Wednesday, 6 May 2020

The Distancing Diaries - Day 46 & 47



Doing my Wii Fit on Tuesday morning I noticed the lounge was looking a bit dusty so, after I'd finished my session, I filled a bowl with warm soapy water, washed my vintage glass, cleaned the inside of the windows & scrubbed the hearth, then dusted and swept the rest of the room. Normally it would take ages but, in lockdown world, as I'd only cleaned it a fortnight ago it took half an hour to get it up to scratch. Who knew that if you did it regularly that housework wasn't the time-consuming horror I once thought it was?


After our fruit & yoghurt breakfast (thank goodness for frozen fruit, we'd run out of fresh) I swept the stairs and the rugs in the dining room.


Then went upstairs and swept the bathroom floor, dusted the picture frames and polished the mirrors on the bathroom wall. The vintage velvet kaftan is my evening attire, I change into it after my shower every night and hang it back up in the bathroom every morning.


I was all geared up for a walk in search of grocery supplies but Jon received a text to say something he'd ordered online was on its way and, as we needed a few heavy items, he volunteered to go alone in the van while I waited in for the package so I watered the patio plants keeping an eye out for our lovely My Hermes delivery man who arrived shortly afterwards.


Didn't he do well? Stuff for us and the cats (including the ham, which Jon will share with Frank). Those baked beans with vegan sausages are so beautifully packaged I don't know whether to eat them or display them!


When I was getting dressed I noticed that the skirt I'd worn last week was missing a hook and eye, so I looked out the appropriate bits I needed and replaced it. I  can't resist buying old sewing boxes and tins crammed full of sewing bits & pieces at car boot sales and charity shops, it's very rarely I ever have to buy any new sewing supplies. Not only does it save money but the presentation is far lovelier, vintage wooden cotton reels in particular.


Lunch was a ham salad sandwich for Jon and egg mayonnaise for me, garnished with curled cress and mustard grown in our garden.


After lunch, Jon topped up the pond and nailed a couple of supports to the wall as our passionflower had had a bit of a growth spurt since I'd moved it last week. His toilet repair was a success but, as he continued prepping the walls in the utility room, he discovered to his horror that the sink had also sprung a leak. Old houses can be utter bastards! He abandoned his work and we went for a walk around the block instead.


Tuesday was sunny but cold - I started off the day watering the garden in bare feet and added to my outfit as the day progressed. By the time I went for our walk I was wearing socks, leggings, boots and my quilted riding coat over my recycled sari silk blouse and Anokhi dress.



The 1970s Anokhi pinafore was an eBay buy last year, the African breastplate and tribal earrings are pieces I inherited from my mum.

Tea was jacket potatoes with those beautifully packaged baked beans and grated cheese. Our evening's viewing was a couple more episodes of The Other Mother (Maman A Tort), a gripping French psychological thriller we'd discovered on Channel 4's Walter the previous evening.

Source
Day 47 (Wednesday) started with Wii Fit, as usual. After breakfast (a welcome return to fresh fruit) I got dressed and reached for a Banjara coin belt I hadn't worn in ages and noticed that there was something dangling from the tie fastener. To my absolute joy, I realised it was the earring I thought I'd lost at The End of The Road festival eight months ago. Thank goodness I'd saved the other one!


Whilst Jon cracked on with fixing the sink in the utility room I got the knife out and weeded the cracks in the pavers & gave the patio plants a thorough watering.  By the time Jon bought me out a posh coffee I was too hot in the long-sleeved kaftan I'd put on earlier and had to get changed into something else.


 I ventured outside Stonecroft's gates, weeding the patch of land on the left-hand side of the house (not the wild other side) and swept the drive. As it was warm I took out the kitchen windowsill seedlings and put them in the sunshine.


I was in the mood for some sewing but, the bedcover I'd planned to turn into a skirt wasn't quite wide enough so I repaired the top I wore yesterday instead - it'll be more repair than fabric soon!


I read The Kashmir Shawl in the sunshine until Jon called me in for noodles and to tell me that the sink was fixed - hooray!


After lunch, I watered the seedlings in the veg patch, greenhouse and the cloches then lay on the lawn reading - accompanied by the boys. In the meantime, Jon painted the skirting boards and the pipework in the utility room.


