Monday, 23 June 2025

St John's Eve and Midsummer's Day

If the first of June marks the first day of meteorological Summer, and astronomical summer starts on the Solstice on the 21st June how is it that Mid-summer was traditionally celebrated with festivals on the 24th?
It was connected to St John's Day, when to protect future crops and livestock  bonfires were lit to banish evil spirits and bring good weather. Midsummer fairs and midsummer markets were held with celebrations in many places. 

Today, St Johns Eve, it was thought that plants gathered for medicinal purposes had special powers. St John's Wort being very important. Other protective herbs including yarrow, mugwort - which protected against witches and thunder,  and chamomile, were also gathered and hung in the home and cowshed. 

 So tomorrow is St Johns Day with many associated weather sayings
 
Before St John's Day we pray for rain, after that we get it anyway

Cut your thistles before St John,
You will have two instead of one. 

Never rued the man who laid in his fuel before St John.



Here is what Thomas Tusser wrote in his Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry in 1557.

At Midsummer, downe with the brambles and brakes
and after, abrode with they forks and their rakes:
Set mowers a mowing, where meadow is grown,
the longer now standing the worse to be mowne.

(brakes are ferns or bracken)


Another old saying from history 

If Midsummer Day be never so little rainy, the hazel and walnut will be scarce, corn smitten in many places; but apples, pears and plums will not be hurt.

"Never so little rainy"? 


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Saturday, 21 June 2025

A Saturday Post Including Tennis, Book News and Comment Questions.

 Well, here in Suffolk it's been a gloriously sunny week. I'm one of those people who loves the heat, although it was very hot for both the Keep Moving Group and my second week at the Arthritis management/exercise class, which was a bit sweaty! Other than that I've cut the grass, been shopping -  early to beat the heat, made bread and quiche, visited an art exhibition and popped out even earlier to the midweek boot-sale (for exercise!!)  and then had very lazy afternoons enjoying the men's tennis from the Queens Club on TV. Cam Norrie and Dan Evans went out before the quarter finals . Jacob Fearnley lost in the quarter finals but has only been on the circuit for a year and  was ranked around 600 in the world this time last year and now he's in the top 60 - what a story! Jack Draper, the British number one is through to the semi-finals today. I'll be watching for sure.

 This is the first grass court tennis that many have played this year, a preparation for Wimbledon which starts on the 30th. Midweek the wild card list for Wimbledon was published and so many young British guys have been given them. The future of British tennis is hopeful.
One thing new for this year is the absence of on court line judges - everything is electronic now. It's stopped those challenges by players on the big screen which spectators enjoyed even if umpires didn't.

I finished reading The Crash by Robert Peston which is his second book about journalist Gil Peck. This didn't seem as good as the first book which was set in 1997 at the time of the General Election. It was a bit confusing at the start until it got going. The Crash is set in  2007 at the very start of a  financial crisis when a bank's collapse set off a chain of events that travelled around the world. Gil Peck has moved from newspaper journalist to broadcasting but when his part-time lover - who happens to be a director of the Bank of England - commits suicide, he doesn't believe it and investigates, which leads to danger.

Then onto the Homecoming by Kate Morton. I said the size might put me off but with the large typeface and double spaced lines this was a much larger book than it needed to be! So it was actually read quite quickly. We don't have many books here that are  set in Australia (that I know of)  so it was odd that I've  read two this month (Nevil Shute was the other)

 

The Homecoming is one of those stories set mainly in two different time lines - 1959 and 2018. 
Adelaide Hills, Christmas Eve, 1959: At the end of a scorching hot day, beside a creek on the grounds of a grand country house, a local man makes a terrible discovery. Police are called, and the small town of Tambilla becomes embroiled in one of the most baffling murder investigations in the history of South Australia.

Many years later and thousands of miles away, Jess is a journalist in search of a story. Having lived and worked in London for two decades, she now finds herself unemployed and struggling to make ends meet. A phone call out of nowhere summons her back to Sydney, where her beloved grandmother Nora, who raised Jess when her mother could not, has suffered a fall and is seriously ill in the hospital.

At Nora's house, Jess discovers a true crime book chronicling a long-buried police case: the Turner Family Tragedy of 1959. It is only when Jess skims through its pages that she finds a shocking connection between her own family and this notorious event – a mystery that has never been satisfactorily resolved.
It's about secrets and lies and is well written. I'd never read this well known author before but will probably go on to read more of her work.

My post about remembering the complications of moving house during covid morphed into something entirely different. Was there anywhere in my post where I said covid was funny? It was only the strange headlines in newspapers at the time seeming so odd that they made me smile. Did I have lack of respect for people still suffering? I don't think so, my post was really about my sister querying when covid regulations made moving difficult.
Did I actually read all of the book I mentioned? Good grief it was 4 years ago! I've no idea if I read every single word or not but I did copy those strange headlines onto a blog post just because they seemed too strange to be believable.
I could have deleted some of those comments but left them for discussion, which allowed people to jump on what others said and turned what I thought to be a fairly innocuous post into something I didn't plan or want. 

