am really enjoying the Eleanor book - it's one you have to concentrate on, no skim reading here.  I always take my Kindle with me on the coach so I can get more read tomorrow too) and getting my bag ready for tomorrow.  I have a coach bag which stays on the coach with charger battery pack, water, spare socks, hankies, car keys, etc, and a handbag that goes with me.
Then all I will need is nice weather.  :-)  

Have a lovely day, everyone.  There may or may not be a post tomorrow; it depends what time I wake up.  Back Sunday anyway, for sure.
Stay safe and warm.  xx

Thursday, 5 March 2026

Thursday, 05-03-26

Morning, everyone.  
It was a funny old day, weather wise, yesterday.  Misty and dull all day and then, come the evening, definitely foggy rather than misty.  It was the same this morning but now it looks as if the sun will come out and the mist is rapidly disappearing.   Long may that continue.

In my sitting down times, I have been getting on with my concentric circles blanket.  It's not a huge one, just a lap blanket really, and it's used up some of my stash of small balls of yarn as well as some of the larger amounts.

Here's a link to the original, Colour Study:  Squares with Concentric Circles by Wassily Kandinsky, which was the inspiration for arguably the best art project I did withy my year ones.  I covered it several times in my many years teaching Y1 and have very happy memories for how much we all enjoyed it.

And here's my blanket - missing a border at the moment.  I think it needs a solid border and, Alison, I'm thinking of doing half trebles - what do you think?  I have loads of black so that won't be a problem!
I think I will probably donate this when it is finished.

Back to yesterday and I got my sound issue sorted - well, I didn't, my super clever friend (taught his boys in Y1) used a programme to take over my laptop from his computer and have a look around.  At first he did just what I did and that was OK but eventually he found the problem and now I can be heard again.  And I know what to do should it ever happen again.
Many thanks, Eddie - you are a star (yet again).

I did a bit of Cambridge 'research' and have booked a ticket for entry to Kings College grounds and chapel.  There's loads of other lovely things on my list so I will just have to see how it all goes on Saturday, how the timing works out.  The coach should get there at ten so I want to get my bearings, have a coffee, visit the market and look and the Corpus Clock and then it will be time to go into Kings.  And then I will just see how it all goes.  I'd like to visit the Round Church and look in one of the many museums (not sure which yet) and there's some nice shops scattered around.  And there's something old and interesting around pretty much every corner, isn't there?  I certainly won't be short of things to do and let's just hope the weather is pleasant - dry at least.

After personal training (as always, really good), I smartened myself up a little bit and Julia picked me up for our girls' meal out together!  We used to go to a local pub but it changed hands and went downhill so now we go cross town a bit to the Harvester which we all like and which really isn't too expensive as these things go.
Before Christmas, I couldn't go, in January Beth couldn't go but this time we all made it and it was a really lovely evening.  We've fixed out next date for early May now,
Driving home was a bit hairy in the fog but it's a familiar route so all was well.  Thanks, Jules!

Today, as usual on Thursday, starts with a Chris and me chat at mine this week.  Then I'm going to do my small weekly shop.  And in the evening it's our Slim Win chat!  SO a really nice day

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Wednesday, 04-03-26

Good morning!  After two lovely days, the weather seems to have turned and we had rain overnight with a misty, damp start to the day.  Not to worry, I'm sure it will brighten up at some point.

The walk down to Groove was lovely although none too warm.  It was still scarf and coat weather, despite the sunglasses!!  Groove was fun, as always.

That was probably the most exciting thing of the day.  I pottered, took life easy, looked up Cambridge stuff (loads to do without even thinking about shops) and slept really well.  

Today is another gentle day until later on when it's personal training.  Then the girls and I are meeting up at the Harvester again - and this time all four of us can make it, barring last minute disasters.  

So that's today - what does your day look like?  Have a happy Wednesday and stay warm and dry.  xx

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Tuesday, 03-03-26

Morning!

It was such a beautiful Spring day yesterday round here.  Sunny and really warm, absolutely lovely!  The sun is shining now too so fingers crossed.

Kay and Dave came round as planned.  Now my downstairs is shiny, as is my bedroom (a bit of guilt cleaning by me!) while the extension guttering is clean as clean and he even polished it up with some uPVA (?) polishing stuff.  Wow!  
I got washing and drying done - ironing is waiting for today - and I'm getting another load on the line before I leave for Groove.
And I made four loaves - two sourdough for Lindsey and two yeasted for Beth and Alex.  

I was rather spendy!
The charging cable for my stick sweeper broke when I put it down carelessly and it fell onto a hard floor so I have ordered a replacement.  I got the book Lola's Mum mentioned in her comment, Kindle version (thanks, Lola's Mum, I'm enjoying it), and the last thing, something I have been waiting for for ages, I ordered a second bowl for Thermione.  I had a spare bowl for my TM6 and it was so useful and I knew one was coming out so tucked some money away for it.  Now I have to be frugal for the rest of this week - and beyond.  

