
Nige sent me this photo from today's meet
He said I looked as though I was enjoying an expresso on Paris' left bank
ps.What's happened to my hair??? I've gone all 1980's
"I'll admit I may have seen better days, but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail, "(Margo Channing)
Chris and I went to the Scala this afternoon for a 6pm showing of the corporate caper thriller Duplicity . There was only four of us in the cinema (just how I like it), and the movie was Ok in a forgettable, convoluted sort of way.
This morning I took a break from rural scruffiness, I washed my face and donned some clean clothes and went to Chester to meet my friend Nige.
Sometimes you can have a sixth sense that something is "off" or not quite right.This was exactly the feeling I had at 5.30 this morning when I was half asleep in bed. It was blowing a gale, so I suddenly thought the door of the shed had blown open, and I dragged myself out of bed, got dressed and went into the kitchen.
This morning Sam,a little chap from nearby Meliden came up to learn some basic hen care. As most 11 year old boys, he had already researched his favourite subject at great length, and was a little expert himself in poultry care.
By the time his dad picked him up, he had helped clean four of the hen houses,fed and watered the whole field population (including the pigs) and helped move the remaining ducklings into the shed.
It has been an ideal day for cloud watching, blustery and bright. Tomorrow the young lad who wanted to buy some hens is coming around to learn some of the basics. He has made his own run and hen house, and has chosen the hens he wants from my laying girls. The only problem is that he poor little chap will have to wait 3 weeks for them to hatch and another 8 at least before they can safely be re homed, so suggested a reputable breeder to his dad on the phone this morning. It would be nice to get some valuable ready cash for a perfect 6 pullets, but If I was ten, I doubt I could actually wait nearly three months for them to arrive.
The original vergetable garden and orchard of our cottage was not sold when old Nora died. Instead the small plot of land was left to go rather wild, in the hope that the new owners could build a bungalow. Several times plannng permission has been refused and at one time we actually hoped we could buy the land and put it back to its original cottage state........
This morning, as I was potting up some bean seeds, a large farm tractor and trailer side swiped the dry stone wall of the field. It pulled around ten feet of the neatly stacked stones onto the road, and drove on without stopping. Neighbour John, galloped after the driver and made him (rather sulkily) replace the stone work but as you can see his workmanship was poor to say the least,
Forgive the series of lazy blogs, but with the weather closing in again, a long day without any sleep, a particularly irritating night shift and a new flock of dirty ducklings to clear up after, I am in need of a feel good movie evening....