Monday 4 May 2020

Our Life in Lockdown - Day 44 & 45


The previous evening's entertainment had kicked off with a documentary about Titian, followed by the BBC's latest Scandi-Noir, State of Happiness, set in Norway during the discovery of oil in the North Sea in 1969. We'd seen it advertised, the storyline didn't appeal, the clips were mostly of actors speaking in American accents, making us think it was dubbed rather than subtitled (which we hate) but once we started watching we realised that the visiting Texan oilmen spoke in English and the rest of the cast spoke in their native Norwegian. Anyway, we loved it. A gripping storyline, gorgeous cinematography, stunning vintage cars and some seriously cool outfits (the menswear in particular).

Source
On Sunday morning (lockdown day 44) Stephen Squirrel did his usual trick by waking me up before 5am but I made a concerted effort, stayed in bed & must have dropped back off to sleep, I couldn't believe it when I woke up at 8am! I left Jon in bed, fed the cats, watered the windowsill seedlings and brought mugs of tea back to bed where we read until 9.30.


Breakfast was a fried egg on toast - after I said we don't each much bread! We watched the rest of the Andrew Marr Show and after I'd dressed, I went outside and watered the plants. It had been raining when I got up at 8am, but not particularly heavily, so I thought they'd appreciate a drink.

This week's lockdown nails - Barry M's Fuschia Generation
Jon decided to prep the utility room ready for painting by filling the cracks in the walls but, as is often the way with old houses, he ended up finding unexpected problems as he went along including a leak coming from our ancient loo. In the old days, he'd have driven straight to B&Q, bought the bits he needed, come home & fixed it.  The new normal means that he'll have to empty the shed this week and see if he's got anything he can repurpose. At least we've got an upstairs loo!


 I beat a hasty retreat, headed back into the garden and swept the pathway that runs alongside the Kinky Shed, also cutting back the brambles, raking up the leaves behind the pond and in the borders and did a bit of weeding before cutting back the shrubs that grow next to our postbox as they'd had a bit of a growth spurt after last week's rain. Considering I'd been working flat out for three hours, I couldn't see a fat lot of a difference but there again, I'm going for the rustic rather than manicured look (or, at least, that's my excuse!)





There was no stopping for lunch as we don't generally bother after we've eaten a cooked breakfast.

The psychedelic bird box was a Xmas gift a couple of years ago, hand painted by Liz

Day 44's outfit was most unusual for me, two contemporary shop-bought pieces! The lampshade-sleeved, dobby cotton top came from FabIndia in Panjim in 2019 and the block-printed cotton wraparound maxi skirt was from Cotton Cottage in Margao in 2018. Both companies specialise in fairly traded, handmade, organic cotton clothing and I try and buy something from them every year.


I allowed Frank a leaf from the nepeta (catmint) I'd bought from eBay last week, he's off his tits now!


The dress I'd worn on Saturday needed a couple of the press studs on the sleeves replacing, in truth,  they've not fastened since I bought it last year and it irritates me every time I wear it. So, in my new lockdown way of life, I decided to tackle the task whilst I thought about it rather than putting it off for another day, so  I brought it downstairs and repaired it at the kitchen table whilst Jon prepared tea (jacket potatoes with cheese & salad).


I decided to repair the hole in my Alpnani kaftan next, something else I've been meaning to do for ages usually only remembering it needs a repair when I wear it. In the absence of a similar type of fabric (I've pretty much depleted my fabric stash with my patchwork curtains) I used some vintage braid to do some visible mending.


After tea we watched Race Across The World Revealed, the series finished last weekend so it was a chance to see the competing couples get together and discuss their adventures. Just in case you've yet to watch I won't give anything away, other than to say that our favourite couple thoroughly deserved their win. Again, we almost forgot it was Killing Eve nightthe weeks fly past so quickly, but we remembered just in time. I went to bed early and read Margaret Forster's The Memory Box for an hour, I've only got a couple of chapters left now, what on earth to read next?