Breakfast radishes, turnips, French beans, Alicante tomatoes, lettuce......all looking good!


Once he'd downed tools for the day, Jon pottered around in the greenhouse before our afternoon stroll around the block.


Back at home, I felt the need to pose in front of the Laburnum which has burst into full bloom today, isn't it gorgeous?


My second outfit of the day! An indigo block print 1970s sun top by India Imports of Rhode Island (found in the 3 for a £1 basket in a charity shop a few years ago) and a vintage block printed maxi skirt, also by India Imports of Rhode Island, which I bought from eBay last year. My fair trade Mexican maize fedora was a present from our festival neighbours, Shilpa Silver, last year.


Tea was snack-sized vegetarian samosas & spring rolls from Jon's expedition to Farmfoods a couple of weeks ago, a couple of cubes of cheese and a salad of gherkins, olives, cucumber and tomato drizzled with balsamic vinegar and fresh herbs.

This photo (and my egg mayo sandwich earlier) is dedicated to Leigh who, like me, loves to see what people are eating.


Wednesday night in Walsall means one thing - beer! We've started already.


Hopefully, there's time to catch up with my blog reading and another episode of The Other Mother before The Great British Sewing Bee kicks off at 9pm.

Keep safe, stay positive and thanks for staying in touch, it's lovely to hear what you've been up to!

60 comments:

  1. There's a blockage in the meat supply chain here in the States. Not a big problem for those of us in semi-rural areas where small custom butchers still operate, especially if one is a hunter -- or if one knows someone who keeps birds. Even so, there is usually a drift toward less meat on the menu as summer warms: more cheese and pasta, more beans and lentils. Those baked beans with vegan sausages would definitely have landed in my shopping trolley. Well chosen, Jon! (and I do like your beard.) Your plated meals are inspiring me, Vix, to stock up on mozzarella balls for the happy day when my cherry tomatoes are ripe.
    We're also riding the roller coaster of wildly dipping and soaring temperatures. Next year I'm planting Sub-Arctic and good old reliable Nepal tomatoes to save my nerves. No doubt you're glad of the greenhouse which eliminates the tucking plants in on frosty nights. Good job the radishes and greens seem to enjoy sunning in the cold!

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    1. I've read about the possible meat shortage in the USA. It is a good idea to reduce the intake and try different options, just in case. Often the most dedicated carnivores are quite surprised at how much tastier veggie sausages are, they've come a long way since the awful TVP things of the 1970s!
      I'm going to investigate Nepal tomatoes, they sound very exotic! xxx

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  2. I have been out there with my butter knife today weeding the front path whilst wearing the waistcoat I bought from you!! Arilx

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    1. I'm loving the picture you've just described! I bet you were making a lovely tinkly noise while you were weeding! xxx

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  3. Don't you love finding things you thought you'd lost forever? I purposefully save earring singles for that very reason. Your plants are doing lovely. Jon is fabulous in the DIY department - plumber to painter to fixer, comes in so bloody handy in these times.

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    1. I do - finding that earring made me inexplicably happy!
      Jon is so good, he'll always have a go at fixing things himself before calling anyone in, he's saved a small fortune over the years what with our old house, elderly appliances and his collection of vintage vehicles! xxx

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  4. I love the tones in your hair that show up so beautifully in your plaits, it gives your hair a rich depth.
    The produce in your green house has come along amazingly well, those lettuces look almost ready to eat.
    Would you recommend the Kashmir shawl? I'm always on the lookout for new books.
    I do love your repair work, I save a lot of visible repair work on Pinterest, it really appeals to me.
    It's a great photo of you infront of your laburnum, we have one in the front garden but I must say it's not quite so magnificent, being much smaller.
    How lucky it was that you found your earring, and more to the point had saved the other one! Your mum's jewellery is gorgeous.
    As always I love your positivity, stay safe xxx

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    1. Thanks, sally! Jon keeps marvelling at my stripy plaits!
      The lettuce are looking really good, even the tiny leaves we've tried are packed with flavour. I'm sure it won't be long until we harvest our first radishes either. Exciting times! xxx

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  5. I love your globe drink stand! So klassy! I laughed at Stephen's pose - he looks like he's all full of beans, about to wreak some havoc! Great work, Jon, on fixing the sink too! Wow, super-impressed.

