My sister
and her husband should be airborne now, between Edinburgh
and London .
Next will come London-Paris, then, after a longish layover, Paris-NY. Then, by
land, NYC-New Haven, where they will finally be reunited with their car for an
hour’s drive through the night to Old Saybrook. A hard day’s work.
It was a
good visit. We have reached the stage of life where we can only say, as Brutus
to Cassius, I think it was, before Philippi, If we should meet again, why, we
shall smile; if not, why then this parting was well made.
And I
decided that the next socks, when Lizzie’s are finished with their
Gibson-Roberts heels, will be my sister’s. She chose the cranberry Zauberball I
bought recently. That’ll be fun – something really to look forward to. I had a
message from Kristie this morning, from which I learn, to my surprise, that she
hadn’t yet knit a Zauberball herself when she gave me mine last year. She’s knitting
one now – but I had assumed her gift was to introduce me to an old friend.
I am afraid
the Sky Scarf has been abandoned. I think I said some time ago that one would
know when it happened, one day neglected, then the next. In the same message,
and knowing that I was sagging but not that I had given up, Kristie suggests
resuming in the winter. I have marked the months with st st stripes, so such a
resumption would be possible. Winter skies are vastly more interesting, beyond
doubt. And I am glad to put four months' scarf away with some hope that something will come of it.
I
haven’t blocked the snood yet. Today, I hope.
The Summer
IK turned up yesterday. Absolutely the last thing I need now is to fall in love
with a new yarn, but I fear it is happening – “Freia Fine Handpaints
distributed by KnitWhits” – that cardigan p.80. I am less than totally
enthusiastic about the cardigan itself – any suggestion that there is any
difficulty in buttoning across the stomach (as in the photograph) is not a look
to which I aspire.
And I could
wish the photography had been more explicit about the tuck stitch. As seen, it
might just be wrinkles in the fabric. But it might be seriously interesting.
Buy an armload of the yarn, Jean, and swatch it? Perhaps not today.
Dining room
I am
grateful for everybody’s comments. The Fishwife, in particular, may well be
right that contents insurance is an essential feature of life in an Edinburgh flat.
But I would
say – we have lived above our dear downstairs neighbours for nearly 20 years
now, and kept them dry. That includes the birth, brief life, and death of Helen
and David’s son Oliver, who had Down’s Syndrome and was born and died here in Edinburgh. Been there, done that, when it
comes to keeping neighbours dry through pain.
Last night
was sleepless, a rare symptom here, and during it I thought this: our contents
insurers have appointed a firm to try to get Upstairs’ insurers to pay for the
ceiling. They sent me some questions, and were kind enough to say that my
answers were helpful. If they succeed, surely Upstairs’ insurers have also
thereby acknowledged their responsibility for our things, a few feet below.
Whether they (the things) were insured or not is totally irrelevant. And if
Upstairs’ insurance doesn’t extend to our things, then…
Or so it
seemed during the night.
I've been following your blog for some months now. I'm a fellow 'old'kitter' - 61. Not too old but old enough! I've been knitting since I was 5, and have gone through the awful, scratchy man-made fibre eras. How lovely yarns are now-I wish I was just starting out on my knitting journey.
ReplyDeleteI've read with dismay your flood traumas, and hope it will be sorted out soon, and with few problems to you
Liz Phillips
Jean, I don't know what the term is in the UK, but in the US, it is termed "subrogation" when the insurer of an injured party seeks payment of damages from the insurer of another party. In your case, your insurer will seek payment of your damages up to (if necessary) the maximum amount of the upstairs neighbors' policy limit for such damages. I'm keeping my fingers crossed for you that the upstairs neighbors' policy has sufficient coverage for your losses.
ReplyDeleteMary G. in Texas
A sentence written by Alexander McCall Smith in his latest 44 Scotland Street book made me think of you: "We're so fortunate, aren't we? To live in a country where the sky changes virtually every moment; where its colours, its attenuated blues, its whites, its purples, break the heart, and then break it again, afresh, every single day."
ReplyDeleteI wonder if he knits?