03 June 2026

A New Cheese to Try

 I found this interesting cheese in Debenham Co-op. Never seen this company before but the co-op had about a dozen different cheeses from them [not all those pictured below]


It's been a while since I tried a new cheese, this looked the most unusual . What I failed to remember was that hops are in beer to make it bitter! Nuff said. I ate it so it wasn't wasted and it had a good creamy texture  but won't be trying again.





Here's the company details.................................

Croome Cheese are a family run business based on the outskirts of Worcester passionate about creating award winning cheeses. We source local ingredients (where we can) introducing a wide range of flavours to cheese and smoking traditionally over Oak logs.

From horse power to solar power and eco-friendly packaging at the forefront of food innovation, those impressionable days still inspire our cheese making ethos, working with only the finest quality cheese paired with local and iconic ingredients.


Although I'd not have the Worcestershire Hop cheese again I'm willing to try another from this company.

Which one ?...............maybe Not the Charcoal!






























































































































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02 June 2026

June Country Days and Country Ways

June is a favourite month - I probably say this every year. The meteorological start of summer so I've put Spring back in the cupboard and Summer is on the bookshelves.

Nothing new for this year, just all my favourite summery pieces


Below is the June page illustration by Eugene Grasset in the Illuminated Book of Days.






It is thought that June is named after the goddess Juno or possibly from Iuniores which was the lower level of the legislature in the constitution of ancient Rome.


 In a Year of Story and Song by Lia Leendertz there's a page about the words for June from all parts of the UK

 



 
Not a lot of folklore attached to the days of June............. there would have been very little time for celebrating the Saints Days as farmers would have been busy with haymaking and sheep shearing. Watching the weather would have been the main occupation.

Calm weather in June, sets the farmer in tune

 The weather pattern for June often alternates between spells of stormy weather and shorter periods of dry calm. The farmers prefer calm and warm with night-time dew to speed up crop growth.

In the Almanac for 2026 again by Leendertz these are the events listed for June. She (or the editors) have made a big error as the FIFA World Cup Final is on 19th July rather than June - whoops.



But in my opinion she's missed out one of the most important - The start of Wimbledon tennis fortnight on 29th June!

Back Tomorrow



01 June 2026

End of May Financials - Just One Day Late.

At the moment (and a lot of people in some political parties would love to stop this but they daren't try for fear of losing all pensioners votes) State Pension goes up in April because..............

"Pension increases in the UK are generally calculated based on inflation, specifically the September-to-September Consumer Price Index (CPI). This increase is applied annually in April to maintain the purchasing power of the pension, with state pensions using a "triple lock" of the highest of inflation, earnings, or 2.5%."

 My first new payment was in May, the pension increase means my state pension is now around £11,560 each year (£12,548 is the full amount. I get less because I paid reduced NI for some years). Tax free allowance is £12,570 which means almost all my Suffolk County Council Spouses pension and almost  all interest on savings will be taxed at 20%. I get an SCC pension because Colin worked for SCC for 30+ years and then died and they kindly give me a % of what he would have got. My total income puts me in between the 'minimum' and the 'moderate' for one person according  to Retirement Living Standards  and probably in a much better position than many but much 'poorer' than we would have been had Col lived. The only discount there is on anything for being alone is 25% off Council Tax. 
To be in the 'comfortable' standard a single person  needs an income in retirement of £43,900!!! Ha!!

 May spending...........

The known extra spending for May was for two birthdays and car breakdown insurance. Regular outgoings were all the usual............Food of course, Council tax, diesel for the car- just once , monthly electric bill, charity donations, broadband and phones.

Not a lot spent for things in the house - kitchen roll and foil . Garden spending was a squash plant, sweetcorn plants and two replacement courgette plants, a scoop from a car-boot sale and growbags [and I got an extra one for Son and family and gave them my spare tomato plants so they could grow their own this year]. 
Someone asked about growbags .These are they!. Much easier for me to use now - I used to buy compost and fill big pots but compost bags are heavy and emptying the pots at the end of the season wasn't easy.. The grow bags say they'll hold four plants but that would be too many in my opinion. I've put two in each and sunk a flower pot in between for watering into. 

Other purchases in May included postage stamps, greetings cards from art sale and car-boots and Aldi had their wild bird food in middle aisle with three suet blocks for £2.59 - but I shouldn't have bothered because the starlings moved in en-masse and ate one in a day. 
(R.S.P.B now say to stop feeding birds through the summer because of the harm done to greenfinches through mouldy food but I'm leaving the starling proof sunflower hearts feeder - regularly cleaned -  for the blue tits and the Niger seed - in their special feeder for the goldfinches. Son said R.S.P.B Minsmere are now only selling suet balls and blocks, everything else put away until Autumn)

And here's why I'm keeping this feeder .............baby bluetits shouting for food atop the feeding station. Mum/Dad get the sunflower hearts and feed tiny bits to the babies.



Personal spending included a hair cut - now heading towards £20 a time, Keep Moving group, a Puzzler book, the scrapbook from the car-boot sale and second-hand books from various places. I bought both dry skin moisturising cream and suntan lotion.

Total spending wasn't too bad when added up - a lot less than income - which is always the best way to be.


Small savings during May

image from google freepik

  • Lots of Batch cooking to stock the freezer
  • Dishwasher only used every other day
  • No alcohol etc 
  • No food out or takeaways and no coffees out either- unusual - not sure why but  see the 😇!
  • No make up etc bought
  • No clothes/shoes needed
  • No flowers bought
  • Reading Library books for free
  • Bread loaves made in the bread-machine 50/50 white wholemeal
  • No newspapers or magazines bought except for the Puzzler
  • Tumble dryer not needed all month
  • Random food savings from boot sale finds - 4 cup-a-soups 50p, tin corned beef 50p, 40 tea bags 50p
  • Birthday cards for the future found at boot sales
  • Saved £30.99 by not taking a months subs to watch the French Open tennis - and as everyone British is out plus some of the other names I like to watch - it was a good saving.
  • Saved a total of about £50 by not going to the Mid Suffolk Light Railway 1940's day - it was too hot and ditto the Suffolk Show.
  • Took a load of all-sorts to car boot sale yesterday and came home with £61.


Looking ahead to June which used to be  one of the months with only one known extra - the garden waste bin fee. But then last year there was suddenly £20 to pay for car tax after the goalposts were moved - it fell into the 'No Car Tax' bracket when we bought it in 2017. But this year June also has a dentist visit - on Wednesday - fear is building!


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