    Gorgeous outfits, and now I know what that yellow plant is - we have one overhanging our parking lot behind our condominium that is also in full glorious bloom.

    Grocery shopping for me tomorrow, post-Mental Health Walk. We've been eating a lot less meat (mostly chicken) but we're lucky in that our grocery store has a full butcher counter, and all the meat is raised locally. Your beans in baked potato teas sound delicious. I don't think I've ever made a baked potato! Isn't that pathetic? Lol. I usually just cut them up and roast them with olive oil and herbs.

    Gorgeous outfits, every one, Vix. I'm so happy you found your missing earring! That's such a wonderful feeling.

    Hugs to you and your fam!

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    1. I'd always wanted a globe cabinet. I spotted one in a charity shop window ten or so years ago when I was off to meet a friend and phoned Jon asking him to call in when the shop had opened and ask the price. He told me that it had been sold when he got there but the sneaky thing had bought it, hidden it in Gilbert for a couple of months and surprised me on my birthday!
      Ypur grocery shopping & mental health walks soon roll around, don't they?
      When Jos & Ann come to the UK Jos always has jacket potatoes for lunch when they eat out as they told me that they're not a thing in Belgium either! xxx

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  6. Keep on rockin' those braids, they are looking quite nice. I have gotten hooked on regular/frequent cleaning as it is so nice to always have the house in good shape. The problem is, you don't tend do do any real "deep" cleaning. I'll think everything is fine, and then drop something, only to be horrified about a pile of schmutz that has been forming out of sight.

    On the other hand, I'd be happy to forgo all of that just for a chance to thrift shop again!!!

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    1. Thanks, I'm loving the plaits!
      It is nice to have some kind of control over your surroundings, isn't it? I dod admit that I only clean when the house looks like it needs it rather than having a strict routine, I have to be in the mood to do something or I won't put my heart & soul into it. xxx

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  7. Such beautiful clothes, lasting so long because you take care of them. But also, somehow clothes of decades ago did last longer. A friend and I would dye our blacks, turquoises, and purples in a big cauldron every year. My clothes now don't stay wearable long enough to be able to do that. Talking of which: my winter wardrobe is so old and tatty that it's not even suitable for an op-shop drop. When we are able to sally forth into the dens of hell which masquerade for shops - I shall go op-shopping instead.

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    1. Thanks so much. I do take care of my clothes, don't wash them too often and really treasure them as many were hard won but I agree, they were made better back in the day, people were prepared to pay for quality and didn't need an infinite amount of clothes like they seem to now.
      I still have a big dyeing session every year or so, dyeing my faded cotton knickers and Jon's tee shirts! xxx

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  8. I love your clothes, sadly I am on the chunky monkey side so I can only admire from afar lol. I have been having a good old rummage and dig around and found a load of clothes that are far to big for me, if only my boobs would shrink! I would be a happy bunny.
    We can order anything we want online and get it a couple of hours later. Thank god for local courier companies. The mending process you use I think is called shashiko sorry for the bad spelling, it’s very beautiful, I had to ask one of my elderly neighbors. Who showed me some of her work. Simply magical. I will just keep making my Pom Pom curtain that way milo the dog cannot destroy it!! keep safe and be strong .

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    1. Hello Allie Jane! Boobs are the bane of many a vintage clothes wearer! I'm lucky I'm an A cup.
      That's so good to be able to order online and get it delivered so quickly. The frustrating thing about ordering on the internet here is having to wait ages for a delivery slot. The reason i haven't been shopping for food for three weeks is that we're scared of a delivery turning up and not being in.
      There's some incredible stuff online if you search for shashiko, it's a real art form, rather like those staples the Victorians used to use to hold delicate China together after it had been broken.
      Milo, please stay away from the pom poms.
      Keep commenting, I love reading about your fascinating life. xxxx

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  9. Very pretty skirts - I like the pink one a lot. I love housework, my mother never did it, never ironed, hoovered, junk piled up, pets nested in piles of clothes, etc, etc, dust rolled, the kitchen was brown and at 11 I discovered you could clean it off the walls but it was a job too large for a small girl! another story/disfunctional family... but it made me the opposite/obsessively tidying forever more! but you are right, do things regularly and it takes five minutes and feels great! everything sparkles, the air is clear and plants thrive :) and just look at your plants! eating the produce already :) I do love all your earings and anything with turquoise always catches my eye.

