14 April 2026

All Saints, Drinkstone

 All Saints Church Drinkstone has a brick tower, dating from the C17 and is one of the first towers ever built to make space for bell ringing. Of course the main part of the church is older but as usual was restored by the Victorians.


The typical Churchyard Yew Tree is Huge!



 The nave is as wide as it is long with north and south side aisles .


The font seems to have been altered over the years and is very rough


The clerestory windows are quatrefoil shape and quite unusual


The rood screen is still complete and finely carved




On the centre aisle commemorating a husband and wife and 12 children



The East window




The porch windows are stained glass too



I love it when there are infomation boards, telling more about the history of the church










Back Tomorrow

13 April 2026

Cycling Again

I used to love cycling and started with cycling to the school bus stop when I was 11, to the village to hang out with friends all through my young teens. Cycling miles to visit a boyfriend  when I was 16, and to work from one end of Stowmarket to the other in my early twenties. Cycling with one child and then two children on bike seats all through the 1980s. Then after 1992 at the smallholding when we often only had one vehicle I biked the 2½ miles to Saxmundham or Leiston for shopping every week, I had baskets back and front. At Clay Cottage I biked the six mile loop for exercise quite often, especially during covid. 

Cycling was always much easier than walking.

So why did I give up cycling 2 years ago after cycling everywhere for nearly 60 years?  My old bike (bought in 1992 I think) was steel frame, very heavy and very front heavy. It had a puncture in 2022 which BiL repaired for me but not for several months, then we had that heat wave when it was too hot to bike anywhere, then somehow the bike slid down when I was trying to get on it back in 2023 and it landed on top of me and I was put right off. I did try again once but not with any enthusiasm or confidence.  The bike was left in the garage getting rusty and I sold it for £10 last year when my knee was painful and I thought I wouldn't be able to bike again but my knee is 99% better now and cycling is good exercise.

So I'd been trying to decide all winter if I should get a) an electric tricycle or b) a non electric tricycle and neither have good reports from the cycle shop in Diss, in fact they stopped selling both because people kept having problems and they had to keep sending out their van to collect the trikes - you can't fit a trike in the back of a car or on a bike rack! You also can't get out of the way on narrow lanes or push a trike up hill.
 As it wasn't through loss of balance that I stopped cycling,  I didn't really need a trike at all, and an electric bike didn't really appeal - they are heavy and not always reliable and I'd no plans to do huge long bike rides so why not just get a new lightweight cycle - they are aluminium nowadays, with a lower 'step-over' and I could have the seat a bit lower. 

That's what I did.

My first try out was wobbly, I only went a couple of metres, the seat was too low and I had to find an allen key to adjust it up. After getting that sorted I went a mile along the flattest road near home and back again, practising braking and getting off and changing gear. The brakes are certainly very effective! The bike just has 6 gears on a special turning bit on the handlebar, very easy to change gear and the wheels are really big so each push of the pedals goes a long way.

I found the large fluffy sheepskin saddle cover that was on my old bike, it's shedding wool as if a mouse has been at it! I elastic band-ed it to the smaller saddle, but what's really needed is a squishier, larger saddle and a new cover. I really knew I'd been sitting on a solid seat after 2 miles!


Next day I did the same 2 miles again, much less wobbly, this bike is so lightweight, I was flying along- why on earth didn't I do this a few years ago??

Next day I went a bit further and down a little lane and up a no through road to a farm and back again which was just over three miles. The gears are so good I was able to cycle up one of our small Suffolk hills that I used to have to walk up with my old bike.

I don't intend to cycle miles but there are a couple of loops I can ride out of the village and back again, to get back to cycling 6 miles -  It's all very exciting! 


Back Tomorrow

11 April 2026

The End of the Week

 Eldest Daughter and the two Grandsons in Surrey were due on Tuesday for a three night stay. We were planning to get all the cousins together for a couple of trips out, to the seaside and RSPB Minsmere maybe.
She rang me Easter Sunday to say both boys had picked up tummy bugs. Oh Dear. The nearly 10 year old recovered in a day but the 4 year old wasn't so lucky. No chance of them travelling up on Tuesday after all.
Luckily YGS recovered and so they were able to come on Wednesday. We soon got the two Surrey boys  meeting up with their three Suffolk cousins in my bungalow = chaos.
 
Just one trip out, meeting up at Aldeburgh for a picnic, sailing boats on the boating pond, loading the beach stones into toy dumper trucks for the two youngest while the three eldest zoomed up and down a slope on two - much too small balance bikes - belonging to the two youngest - weird, but it kept them amused for ages.
Ice creams for all!  By chance they are sitting here in age order, Eldest Granddaughter is still taller than Eldest Grandson, but he's catching up.




After much too short a time they were off back to Surrey.

Now it will be a quiet weekend, car boot sales of course - weather permitting. Plus I must get the electric propagator onto the windowsill in the spare room and get some seeds started. 

And reading..............


Several people said they'd enjoyed reading 'The Eights' by Joanna Miller when it was in my library book photo and I did too. I'd  found details of it on a blog and a vlog and it had good reports.


It is the first book by this author and on a blog someone commented they hoped there was a sequel and it certainly sets itself up for more of the story.
Oxford, 1920. For the first time in its 1,000 year history, the world's most famous university has admitted female students.

This is the story of four women, all very different, who find themselves in adjoining rooms in their first weeks at university. It follows them through their first year, their secrets, fears and hopes for the future - just two years after the war which still casts a long shadow. 

 

Have a good weekend folks, I'll be back Monday