Today is Groove, of course, and I have a phone call I need to make.  After that the day's my own.  I have all the usual stuff, of course, and I want to look up things to do in Cambridge, that being my next coach trip!  I'll be spoilt for choice as far as churches go, of course.

Have a lovely day, everyone.  See you again tomorrow.  xx

Monday, 2 March 2026

Monday, 02-03-26

Morning.  It looks as if it's going to be nice today so fingers crossed because I have washing that could dry outside!

This will be short - yesterday was a nothing-happens sort of day and today is a home day.  Kay and other half will come this afternoon, Kay to work her magic inside and Dave to clean the extension guttering.
There's plenty of washing hanging around and some tidying, so plenty to do!

Have a good day, everyone.  Take care and see you tomorrow.  xx

Sunday, 1 March 2026

Sunday, 01-03-26 - a trip to St Albans

Afternoon, all.  A late one today because it took ages but never mind, I've uploaded and cropped the photos and off we go.

St Albans isn't all that far away from here so I was at the picking up point at half past eight for a nine o'clock departure - and it was raining.  Oh, dear!  The coach arrived, we all got on and off we went.  A pleasant journey, no hold ups and no heavy traffic so by bang on ten we arrived at the dropping off point, almost right outside the Museum.

By then it had stopped raining but it was pretty dismal  and very damp.  Not to worry, what are hoods and brollies for, eh?
 The first thing was to go into Pret for a coffee - Pret does do lovely black Americano coffees and I don't have any morning drink if there's a trip.  The coach does have a loo but, even so, no . . .
Once my caffeine deprivation had been sorted, I decided to just go up to the top of the market and then trundle slowly back down, past the museum, to the tower and then further down to the Cathedral.

And that's where I started taking a few photos.
(I was cross with myself - I left my camera at home so I had to use my phone which I really don't feel comfortable taking photos with but at least I had it with me)

That market was what I would call a proper market, not one set up for an occasion with overpriced food and 'stuff' stalls.
As a 'thing' the market goes back a very long time.  Wiki tells us that after Canterbury Market was closed in 2022 (what a shame), it became the second oldest market after York's Shambles Market.  You can read more here.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Albans_Market

It was quite a big market with so many different stalls.  Prices weren't overly steep and the fruit and veg stalls were great value.  If I lived conveniently close, I would get the bus in with a shopping trolley and get all my f&v there. food stalls that looks amazing,  There was such a variety of stallage - candles, jewellery, breads, both sourdough and 'ethnic', crafts - but only one fabric stall that was plastic covered cloth and furnishing fabrics and NO YARN stalls!!  What is the market world coming to?
(To be fair, there might be a yarn stall on Wednesdays - and maybe it was just as well)
Anyway, it was a market I would use, unlike the Edinburgh Christmas one.

So I meandered down through stalls and people, noting a fresh farm egg stall to return to later (I did but by then they had more or less sold out and only had extra large blue eggs for a fiver for six - so no. )

Towards the other end, the buildings became more historical looking and you can see the top of the Clock Tower, the only remaining medieval town belfry in England.  
Click here for more history.
This is as good a photo as I could get.  I had an idea that I would challenge myself to climb up the very worn spiral steps to the top but it doesn't open until after Easter so I couldn't.
But there's an interesting site about the tower that has a virtual tour video which is worth watching, if you're interested.

The tower is very close to where St Albans' Eleanor Cross was sited.
I just love the story of the Eleanor Crosses.  Eleanor of Castile was married to Prince Edward (later King Edward I, known as Longshanks and then the Hammer of the Scots).  It was, as all these were at the time, a marriage of convenience, a contract, a transaction involving property and lots of money.
Despite this, it became a love match and the pair, we are told, spend more time together than most couples in this situation.
Eleanor passed away very suddenly and unexpectedly at Harby in Northants and her grief stricken husband decreed that crosses be built in every place that her coffin rested when it was conveyed back to London.  Hence Waltham Cross, Charing Cross - and the area known as Market Cross in St Albans, close to where the tower stands.

On I went to the Cathedral.  Oh, my, what a lovely place the Cathedral is.
This 'Peace Bench' was next to one that remembers those who dies in the two World Wars.  I have no idea how comfy it is - it was too wet to sit on - but it's rather lovely.

And here we are.  There wouldn't be much to see if the trees were in leaf!  The tower in the middle is interesting because in 1870 people heard a loud crack from this 700 year old tower and when the investigated, they found serious structural weaknesses that needed prompt action.  It could have been a disaster, both for the tower and, of course, for people inside.