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    1. You don't see many pink Indian block prints, do you? I loved the combination with the faded indigo blue.
      I think I'm going to treat myself to a new pair of earrings for lockdown, Im watching a few lovely pairs on eBay! xxx
      Your childhood home and mine sound remarkably similar. Like you, I tried to clean things and sort things out but dealing with a chronic hoarder was beyond my capabilities and I chose to leave home instead. I do think growing up in such conditions gave me a cast iron consitution, I never missed a day of school through sickness! xxx

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  10. OMG! thanks for the pics. I get so inspired by food pics. your garden and house are lovely . so is your personal style.

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    1. Thank you so much, Leigh! You are lovely! xxx

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  11. what a luck to find the earring!
    love this anokhi apron dress - its so unusual and beautiful - and suits you to the nines. but your sun top make me shiver, i sit here in a wooly cardy AND a sheepskin vest - icy winds howl around the house, but it is very sunny though...... so some housecleaning is in the cards here too - although i would like it more to be out in the garden in the sun. maybe i do some sewing later.
    jon is the hero of homely handywork - cant wait to see the renovated room!
    beautiful laburnum tree!
    xxxx

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    1. Thanks, Beate! I love that pinafore dress, the quilted hem makes it hang really nicely!
      We've had such changeable weather this week, I'd started the day in long sleeves but was melting by mid-morning. There's a threat of snow on Sunday! Crazy! xxx

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  12. I do love your outfit in the Anokhi pinafore!
    I still have my grandmothers sewing supplies and all of my cotton reels are the nice wooden type and I swear even the cotton thread itself is much stronger quality than what I see nowadays. Its really is sad how quality has declined over the years and most people don't even realise if they don't hoard vintage stuff!

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    1. Aren't those wooden reels lovely? I was watching a repeat of the BBC's Antiques Road Trip where tone of the experts visited an old bobbin factory and made a few, it was fascinating!
      I'd been watching a near-identical Anokhi pinafore on eBay for weeks with a Buy-it-Now of £250 - I couldn't believe it when that one popped up at a fraction of the price! xxx

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  13. You're a domestic goddess, Vix, and put me to shame. I noticed a layer of dust in the living room this morning and it's just going to have to stay there for now.
    Love the maxi skirt. X

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    1. Ha! I've changed during lockdown, that's for sure! xxx

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  14. Jos seems to think I'll do the dusting now that I'm at home so much. I don't mind doing it at all, but I've yet to find the best way of staying on top of it. I often take out the duster when the sun shows up the dust, but that seems to be it. I keep getting distracted and flitting from one thing to the next. Jon did very well as the food shop indeed, and it did make me laugh that he'll sharing the ham with Frank! Both Jos and I are feeling a bit sorry for Jon, though, coming across yet another leak. Living in an older house ourselves, we now what utter bastards they can be! I'm loving the Anokhi pinafore and the weather must certainly have been on its best behaviour if you were able to wear that sun top. Your outfit looks especially fabulous with that magnificent Laburnum as a backdrop. And even if I'm not really a sewer, I can never resist crammed old sewing boxes either. As I also have both my grandmother's and mum's sewing kits, I don't think I'll be in need to buy anything new soon! xxx

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    1. The sun does show the dust up, doesn't it? I blame our open fires, even if we don't use them they just seem to generate dust.
      When I've set my mind to doing something and am in the mood for it I can whizz through it, if I don't I leave it for another day and find something more interesting to do, no pointing in forcing it!
      Poor Jon, he's had a right week. The utility room is tiny, who knew it could be so problematic?
      xxx

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  15. I love to see what other people are eating too. It inspires my meals and gives me new things to try. How do those vegan sausages in the beans taste?