Now anon (you know who you are) will say that I welcome comments one week and complain about them the next!

All Jolly Good Fun!

Have a good weekend, I'll be back Monday - with a dozen less readers no doubt!



Friday, 20 June 2025

Solstice 20th/21st

 From the Latin Sol meaning sun and sistere "cause to stand still"



The summer solstice, when the sun is directly overhead at the Tropic of Cancer and daylight hours are the longest for us here. 

We say a day, but really the Solstice is just one moment in time - UK time 3.42am tomorrow morning.

Some people will be joining the Druids at Stonehenge for an all night vigil and to watch the sunrise or heading to a Neolithic passage tomb on Anglesey where the inner burial chamber is lit up by a shaft of light as the sun rises.

In the past bonfires would have been lit and the solstice was once said to be the perfect time to gather herbs, especially Vervain, which was cultivated as a medicinal herb in Medieval times for use as a relaxant or nerve tonic.


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Thursday, 19 June 2025

Focaccia Bread

 I discovered the recipe I use for Focaccia Bread had never been added to the separate recipe page  when someone mentioned needing a recipe several weeks ago. Then I forgot to do anything about it.

But I'd almost run out and made it again last week, so now it's been added the recipe page for future reference.

This is the recipe I used which turns out well. I do the mixing in the Kenwood with a dough hook.. 

500g Strong Bread Flour
30mls Rapeseed Oil
10g Salt
10g Yeast
Approx 325ml Tepid Water
Sea salt, olive oil and rosemary to finish

Mix salt, yeast and flour
Mix oil and water and add to flour and mix really well
When smooth knead for 10 mins.
Don't use flour when kneading but a little oil on hands instead.
Place on a well oiled  11 inch by 7 inch brownie tin, flatten to a rectangle, cover with cling film and rest for 30 minutes.
Uncover, fold into thirds. Turn and fold into thirds again. Turn over and flatten to rectangle again.
Cover and rest for another 30 mins.
Push dough to  11 x 7 inches.
Rest for 30 mins, then dimple top with thumb, sprinkle with salt, olive oil and chopped rosemary.






180℃ for fan oven or 200℃ for 20 - 25 mins.




I cut it into chunks before freezing and  eat it with anything tomato-y  that has juices that need mopping up.

It's soft, bouncy and very delicious.

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Wednesday, 18 June 2025

Roses

 It's a good year for the roses - I'm sure that's a line of a song?  There are 6 different ones here and I've no idea what they are. I only know that there's white, red  and  shades of pink and orange. There's another that I have to keep cutting down as it's really in a wrong place. Three are climbers. My sister gave me  a yellow rose in a pot for my birthday. I don't think its a miniature - the flowers are bigger - those miniature roses never last long for me.

I think it's wonderful that many people know exactly what varieties they have growing but I'm not a massive fan, and have never gone out to actually buy any anywhere I've lived and I never know how much I should be cutting back each year. But it is nice, at this time of year, to be able to bring in a few  now and again.



Cecily Mary Baker has Flower Fairies for garden flowers too. I expect all roses were scented back in the 1920s. Sadly none of those here have any fragrance.


 And yes, it is a line from a song



This is the biggest and most showy of all the roses, it's in the front border so gets the most sun.


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Tuesday, 17 June 2025

Out Early

 When I wake up I often feel old! Specially if it's been a disturbed night - traffic, heat, aching knees etc. But if the sun's shining I don't have a problem getting up and Sunday morning I was at the car boot sale at 7am - It was the most glorious morning for being out early. The rain on Friday night and the breeze on Saturday had cleared the air, so all was fresh and lovely.

The car boot bargains were  minimal - nothing unusual nowadays - I'm definitely counting car boot sales as an early morning walk rather than a treasure hunt. 

My "what to look for list" in March included a plate for Spring to make a change for the seasonal display. I was thinking of something a bit bigger than this little Spring Brambly Hedge plate but as it was only 30p it seemed a good idea.



The very pretty birthday card on the left was 10p from the same seller and the cards above are a pack of 6 Christmas cards. I paid just 20p for these. The design is by Carry Ackroyd whose illustrations from her book "A Sparrows Life as Sweet as Ours" I often put on the blog because they are so good.

Now I've got to look out for a very small plate stand for this very small plate as it's too small for the one I have -  it wasn't the plan to Add to the 'looking-for' list!

Later in the morning I went over to son's village to look round the garage/yard sales there and to see how they were getting on with selling their unwanted stuff. Unfortunately there were only 18 houses selling and they were spread out all around what is now a large village. The family were hoping for buyers but the morning got more overcast, hot and humid as I was walking round, there was  nothing I needed or wanted anywhere, so back to son's house to get the car and then home.