This morning started, as all weekdays do, with a Wii Fit session and a fruit and yoghurt breakfast. We've run out of bananas amongst other things, so it looks like a trip to Johal's is on the cards in the next day or so. As it was dry I dragged an old metal chair outside the gates, piled it up with some of the books we'd recently finished. Within an hour half of them had gone so I added a few more.


I got dressed in one of my vintage Afghan nomad dresses and replied to my blog comments, leaving reading the blogs I follow as a treat for later.


I do love an Afghan dress!

I watered the patio pot plants & sprayed the windowsill seedlings whilst Jon, unable to find all the stuff he needed in the shed to repair the loo, called the plumber's merchants to place an order and drove into town to pick it up. The postman arrived with our Superdrug suncream, not that I'll need it today, it's another overcast & distinctly chilly one. I also unwrapped a book Gill, a lovely Facebook friend, had just finished and had kindly offered to send my way.


As Jon cracked on with fixing the loo, I repotted the basil, the purple cauliflower & some of the ruby red Swiss chard into larger pots and planted out the remainder of the chard into the bed below the lounge window, I've grown rainbow chard before and loved how pretty it looked so I'm hoping it'll work well with the rest of my plant. I got the hosepipe back out and gave everything a good watering.


After our lunchtime noodles, I planted the lemon cucumber out into the grow bags inside the cloches.


Ha! No chance of getting to those cucumbers in there, mister!


Having successfully fixed the loo, Jon continued in the utility room, filling a few more holes in the wall and scrubbing everything down.


By 2pm watery sunshine had broken through the clouds so I sat outside, finished my book and added it to the free pile.


I had a light bulb moment this morning, got out of bed at the crack of dawn so I could retrieve something I'd forgotten about. Above is a photograph of my Grandpa (Mum's father, the previous owner of Stonecroft). This a poem his Aunt Dorothy (b.1884) wrote and sent to little Reg in 1919.


 I've featured this on my blog a few years ago and, today, it couldn't be more apt.  Its a relic from the last pandemic, the Spanish Flu outbreak, which tragically claimed more victims than the Great War which preceded it.



I daren't suggest a lockdown walk around the block as Jon's still traumatised by the toilet. Instead, I'm leaving him to relax by cooking tea (grilled halloumi with roasted vegetables) whilst I catch up with blogs.


Tonight we'll be watching Grayson Perry's Art Club and I'm not sure what else, I'll have to see what the BBC has on the i-player.

Stay safe, happy and positive. See you soon!

55 comments:

  1. I am a fan of your garden! No really it's awesome.

    and your outfits are perfect in my eyes. I am positively crazy about belted afgan dress. Oh I positively need it.

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    1. Thanks so much, never have I been so glad to have a garden I these strange times.
      Afghan dresses are my favourite things, I dream of finding more after lockdown.

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  2. Your dresses are incredible, Vix! I'm a fan of the visible mending - it's a nice memory. I did have a flashback on those snap-fasteners! I have a card like that around somewhere (I often sew them on the "boob gap" on blouses).

    I laughed at Frank being "off his tits" on catnip - Vizzini has a few 'nip mousies but we have to take them away from him quickly as he goes completely batsh*t with drool and growling. Stephen, you keep away from those plants too, mister!

    I have huge empathy for Jon and the toilet! L is so NOT handy - he took out our scary-sounding bathroom fan, and then never replaced it, so we have this hole in our ceiling! Gah! I try not to look at it.

    Hugs to you, Vix! I am always happy to see your posts and hear what's going on in your part of the world. What a cool letter that is from your Auntie D to your dad!

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    1. It's funny how daft Frank gets with at op, Stephen doesn't get the appeal at all. Cats are all so different.
      Jon will have a go at repairing anything, he refuses to give up, there are a lot of unfinished
      projects though,I had to wait three years for the shower to work. Xxx

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  3. I general call my style for gardening "crazy garden", where everything grows like crazy. Rustic does have a nice ring to it.

