I had a conversation the other day with my friend Nige.
He asked me if I had a hobby?....( I think he thought I had got bogged down just a little with normal ebb and flow of home life)
I was not sure what he was getting at, and sited my animals as my reply.
"No, you misunderstand me" he said
"are there things you just want to do rather than Need to do?"
I then got his drift........ most of us feel that we have to do things....It's the way our lives work. We have to go to work,we have to prepare food, he have to eat it......so many Have tos ....and so many need tos in our lives.......I need to walk the dogs several times a day, I need to feed and care for the stock appropriately.....but Also I know I want to do these things too..........but I understood Nigel's point....sometimes it's just nice to do something because we would like to......simple as......
Tonight is a work night....so today is a bit of a nothing day....you know the sort day that you are just waiting to "get over" so to speak....Its a bit like waiting for the flight home after a rather nice holiday......
My "have to" jobs were all done.....so while Chris drove down to Prestatyn to get his hair cut....I indulged myself (lol when don't I?) in a brief moment of "would like" time.
I took myself into the Church Yard and with no dogs to watch, no birds to feed and no jobs to do....it was nice to soak up the warm day and read the headstones
"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)
A day in the life of...................
Albert stalking baby rabbits on our post dawn walk |
Anyhow The following is a pretty normal day for me ( when the sun is shining that is!!!)- hope it gives an insight of the pace of the field
I was Up at 7.30am and let out the hysterical Runner ducks for their first drink and swim
All of the water feeders needed filling and all of the pellet feeders needed checking.
All 15 bird houses were opened and every bird counted out onto the field
The runners doing what they do best........being bloody hysterical |
The dogs contemplating the morning |
One of the St Trinians is a little poorly and needs antibiotics syringing into her mouth twice a day. She is receiving a course of Baytril ( 7 quids worth of antibiotics from the vets!!!)
The sweet little hen is eating a little better today and took some cat food ( with some wormer on it) as a treat
Boris needs lifting out of his house EVERY morning (as you can see I do not look too happy so early in the morning...mind you it IS before my first coffee of the day) |
I finish most of the "first thing" jobs by around 8.30am
Then the dogs get fed, my household jobs are completed (including a little bit of light dusting !)
This morning I had to change all of the bed linen...Albert had regurgitated the bloody remains of a mouse's intestines all over the quilt!
The kitchen wreck of last nights stir fry............. |
.......and after a bit of bleach |
(To those that don't know Jeremy Kyle is an odious slime bucket who fronts a trailer trash talk show)
Then its a 2-3 mile walk with the dogs ( this morning it was the round robin Marian walk past the Gop)
Then home...and a brief moment of gayness.......nicking daffs from the building plot behind the cottage |
I am never alone of the field for long, this morning Pat called down for a chat and eggs and this afternoon farmers Eirlys and John dropped by |
Before lunch ( an apple, coffee and a bagel) I completed fencing in the entire main vegetable patch, which is now safe from prying beaks! |
I made a "gate" to complete the enclosure....I can start planting out on Sunday |
Then its more SHIT, SHIT and More SHIT.... four of the hen houses needed cleaning out and new bedding (a gift from the ever resourceful Red Faced Welsh Farmer) |
After that I collected eggs, Including another giant Goose eg from Winnie |
Then I prepared wormer medicated feed for the birds ( It has to be prepared in different strengths for the turkeys) That little tub of worker cost 20£!!!! |
Now its around 3.30 pm!
The dogs, who have sat out on the field all day, are bored, so all four are taken for another walk around the village. I took the chance to deliver another 6 eggs
Meg in the centre of the Village |
The Chapel in the late afternoon sun (The building was converted from Market Hall to Chapel in 1701) |
We returned to the cottage by 4..00pm ..The sick hen needed another shot of antibiotics, and looked brighter than she did earlier in the day, I grabbed a cup of coffee , downloaded these photos to the blog then I am off to start the process of bedding down the geese, ducks and turkeys for the evening. ( Each group need "showing" to their individual houses)
The hens can be left until later, being brighter animals they take themselves off to their own houses when the light starts to fade, then it is only a case of locking up each house in turn
Chris will be home at 6pm
I have only the fire to light,the meal to prepare and the late dog walk to complete..........
A pretty cool day eh?
What ?he f*^k do you do all day?
I was asked the above question recently
So my next blog will hopefully illustrate a "normal" day quite nicely
Watch this space
So my next blog will hopefully illustrate a "normal" day quite nicely
Watch this space
Can I Thrust By...I'm a Diabetic
I think I have stolen most of Julie Walter's one Liners over the years and all of her best ones can be heard in this priceless sketch from the 1980s........
I remembered it almost line for line when I was being served by a very lacklustre woman at the service station on my way to my brothers. As I stood waiting for her to notice my very existence (she was chatting to her friend Carol on the phone about a sports bra that didn't fit!) I very nearly said
"You've a look of Eva Braun!"
She wouldn't have understood even if I had
Hatim
You may remember that I used to work on the spinal injury unit in Sheffield.
One of my most well remembered patients was a Iraq street kid called Hatim who was accidentally shot in the Iraq war when he was only 13 years old.
I was the ward manager when Hatim arrived in Sheffield and helped to supervise his care when he was on my ward.... I do recall that the isolated and small framed pre teen had a huge cultural challenge when coping with the rehabilitative process a paraplegic has to deal with in a rather strange, straight talking Yorkshire City!
I also remember taking him out to Hillsborough park with my welsh terrier Finlay. Fin was always tied to his wheelchair and Fin's laid back and rather sweet personality brought the little Iraqi boy out of his shell when we often "ambled" through the Victorian park.....