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Monday, 16 June 2025

How Long Did Covid Last?

 I was talking to my sister about moving here during covid and the time in holiday lets that could only be used if you were moving and needed somewhere to live and people  were banned from actually using them for a holiday. She said  " in April 2021? I thought it was over by then."

That made me look back at some of the "Strange Times" posts I did at the time. The last post with that label was in February 2022 - almost two years after the start.

It made me smile to re-read these headlines of the time from another Strange Times post...............


Here are some of my 'favourites'
From The Independent. 19th April 2020 "UK must prepare for volatile and agitated society after lockdown lifted says a senior police officer
From  The Daily Telegraph. 28th July 2020 "People over 6ft have double the risk of Coronavirus"
From The Daily Star.23rd July 2020 "Baldies are 40% more at risk of coronavirus says a US study
From The Daily Mirror 12th November 2020. "Covid survivors could have life threatening allergic reaction to hair dye"
From The Sun 13th November 2020  Doctors say "Masturbate during Coronavirus to boost your immune system and fight off infection"
From  The Daily Mail 16th November 2020 "Dog owners face 78% higher risk of catching Covid 19 and home grocery deliveries DOUBLE the risk." 
 
People who read and took that last one as gospel presumably then starved - being too afraid to enter a shop and then finding their home delivery was too risky to receive.



Those quotes came from a book I borrowed called  "A State of Fear". They all seem even odder now than they did 5 years ago. I looked on the library website to see if they still had the book. And yes, there were 4 copies in the County , but only one copy out on loan. I've no intention of borrowing it again!

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Saturday, 14 June 2025

It's Half Past June Tomorrow, Things I didn't Know and Thank You

Thanks to everyone for comments all week. I often don't look at the laptop at all in the evenings so don't always catch comments from places behind us timewise until next day, by which time it seems a bit late to reply. But I do read and appreciate every comment - I'd be talking to myself without comments, and I do plenty of that anyway!
Thank you also to people who have clicked the follower button to get past the 850 which it was stuck on for months, except when it went down to 848 one day. Not sure it's accurate with ups and downs so frequently.

Racing through the month as usual, I've watched some of the Queens Club tennis women's matches but I'm looking forward more to the men's matches next week. The weather has been lovely, we've had the best of it in the East.
 BiL popped over with the huge plastic tub that I'd asked him to drill drainage holes in and helped me lift the bay tree from it's old pot into the new bigger one. I need to give it a feed of something then it should be OK for a few more years. 




In the greenhouse the cucumbers are looking the best, tomatoes are a bit lanky without many trusses as yet but I spotted the first tomato has set. Peppers showing signs of greenfly, I'm keeping a close eye on the leaves. I've netted the long raspberry bed, they are going to be early this year which is good as there'll be no strawberries from BiL, his strawberry patch is poor this year after many good years.














And the things I didn't know?

 I didn't know #1.............. that 'they' had altered the goalposts and from April the amount payable for car road tax had changed.  We bought our Fiesta, not new but nearly, in 2017 when we needed something more reliable than our very old Fiesta for getting to Addenbrooks hospital every week. It had a big advantage as it just fell into a category when cars with less than a certain amount of CO2 emissions didn't have to pay any road tax. A government thing to get people to buy smaller cars.  It's not needed any payment for re-taxing since, until this year when the reminder came and I found I had to pay £20. I don't mind paying £20 as it's much less than many cars owners have to pay but no one told me it had changed. 

I didn't know #2.......... that the new umbrella that I won in a raffle last year and hadn't seen for months was under the front passenger seat of the  car - I found it wedged into a small space against the seat runner fixings thingy. I assumed I'd left it somewhere and it was lost forever.

I didn't know #3................that my annoying knee problem is probably the start of osteoarthritis until I saw a physio during the week. Here in Suffolk we can refer ourselves to a physio without seeing a doctor. Fill in a form online and then they email helpful exercises - which I'd been doing like a 'good girl'! Then after a while they contact to see how you are and to book an actual appointment. 
 Osteoarthritis  used to be called "wear and tear" and is due to loss of cartilage around the knee joint.  He suggested joining a physio led exercise/arthritis management group. I started two days later, it's six weeks initially,  all free. Some exercises are similar to what we do at our Keep Moving Group but done for 2 minutes and then move onto the next - Oh, so That's what circuits are! 

I also don't know what the weather is going to be like this weekend but hope Sunday is fine as there are yard/garage sales in Son's village and they want to get rid of some unwanted bits.

Hope everyone has a good weekend, I'll be back next week.


Friday, 13 June 2025

Getting Annoyed With One Book And Giving Up on Another

 OK - Fiction is fiction, it's made up but when a story is set in the 1940's during the war, and facts are easy to verify it's just really annoying when an author says something that just sounds so wrong.

