February!
The news from Athens continues good.
Pain is no longer a problem, and David has been detached from his
tubes except for two drains, He ate some chicken noodle soup.
Goodness! what an ordeal! It had better solve the problem
permanently.
We had a delicious day yesterday, C.
and I. The weather cooperated splendidly, despite a savage turn
earlier in the week, and grim forecasts. It wasn't exactly warm, but
it wasn't icy either, no snow, no wind. The hazard, as so often, was
mud. We picked our way with care, and neither fell.
We went to East Linton, as recommended
in a Walk Book she gave me for my 80th birthday, and
walked upstream along the river Tyne (which sounds as if it ought to
be somewhere else) as far as the ruins of Hailes Castle (Mary Queen
of Scots, Cromwell). The muddy path was the first half of the
journey, the return was along a surfaced lane. About four miles in
all, about the limit of my strength.
Along that muddy path we found sheets
of snowdrops, more than I have ever seen before in the wild – as
distinct from carefully managed and fenced arrangements in wild
gardens. And although the path was used by dog-walkers and one
unhappy mother, bogged down in the mud with her pushchair, nobody
seemed to have picked any. C. took pictures with her telephone which
I hope she will send me.
Then back to East Linton for cider (for
me, who wasn't driving) and bacon butties.
Panic was, for the moment, completely
blown away. It's back, this morning.
C. has gone off with my passport.
She it was who booked our tickets for Athens, and she says that
EasyJet is enquiring about particulars. She's welcome to it – at
the worst, with a certain amount of huff and puff, it could be
replaced. What she can't have is the previous one, now expired of
course, which contains a stamp saying “Given leave to enter the
United Kingdom for an indefinite period”. They don't issue those
any more, for whatever reason. I have to carry both passports to get
back in.
Anyway, knitting
Despite complete, delicious tiredness I finished off the decreases in
Archie's first sleeve, found I needed another four inches, calculated
how many rounds that would be given the row gauge previously
achieved, and set the Sirka counter accordingly. It's a wonderful
gadget.
I think you may well be right, Hilde, that I could have done a lot
more of the sleeve on a circular needle. I'll determine the length of
the one I was using, root around to see if I have anything shorter –
almost certainly not; the needles are in some sort of order – and
have a look at good old Meadow Yarns.
I've had some thoughts about Pocket Squares, but no action. Don't
panic, don't panic, was Corporal Jones' excellent advice.
are you watching murray v djokovic? on now...
ReplyDeleteAnd still on, 2 hrs later, only 2 sets complete.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a delightful walk yesterday, perfect day for it.
Jean, should you ever be unlucky and lose that old passport, those permits are still issued as a separate document (the biometric residence permit) and can be replaced. It's easier from within the UK; if you lose it while away, you have to apply for special leave to enter.
ReplyDeleteI carefully renewed my us passport before applying for leave so as to have one travel document for as long as possible, only to learn that they were now separate.
It involves dealing with the Border Agency which is at best tedious and at worst expensive and nerve-wracking. But it can be done, if it needs to.
Two things
ReplyDeleteWhat about magic loop for those sleeves. I usually knit each down a few inches on its own, then do them both at the same time on a long needle.
And, I am impressed at your use of the Sirka. I was gifted one, and can't quite sort it out!
I'm with Pattie regarding the magic loop - a 1m needle will cope with anything from a glove finger to a sleeve, so useful :]
DeleteYEs, the Sirka Counter use is evidence of your programming skills. I would love to see a sheet of snowdrops. I did see wood anemones on my first visit to UK, but my real dream is a bluebell wood in full bloom
ReplyDeleteDid you go to The Crown and Kitchen in East Linton for cider? We often have Saturday lunch there and there's also an excellent butchers in East Linton if you happen to visit again. You were very brave venturing out in that weather yesterday. It was positively Baltic down this way.
ReplyDeleteSO glad you were able to have your walk - pretty much a guaranteed mood lightener. Goodness, sheets of snowdrops while I'm looking at heaps of snow, at a lower latitude - let's hear it for the Gulf Stream and hope that global warming doesn't make it a thing of the past.
ReplyDelete- Beth in Ontario