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    1. Rustic sounds like it's a deliberate thing, it definitely isn't!

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  4. Oh you do brighten my day with your gorgeous outfits. Those seedlings look healthy. We have a 'two chances' style of gardening. It either lives or dies... My Hostas are looking pretty at the moment and I've just remembered that I need to Vaseline the pots. The rain last night will have done them the world of good. It absolutely hammered down.

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    1. Thanks, Cberie. We try not to get too upset if the seedlings don't all grow but it's inevitable, isn't it? I must redo the vase line on my host's pot, I spotted a couple of nibbled leaves earlier.

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  5. My goodness your outfits never end! I think your house must be like the tardis with so many beautiful dresses to home :) I love your bird box - I am thinking of painting my cuckoo clock and it's sort of inspired me. Isn't gardening so relaxing and absorbing. I hope the weather picks up for you but for me too as our cooker is broken and we are relying on the bbq for the men's meat meals! Your bluebells are gorgeous, I can't think of a better frame for your pretty house either.

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    1. Thanks Betty, I'm enjoying shopping my wardrobe, in reality I don't really need to buy anything else ever again, but that'll never stop me.
      Arent the bluebells pretty? Hopefully it won't be long before they are replaced by poppies. Xxx

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  6. I do love your rustic approach to gardening, which is similar to mine. In fact, rustic is a word which features heavily in my vocabulary :-) That photo of you with the psychedelic bird house could have been straight out of that garden people book too! Frank's after-catnip face made me chuckle. Putting out the chair with free books is a lovely idea. Our opposite neighbour put out some free stuff last week, and some of it was gone within the hour. We even grabbed something ourselves! Your row of colourful Afghan dresses is a sight for sore eyes, and how poignant is that poem. Glad to hear Jon finished the toilet repairs. Isn't it wonderful to have handy men? xxx

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    1. Rustic is far preferable to "manicured", isn't it? Can you imagine having to maintain one of those perfect National Trust gardens with the topiary and knot gardens? You'd need a full-ime team of staff!
      I love what you grabbed from your neighbour. That was perfect timing.
      All but two of the books went, so now we go into the cupbaord under the stairs we're mo longer in danger of being flattened by an avalache of paperbacks!
      Jon's a star, a leaky loo and a leaky sink, sorted! xxx

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  7. So did Aunt Dorothy survive the flu? Love that you still have that, so much family history. Love the make due and mend - we all have to these days. After struggling through making 5 masks, 2 each for us (replacements of early poor ones) and for Mom I have decided I never want to sew a lot and will be a mender. I did save a bunch of money making us masks though, at least $60 so there's that. Free piles is where it is at this year, although our 24 hour facebook bidding site reopened. I don't have much to get rid of at this point but will look for new books there as well as the little free libraries in our neighborhood. I love your clothing, always so colourful.

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    1. She did, she died at the age of 82 in 1966, the year I was born.
      One of my friends is making scrubs for the NHS, while they are fairly straighforward to make, each time the driver delivers her next consignment they've increased the numbers, she's definitely got no time to be bored in lockdown and would quite welcome some free time like the rest of us!
      All but two of my two piles of free books went, I was amazed. I wonder what else I can leave outside? xxx

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  8. When the feline population in my household numbered 5, the cats had their own laundry basket. Now that there's only the two old toms, their towels and covers are washed with my own. However, they do have their designated outdoor pot of catnip and a row of pots of cat grass sown in two-week rotas. Much too pricey in the posh pet shops! * Which reminds me, how goes Jacob Herrmann's salad patch?

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    1. I love that your cats had their own laundry basket! That reminds me, I should pop Frank's special blanket in the machine today, we've got a warm & sunny day forecast and hopefully it'll be dry and back on his favourite stool before he's even noticed it's missing.
      Jacob's enjoying a mix of dandelions, rocket and lettuce at the moment - all home grown! xxx

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  9. Ah.... Afghan cothes (sigh). As a young child, Afghanistan was where I longed to be. Obviously that country of a different past era and not the one that we know of. Your clothes are exquisite. In New Zealand people tend to covet ethnic clothes from Bali, and secondly, India. But now there is a big push to buy local, buy NZ made, since the lockdown started. No new cases for us yesterday....

