Tuesday, February 27, 2007

February

I am put to shame by the wonderful blogs of Archie and Louis, they write so often and so engagingly, and I can't believe how long it is since I last posted. I had wanted to write about the fact that we had our first outside lunch of the year this year on the 3rd February!! How mad is that, a few days later it snowed and it has been unspeakably cold and miserable ever since. I am not sure whether I managed to get a picture even!
Other notable events this month include the chopping down - at last - of the dreadful leylandii which ran down the edge of the patio outside the kitchen.

The difference it has made to the light both inside and outside is fabulous. I have been busy digging up various plants from around the garden to create a mixed hedge to replace them, which will be kept at the height of the existing fence.
I was reviewing my postings from this time last year in which I promised Georgia more growing space and am proud to say I spent a long afternoon recently removing a huge shrub and loads of weeds from a bed at the bottom of the garden - I get there, eventually!!

Half term highlights centred around Penny coming to stay to help with the childcare - the kids had a ball with her and we loved spending time together - Georgia finally finished the wooden dragon which she started at Christmas - a project only made possible by the amazing patience of a wonderful Granny in the face of some pretty concerted bossing! Her royal loveliness also finally had a haircut - and doesn't she look beautiful!


Since our trip to Bodiam castle Raff has developed a passion for all things Knights/Castles so I whipped up a tabard, shield and sword which he loved. He made a wonderful castle out of Lego yesterday which has been archived - Michael's new project to record some of the wonderful things Raff creates.


This weekend Nick and the boys, followed by Clare, Richard, Ben and Dexter came down so it was fun filled and action packed. We managed to get out for a walk at Seasalter on Sunday which was lovely if a little cold and bleak - roll on summer!

Michael and I have a VERY exciting treat coming up to raise the spirits! We are off to Kenya to Diani for a week, courtesy of a lovely fairy grandmother, for a holiday without the sprogs! The pictures will I am sure be somewhat brighter than these beach scenes!

Sunday, January 28, 2007

My birthday cake



I made a cake and let the kids loose with the decorations - a collaborative affair!

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Longer Days


Having endured a week of absurdly storng winds and rain - we lost a couple of fence panels, today was gloriously sunny and calm. Raff had finaly made it to the final square of his star chart (slightly engineered by us obviously!), in which is a picture of a castle. So we headed off to Bodiam Castle which I feel sure I must have visited as a child as it is so close to Battle and not far from Wally Hall, but I don't remember it at all. It is however the perfect castle to take a knight obsessed boy to as it just looks so text book- moat, square plan with a tower on each corner, portcullis etc etc.


We had great fun climbing up and down the vertiginous spiral staircases and popped out of the tops of a few. I suddenly realised why Mum hated taking us up the Chateaux near Soulatge and it dawned on me that I am not sure I ever want to take the kids to Peyrepetreuse, my heart was in my mouth all the time and Bodiam has probably been thouroughly risk assessed and poses none whatsoever!

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

Flowers on December 23rd

nasturtium rose
calendula candytuft

winter viola sunflower! and canterbury bells
cornflowerrambling rose
periwinkle

This will be out of synch dates wise unless I can change it around, but I captured these pics of things flowering in the garden on the 23rd of December - most of them shouldn't be!

Festivities

Here I am at the end of the festive fortnight. There's too much to write about everything but the highlights .

We left here on the 24th for lunch with Katy and Kev which was delicious, the big kids had their own private table with fabulous choc mousses for pudding!

Then on to Nick and Geo for a couple of nights and lots of wonderful food. It was the first time we had seen we had seen their great new kitchen which is such a great family space. Nick cooked a wonderful Christmas lunch helped by his beautiful assistant - we need the secret recipe for that amazing mash please!
All 7 of the Gibson cousins were together on Christmas Day for the first time in years,
with a very proud Grannie Annie!
Memorable moments included Stanley's appreciation of the wonderful Gingerbread house Mum had made - he particularly liked the roof tiles whilst Raff went for the walls!!
Boxing Day and a trip to Kew Gardens where they had an outdoor ice rink in a beautiful setting, All of us except Stan could go on the ice - although Raff wasn't convinced and came off fairly quickly! Skating with him was a bit like holding a very slippery piece of elastic! Georgia was really beginning to get the hang of it by the end and would love to go again.

Suitably worn out we then loaded them into the car to drive down to Devon and this time even Georgia managed to sleep (on her brother!) so it wasn't too arduous.


Our days in Devon were mostly spent doing nothing much but eat and sleep which was fabuously idle, we caught up with David who had fun with Raff and met Lucie, David's girlfriend, who he proposed to the next day; so now we have to see if we can make it to the States later in the year?

We also had a big Somerville gathering with a huge feast and much jollity, the boys discovered they go in a loop around the house as it has two staircases!
Georgia and Penny had some time in the studio which was lovely, making a wooden dragon - only 78 more pieces to go girls!