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    1. You always feel like you know people a bit better as well, don't you? Those baked beans and sausages were delicious - we usually have Morrisons' own but haven't set foot in a big supermarket since lockdown. They're not sweet & mushy - unlike those disgusting Heinz things - with a subtle peppery taste. The sausages are really good, even meat eater Jon agrees! xxx

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  16. I love your fab beer bottle glasses! Where on earth did you find them?? x

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    1. Hello Keshling! They were a Xmas present from my brother years ago, he knows our love for recycling & quirky stuff (and beer!) Funnily enough we found a couple more in a charity shop a few weeks later. x

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  17. We do our housework weekly. Between the two of us we can do the whole house - hoovering, dusting, wiping, polishing, mopping; and the bathroom in a couple of hours - hours that I begrudge but it has to be done!

    I'm so glad you found your earring. If I lose an earring I never throw the other one away; I have a bag full of odd earrings and occasionally one of the missing ones turn up. Lovely outfits and I loved your velvet lounging gown. In the first outfit you looked very 'Anne of Green Gables' - it's the plaits, I think!

    The boys looked well chilled out...

    Wonderful growth in the garden; it's amazing how fast things are growing with the sunshine we've been having.

    Love the beer glasses!

    Take care,
    xxx



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    1. Jon does the kitchen floor, the utility room floor, the stove top, the windows and the shower and I do the rest. It's good to share!
      I was so absurdly happy to find that earring, I kept looking at the other one and pondering on what i should do with it, thank goodness I didn't chuck it out.
      Everything's having a growth spurt this week, the yukka's even gone mad. I love seeing the differences every morning when I'm out watering the garden, I must have walked around with my eyes closed before lockdown!
      Much love to you, Vronni! xxx

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  18. I don't spend much time cleaning-I used to once but I went off it.I usually wait until it gets noticeably mucky first.Perhaps like you said it would be easier if I cleaned more regularly.I love your sideboard-I've seen similar in the Stonehouse and somebody or other brochure x

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    1. Hi Flis! There's no point in cleaning if you can't see a difference. I blame our open fireplaces, even though we haven't had a fire in weeks they seem to generate dust!
      The sideboard was from an amazing company in Brighton called "Jugs" who import industrial, retro and antique furniture from Rajasthan. As soon as I saw it on their website I knew it had to be mine - it originated in Jodhpur, the place we fell in love with in January. xxx

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  19. Hello Vix. Your outdoor photos are all sporting sunshine which is always welcome after a cold winter. Good to see all your seedlings thriving and your Laburnum is magnificent!

    I'm an early riser and I try to get some housework done most mornings. I like keeping my house tidy; when it's dusty or messy it messes with my anxiety levels.

    I'm a bit of a foodie, so I always enjoy seeing what other people are eating. I've never had vegan sausages; might buy some to try.

    Your outfits are always stunning. GORGEOUS ear-rings!

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    1. Hello, Suzy! We aren't out of the woods regarding winter yet, despite Wednesday's sun top we woke up to frost the previous day and there's a threat of wintry showers on Sunday, never a dull week of weather in the UK!
      It does feel good to take control of our enviroment by keeping it clean and orderly, especially when life outside our domestic bubbles is so crazy.
      Vegan sausages are delicious - not that I know that meat ones taste like - but Jon's a carnivore and he really likes them too! xx

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  20. We don't have anything like your vegan sausages and beans-I'm envious. American baked beans are heavier in smoke flavour and molasses. They're not bad, but not tomato-y either. When this crap is all over, I can send you a tin of the meatless ones.

    Good to find the sink problem now, I suppose. Our kitchen sink is acting up, so I crawled under and located the turn off in the event I need to cut the water. The days of calling someone to fix things are still a ways off. Maybe you can get Jon to post some basic home repair tutorials!

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    1. I'd love to try American baked beans - I'll send you one of ours when all this is over!
      Oh no, sorry to hear that you've got sink issues, too - why does it have to happen now? x

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  21. I am si enjoying your isolation posts and admire your productivity. 3 loads of washing, the dishes and Hoovering was enough for me. Time to collapse on the couch.