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    1. You and me both, I've found some incredible old photos taken on the Hippy Trail in Afghanistan as well as pictures of Afghan female students in the 1960s and 1970s, what a place it once was.
      There's been a real ressurgence of interest in Indian-made clothes here, the vintage ones sell for eyewatering amounts of cash - my wardrobe is my pension!
      So good to hear that NZ has no new cases, Jacinda is doing a wonderful job. I wish she were our leader. xxx

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  10. The clothes are just so pretty, I type wearing yoga pants and an over size Cabi pullover. I;m glad Jon took an afternoon to rest-he does't slow down.

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    1. Thanks, Sam! Can you believe that after he'd mended the loo the sink sprung a leak? Poor Jon, he totally earnt his beer last night! xxx

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  11. That's quite a poem. I hope she did have a spree when it was all over.

    I have two Afghan dresses. Do I ever wear them? Anyway, yours are beautiful.

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    1. I wonder what a spree in 1919 involved? Dorothy, like the vast majority of my female ancestors, never married - I'd like to think celebrating surviving the flu involved good looking young men, gallons of gin and a couple of fancy new hats! xxx

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    2. PS I remember lusting after your Afghan dress a couple of years ago. You ought to sell them to me! xxx

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  12. your garden is so pretty and inspires me to work on mine. please show us pictures of your tea. I love seeing pictures of what people eat.

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    1. Thanks, Leigh! If your morning is as sunny as mine is today we'll be working outside all day! I've taken note and included a couple of food photos in my latest blog post, I love seeing what people eat, too. Stay safe! xxx

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  13. What another lovely post, hubby bought me a sewing machine as I prefer to hand repair everything. I am terrified to use it! I Love the Japanese way of repairing many of my kimonos are repaired like that. But for the life I cannot think of the name.
    I work in a vintage store in harajuku and we get a lot of American vintage sometimes Indian but the kids seem to really like the American vintage. I once got a dress from 1950, it’s too small but it hangs in my bedroom as I love it so. I love your garden that is one thing I do miss, the koi pond is beautiful but I really would like some plants , my mum send some seeds and god knows how they got through customs as they are really strict, I think she hid them.
    So I am waiting for pansies, tomatoes (plum’) , fried egg flowers and cornflowers. I can’t wait.
    And milo my dog decided he didn’t like the bamboo divider screen and ran through it on Sunday! So no more screen! Pets who would have them.
    Take care allie xxx

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    1. I do love mending by hand, Allie Jane. I probably sound a bit hippy-dippy but you feel like you're really connecting with your clothes when you spend time repairing them.
      I've just read your comment on yesterday's blog and googled Sashiko and Boro, they both look very similar to my non-expert eyes but the process is fascinating, isn't it? I love that the Japanese take great pride in mending rather than this horrible habit we have in the West of throwing torn clothes away as we see shame in them.
      I'm sad that you're afraid of your sewing machine. When I first showed an interest in sewing as a teen my parents bought me a fancy Jones' machine, it was so complicated I lost all my confidence and didn't pick up a needle again until I was in my 40s!
      I hope your plants turn up soon, I've got a few seeds that need sowing but I need to do some Googling to see where to put them first. What on earth did we do before the internet?
      Much love to you and naughty Milo! xxx

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  14. You're both certainly putting lockdown time to good use, you rarely seem to sit still!
    Stunning outfits here Vix, even though your first outfit is new, it's a far cry from high street stuff, and will stand the test of time better too, no doubt.
    How lovely to have so many bluebells in your garden, I was delighted to find just two in our hedgerow.
    How apt is that poem?
    xx

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    1. I've always been a fidget, I think I'm getting worse in my old age!
      Isn't that poem adorable? I wonder if there's any Coronavirus poetry about?
      I do love our bluebells but they're horrible when they die back, yards and yards of slimy, drooping leaves.xxx

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  15. Your Afghan dresses and Indian block print garments really are things of loveliness. When I was a kid, growing up in the 70s, I dreamed that as a grown-up I would waft around all day in outfits just like them, but it hasn't quite worked out that way! More structured garments suit my size and shape better, so I'm more of a 40s/50s girl, but I can still admire from a distance!