Then back home for New Years Eve which this year we spent at Polly and Simon's with Rutty and Anna, great fun and pretty late! Only to be capped off by our annual New Years Day open house which started at 12 and ended at 8.30 pm when the last guests left. I was absolutely shattered which has rather undone all the good resting in Devon. Hey ho! Back to work tomorrow and I hope to really begin to get my teeth into the job. There's still so much to sort out not least a desk/computer/phone etc etc. Watch this space because I am going to give it another month or so and then start looking for somewhere that might appreciate me!

I think I may have failed to mention the single most exciting thing that happened at Christmas and that was my new Digital SLR camera. Hooray for Michael I can now get back into some proper photography!
Looking back over these few pics all I can say is what a smiley time we had!

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Freecycle

Hooray the cot has gone and I am no longer a freecycle virgin. I was going to stick stan's cot on ebay but given that we bought it for just £20 8 years ago and it has happily contained all three kids, I thought it would be better karma to freecycle it. I have long been chasing various great sounding things there, but am always too late, hopefully now my luck will change since I have given something away.

December starts

It's the 2nd of December and the roses are blooming, nasturtiums going strong, geranium flowering for third time this year, not to mention a sunflower in Dot's garden surrounded by a sea of Larkspur. I still haven't planted my broad beans which I absolutely must do today, but am quite glad that I never planted any garlic, I think it would have rotted in the ground by now!
So I started my new job this week and it was truly baptism by fire. First day discovered boss is #**&&$$£!.
Stanley coped with his first week of not much Mum, although he was so shattered by Friday that we didn't get up to much (he wasn't the only one). I am going to have to be far more organised about boring domestic planning so that I can still give the kids decent attention at the end of the day. Getting the meals sorted for the first few days of the week and washing and ironing all done at the weekends - although Michael is going to be finishing early on a Monday so perhaps I can look forward to some of his cooking!

Monday, November 20, 2006

Perfect Sunday



A few pics of a lovely day. Swept up some autumn leaves then had Gavin et al around for roast pork. India was looking lovely and the boys serenaded us with their Mariachi band whilst Gavin and Georgia battled it out in Trivial Pursuit. Some very fine Rioja was drunk too!

Saturday, November 18, 2006

apropo of nothing, but made me laugh!



I think it should say Meditation, but I still love it

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Raff's new bed!


He's done it again, Michael the wonder-builder has made Raff a fabulous new bed. Using the old storage units from our room as a base (which now means an unorthodox approach to clothes storage for us)
and the top half of an IKEA bunk bed, Raff now has a wonderful bed with a 'cave' underneath, which is guarded over by a fearsome dragon. Soon hopefully we will put all of his toys on the shelves, then all of his clothes in his room, so that Stan can have somewhere to put his clothes!!!! It's a never ending circuit of change. Stan is also now looking forward to having Raff's old bed - I just need to flog his cot to make space - Ebay here I come.

Meanwhile my darling is making a whole new built in cupboard for our clothes so that we can have the spare bed back... I am reminded of the amazing dressing room which he constructed for our first flat which was genius!

The DIY skills also had a new outlet in Saturday night when Michael and I indulged our passion for sushi by preparing oursleves a sushi feast. With some really yummy tuna from our local fish man and salmon too, we had sushi rolls, sashimi and Nigiri. I think we may have made a little too much...but I ate most of it and was a truly happy lady (it doesn't take much!) Here's our proud selection


As a footnote to my last post, global warming brought huge benefits yesterday when i picked 2kg of raspberries from one of the fields near us, I finally caught up with the farmer to find out why it hadn't been picked all summer - they are trial varieties apparently - well I think they're all yummy, some are the size of loganberries, so big helpings all round and then 7 jars of free jam - hooray. I hope to get one more picking session in before the cold weather really hits. Stan and I had fun making Sloe vodka last week - I pricked the sloes (7 times each is apparently the tradition) and he popped them into the bottles. It will be ready for Christmas 2007! So we can be self suffcient in jam and vodka, not exactly a balanced diet?

Monday, October 30, 2006

what global warming?


We had friends for lunch yesterday, on an another impossibly warm day and I picked a small bouquet for the table. If the flowers in this don't demonstrate climate change then what does? It's the 30th October, we haven't had the heating on yet, the back door is wide open all day long - yes we are hardier than many but it's really balmy, until the sun goes down. Today Georgia is off school for an inset day so we have been planting crocuses (her) and sweeping up leaves (me) plus I finally got some wallflowers and tulips in the bed by the front door, so it will stop looking so dreadful, plus an old tin bath full of winter pansies. Stan is sleeping and the house is quiet so a chance to catch up with the world of blog.

Life is about to get a whole load more complicated though as last week I was interviewed for a job, which I got! I am going to become a Knowledge Transfer Co-ordinator at the University College for the Creative Arts at Rochester - it will be a long skinny business card I think!! Now I have to begin the search for childcare to fit in with the kids three different days, two different schools and Stan just starting at playgroup!

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

autumn colour







A friend who saw the kids and I walking across the fields today said we looked like something out of a lifestyle magazine with our vibrant colours and a thoroughly country look about us. I think the praise for colour should go to the landscape which looked awesome today. My favourite light, super high tide bouncing it everwhere and all of the plants on the turn into autumn.