I took a stroll around the outside before going in.  It was lovely and peaceful and one side looks out over the park through which I could have walked to find the Roman museum, hypocaust, etc.  Something for another time.

I found the tomb of Robert Runcie, one time Bishop of St Albans and then Archbishop of Canterbury.

The cathedral as a centre for worship goes back well before the Normans.  The story of St Alban, the first British saint is that he was a Roman living in what was then Verulamium at a time when the only religion allowed was that of Roman gods.
He gave shelter to a Christian priest, fleeing from persecution.  We don't know his name but he is called Amphibalus which is a Greek/Roman word for cloak.
Alban converted to Christianity, moved by the priest's faith and courage.
The authorities came to arrest Amphibalus and Alban, inspired by his new found faith, exchanged cloaks with the priest, allowing him to escape.
Alban was brought before the magistrate, refused to give up his faith and was taken outside the town and beheaded.  

The site/grave became a centre of pilgrimage and Alban became the first British saint of a still undivided fledgeling Christian church.

(The nave has some wonderful medieval wall paintings which had been limewashed over in the mid 1500s.  Using light projection, we can see how they may have looked in the Middle Ages - the one above is Alban and Amphibalus exchanging cloaks)

Obviously, there's a whole lot of history here and this is going to be long enough without that so, if you're interested, here's some reading . . .
https://www.stalbanshistory.org/archaeology/st-albans-abbey/a-brief-history-of-the-cathedral-and-abbey-church-of-st-albans

I was lucky.  Just as I walked in, a group was gathering for a guided tour (totally free) so I joined the group and was treated to an excellent guided tour of the Cathedral.  The lady giving the tour was so good, so knowledgeable and she popped in so many of those little human-history stories that bring the past to life.  The whole tour was around an hour, maybe a bit longer.

The whole building crosses the whole panorama of British history.
While no parts remain standing from pre Norman times, there are Roman bricks used in rebuilding work and I am sure there's other remains from Roman and Dark Ages times.  The most modern part is the Welcome Centre and shop (yes, I got my fridge magnet).  You walk in and look down the transepts to a lovely rose window.  My photo is rubbish but you can see a really good one here.

I'll share a few of the photos I took inside.  The light isn't great but never mind.

I love really old wooden doors and there are plenty in the cathedral
This is the Lady Chapel, completed around 1310-ih sort of time.  There are traces of the original beauty of the place but in 1553 the abbey church was bought by the townspeople and the Lady Chapel was walled off and used as a grammar school for the next three hundred years.  Where I am standing was a covered public pathway and behind me is where the shrine of St Alban is now.

After the school moved to the gatehouse in 1871, the Chapel was reunited with the rest of the church and attempts were made to remedy the damage cause by generations of schoolboys!
The guide book says the restoration was quite sympathetic and today it's in use for weddings, funerals, etc and serves Christians from many traditions, not just the Anglican one.

The stone nave screen has seven new statues to represent martyrs - people who have given their life for their faith  - from many times, places and Christian traditions.  They are from l to r:
St Oscar Romero (1980)
St Alban Roe (1642)
St Ambhibalus (around 300)
St Alban (around 300)
George Tankerfield (1555)
St Elisabeth Romanova (1918)
Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1945)
This is stunning - the High Altar, Presbytery and Quire.
The original images were destroyed by Henry's hooligans after the dissolution and now the screen displays images of notable people from British Christianity.

St Alban's shrine.  Again, it is a reconstruction as the original was destroyed in 1540.

They used small pieces of the original found during other work and some supposed relics of the saint rest under the canopy.

I love this.  Beside the shrine there is a 'watching loft' where monks were able to keep a beady eye on what was going on on the outside.  These are the stairs.

And here's St Amphibalus' shrine - he didn't survive for long after he escaped with Alban's help, I'm afraid.

Again, destroyed after the dissolution and reconstructed using as much original material as they could.  It was left in a dark corner until it was restored in 2021.
Some new carvings were added including one little carving of a figure wearing a face mask, a reminder that this restoration happened during covid.
I think that's so good.

And, finally (no cheering at the back there!!) my absolute favourite little thing which you could miss if you weren't told about it.  

These little holes in a 3x3 grid were dug into the stone seats on the outside of the public way outside the shrine.  It is thought that waiting pilgrims used then to play games - a sort of medieval noughts and crosses, maybe, or skittles - with stones to wile away the tedium!

By the time I emerged, the sun was shining and I strolled back up the market, did a quick trawl of the museum (not that impressed really but maybe I missed some parts) and had a pot of tea in M&S (very refreshing) before getting back on the coach for the journey home.

It was a really lovely day and if they do another trip there, I will definitely go again.  There's a whole load of Roman stuff I didn't investigate at all.

If you get the chance - go.  It will be well worth it.
(and I hope the links all work)