Monday, June 29, 2015

Watching -- Dig and Casual Vacancy
Reading -- Martha Wells City of Bones

Making -- (but taking the LONG road to finish) my hexagon quilt
Dreaming -- of freshly painted walls and plantation shutters, like this


Eating -- flame raisins, cranberries and blueberries, in a little box like you used to take to school for your play lunch!
Feeling -- a little bit fitter thanks to my first week of fitbitting
Thinking -- of writing ... thanks to Neil Gaiman's post 
Hoping -- I can go to the Doctor Who Festival in November
Wondering -- when I can paint my little found by the roadside stool/table
Hearing -- 12's theme
Liking -- this lovely quilt
Wanting -- to watch Star Trek Continues (I only just found out about this fan driven phenomenon!)
Playing -- OK, I admit it, Candy Crush Soda
Wishing -- it was my impromptu long weekend already
Enjoying -- re-watching 8 in preparation for 9 in August!

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Where I'm at now

It's after 1am on Sunday, so things don't change do they? Trying out posting on the iPad via the blogger app - quite easy although I have to solve the photo problem, but that's for another day - I'll add photos into this post tomorrow - I hope!

So where am I at just now?

~ Buying a new tap today at Winnings - what a well organised establishment, very civilised free underground parking and a 'working kitchen' where you can help yourself to coffee and yummy things.

~ Walking my daily steps - over 9000 today and (drum roll please) over 11,000 yesterday. Best $118 ever spent on the FitBit - who knew I was that competitive (walking up and down the hall the other evening at 5 to 12!!) Tonight I walked a big block, to the vet, and carried home a bag of crunchies for the boys!

~ Candles, particularly Ecoya, the pine needles one, so fresh! And nearly gone :( Love this in the evening as it glows warmly and scents the room very beautifully.

~ Doctor Who soundtracks! Yes, I know I'm a bit obsessed - but how great it is to drive around town with Murray Gold's wonderful music blaring! Particularly enjoying the 8 soundtrack. Love 8's theme, it's dramatic. Lots of drums. Wonderful symphonic music, I remember this years' (and 2012's) concerts very well, lots of fun and this music works so well when played by an orchestra. It really adds to the show.

~ Cooked a recipe from Tessa Kyros's book Limoncello and Linen water - I think that's the title. Lamb shoulder stuffed with herbs and prunes, baked with veggies and white wine. Very delish.

~ Some beautiful flowers arrived this morning from dad. One of the nicest bunches I've ever received, and such a lovely thing for dad to do.

It's only halfway through the weekend! Time left to dream and walk - and cook more nice things tomorrow. 

Friday, June 26, 2015

An evening in June

Trying to decide how to restart this blog again, but instead I'll add this photo:

This shot was taken on the balcony of the pub in Byron Bay, a couple of years ago. It was winter, and cocktails were about to be served - mine had lots of mint and gin if memory serves me well!

Fast forward to today - it's nearly July, but today was warm and sunny. Walked with a friend at lunchtime and enjoyed the mild day and bright sunshine.

I'll walk some more over the weekend. Hope to visit the markets tomorrow. For now, it's home James and don't spare the horses!

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Beginning near the end

Here I am back in Everyday Land ... but the Time Before Now involved an Excellent Adventure on Another Continent.

Yes I know I was going to write and post and add photos en route ... just think of this as a timey wimey thing ...

... here we are in the Sequoia National Park ... well that's me, and can you see some small patches of white near the trunk of the tree? That's snow. The air was crisp and very fresh as we strolled down

a mile long and very well kept footpath/trail, on our way to see the largest living thing - the General Sherman Tree.

These two trees, huge and very old, were so beautifully incorporated into the trail.The blackened gap in the trunk beside me was an opening I could stand in. And don't you love the moss on the mere saplings behind them - huge trees in their own right!

The General Sherman is not as tall as the Redwoods we saw further north, but it is vast and huge and growing wider every year ...


Here's some handy facts:
It's 2,200 years old. The base is 11 metres wide (36.5 ft) and its 31 metres in circumference (103 ft) and weighs a whopping 1,385 tones! And I love this from one of the helpful information posters on the trail - if you could fill the trunk with water, you could have 9,844 baths - one every day for 27 years!

It was a steep hike back up to the car park,so it was great to have lots of rustic wooden benches to rest on.The trail winds past other huge and ancient trees. With the snow, the forest had a magical feel. The Sequoias have such amazing chestnut coloured bark that almost doesn't look real. We saw a few forest critters, little squirrel/chipmunk creatures and tiny birds, enjoying the mountain spring and splashes of sunlight, quite unconcerned about the waves of humans wandering through their forest.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Let's get this blog started ....