Hatim moved on to community rehab after many months with us, yet even today I often think of how he is doing as a grown up man in his new life over in this country....
so tonight I used the amazing google and found that he is now a member of the esteemed sheffield steeler Wheelchair basket ball team!
I would love to see him participate in the 2012 Para Olympics.......the last tme I saw him he had the beginings of a right Yorkshire accent!
http://www.sheffield-steelers.co.uk/
One of my most well remembered patients was a Iraq street kid called Hatim who was accidentally shot in the Iraq war when he was only 13 years old.
I was the ward manager when Hatim arrived in Sheffield and helped to supervise his care when he was on my ward.... I do recall that the isolated and small framed pre teen had a huge cultural challenge when coping with the rehabilitative process a paraplegic has to deal with in a rather strange, straight talking Yorkshire City!
I also remember taking him out to Hillsborough park with my welsh terrier Finlay. Fin was always tied to his wheelchair and Fin's laid back and rather sweet personality brought the little Iraqi boy out of his shell when we often "ambled" through the Victorian park.....
Hatim moved on to community rehab after many months with us, yet even today I often think of how he is doing as a grown up man in his new life over in this country....
so tonight I used the amazing google and found that he is now a member of the esteemed sheffield steeler Wheelchair basket ball team!
I would love to see him participate in the 2012 Para Olympics.......the last tme I saw him he had the beginings of a right Yorkshire accent!
Hatim is second from right |
The War on Smoke
Chris' stress levels are through the roof at the moment.....research bids need to be put in, his Dad has been a little poorly and the cottage fire has been smoking too much filling the cottage with great plumes of soot!....
I can't do too much with the research,but I can support his dad over the phone and I certainly can get to the bottom of the stove issue...so after looking through the internet DIY self help pages, I grabbed the sweep brushes and swept the fuckling chimney YET again!
Remember it was only a few weeks ago that a professional sweep gave it a go, well since then I have got down and dirty sweeping it again, and today I repeated the disgusting job, but did so with some gusto , getting into all of those nooks and crannies I might of missed last Saturday.
I can't do too much with the research,but I can support his dad over the phone and I certainly can get to the bottom of the stove issue...so after looking through the internet DIY self help pages, I grabbed the sweep brushes and swept the fuckling chimney YET again!
Remember it was only a few weeks ago that a professional sweep gave it a go, well since then I have got down and dirty sweeping it again, and today I repeated the disgusting job, but did so with some gusto , getting into all of those nooks and crannies I might of missed last Saturday.
After an hour with my head up a flue, I had removed another two bin bags of soot and most of the lining of both lungs....but the job was done and the fire lit without a problem.....and all this after I paid a bloody professional chimney sweep 50 quid to do the job originally!
If I see him again, I will stick his bloody useless brushes where the sun don't shine
This afternoon it was nice to breath God's cold fresh air again. I surrounded half of my large vegetable patches with a new chicken wire protective fence, then delivered eggs around the village. It was home time for the village school children and as we waited for some of the larger kids to walk past us to their parents' cars one mother walked past with her toddler. The little girl pointed at the dogs and pulled herself forward. and I told the mother that William would be safe to pat if she wanted to.
He stood quietly and interested as the child reached out a pudgy hand and tapped him firmly several times on the head, then lent forward politely to take a long sniff at her nose. The child and her mother was delighted as he acted just like the teddy bear that he resembled and I,as ever was amused and rather proud of just how gentle male Welsh Terriers can be with little people,
I will end with an apology to Trelawnyd Val ....I am very sorry I flashed my "builder's arse" to you this afternoon when I was bending down to collect eggs..........not the nicest of sights when you are out for a walk eh?
blogitandscarper
I am constantly amazed with the eclectic amount of ,talent and richness of imagination that I find in blogland, it is truly a forum for individual self expression or in my case a daily habit to add to a somewhat teenage diary.
Marathon blogger Phil over at http://blogitandscarper.blogspot.com/ is well worth a visit. His blog is a meandering stream of consciousness, ideas and amusing anecdotes.....give it a look why don't you, but be sure that you have a full half an hour spare and a good cup of coffee with you
Marathon blogger Phil over at http://blogitandscarper.blogspot.com/ is well worth a visit. His blog is a meandering stream of consciousness, ideas and amusing anecdotes.....give it a look why don't you, but be sure that you have a full half an hour spare and a good cup of coffee with you
By way of an explanation of his blog content...take a look at his last posted video
Aftershock
Terrible timing , I know, but tonight I found myself over at Theatre Clwyd watching an Asian Earthquake disaster movie. Aftershock is the most expensive Chinese Movie made to date, and concentrates its story on the 30 odd years AFTERMATH of a real life Earthquake, namely the Tangshan quake of 1976 which killed over 240.000 people.
Happy Chinese factory worker and mother Yung Ni (Fan Xu ) is caught outside her apartment block with her husband as the Earthquake flattens the city. Her husband is killed trying to save their twins Fang den and Fang da, who are buried under tons of rubble. As rescuers try to save the children, Yung Ni is given the impossible decision of which child she wants saving, and which one has to be left to die...a decision that haunts her and her family for the next three decades.
Yes it's basically Sophie's Choice with special effects....and within a few minutes the audience is literally catapulted into one of the most frightening, harrowing and "realistic" disaster scenarios ever captured on film.
Unfortunately the rest of the epic story of how mom, and the rest of the family deal with the aftershock of her terrible decision , doesn't quite live up to the first twenty five minutes.
Having said this, there are some cracking tear jerking scenes (Fan Xu is especially good) but the family drama post catastrophe, for me , just didn't work as well I hoped it would.Which is a shame
7/10
It was lovely to get back in the cinema !
It was lovely to get back in the cinema !
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