    Your mention of the menswear in the new series you're watching reminded me again of how much more stylish, elegant, colourful and imaginative men's clothing was in the past. Modern women's fashion generally leaves me cold (I can only get interested if it's vintage-inspired), but I think menswear has suffered even more in the modern age - high street offerings are all so drab and shapeless. Shame!

    I'm incredibly impressed by Jon's skills - I'm sure both myself and my husband would be running round in a complete flap if we discovered a leaking loo! Oh, and what a great idea to leave out your completed books for passers-by. :)

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    1. Hello, Fran! I think I had a similar vision as me as a grown-up, wafting around in impractical dresses accompanied by a cloud of perfume. The dresses yes, the fragrance less so!
      You're not wrong there, the menswear of the past was wonderful, I often find smoking jackets, luridly checked wool jackets and 1970s shirts on the women's rails in charity shops, the assistants look at me like I'm mad when I buy them and explain that they're menswear!
      Jon will have a go at absolutely anything, it might take a while (like the shower that took three years!) but it always gets done in the end! xxx

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  16. Hi Vix, you look stunning while doing your gardening chores, as always. One thing I have been meaning to comment on is how healthy you both eat! There is never any mention of snacking and I suppose you are never still! No wonder you are slim. Also do you find watering the garden therapeutic? I do. The jewellery is stunning by the way. Take carexx

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    1. Hello! I totally agree with you about watering the garden being therapeutic, on a warm day with bare feet and a hosepipe in my hand I couldn't be happier especially when I spot signs of growth and flowers emmerging.
      I don't snack and never eat between meals. Jon loves a treat after his tea, like salted peanuts or biscuits and a few years ago I started to keep him company and so the same but realised that, for the first time in my life, the weight was starting to creep on so I knocked it on the head. We can enjoy each other's company without snacking!
      Much love to you. xxx

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  17. old houses - the BW lives in constant fear of finding a big malaise when only wanting to hang up a picture.....
    ;-D
    all the afghan dresses on one wall its such a beautiful sight! sadly they never appear in shops here, no idea why. your garden looks neat yet cosy and natural - perfect in my eyes - and the veggie plants grow like mushrooms - i have catmint too, but lisbeth is not interested.....
    finally it rained here substantly and all the plants doubled their size!
    xxxxx

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    1. Old houses can be horrors. The loo got fixed only fro Jon to discover that the sink had sprung a leak, it's never ending!
      I remember wearing Afghan dresses as a little girl but you're right, they are few and far between. I got so lucky with mine, the few I've seen on eBay recently have sold for well over £100!
      Stephen isn't interested in catmint either. xxx

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  18. woww, love to see you rocking in these fab outfits, love the burgundy-red shades in both outfits and your stunning pendants and bracelets.
    Your afghan dresses collection is totally Fabulous, all those colors and details and embroideries!, love them!. This is a feast for the eyes!
    And I'm also doing some mundane sewing, mending and replacing buttons, whereas I watch tv. I tend to procrastinate these tasks and they pile up!.
    Love to see your gardening and how beautifully 'rustic' your garden looks, it's really more attractive than a perfectly manicured garden and suits your house (and its residents) better!.
    Lovely idea to offer some books for free, as nowadays we can't donate them to charities. I'm going to send some of my books to friends or let them outside their homes, as now we can go outside for a walk!.
    And such an amazing thing to read the little poem/song that Auntie D. sent to little Reg. And totally appropriate nowadays too!.
    I totally admire anybody who can repair a leak or anything related to plumbing, as it stress me out and makes me feel so anxious. And I'm the handywoman in the family! ;DD
    besos