Been spending the evening re-kick-starting my blogging - so let's set the scene....

It's way past midnight, and one day 'til lift-off. Yes, Monday we fly out to LA.
We arrive Monday - I love that about travelling east - and then it's off on a road trip, the first for 4 years over in the US.
I'll put up the odd shot here, so stay posted .... !
But for now, it's good night!

Friday, April 18, 2014

3 more sleeps ... Again!



Time has passed, technology has changed and here I find myself again, 3 days out from our next US adventure. Had planned to post over at my blog cherrypips* and perhaps I will, but seeing as I didn't get very far with this one last time, here goes again. (*I did move the post here!)

Dinner tonight? A mushroom omelette, a nice glass of red, a Ten story - Tooth and Claw - and The Hobbit.

A bag sits in the third room, full of my first go at packing, no black cat in it this time though. Jaz has been in for cuddles, Ruf on his table - or vlado!

Trying to sleep one hour earlier tonight, and need to wake one hour earlier - jet lag technique.

Here I lie in bed, writing this on my ipad - a very different style to last time when I had a big, heavy, hot laptop. Hopefully this will make it easier to post en route!

Sleep, it calls ..  Here's a shot from the recent exhibition, it foretold of things to come ...


Friday, January 04, 2013

Dreams, wishes, plans ...

Sitting in dappled sunlight, well my left foot is. It's a new year again, 4 days in, little aunty marg's birthday today, happy birthday to someone I fondly remember. There's a breeze, the titch, titch, titch of crickets, a pleasant rumble and clickety clack of a train crossing the bridge and heading on westwards. A plane roars out, off to some far distant place. Birds rasp, chirp and whistle. Now a train coming east approaches and clatters over the bridge, a nice sound I think.
So here we are in 2013. Our Ruf is currently asleep on top of the BBQ, very relaxed and peaceful. We made it, through 8 weeks of, well, through 8 weeks. Feeding tube gone, jaw working well, now it's just healing and a few more things that we can come to when we come to them.
Happy. Enjoying this moment, and that's what I hope the most for 2013 - enjoy the moment, and make the most of it. Make plans and enjoy them.
So my plan today is Les Mis, shopping, lunch, Bunnings maybe. Tonight I'm cooking my second 15 minute meal, thanks Jamie, the Thai chicken lahksa was very yummy, but more like 45 mins! But that's ok, just need to do more prep, so that means it really isn't 15 mins??!
Days 1,2 and 3?
1 was the last of tube feeding, collar changing, the leash! Lunch - very good roast potatoes! And beef, pork, salads, strudel. Driving up to SASH, then an evening, the first in 8 weeks, that didn't have a night feed. Felt amazing.
2 was waiting, waiting, progress reports, and finally success. Picked up Ruf at 5.30, now just 7 days of meds.
3 saw me lolling a bit! Poor uv had to return to work, but I spent the day checking on Ruf who was enjoying next doors garden and later and who later curled up and slept all afternoon in a corner of their shed. I washed, read, snoozed, talked on the phone, shopped, cooked, watched the first almighty johnsons, season 2. Not bad, eh?

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

New discovery: Bloglovin

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

I've just discovered Bloglovin and I'm experimenting with it. Just have to add some code to my blog so that I can claim it as mine ... here goes.

Seems to be a nice way to manage your blog subscriptions. I currently use Google Reader in my iGoogle page, but I'm always up for a new idea!

Discovered this after reading a post from one of my fave knitting blogs, a friend to knit with, who was featuring a guest blogger from a blog that is new to me, tentenknits.

Thursday, August 04, 2011

And again, it's August!

Not a windy day like last year but sunny, fresh and full of the promise of summer. I walked under a long, shady stand of Moreton Bay Figs at lunchtime, enjoying the cool shade, while yesterday I was looking for as much sun as possible.

Here are some images I took last year in New York on a day that felt very similar to today ...


Wish I was there right now!


Thursday, August 12, 2010

It must be August

Someone today remarked that a friend born in August was given the middle name Gail ... made me smile .. perhaps they spelt it Gale, or even Gael ... but a whimsical nod to the windy month of August.
Here are some Etsy treasures that are all about the wind ....