Here they are, a lot of London policemen, in wartime London discussing what's going on at Bletchley Park - this was so secret that hardly anyone knew what happened there until it was revealed much later. Yet in the story they know it all - the machines, the clever code breakers and even the name Enigma and what it was going to be used for.

And then one of the policemen pops home to have a shower. Bath -yes - but showers were rare in private homes until later - even if he was a top cop with royal connections!

Does it matter - I suppose not really, just makes me cross.




This was the book, it's the 8th in a series set in wartime London and featuring DCI Coburg, Sergeant Lampson and Coburg's wife- a well known pianist and singer. As well as murder in the cathedral there is also a murder at the Ealing Film studios. This author is very prolific and seems to write two or three books each year. I did finish it and the story and details about the people working in the Cathedral during the war are good.


The book I gave up on after just  2 pages was "The Case of the Christie Conspiracy" by Kelly Oliver. It's set in London in 1926.  The first character was "Hustling Chess" ? What on earth? and then a few sentences later she was talking about their flat in a "Brownstone Row-House"  There might have been houses in terraces in London made of Brown Stone but were they called that? It's a common word on any TV programme featuring New York.
I looked at the Author details - she lives in Tennessee and writes "Historical Cozies!" 
I gave up.

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Thursday, 12 June 2025

Third Jigsaw Puzzle for Autumn/Winter

 I'm nearly sorted for autumn and winter with the finding of jigsaw puzzle number 3, from a charity shop this time. Another House of Puzzles jigsaw that I'd seen online and thought it would be a good one to do. Hope the rough seas aren't too difficult.


I just need to find one more  then I'll have one each for October, November, January and February. That's enough or I'll never have time for reading!

It's handy that they are easy to spot in Charity shops because of  the box size and the small illustration on each side of the boxes. I'm looking out for a couple that I've only seen on line -( there are hundreds on ebay to look through but I'll try to find locally to save postage)- one is the signalman and the inside of an old fashioned railway signal box, with steam trains passing by and another of farm buildings with someone repairing a tractor.

 There are several from House of Puzzles  that I wouldn't want to attempt - one called Frosty Morning is all snow, sky, trees and sheep - all much the same colours and there's another of an old fashioned shop with dozens of small packets on the shelves - that looks difficult to sort the pieces and a Christmas one just has lots of similar looking and similar colour Christmas cards.  Those need more patience than I have!

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Wednesday, 11 June 2025

Free Cake at the Castle

 English Heritage kept sending emails to remind me that as a 'Senior Member' I could get a free cake (but only from a choice of three - they aren't That generous!) with any drink on Wednesdays, anytime this summer.

So last week I thought a visit to Framlingham castle - without Grandchildren - would be a plan. The last two times I've been I've had small people's company who aren't interested in the museum bit .

There was much confusion actually getting into the castle at 10am, with the lady at the gate saying a wristband (and paying for non members) had to be done at the ticket office in the car park while a sign at the ticket office said to pay in the castle at the shop! There was definitely no-one in the ticket office even though the lady at the gate said she had seen the ticket office person going in. Eventually gate lady came and shouted through the keyhole of ticket office! - By this time there were about 20 people waiting, all very amused at the confusion...someone did suggest we "storm the castle walls!". Then finally she rang up someone else and found that the sign at the ticket office was correct and everyone needed to show membership at gate and get wrist band at the shop. By then it was well after 10am and I decided to have my coffee before looking round! 



From a distance it's the remaining towers and their chimneys that are noticeable. The first  photo is over the gates on the way in.




The wall walk was only open for a short way as major repair work was going on part way round.




From up the top of the wall this is the view down to the buildings, one of which was the Framlingham workhouse






I took a few photos in the museum but the light wasn't good. 

It's been a very long time since a visit by train to Framlingham by train was possible


Below is a then and now photo of the Methodist/ United Free Church. It was the place where the Country Markets organisation sold produce every week. I used to take some cakes and cards. The market stopped several years ago when there weren't enough bakers or buyers.

I had no idea the building started as a steam built mill in 1853.






There are several paintings, drawings and etchings of the castle from history. Not good for photos though.






HERE are photos from my 2021 visit, I didn't take any photos last year when I went with EGD and joined English Heritage  for the year.

And HERE is the English Heritage page if you want to see more.

Thank you to everyone comments yesterday. The new header is the Black Elder that grows at the corner of the bungalow just outside the patio doors. The flowers have a lovely pink tinge but never set many berries. It was here when I came and is much bigger than any I tried to grow at the smallholding. Probably it was just too dry there for them to last long.
Here, I have to cut it back to stop it getting tangled with the washing on the whirly washing line and on the other side to stop it knocking on the living room window in windy weather!


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Tuesday, 10 June 2025

Speedwell

 When we were young we called it 'Bird's Eyes', one of it's common names, along with Angel's eyes. It grew in many places and was very common.