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    1. Thank you! I keep searching for more of those dresses to add to my collection but the prices have gone scarily high, I should just stick with the ones I already have.
      Those mundane tasks are so easy to put off, it's silly isn't it? Replacing buttons and hooks are so quick to do and mending is so rewarding, I shall definitely continue to do things as soon as I notice them in future instead of procrastinating over them and starting mending piles like I did pre-lockdown!
      That's great that you're the handywoman! My parents didn't have a clue about fixing stuff, they were always in awe of Jon when they were alive! xxxx

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  19. Oh, Aunty Dorothy sounds like fun - and Aunty Phyllis, too! Brilliant.

    I've finally got to see a monged catnip cat - yay!!

    The garden is looking so lush and such a variety of plants, veg and herbs. I'm telling you you'll be selling veg not vintage gear by next year at the rate you're going! We finally got some rosemary the other day so I'm hoping for a nice bushy bush in the future.

    You are very lucky to have such a handy man and one who knows how to repurpose things; Jon must have saved you a small fortune over the years.

    Loving all the outfits; the afghan dresses are just lovely. I loved the fuchsia nail polish, too and the fab jewellery. Mending your clothes has reminded me I have 2 maxi dresses hanging up since lockdown began waiting to be hemmed - I need to get on with it!

    I really didn't like the new BBC4 9pm Scandi -we gave up on it but I am enjoying 'Killing Eve'.

    Take care
    xxxx

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    1. I'll have to find out my family tree I blogged about many years ago, I come from a long line of fascinating women who never married, it's such a shame that I only met one of them. It's lovely to have a few of their things.
      Frank is so silly, Stephen isn't bothered at all by catnip!
      Jon will have a bash at mending anything, he might take ages to do it but he always gets there in the end. There's always a YouTube tutorial if all else fails!
      I do love my Afghans, I'm always searching for more but the prices seem to be getting higher and higher. I wasn't sure about that fuschia nail paint but the longer it's on the more I'm getting used to it.
      I didn't think I'd enjoy the new Scandi but I really did. The Other Mother on Walter is really good, the cops are a bit like the Spiral crew,they keep f*cking up!
      Stay safe and hem those maxis! xxx

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  20. I much prefer a more natural looking garden.A large fern has appeared recently here and I also have another variety that has self set.Does cat mint make them euphoric Vix,I heard they like it?I wonder how the dancing went to the poem x

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    1. I do love a fern, Flis! I once found one on a mountainside in Greece and smuggled it home in my shoe, sadly I left it behind at my last house!
      Stephen isn't interested in cat mint at all but Frank loves it, he's as high as a kite after rolling on and nibbling the leaves. So funny to watch! xxx

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  21. You two have been so productive through all this it makes my head spin! I love your garden, and definitely prefer the more "rustic" look. Sylvester gets catnip once or twice a week, depending on how much he is bothering me when I'm working. It tends to make him wonky for a bit and then he sleeps it off. I'm inspired by your "free book chair" to do the same with the pile of books accumulating in the corner of my living room.

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    1. We've amazed ourselves with our productivity, I'd imagined we'd spend most of lockdown reading indoors or surfing the net but the weather has been unexpectedly lovely & we've loved every minute of our "new" lives, I'm not anxious for lockdown to end - I thought I'd be climbing the walls!
      Nearly all those books went, it felt good to offer people a freebie, like we were sort of doing our bit in a small way.
      Say hello to Sylvester for me, I bet he's loving you being at home! xxx

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  22. I love natural gardening and happily coexist with a lot of weeds..ahem wild flowers! They're often so pretty and often have medicinal properties too.
    I reckon you will be self sufficient in vegetables this summer, how fantastic.
    The photo of your grandpa is sweet and I think you have a look of him.
    Well done to Jon on fixing the loo, we've had similar troubles here! xxx