Dark forest - digital art Print
{lovely illustration from a cute little shop called Matilou from Lyon}

Print, The grey wind
{just how it is now, in Sydney, from here - how about that, another one from France}

upcycled palm tree clutch in gray
{lovely clutch, palm trees buffeted by the wind, from here}

750 words poetry

Is it me or is this one of those crazy online moments that appear spontaneously, full of meaning and intent where none was intended. These were my most frequently used words in my writing tonight on 750 words:

again
bit blogs 
feel first get here
just keep like looking
me 
my nearly nice night
nose not now 
still tired tonight up


Not so sure of the meaning or intent (that sounded like a good way to describe a random collection of words drawn from my prose) - not sure what 'my nearly nice night nose not now' is but it is pleasingly alliterative!
As it's now a quarter past midnight, the last bit is spot on - 'still tired tonight up'

Hmm, will keep checking this little phenomenon over the next wee while!!

Found :: little houses

It's been a while since I dropped in a few nice finds. It's late, I'm nearly asleep but I can't resist sharing these  ...


Victorian house card

Victorian house tea towel - my fave kitchen tea towels right now are always red + white

Victorian house storage

And these little treasures
Windowsill Neighbours...Pair of Miniature Cottages...Green and White
Windowsill neighbours
november X / original painting on canvas
November X
Vintage Fabric Applique House Pillow

Vintage Fabric Applique House Pillow

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

I'm a 750 page turkey!

Badge

3 In A Row
08-10-2010
Actually I'm now 4 in a row, so what will I be tomorrow?

Sunday, August 08, 2010

But wait, there's more on writing

Try this :

http://750words.com/

It's fun. I wrote 750 words in 15 minutes - and it kind of made sense too!

The creator, Buster, charts your progress, gives you little prizes, incentives and all sorts of amazing stats!

Found (yet again) via Pip over at Meet Me At Mikes! Thanks Pip, I'm gonna love this one!

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Ways with writing

Just found a small glittering seam of writing about writing ... about using your time better, about being creative generally ... yes, I know, I can make much from the sage advice offered up here ..
 Companionable sunbakers by the sea in Monterey
So, here are some Unmissable articles on writing
Monterey feline
And I found something called Uncopyright - I like his reasoning ... and here is some of his uncopyrighted work :::
focus : a simplicity manifesto in an age of distraction - there are some great ideas here, good ways to reconsider your connectedness to things online, etc (but now that I am about to get a kindle ....! although it should swing me back towards reading, so good thing, no?)
 Out the front door of our New York hotel
Turn the internet off - one of many from someone who writes a blog called RowdyKittens (liking the name.)
Seen on a New York street corner ...
7 tips to kick the cubicle habit - is a picture of moi forming here???
Locals in Central Park
How to get your writing groove on - writing, editing and focus. Yes.
Hard working New York equine

We're back to the first site :::
Have you thought about a tiny house - thanks again to Pip from Meet me at mikes - many times she inspires me to think outside the box.
A sweet, goofy gull, beside the sea in Monterey

Monday, August 02, 2010

Goodbye and hello

Three weeks on and the patient has finally moved to another rehab facility. This time it's in NSW and much closer to home.

So, it was goodbye to Mildura and, among other things, the omnipresent Walnut Avenue ...
Over our extended stay, we became certain that all roads began, ended, converged and dispersed via Walnut. We wondered ... could it in fact be the centre of the universe ...

My brother made a solo return trip to Mildura last week, to oversee Dad's departure. His imagined stay of a day or two turned into five. During hospital siesta hours, he visited Robinvale and Trentham estate, stocking up on local olive oil and red wine ... and solving all upcoming birthday and Christmas presents.


We were really happy to learn that dad had been accepted as a passenger with Angel Flight. This rather extraordinary organisation co-ordinates non-emergency flights throughout Australia, transporting people in remote country areas to wherever they need to be. For dad, Mildura was just so far away from his home. A commercial flight was way too involved and a car trip virtually impossible, while he was still reliant on a tall gutter frame to move around. Angel Flight was a brilliant solution.


I contacted the hospital near his home and they proved to be very friendly and welcoming every time I rang to discuss the transfer arrangements.


We had hopes that the flight would happen on Friday but it was not until last night, Sunday, that the expedition finally got underway.

My brother rang me as the small plane taxied down the runway. He reported that dad had been gently folded into the tiny plane, settled and tucked up with the help of the wonderful pilot and his two genial companions. Thankfully my brother had been able to give dad his very warm coat, leather gloves and woollen cap because the plane's heater was not working.

The pilot and his friends had set off from Melbourne a few hours earlier and would return later that night, after depositing Dad.

They took off, then turned and did a fly past, before beginning the two and a half hour flight north. A late start meant that they would not get to Bankstown until well after dark.

My brother said it was the strangest feeling, watching the plane disappear while he stood on the tarmac, a lone wheelchair in hand. The Mildura chapter of the story was over, but he was still there ...

