Breaking
news
Jenni and
Theo’s son Theodore was born yesterday.
It was a long, hard labour ending with a Caesarian, but all are well. He shares Archie’s birthday – Archie was 17 yesterday. It’s rather an appropriate birthday to share – Archie, too, was born the year after an infant brother who died. And Archie, too, was born by Caesarian – in his case, because he was discovered at the very last moment to be upside down.
It was a long, hard labour ending with a Caesarian, but all are well. He shares Archie’s birthday – Archie was 17 yesterday. It’s rather an appropriate birthday to share – Archie, too, was born the year after an infant brother who died. And Archie, too, was born by Caesarian – in his case, because he was discovered at the very last moment to be upside down.
This new
Theodore is to be called Ted as was my father, his great-grandfather. Now I’ll have to sew buttons on that BSJ and
get up to the post office.
So today
Helen and her sons will head back to Athens ,
much missed. Mungo liked Glenalmond better than Fettes, an unexpected result.
It ranks lower in league tables but that isn’t necessarily significant. He will
be entering the sixth form: he wants to do an Ancient Greek A-Level, and to
start Latin of which he doesn’t know a word. They seem happy to oblige. We
shall see.
Knitting
Mary Lou, I think it’s pretty well
essential to have someone else help you with measurements when you start on
CustomFit. Some of them are easy enough to do for oneself, like the (hem, hem)
inter-nipple distance. Others near impossible. I hope this scheme is a huge
success and that eventually she’ll include men. I have a bad track record,
fitting men.
(And on the
other matter your comment touches on: I had to look up Simon Serrailler
yesterday to check on how to spell him, and thus discovered that there will be
a new book about him in September, 2014. Will I live that long?)
Knitting
moved peacefully forward yesterday. I’ve made a good start on the centre chart
of Rams & Yowes. I’ll show you, as soon as the pattern begins to resolve
itself. The initial roll has finally given up. It stays put, and I make visible
progress beyond its reach. I’m knitting more Rs&Ys than Milano these days, but both are
still happening.
The fiddly
Christmas knitting I have in mind is on pages 112ff of “Knit Your Own Britain”.
I can safely assume that the intended recipient doesn’t have a copy. Tomorrow
is November. Maybe I’d better start knitting little pieces of it from time to
time.
It isn’t
just knitting, either: Christmas is encroaching more and more on the year, like
that roll at the beginning of Rams & Yowes. My husband’s birthday is just
after the middle of November. When I was young, I used to regard that as the
signal to get started on Christmas – and often didn’t do it. Now, everything
seems to be in full swing in October. There was even a pull-out Christmas present
supplement in the Scotsman yesterday (with some rather good ideas).