It's real name is Germander Speedwell and it's part of the large Veronica family (Veronica chamaedrys). There are garden varieties but the photo is of a tiny patch growing in the grass on the edge of the 'lawn'. It spreads by creeping and does no harm, yet according to the RHS website some people need to know how to remove it from their pristine lawns.


When I left a patch of grass unmown for No Mow May last year all I got was grass so it was nice to spot these in a corner by the sink-pond.

It was traditionally supposed to be effective against spells, and the flowers were said to be like St Veronica's 'kerchief, which was impressed with the face of Christ after she wiped Christ's eyes (but with her veil not a handkerchief, so that's confusing!)

And of course whenever a wild flower gets a mention, the fairy from the Complete Book of Flower Fairies by Cecily Mary Barker, first published in the 1920's, has to be included.


And his song/poem

Clear blue are the skies;
My petals are blue;
As beautiful too,
And bluest of eyes.

The heavens are high:
By the field-path I grow
Where wayfarers go
And "God Speed," say I;

"See here is a prize
Of wonderful worth:
A weed of the earth,
As blue as the skies".

I won't be digging it out as per the RHS website but will leave it to spread as far as it likes.


Back Soon
Sue

Monday, 9 June 2025

Tennis + Two Old Books + One New Book

What a fantastic final at Roland Garros in France yesterday. Amazing tennis, two finalists, Spain versus Italy, both born this century - frightening thought - and as the commentators said we could be watching them in finals for another 10 years or even more. Both fluent in English as all young people in Europe seem to be now and they both seem nicer than moany Djokovic. I was pleased to see Andre Agassi there presenting the cup - a favourite of mine from the 90's and early 2,000s.

( The Tour of France Cycling is only on Channel 4 for this year and then that's also lost to Discovery+ & TNT)


Last week  I read two books from my shelves while waiting for my library books to travel to Stowmarket.


'The Habit of Widowhood' by Robert Barnard is a book of short crime stories published in 1996  by this prolific writer (1936 - 2013). I've read many of his crime novels written all through the 70's, 80's and 90s.
These 17 short stories are all murders or crimes involving husbands, wives or lovers, who find a way to murder and all really well written.


'The Far Country' by Nevil Shute (1899- 1961) was written in 1952. This was really a re-read, if it's counted as that, considering I read it 50+ years ago!
He wrote many books between the 1920's and 1960's and they were well known and popular at that time and for many years and are still reprinted occasionally .  Nevil Shute settled in Australia after the war and many of his books are set, or partially set there. 
In Australia the Dorman family have just received their best ever cheque for the years wool production. Jane Dorman had moved away from England several years previously when she met her Australian husband during the war. Jane writes regularly to her Aunt in England, the only person who had supported her marriage and emigration. When she realises her Aunt seems to be very poor she sends money. The money arrives too late for Aunt Ethel- who has been too proud to ask for help but she manages to pass the money onto her Granddaughter Jennifer so that she can visit Australia. The differences between dull, drab post war London and new bright Australia are well described and a good look at that period of history.

The new book was one of the library books. Susie Dent ' Guilty by Definition' . This is such a clever and well written story set in the offices of the Clarendon English Dictionary offices in Oxford, ( No doubt based on her work at the Oxford English Dictionary).
(For anyone  who doesn't know, Susie Dent is well known as a Lexicographer in this country she has been on the daily words and number  quiz programme Countdown for 30 years. She has written many non fiction books about language.)



In this book, her first novel, a cryptic anonymous coded letter arrives at the offices and seems to have a connection to Dictionary compiler Martha's sister Charlie who disappeared from Oxford 10 years earlier. More letters and postcards arrive sent to anyone who knew Charlie and even some who didn't. The team use their knowledge of the history of words to decipher the letters.
The book mentions all sorts of unusual and unknown words and their origins and makes for a really good story.

Her second novel in the 'Linguistic Mystery' series will be published in 2026.

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Saturday, 7 June 2025

Saturday 7th. Random Notes.

Thanks to everyone for comments yesterday, seems we are in agreement - Lists are vital but remembering to actually look at them/take them with you is even more important!!

 After my cinema visit on Monday I looked to see what films were being released in June, July and August to see if there would be anything else to go and see. But goodness me  there are some weird things that don't appeal at all. Maybe the Thursday Murder Club might be OK but turns out it's probably only on Netflix.  The Regal on Monday trailed 'The Roses' - full of famous actors but not something I would bother with and the Final Downton Abbey - costume drama never appeals to me at all. I started looking at the 9000+ on the imdb website that are due out this year but gave up after a few 100!
So it might be a while before another Film Review appears on here as I can't be bothered to go just for the sake of going out -  with 'Happy at Home' being the subtitle of the blog!

