My eyes are fine.
Well, they're not, of course, but I can
drive. I can, in fact, read the line below the one on the oculist's
chart which the DVLA specifies as a minimum. The recent difficulty is
(I was told) because the plastic lens in my right eye since the
cataract operation, has gone a bit cloudy, as plastic does. This can
be corrected with lasers if I want but for the moment I will leave
it, at least until I see how much new spectacles help. As long as I can knit comfortably and drive safely, why worry?
I've reached round 83 of the borders of
the Unst Bridal Shawl. 136 is the target.
More non-knit:
A brief, excited email from
granddaughter Hellie yesterday: “EENY MEENY is my book!” with a
link to Richard and
Judy.
I don't think this means that Hellie is
writing thrillers these days under the name of M J Arlidge. More
likely s/he is a writer Hellie has found and got published and
promoted -- Richard and Judy are surely a coup -- in her role as
literary agent. I bought it and am reading. It is perhaps stronger
meat than I really care for, but it is certainly a page-turner. More
on this later.
Before I get back to “Counting Sheep”
and Sharma's “Family Life”. The great thing about Kindle is the
way half-read paperbacks don't pile up on the floor.
Football
I'm not really a Liverpool fan,
Knitlass. Rachel's husband and children are, and Hellie's boyfriend
Matt. In fact I think it is Liverpool that brought them together. On
Easter Sunday they got up early and went off to Mass in Dunoon so
that they could be back in time to watch the match. The rest of us went to the 11:30 in Inverary. And of course on
Easter Sunday, Liverpool won. Things have gone downhill since.
As I understand yesterday's newspaper,
Liverpool can still win the league if they win on Sunday and
Manchester City lose. Stranger things have happened, although not
many. But perhaps I don't grasp the subtleties. The man on the radio
said yesterday that Liverpool would have to win by 14 points. That
would require direct divine intervention.
Horticulture
The chilli plants on the kitchen
windowsill have overwintered successfully and are now in action,
although the big jalapeno from Waitrose that started the whole thing
off, is reluctant to set fruit, as it was at the beginning of the
season last year. The little plants that Alexander gave me are coming forward nicely. Eventually they will have to be re-potted and then one, at least, of last year's chillis will have to be sacrificed to make room for them.
And I am about to sow peas and salad leaves and
courgettes on the doorstep outside – safe from rabbits and slugs
and deer and sheep but alas I will not hear the cuckoo sing as I
work.
We have our first asparagus almost ready to harvest! And salad greens, carrots, chard and broccoli are in. If it warms up a bit more the potatoes will be next. Last year we planted too soon in the too wet and had bad centers in many.
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