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    1. You're right, I ought to investigate the medicinal properties of all the strange things we have sprouting up here, we might find a cure for Corona!
      Oh no, not leaks for you, too! Isn't it a bother when you can't just drive to B&Q and get the bits you need? xxx

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  23. That psychedelic bird box is so pretty. Such a great gift. You look lovely in your ethically traded blouse and maxi skirt. I also love your Afghan dresses. You have quite a collection and you wear them so well. I love the red one with the brown sleeves that you paired with a brown belt.
    Your garden looks lovely. Nice to see the repotting work. The photo of your grandfather as a young boy is adorable. Fascinating to see those letters from the Spanish flu times.

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    1. Thanks, Ivana! The bird box was a lovely idea for a gift, wasn't it?
      The clothes available in shops in India are incredible, ethically made and so beautiful. The entire outfit cost less than £30 - can you imagne how much a handmade, fair-trade skirt & blouse would cost hee in Europe? xxx

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  24. I'm very smitten with that first outfit and your gorgeous newly bought Indian garments-they are beautiful!!! I am LOVING all the plant updates you post every day!!! My chard is still so small outside!! I wish it would hurry up!!!! Your Afghan collection is beautiful!
    Oh no about the loo!!!!! Ahrgh!!! It's good he's got the skills to sort it though. I wouldn't trusted CBC to do that!

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    1. Thanks, Kezzie! The quality, ethics and standard of the clothes in shops in India are wonderful, I could easily be converted to buying new if we had stuff like that here!
      I get so excited about new shoots and greenery. Our chard is surviving the outside although th kohlrabi isn't quite so happy, I can always plant more though!
      The loo is fixed, Jon's so good at mending thngs! xxx

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  25. What an awesome, psychedelic bird box! I wonder what Frank thinks of all the colors and designs now that he's on the catmint? I have a big pot of catmint growing and all the stray cats we feed keep getting in the pot. So far the plant is ok though. Clearing the path, cutting brambles, raking, weeding for three hours makes me tired just reading about it! I planted a geranium and a pot of moss roses today. I ended up sitting down on the garden chair and getting really sleepy so I just gave up on doing any more. Love seeing all the Afghan dresses hanging together in their colorful awesomeness! It's amazing to see the photo of your grandpa and the poem.

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    1. Ha! That's a good point. I bet he can see all kinds of freaky creatures emerging from the psychedelic bird box after a few bites of the catmint! I've kept the plant on the windowsill, out of harm's way, last year Frank managed to find it, knocked it down, broke the pot and rolled around in the dirt, it took days for him to be white again.
      Planting is hard work, you totally need a sit down with a book and a nap afterwards!
      Much love to you, Cheryene! xxx

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  26. Thanks from Wolves for you blog, another little thing to see me through lockdown. In return a little snippet I should have told you yonks ago. After your Peaky Blinders post we were shopping in Waitrose in Penn when I walked past a staff entrance and
    collided with Tommy. He apologised and didn't cap me and was surprised to hear he was popular in vintage circles.

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    1. Hello! Lovely to hear from a near neighbour.
      Fancy Tommy going shopping in Waitrose and you managing to bump into him and not getting clobbered! xxx

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  27. Wow, so many lovely things to look at in this blog post. Love this week’s lockdown nails and your Afghan dresses, of course!

    Poor Jon, a broken toilet would have traumatised me too. It’s great that he was able to relax by cooking.

    Wow, what a piece of history you have with the Spanish Flu poem. Who knew that we’d be able to perfectly relate to it under the current circumstances! Take care. X

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    1. Thanks, Jess! Isn't it strange to think people were living with a pandemic a hundred years ago, too? When we learned about the Spanish Flu at school it seemed incomprehensible that so many died from the flu. That poem really is apt. xxx

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Lots of love, Vix