I got home in time after the cinema to see both Cam Norrie and Jack Draper getting knocked out of the French Open - the end of Brits in singles. Ho Hum - t'was good while it lasted and there remained the British guys in the Doubles and Alfie Hewitt and Gordon Reid in the wheelchair matches - they've already won so many titles over the last few years but hardly get a mention.

I got my 12 sweetcorn plants out into a vegetable bed this week along with 10 more plants I got for £2 at the car boot sale, that were way ahead of mine. I'm still fencing round plants that I'm putting in  to keep the pigeons from walking into them but the difference to everything without a cat constantly digging stuff up is incredible. My rhubarb is actually growing and I no longer need to cover and peg everything down. I'm sad that the children lost their pet but it's wonderful for gardening - sorry to write that buts it's true.
 The day after planting there was some good steady rain which is useful although it turned really chilly.
There's plenty of black and greenfly around this year and 3 out of 4 Buddleias are really suffering. I cut the two down the side right back but new growth is completely covered in black sticky mess again. Not a good outlook for flowers for the butterflies this summer.


This is my old school scarf, it's been kept for the 54 years since I left school which is probably ridiculous. I had a clear out of a few things from the built in wardrobe/shelving. It's going at last, along with a bagful of other bits. I can't think of any reason to keep it, especially as I've got some much nicer and softer scarves for winter.




Anyone else noticed tins of  sardines are missing everywhere? I was eating a tin every week either in a warm pasta salad or on toast they were only around 50p a tin. Apparently most come from Morocco and they have problems. What's the betting that when they re-appear they will be much more expensive.


I did have one other trip out during the week for free cake with photos but I'll make that a post for next week.

Have a good weekend, weather forecast here is a bit iffy - shame, as it's the village summer fair.

Back Monday



Friday, 6 June 2025

Just Two Cards but I Need Another List

 Last Saturday the car boot sale was GIAGANTIC. Even at 5 past 7 the car park was filling fast and there were no more spaces for people selling. 

I scanned the tables and boxes for interesting things but just came home with these two cards and some butternut squash and sweetcorn plants.



In my box of birthday cards there are several with various ages waiting for the 5 grandchildren, two great nephews and one great niece's birthdays but of course when I'm at a boot sale I've no clue what's in that box at home.

Need a list. Always a list!

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Thursday, 5 June 2025

Second Library Book Photo for May....in June

Hooray to the lovely library people who found my 15 books in the mobile depot, labelled them up, sent them via the delivery van to Stowmarket, where they duly arrived on Tuesday and I got an email to pick them up ASAP. So I did.

I'm really grateful to them because they might have said "wait until the next visit".

There are so many that it needed two photos to fit them all in.

c



As usual most are crime fiction and some are by authors I know, but more are new-to-me authors, so that will be interesting to see what they are like. I'm puzzled by the Katie Fford labelled as Thriller - think that might be wrong as they are usually quite lightish fiction which I read now and again for a change. The book by Kate Morton, an author I know of but haven't read looks rather large - which always puts me off.

Now which to read first?........................... but what a lovely dilemma to have!


These are what I collected four weeks ago. I read seven.  Info of those I read are on the Books Read 2025 page.



Back Soon .

Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Chaffinch

 I was standing talking to BiL in his back garden recently when a bird started shouting loudly from one of the shrubs. It flew out so I could see it was a chaffinch which made me realise how rarely they are seen now. I've never seen any on the feeders here. BiL's garden backs onto fields and although he only feeds birds with sunflower seed hearts he gets more variety on the feeder than I do here.

In the book 'An Illustrated Country Year' by Celia Lewis it says they are common and they are common in many parts of the country. I remember them hopping around the table when we were having coffee and cake outside at a café in Cornwall or Devon many years ago, like sparrows would have done in Suffolk, now sparrows and chaffinches are both harder to spot .





Then by a weird coincidence at Bank Holiday Sunday's car-boot sale I spotted this and picked it up to look at the base and yes it was another Beswick bird, question was, was the lady selling a dealer and would want a few £ or just someone clearing out? So I asked how much and when she said 50p it had to be bought!



Oh dear, I did say there would be no more but I now have 3 Beswick birds, that's almost a collection. The Wren and Blue tit will come out of the box for spring and the Chaffinch will be for Summer, that way they won't be dust collectors and I won't get fed up with them.

June on the bookshelf looks like this..........

The piece of Poole pottery shaped like a buoy (it's a small bell) was found in a Charity shop in Ipswich in 2022 , it hasn't been out on display before because it got wrapped up and tucked in a corner of the box that I keep all the bits in and kept getting missed . I had a sort out a few weeks ago and found it. About time it was out of the box!


Back Soon




Tuesday, 3 June 2025

A Very Rare Film Review

 Not a rare film, but a rare review as I hadn't been to the cinema for ages. I discovered the Regal in Stowmarket were having a morning showing of 'The Salt Path' yesterday. All the other times were afternoons and evenings (watching tennis times!)

