A dull day. I got
around the garden.
I got the tinking
done (see yesterday) and the second steek cast on. Then I sank back, exhausted.
However, later in the day I discovered that the Calcutta Cup will actually be
contested during the first week of February, the 5th or so. I’d
better get cracking. I could finish the vest off with ordinary ribbing instead
of corrugated if need be: that would speed things up a bit.
Here is my salad
factory at the end of week 3, under its eerie light. Basil, far left, was slow
to start but is now moving along nicely. I messed around with Youtube a bit,
and discovered that I am not expected to wait until I can replace all four
lingots; I can take them out and slot in replacements whenever. It is sort of
embarrassing not to have thought of that myself. Sometime in June I am supposed
to take the whole thing apart and clean it. I want to grow chillies. There are
two chilli lingots, cayenne and jalapeno, but both are “out of stock”, the only
ones that are. But perhaps by the time I
need them…
Archie is doing –
I think I probably told you – a degree course to become a mental health nurse.
The first term was almost entirely on-line (and not very demanding), but now he
has embarked on his first placement and is full of enthusiasm. He is attached
to a community health ward at a hospital in Haddington. So far he is only
shadowing real nurses, but he will be there six weeks and may become more
engaged. It sounds potentially depressing – the patients are mostly if not all
elderly and somewhat demented. He will come and see me one day next week when I
hope to learn more.
Shandy (comment
yesterday): tell me more about that art programme. My husband was at the Barber
Institute in Birmingham, but there were no W*lkies there. There is no need to
be coy about the Barber Institute. I spell “D*vid W*lkie” like that because I
don’t want any scholars to search for him, and even perhaps add “Miles”, and
wind up here. There are lots of interesting narrative W*lkies, and I would like
to have heard the attempt to link them to the pandemic.
I’m getting on
fine with teetotalism. The secret is simple: there is no cider in the house.
There are enough spirits, mostly good whiskey, to provide a bath; and some wine
and vermouth and what-not in the kitchen for cooking, but I am not even
remotely tempted. So if I did weaken, it would take me 48 hours at least to lay
in a supply. February, if I attempt four-days-dry-three-days-cider again, will
be much harder.
It was a programme about the Scottish National Gallery. The presenter, annoyingly, felt he had to make a link between the artwork on display and what "We" were all feeling during the Pandemic.
ReplyDeleteBut - did you catch "Antiques Road Trip" this pm? It was set around Edinburgh. I watched it while ironing and there was the Calcutta cup with an account of its history - made from melted down rupees they said. Some really good close-ups of the cup itself.
Oh, and please give Dry February serious thought....