Sunset Over the Harbour at Cockwood

After dinner at “The Anchor” on Saturday evening we (Mary and Geoff, Roland, Chris and me) took a stroll around the harbour. The tide was in (we don’t always catch it), the sky turned to gold and then fire; and we were in the flight-path of a flock of Canada Geese taking off in an orderly fashion. What a treat!

Cycling or What?

We were going to cycle over to Cockwood Harbour after breakfast this morning… Well, it was so sunny and inviting out on the terrace, and we agreed that you have to grab your opportunities for cycling on these rare hot and dry days in the English summer. But first I had to shower, and while I was in the shower our girl from New York (Airbnb) called out to say that she was leaving; then we decided to do the change-over before cycling; and while I was in cleaning mode I cleaned the upstairs loo and bathroom, and when I was watering the garden I noticed there was a little more to do – the steps leading down to the front garden were in desperate need of bleaching and scrubbing with a yard broom (and a colony of snails had to be annihilated).

We were going to go cycling to Cockwood Harbour after our guest had gone and all the watering, scrubbing, snail culling, cleaning and washing was done… well, it was such a beautiful hot day. But I had to make some scones because we had family visitors coming for afternoon tea at three o’clock…

We were going to take a shorter ride to the ford this evening… it was still lovely and sunny and we like nothing better than to dangle our feet over the little bridge into the cool running water at the ford. But after the goodbyes to family and hellos to new visitors from Belgium (Airbnb), and washing up, and watering, and a nice refreshing shower and hair-wash… we didn’t feel like cycling anymore. Tomorrow morning we’re going cycling – whatever!

Reflecting on Age

Nice Sunglasses!

Nice Sunglasses!

I was at my computer in my studio (probably writing a blog post) when Chris came up behind me, bent over and planted a kiss on my forehead.

“I’m just off to Sainsbury’s,” he said, “I won’t be long.”

I turned around to look at him and return the kiss when I saw that he was wearing his reflective sunglasses. In fact he was so close to me that his glasses – and my own reflection – were all that my eyes could take in. I drew my head back a little to observe his full countenance and paused before showing my approval.

“Nice sunglasses,” I said. (Well one doesn’t like to go too overboard with the compliments!)

We kissed goodbye and then he looked me square in the eye (through his reflective sunglasses) before responding:

“Upon mature reflection!”

Very funny!

So Difficult to Speak English

Like Laurel and Hardy

Can we park it here?

Over thirty years ago my brother-in-law Glyn, in partnership with his Welsh friend Emlyn, set up what is now a highly successful English language school in Brest, Brittany. Needless to say, the two friends have countless tales to tell about their comical experiences with novice English speakers at “English Apart”. During Glyn’s recent visit to his homeland he regaled us with many of his amusing stories about the early days when they first set up the school, and misunderstandings and difficulties his French students encountered when suddenly finding themselves in a purely English-speaking environment.

The first home of “English Apart” was a fourth floor apartment with no lift and no furniture, hence every item of furniture had to be taken up manually by the poor teachers who could not afford the services of hired hands. They bought two identical bookcases from a second-hand shop (not to be confused with ‘hired hands’) in walking distance from the new school; however, Emlyn was – and still is – a man of small stature with a dislike for humping furniture through the streets of Brest. Even worse, the roads to their building were steep and then they had to go up again – the several flights of stairs to the top. Every so often the pair (in a fashion not dissimilar to Laurel and Hardy) had to drop the onerous bookcase and have a rest before continuing on.

At last the first bookcase was nearly at its new home. There was a garage across the road and the two English-speaking comics put down their heavy load beside one of the petrol pumps.

“La Remplir!”, they said. (That’s “Fill her up” in English – hopefully!)

No doubt the old proprietor was vastly amused by the antics of the strangers. He may have been even more amused, or perhaps non-plussed, when an hour later the pair appeared again with the identical second bookcase.

“Nous ne pouvions pas trouver un endroit pour se garer!” Glyn said. (We couldn’t find anywhere to park!”)

Typical Glyn. And did you know that French people have great difficulty in pronouncing the “th” sound in English language. One day, after lunch, Glyn noticed that one of his students had a very obvious problem with some food stuck between his teeth.

“Would you like a toothpick?” Glyn asked the pupil.