As most people reading this will already know the film is based on the book Raynor Winn wrote about the 600 mile walk  on the South West Coast Path that she and her husband Moth did after losing their home and their money and at the same time Moth's diagnosis with a rare brain disease - Corticobasal Degeneration.

They had invested money in a friends business and when the business failed leaving huge debts they were taken to court by their friend, battled for 3 years but eventually losing and had to forfeit their home which was a B&B business in Wales and all their money. They decided that the only way to cope was to pack a few belongings, tent and sleeping bags and to start walking.




Walking seemed to help with Moth's condition despite the extremes of weather they encountered on the way. Luckily a friend offered them accommodation of a shed for the winter in return for turning the shed into a holiday let.

The film starring Gillian Anderson as Raynor and Jason Issacs as Moth has gorgeous views of the wild lands, wildlife and coasts of that part of Great Britain, which for me was one of the best parts.

Their walk was in 2013 and the book published in 2019, which was when I read it and was soon a best seller. The film wasn't as tear jerky as I thought it was going to be thank goodness and  there were only 4 other people in the audience.

12 years on from his diagnosis Moth is still alive and Raynor is still walking and writing. Since the first book there have been two more, The Wild Silence and Landlines and another due to be published in October.

Raynor Winn is not the first person to write about this walk - I read "Five Hundred Mile Walkies" by Mark Wallington way back in the late 1980's.

Monday, 2 June 2025

June Country Days on the 2nd of the Month

June - my favourite month of the year, meteorologically the start of summer (or  wait to the 21st for the astronomical start)

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.

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 and statistically June is England's sunniest month.

 

Summer Moon Walk . An Illustration by Angela Harding from her  book 'A Year Unfolding'

Other people in the past have also enjoyed June and written poems


 
Christina Rossetti said in her poem                    Summer

If the year would stand
Still at June for ever,
With no further growth on land
Nor further flow of river.
If all nights were shortest nights
And longest days were all seven,
This might be a merrier world
To my mind to live in.



JUNE 

Mine is the Month of Roses; yes, and mine
  The Month of Marriages!  All pleasant sights
And scents, the fragrance of the blossoming vine,
  The foliage of the valleys and the heights.
Mine are the longest days, the loveliest nights;
  The mower's scythe makes music to my ear;
I am the mother of all dear delights;
  I am the fairest daughter of the year.

From 'The Poets Calendar' By Longfellow 

And another written for children by Irene F Pawsey

Month of leaves,
Month of roses;
Gardens full
Of dainty posies;
Skies of blue,
Hedgerows gay,
Meadows sweet
With the new mown hay.

Flowery banks,
A-drone with bees,
Dreaming cattle
Under trees:
Song-birds pipe
A merry tune—
This is summer,
This is June.

And way, way back in 1557 Thomas Tusser said in his Five hundred points of good husbandry


In June get thy wedehoke, they knife and thy glove,
And wede out such wede as the corn doth not love;
Slack no time weding, for darth nor for cheape;
Thy corn shall reward it, or ever thou reap.

I think this means - keep weeding that garden!

Back Soon
Sue

Saturday, 31 May 2025

Much Less Spent This Month - And An Explanation for Ana and Others

 After the expenses of April with several annual bills falling due plus dentist and heating oil, May was much better. The only known extras above the normal monthly spending were ED and EGS birthdays and car breakdown insurance.

The normal outgoings are Council Tax, Phone and broadband, monthly electric bill, charity donation, diesel for the car (two lots this month as I've been out and about) totalled £375 and food of course. 
Then there is always something that needs buying in a house- this month I needed new AA batteries and some mastic to redo around the shower enclosure base. All was going well with not too much spent until the cold tap in the en-suite started drip, drip, dripping. BiL looked but said it's one of those new ones without a washer but with a 'cartridge' thing instead, and you have to have the right one. He didn't fancy the job - so I had to call in a proper plumber! Got a recommendation for someone local and it was soon sorted but cost £85! Yikes. - and that was someone reliable who didn't rip off old people!

Garden spending totalled £9.38 for parsley from aldi, courgette plants, bean plants, trailing thyme and a clay flowerpot  from car-boot sales.

A wide top small clay pot for the plant stand to replace one that was starting to be frost damaged


Food spending was up this month, after two lower spend months. Mainly due to replacing items that had been used up to restock the freezer and cupboards. Although prices of things like milk and other dairy products have gone up. I had a pensioners discount Fish and Chip meal for £5 as I'd not had one for a few months and coffee out three times. 

A few frugal notes for those who like to read the list.............