About an hour out of Bankstown, the pilot called me. He said dad was going really well and they were on time.

Now it was our turn. My husband and I set off around 7pm. We rapidly got lost (it was a dark and stormy night), arriving at the aerodrome just as the plane was taxiing towards us. The passenger terminal was in darkness, locked and bolted. But incredibly, right at that very moment there just happened to be a friendly security guard doing his rounds. He unlocked the gates and escorted our car - driven by my husband - right up to the plane.

I ventured towards the cockpit of the minute aircraft and peered into the back. There was dad, wearing my brother's cap set at a jaunty angle, looking half frozen but smiling happily. The air had been so cold en route that the engine and wings had iced over. Just as well the outside heaters were working. The temperature inside the little plane had dropped to about 1 degrees Celsius (-5C outside.) Yes, brrrrrrr! Dad weathered it all very well, with the aid of the cosy coat, gloves and that cute beret.

I was really quite in awe of the remarkable men that escorted dad back home. These three men were doing this wonderful thing without any recompense or reward, other than, I think, the pleasure of helping people and  the enjoyment of flying. They kept saying what a privilege it had been to carry dad and I really felt they meant it. I'm sure he had shared a few flying stories with them on the journey, one old pilot to a younger crew.

Our next conundrum was how to move dad from aeroplane to car. It was solved quite quickly when my husband and two of the men managed to unfold dad from the plane, then lift and carry him straight to the car.

Then just as quickly as they arrived, we were bidding the men farewell on their long return journey back to Melbourne. I know I'm repeating myself here but I am still thinking of this quite extraordinary little episode.

The rest of the story is more mundane. We drove away with the heater turned high to thaw out the frosty traveller. It was approaching 10 o'clock when we arrived in the mountains. More chillier air I could not have imagined. I initially had trouble convincing the reception staff that we were a genuine transfer. They could not seem to get their heads around our fantastic journey - but a phone call to the nurses soon confirmed our story.

When the nurse came to help dad into the hospital, she remarked on something that had just landed on the wheelchair - snow! Yes, to add to the eventful night, we were in the midst of a long awaited snowfall - "and it's August!" she said.

Dad was deposited into a bed with his name printed on a sign above it - a good sign we thought. The very kind and caring night nurses found him an egg sandwich, apple juice and a cup of tea. He sat on the edge of the bed, quietly recovering from the amazing expedition. We helped him unpack, sort out his things and get a little more comfortable. But the night was drawing to a close. It was time for dad to go to sleep and for us to return home. We left him fairly relaxed and very happy to be that much closer to home.

Even though it was a rainy night and the road was quite dark at that late hour, we had a pretty good trip home. We arrived a little dazed and bemused - although that could have been the extreme sugar hit en route - soft drink and chocolate to keep us awake. We ended the evening with a very late supper of hot tea and more comforting chocolate.

And my brother kept texting me throughout the evening. He was back in the hotel again, the same one we had stayed in from the beginning of this saga. It's never wise to set out on a car trip after 5 in the country, the light is failing and the kangaroos are out so I was very glad he chose to stay put. Plus he was totally exhausted from the eventful day. He returned to the hotel he had checked out of only that morning and reported that he was watching The Movie Show, while sipping some of the red he had bought the other day ... it was groundhog day and was he ever going to be able to leave Mildura? ...



Addendum :::
Dad went well today, the new hospital is somewhat better and somewhat worse: great physio but very ordinary food, and ward chums that like leaving the tv on all the time ...
My brother made a successful escape from Mildura, drove the 8 hours home and was last heard of curled up in front of the fire, en famille and pets, sipping more of the red, a most esteemed and venerable fellow escapee from Mildura ..........

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Singing out the weekend

Heard last night. Surprising, exhilarating, fabuloso!







PS - and we discovered this great new/old spot to eat before the show.We enjoyed the old Razor's Edge restaurant, so great to see it's been reinvented. I had the oven baked schnitzel and my husband had a great sirloin steak. And the hand cut chips were as good as they say! The upstairs section had only opened the night before -seems like a lovely outdoor terrace that we can look forward to using as the weather warms up.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Mildura days

En route to Mildura. A pink sunrise at Tullamarine airport, through the window of my plane :::

The patient :::

One (very heavy) plastered ankle, post op. Patient doing well ((and much better now, two weeks on))

More than anything, Dad was mad with himself that this could have happened. But he is slowly adapting to the new method of getting around for the next 5 weeks - the hop. Aided by a tall frame, a daily physio class and fluoro pink hand-held weights, he is gradually developing strength - and great pecs! Not bad for an 87 year old!

