I keep my blog as a personal record of what I'm up to, which might be seen as working towards "An elegant sufficiency, content, retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books, ease and alternate labour, useful life"

I'm certainly not there yet.  There is quite some way to go!

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Friday
Feb172012

g'day

We're in pretty bonzer shape considering! We're now in the Qantas lounge in Sydney, no worries - it's fun to listen to the 'strine going on around us but just like when we're in the USA, our British accent shines through all the stronger when we're in foreign parts! Both flights were comfortable and smooth and BA's choice of entertainment was right up my street. I watched One Day first, which I very much enjoyed even if it hardly did the book justice and Anne Hathaway's suspect and very inconsistent accent grated from time to time. Then, after a few dozes and one pretty solid sleep, I drifted in and out of four back to back episodes of Downton Abbey followed by two classic Desert Island discs on the radio. No wonder I'm feeling particularly British this morning.

So, it's now Friday, our Thursday was a mere half hour turnaround in Bangkok! As we flew into Sydney around 5am, the sunrise was glorious. Now, the skies are clear and blue here and we're both feeling in holiday mood. Our flight to Hobart doesn't leave until after lunch, so after a shower and a catch up of email, my guess is that we'll catch a few more zzzzzzzzzs.

Wednesday
Feb152012

Meet Mrs P

 

(completely unrelated to going on holiday!)

 

My apologies for a flurry of posts today. I’ve been wanting to introduce you to Mrs P for a while, but waited until my post on another blog was up and ready to read.  I feel sure my crafty friends will be as fascinated as I was by the hanging which was distracting me from my meeting the other day, so thought I’d share the link to her story.

 

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Nelly May was a remarkable woman with a wealth of craft skills, acquired mostly through her WI membership.  What prompted this post was the next piece of the story, which arrived in this morning’s mail and which will appear as the next installment in my Craft Blog on the WI website soon.

Wednesday
Feb152012

Empty fridge, full suitcases.


I spent the morning running up and downstairs, resolving a few comment difficulties which must have tested the patience of Carol and Helen but ultimately, mean that hopefully all will be tickety boo from now on - please, let me know if it isn't. Full marks to Tom at Squarespace for sorting it and being persistent enough to resolve this frustrating and inconsistent issue. I highly recommend Squarespace for this kind of thing - instant reply to a call for help and then unceasing attention from a named expert until it's resolved. Great service.

The bags are packed then and I am testing Blogpress on my iPad, to see if I could manage without baby laptop on this trip. Should have tried all of this sooner of course and perhaps I should have persisted a little longer with the Squarespace app, but early days with a new way of working and it does take time!

Haven't quite discovered how to add links yet, nor to add a photo. That must be the next challenge!


Wednesday
Feb152012

Into hibernation

 

As we snuggled under our duvets last night, it dawned on us both that the next time we sleep in a bed, it will be in Tasmania, it will be Friday and it will be Summer.  Except of course, in our heads, it’ll still be sometime on Thursday, we’ll find it odd to wear sandals not shoes and we’ll most certainly be, as my Nan would have said, “all at sixes and sevens”. 

 

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For the last few days, I’ve been scanning the weather and live images of the earth on my ipad, wondering how warm (hot?) it will be and how to pack for the first part of our trip.  I always find it hard to pack for a different season, especially when it’s been so cold here recently.

 

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So, for now, we’re in that funny time when it would be tempting to say “oh, let’s not bother”.  The lists are endless, the building work will progress whilst we’re away and there’s all kinds of decisions to be made.  What will we wear en route?  Have we got enough to occupy us on that long journey?  Above all, for me, what shoes will I put on today?!  Much as I’d like to commit to Birkenstocks from now on, the style of my current pair means I can’t wear socks and I’ve simply got to put on my compression stockings!  So, yes, it’s part vanity, but part practicality -  or that’s what I’m trying to convince The Man who Has No Such Problems ;-)

Anyway, the charging session of the century has been completed and Kindles, ipads, ipods and anything else we can think of are ready for use.  The art kit has been assembled (which will offer Jordi some relief, I know) and as you can see from the photo above, the toenails are holiday-ready too!

Perhaps I’d better go and pack a suitcase?

Tuesday
Feb142012

The Hanky Drawer

 

It’s all very fine and large putting away the big stuff into the new dressing room, but I’m down to the last bits now.  Where to put the contents of the old dressing table hanky drawer?  Of course, before I did anything else, I had to freshen them all up and this morning, I’ve been ironing them.  they tell quite a story.

 

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Several of these hankies go back to my childhood, when girls always carried such things, either tucked up their sleeve, their knicker leg or in the case of one girl I remember from Junior School (Lynn Moody?) safety pinned inside her skirt.  I remember getting boxes of three initialled hankies from Aunts and Uncles at Christmas and never ever remember having to buy them for myself (or have them bought for me).  These old squares of soft, soft cotton have seen the inside of one or two pockets and most of them have raggy corners (did I chew them?) but can I throw them away?  What do you think?

 

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Some of the finer ones come from years later, but still, I think, received as gifts, probably from the same Aunties who hadn’t embraced the paper tissue habit, which I had by then. 

 

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There are one or two larger squares, undoubtedly from Daddy.  I can be sure that this blue square was never used by him, however, because he was most particular about only ever using plain white hankies and wouldn’t even consider one with a border.  As a small girl, I was often given the job of ironing his hankies – my first introduction to this life skill – and I was given strict instructions by “quality control”, Mummy, that they had to be folded straight and ironed right into the corner because he wouldn’t be pleased with anything less.  Of course, this makes me smile now and I wonder if I remember wrongly, because my parents were the sweetest and most forgiving of all – I really can’t imagine how either of them could possibly have been so pernickety, but that’s how seriously I recall taking the task.  How old would I have been?  Well, the memory is accompanied by the picture in my mind of the kitchen of our first house, which means I was less then ten years old.  Do children of that age take their first steps using an iron now?  Did Edward?  I really can’t remember!  But I suspect there was a Brownie badge to be gained from that kind of thing, for certain.

 

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One hanky in particular can be identified immediately and I can name the girl who gave it to me and the circumstances in which it was given.  I was a young teacher in a girls school and received this as a small gift from her skiing holiday.  It reminded me that during my days at primary school, each Christmas, Mummy would place a hanky in the card I gave to my teacher.  In a Hull, inner city school in those days children didn’t give presents to their teachers at all and this was an unusual thing to do.  But for sure, each year, she would buy either a plain white gentleman’s handkerchief or a small lace-edged square and place it inside my Christmas card; a simple and low-key expression of gratitude.

 

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Clearing her house a couple of years ago, I kept but a few of her things, but certainly bundled the hankies into a bag and brought them home.  The fine white cotton ones with lace edges get fairly regular use, because I like to put one in my bag when going somewhere special.  But like Daddy, she wouldn’t use coloured squares and those others, bearing the names of high-quality Swiss brands such as Lehner, simply reside in the pile unused.

 

I’ve read of several textile artists who have been inspired to create art from these small cotton squares and the vast range of emotions in which they have played a part.  Who would have thought that the simple task of ironing a few hankies would have set me off on a journey of memories like this one?