“Yes,”  the French businessman nodded and smiled apologetically, “it is very difficult to thpeak English!”

I’m afraid that I said something very silly but hilarious on the last night of the French contingent’s visit. I’d like to be able to say that it was deliberate, for the sake of humour, but it wasn’t. Glyn was relating a funny story to a captivated audience of family and friends when he turned to me and asked:

“What is ice in French?”

Now for some reason I didn’t even consider the question seriously (perhaps I was tired – yes, that’s it!) and the word “glace” (or de la glace) never entered my head; instead I said the first thing that came into my head.

“Eeece,” I said.

“That’s funnier than my story,” Glyn replied and we were all in stitches.

Somehow, I have this terrible feeling that my faux pas will go down in history. The tale will be embellished and retold, and soon all the people in Brittany will know what a fool I am; or maybe they’ll realise that it’s sometimes quite difficult to thpeak French.

 

Cockroaches and Other Bugs

Oy Vey!

Oy Vey!

It seems to me that everything has been about insects and bugs recently, in particular the period during which my brother-in-law Glyn, his wife Rolande and my nephew Robyn came over from Brittany to stay with us and our mutual cousins up in Warwickshire for a big family gathering (which is why I’ve been off the radar since Thursday). Robyn, twenty-six years old and something of an intellectual and deep thinker, is currently attempting to subsist on a mainly vegan diet. After the hog-roast lunch on Saturday my conscientious nephew informed me that he wished the world would stop killing large animals for food and switch to eating insects – including cockroaches – as a major source of protein.

“Pound for pound, insects provide a greater amount of protein than red meat, ” he informed me.

Perhaps he’s right but, being an Australian and rather squeamish about fat flying cockroaches (I prefer them flat!), I could not conceive of a more disgusting diet other than worms (and even they were an option on the “Robyn Diet”). In bed later that night I imagined what a pound of insects might look like and I smiled to myself in the darkness.

One other night, more years ago than I care to admit to, my young son James and I were sleeping over at the house of my older brother Bill and his wife Lita in Brisbane; it was Lita’s sewing room cum guest bedroom and the double bed had green satin sheets. No sooner had the lights gone out than we heard strange crackling sounds, like scrunched up balls of cellophane being rubbed together, followed by numerous thuds on the wall behind our heads. As our eyes became accustomed to the dark we saw that the wall was covered in large black elliptical blobs. “What could they be?” we wondered. I switched on the light and fifty million giant cockroaches flew, en masse, back into the net curtains from whence they came. Sadly, the aerosol tin of cockroach killer that I found in the cupboard under the kitchen sink had only one puff of noxious spray left in it… We pulled the bed out into the centre of the room and slept entirely covered by the green satin top sheet, not daring to poke our heads out for air lest the huge creatures should fancy to walk through our hair. Those were the days!

 

By now Robyn is back in Paris and his parents have gone to see a dear friend. Our house has been a whirlwind of activity and our new guests, from Denmark, are already ensconced in the suite upstairs. In the mid-afternoon of this gloriously sunny day – we’re having a heatwave – Chris decided to catch a few rays out on the terrace. As I came to join him in the sunshine I noticed something small and black resting on his stomach.

“What’s that?” I asked, peering closer.

Chris instinctively put his hand to his stomach and, without looking, crushed the innocent bug that had chosen him for an “air bed”.

“Oh, it was just a bug,” I said (not terribly worried about the bug’s demise).

“I suppose that’s what you’d call a “tummy bug”!” Chris quipped.

 

Anyway, I don’t think I’ll change my mind about eating insects, even if they sprinkle them with sugar or Cajun seasoning. The cockroaches, locusts, grasshoppers and stick insects are safe with me. Guess I’m not that hungry. Of course my gorgeous nephew is French… Don’t frogs love eating insects?

 

Empty Chairs and Empty Tables…

When the rest of us were all having a day of rest a good fairy by the name of Lizzie (one of my nieces and sister of the recent bride) went out to the farm and spent five hours cleaning and clearing up after the wedding reception on the previous day. Bless her! And she also joined us in the final clearance yesterday.