    Julie

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    1. Hello Julie! Lovely to hear from you. You're a front line worker, I'm amazed you mananged all that before collapsing on the sofa. Stay safe! xxx

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  22. Been loving catching-up with your distance diary-ing. Such an eclectic mix of everything that I love. I've been on furlough from cleaning duties at work for the last 6 weeks, 4 of which have been taken up with the virus. I think I'm on the other side now though. Have a great weekend both.xxx

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    1. I'm so sorry you've had the dreaded virus, I hope you're well on the mend now. Lovely to hear from you. xxx

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  23. Your blog is fantastic!!!
    I just had to become a follower.
    I am looking forward to visiting with you often.

    Stay Safe 🌷

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    1. Thanks, Jan! I'll pop over and visit you. Lovely to get to know you. xxx

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  24. Hi Vix,

    I agree, I think if you tidy up regularly, it doesn’t seem like such a huge job.
    In regards to the cans of baked beans with the lovely packaging, once you’ve eaten the food inside, you could keep the can and use it as a little pot plant holder.

    Keep up the food photos- like Leigh I also like seeing what people like to eat and sharing some meals on my own blog too. X

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    1. t's all about keeping on top of things, isn't it? Hard to do when we're away for weeks on end in our normal lives but there really is no excuse now!
      If the label wasn't paper I could have done that - plain tin cans do make good planters though, I've used them before. xxx

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  25. You and Jon are living my idea of the best quarantine life. Unfortunately, mine has been spent mostly indoors with the dust and cat hair, and it doesn't help that it's been damn cold this week!

    I have heard that if you do a cleanup on a regular basis it's not so much of a chore but I can't seem to work that into the routine. The brass jewellery you inherited from your Mom is wonderful!

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    1. Dust and cat hair, the bane of our lives! You should have seen the washing machine after the cat blankets had been through the wash!
      Mum loved brass jeweelery, there were drawers full of the stuff when I cleared the house. It was hard not to just keep a few bits! xxx

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  26. I had the last beer yesterday with homemade pizza, and may invest in a new 6 pack. The brewery also has their hard seltzer ready for a growler, but I don't think I could drink enough before it went flat and too expensive to waste. They do have 4 packs in stores-may splurge! We'll have to wait again to plant outside-another freeze last night and tonight.

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    1. Beer and homemade pizza, food of the gods! You definitely need to stock up on some more! The weather's gone very cold here, I've lost one of my basil pots and my kohlrabi, I'll try again next week! xxx

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  27. My Mum used to say the same about cleaning and housework, I didn't believe her until recently!
    Laburnum! I think this is what I've been trying to identify in our garden for a while, ours is much smaller than yours but it looks very similar.
    Your outfits here are lovey, I've started to dig out skirts and dresses and am loving it! Hurrah for the sunshine!
    xx

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    1. It's not so daunting when you keep on top of things, although I can't guarantee I'll stay thay vigilant!
      An American lady commented that they call Laburnum "Golden Chain" which is lovely.
      I bet that green skirts having plenty of wears! xxx

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  28. love both of those outfits! How cute is that outfit with a maxi skirt and a cropped top. The flare sleeves worn under that first dress are divine too.

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    1. Thanks, Ivana! I'm always trying different tops with that pinafore, that flared sleeve top was my favourite so far! xxx

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  29. Lovely to see those colorful details in your home, the colour of the walls is so fabulous and everything rocks so much!.
    And I also enjoy to see what people is cooking and eating, as it could be inspiring!. I have to remember to take pics of my fav dishes and post them!
    Love to see you looking gorgeous in your Anokhi pinafore so brilliantly layered!, and love these pics of you in the garden in front of the blooming Laburnum. These pics totally bring on the sunshine and put a smile on my face!
    Glad you found the lost earring!, such a lucky find!. I also keep my 'orphan' earrings and sometimes find a new partner for them.
    besos

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    1. Thanks, Monica! I'm so glad we went for a dark colour, the room always feels cosy and relaxing these days.
      I was so happy to finally find that earring, I was starting to give up hope! xxx

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  30. My Mum has a kaftan on the back of the bathroom door too! I've honestly never come across anyone else who does that before, I shall tell her she is in good company. xx

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  31. Hoorah for beer! I bet you needed one after facing a leaking sink. Leaks are such pains. (I'm always having to keep an eye on the seals round our shower.)

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Thanks for reading and for leaving a message. Please don't be anonymous, I'd love it if you left a name (or a nom de plume).

Lots of love, Vix