My brother and I ended up staying a full week down there - we both felt that we couldn't leave him, at least until he was more comfortable and we were a little more sure of the (long) road ahead. After initially hoping we could fly him back to Sydney to be close to me, the hospital advised that it might be better for him to stay there. They were happy to keep him there for the length of his rehabilitation but we still spent the week trying to decide what to do, how to get him home, when, where, etc. In the end we agreed that he was in the best place for now. The hospital is fairly new and we are really pleased with the treatment he is receiving. And the food is great. It's varied and fresh and well cooked and he has a lovely selection of fresh fruit with each meal.
He was initially in a 4 bed ward with 3 other men. One man was in his 50's and his family were frequent visitors, nice people but noisy, talkative Italians. The other two, Tom and Bert were men in their 90's. Both were old farmers from the area, one had been in the RAAF like Dad. Both men were frail but had a sense of humour that was gentle and charming.
Later in the week, Dad was thrilled to have a visitor from Legacy, a retired navy man. Dad has been involved since the end of the 1940's so it was nice for him to be on the receiving end of their support and care.

Dad sent us on daily errands, getting him organised for after our departure, because we both had to eventually get back to work, home and all the rest. So each day, after he had finished his lunch we would head off for ours. Then it was off to do our errands and sometimes we would go for a drive so he could have a rest in the afternoon. We drove by a rather well known Mildura restaurant, and dropped in for lunch. Great pizza and coffee :::
A very skilful front of house man made an offer we couldn't refuse - a table, the last one he assured us, for dinner that night. We had to eat ... so we took up the offer.
Later that night, after an undeniably good but excessively expensive meal, we agreed we had been somewhat duped - crazily priced wine, mostly connected to the owner in some way. But the man can definitely cook. With our close proximity to the kitchen, sitting at the table we were told was reserved for family and friends, (squeezed under the serving counter and butted up beside the plating and despatching table), we could observe The Chef in action. He remained remarkably restrained all evening, but we were nevertheless treated to a show of sorts - a trickle of slightly fawning fans, clutching his books and lining up for his autograph and personal advice for their home cooking. What perhaps amused us the most was our used-car-salesman front of house man who turned up sizzling, smooth and sharply dressed for the evening show. My brother christened him The Pimp, but we agreed he was an extremely likeable one.

So, Mildura. We got to know it quite well over the 8 days. Mildura is renowned for it's grapes, both wine and table, fruit and vegies and particularly wonderful navel oranges, in season right now. Oh, and The Chef.

Friday, July 09, 2010

I've been shopping!

Enough music for a wee while - I have purchases to report on! ...

A friend at work bought a cute clutch/purse today from MayasKalupi :::
P u r s e / K a l u p i - Songbird in Rose - Holly Anderson fabric
It's a bit like this one

When she said that she wanted a coin purse in the same fabric, I went on the hunt and found some :::
Botanica-Botanical Garden in Porcelain by Art Gallery Fabric 1 Yard
{from MandMStudio}

I also bought the same fabric in green :::
Botanica-Botanical Garden in Lime by Art Gallery Fabric 1 Yard

When the fabric arrives we plan to start designing and making coin purses, clutches, wallets ... Anna's purse will be the prototype.

I also bought this lovely bag. It's velvet in a browny grey - a bit like a mushroom was how they described it :::
Perry in melange -velvet- --adjustable strap and ZIPPERED CLOSURE everyday purse--
{Yum! from bayanhippo}

And I chose this print :::
Eternal Forest Print on glorious recycled matt paper
{from the lovely people at inaluxe}

And then, I treated myself ... I shut my eyes and clicked on this one - isn't it lovely? And it's from Bondi, close to home!!
Black floral motif on natural hemp
{from Sir Tom}
I love the fact that it is black and white, it looks a bit like a scandinavian needlepoint design and there are tiny pineapples as part of the motif. That reminds me of Marblehead, Massachusetts - many people had wonderful gilt pineapples over their front doors, or sometimes they had gilt fish or even whales. This purse is screen printed on hemp and is lined with black taffeta. Very very nice. It should arrive quite quickly if it's coming from Bondi!

I'm travelling interstate tomorrow, not on a holiday but to see my father. He is in hospital as he unfortunately broke his ankle last night and has just been operated on tonight. Dad and my brother have been on a lovely driving holiday together this week, so this is a really unfortunate accident. I have just heard that he is out of theatre and is doing well, but now has pins and a plate in his ankle. Dad is 87 but he is a very fit and hearty 87 year old with a great outlook on life so we hope he will recover speedily. It will be a slow process though, as I think ankles are tricky.

So, no blogging for a little while ... see you in a few days.