At last the work was finished and we all partook of the left-over cheese and biscuits, and roast beef, which had remained untouched, along with numerous cheese cakes, ice cream and other delights, in the two fridges. We washed lunch down with Sangria and beer (for the menfolk) and ended with cups of tea and coffee. It felt like another party. While I was taking after-the-ball photographs I was reminded of the sad song “Empty Chairs and Empty Tables” from “Les Miserables” but I wasn’t sad of course – just a bit flat after the excitement. We had had a ball.  “After the Ball” seemed rather more appropriate until I looked up the lyrics…

AFTER THE BALL

A little maiden climbed an old man’s knees—

Begged for a story: “Do uncle, please!

Why are you single, why live alone?

Have you no babies, have you no home?”

“I had a sweetheart, years, years ago,

Where she is now, pet, you will soon know;

List to the story, I’ll tell it all:

I believed her faithless after the ball.“

”Bright lights were flashing in the grand ballroom,

Softly the music playing sweet tunes.

There came my sweetheart, my love, my own,

‘I wish some water; leave me alone.’

When I returned, dear, there stood a man

Kissing my sweetheart as lovers can.

Down fell the glass, pet, broken, that’s all—

Just as my heart was after the ball.“

”Long years have passed, child, I have never wed,

True to my lost love though she is dead.

She tried to tell me, tried to explain—

I would not listen, pleadings were vain.

One day a letter came from that man;

He was her brother, the letter ran.

That’s why I’m lonely, no home at all—

I broke her heart, pet, after the ball.”

Chorus:

After the ball is over, after the break of morn,

After the dancers’ leaving, after the stars are gone,

Many a heart is aching, if you could read them all—

Source: Many the hopes that have vanished after the ball.

Ah, Ambrosia!

“I think I’ve developed an aversion to milk”, I said, pulling a face.

Chris and I were having breakfast at the time. I was about half-way through a bowl of “Maple and Pecan Crunch” cereal mixed with bran flakes (a nod to my slimming diet) when a wave of nausea hit me (must be sick of that diet!).

“I can’t finish this,” I continued, “but I won’t waste it. I’ll pop it, with an egg, into an old jam jar and take it to the dogs on Rosie’s farm. Egg-nog for dogs – they’ll love it!”

“Here,” began Chris, “you can add the rest of my milk, too.”

So I poured the lumpy mixture of half-eaten, milk-swollen cereals into a jar, added Chris’s left-over milk, then two eggs… I shook the concoction and opened the lid – the egg yokes floated unappetizingly in the pinkish-grey fluid and, yet again, I felt sick.

“I know it looks disgusting…” I paused as I pricked the yokes with a sharp knife.

“Yes,” Chris interrupted, “but presumably the dogs will think it’s ambrosia – the food of the dogs!”

 

And here is a typo from yesterday’s blog post that made me laugh. Freudian slip or what?

The slip!

Just One Hitch – A Country Wedding for Katie and Javier

On Saturday my beautiful niece Katie got hitched to Javier (her handsome Spaniard) at Mamhead Church near Dawlish and had her reception in a place very dear to some of our hearts – Rosie’s barn! It was wonderful. The only hitch, it seems, (as I noticed when going through some of my eight hundred odd photographs) was a slight trip up on Katie’s hem; James appeared to find it hilarious, as did those naughty boy cousins onlooking behind them (to the left of James in the third photo). They remind me of the children in “Giles Cartoons” – do you remember Giles? Anyway, I’m still too tired to go through ALL the photos but here are some to give a flavour of the day…

Preparations For a Real Country Wedding

My beautiful niece Katie and her intended Javier (also beautiful in a dark and handsome Spanish way) are going to be married next Saturday but it’s not going to be a big affair in a grand hotel; they will be married in a tiny church on a grand country estate and have their reception in a nearby barn. Of course, it’s not just any barn, it is the most charming, colourful and characterful barn you could imagine; and it’s on Rosie and Slav’s farm (so it couldn’t help be lovely!).

Everybody has had fun mucking in (not ‘mucking out’) painting the floor, arranging flowers, revamping chairs, shining the copper pots and kettles, cutting the grass, putting up the marquee and making everything spic and span – but not too spic and span as Katie fears the country charm would be lost. She thinks the barn is perfect as it is. And so do I – almost – think I ought to make some more bunting. I have some pretty pink material and some white net with sparkles on it… not too grand.