  • Gift of bundle of  Rhubarb from my sister. Mine is not doing well.
  • Big bundle of asparagus for £1.50 from boot sale, made me two meals with poached egg and wholemeal bread.
  • Eggs from roadside stall are still just £2 a dozen
  • Found a really good quality t-shirt for £3.49 from charity shop. Lovely jade green and looks hardly worn.
  • 4 x 25L bags of free compost from District Council giveaways
  • BiL had a small bag of tile cement in his garage which I borrowed so I could re-attach some of the quarry tiles on the front step.
  • Reading library books for free
  • Home made bread from the bread-maker - 50/50 wholemeal/white this month
  • Dishwasher used only every 2 or 3 days
  • Washing machine used twice a week only
  • Tumble dryer not used all month
  • Lights not needed until 8.30 in the evenings for reading.
  • Two big bags dishwasher salt for £2 from boot sale
  • New kitchen sieve from boot sale 50p
  • No flowers bought - I've been bringing in a few roses from the garden.
  • Given up feeding the birds for the summer as the huge starling family are clearing out the mealworms and fat balls in 10 minutes. Just leaves the starling proof sunflower heart feeder.
  • Free referral to physio appointment for next month to look at my knee problem.
  • Made 4 x Two cheese, onion, spinach puff pastry bakes  - instead of buying more 'vegetarian taste test' products.
  • Cooked up a big batch of Quorn and vegetable korma curry - 10 meals total
  • I put the refill filters for my water jug on my Amazon wish list and keep an eye on the prices because they go up and down. This month they went down by £3 to £9.99 for the pack of three so I ordered, I've still got one filter left in the cupboard so OK now for a year of good filtered water for the coffee maker and to drink with no limescale.
  • I use Sensodyne small head toothbrushes and found packs with buy two get one free, so got two packs, 6 toothbrushes should last me a while. Sensodyne toothpaste is cheaper at Aldi than anywhere else.
  • First few strawberries from my few plants and  handful of  Very early raspberries - they were a surprise find.

 Personal spending included the first  book find of the year from a boot-sale for £1 and then another for another £1, the old scrap book, mentioned earlier in the month. A much needed hair cut, exercise group, jigsaw puzzle and a new Puzzler Magazine. I also printed out a couple of grandchildren photos for my frames. The £10 spent at Sibton church for 5 books, a birthday card, coffee and sausage roll was added to the charity part of the accounts (clever accounting!)

Finally a special treat..........a   subscription to Discovery+ TV so I can watch the French Open Tennis. Just have to remember how to cancel after a month. Discovery+ has amalgamated with TNT Sports, and cost a lot more than last year , but I decided I'd rather have this than an outing to the Mid Suffolk Railway for their 1940s day, which I'd pencilled in the diary - especially as it was wet and chilly and I don't bother with the big Suffolk Agricultural Show now, so that's a saving of nearly £30 anyway. After the first 3 days of tennis there were still 6 Brits going into the second round of matches and Cam Norrie and Jack Draper both played well to get through. By Thursday evening all the women were out and just  three British men left, apparently that's the first time since 1968 that there have been three British men in the third round. There will be at least one of them in the 4th round as Cam Norrie and Jacob Fearnley play each other today. Still several Brits in various double matches which never get as much publicity.


Looking forward - June is usually a good low-spend month, the only extras above the normal are the annual payment for the Garden Waste Bin. But whenever I say it's going to be a low spend month something usually happens to upset that plan so I didn't ought to mention it - ooops too late! 

Have a good weekend and I'll be back soon. 

And here is my explanation of why I use the mobile library-

The mobile libraries (3 in Suffolk) travel around all the villages so that people can go on and choose books or collect books they have reserved on line, especially useful in villages that are many miles from a physical library building and especially useful for elderly who can't drive. We can reserve books on line and ask for them to be sent to any Suffolk library or to the mobile library. I have read so many books in my 70 years that most of what I read are new books by favourite authors and I rarely find books I want actually on the shelves.
If the books go to a library building they have to be collected within one week of arriving there whereas the mobile saves them up to bring all at once. Also I can keep books for up to two visits (that is 8 weeks) where as people borrowing from town libraries have them stamped for just 3 weeks.
Yes I could drive to a library but it seems silly to do that when I can stroll up the road once every four weeks to collect my books. If I was to use a town library I would need to drive to town (10 miles or 20 minutes) every week to collect my books.
The mobile library service is always under threat of stopping as it is gradually used less and less. When I worked on one we had 5 mobile libraries covering the whole County (several 100 villages) and visiting every two weeks. Now there are just 3 visiting every 4 weeks.
The mobile libraries have depots in 3 different parts of the County where they park and where all books waiting to go on the various routes are stored so my books are not actually somewhere where I can go and collect them at the moment. Hence hoping that the delivery van (a small van that takes reserved books and new books around to all 40 libraries in the County) will bring my books to my nearest library before the next mobile visit at the end of June.
For the last 20 years I have been using the mobile libraries as it's a case of use them or lose them.
.