It
has been a miserable March, what with the weather, poor health and hospital
visiting, but here a few highlights:
Visitors
We
were delighted to welcome our family from Sweden, who were not expecting
similar weather to theirs. When they
visited last year at the same time, the weather was glorious.
Drinking Yorkshire tea |
Grandad made us all a veggie fry up |
Gardening
As
an East wind has brought temperatures which have been less than average for the time of year and the garden
has been under snow on and off for weeks, everything is very late and it has
been impossible to do any jobs. In fact,
Spring judging for Yorkshire in Bloom has been cancelled for the first time
ever.
Pictorial
Meadows
Mike
Evans of Ashworth Nurseries/Green Estate talked to our gardening club on the pictorial meadows and
green wall his company supplies. A
social enterprise, which started out to deal with unsightly, inner-city, wasteland
areas, the company is based in the Manor Lodge, Sheffield, where Mary Queen of
Scots used to stay. It looks like an interesting place for a visit; see www.manorlodge.org.uk for more details. The seeds supplied for the pictorial meadows
are non-native to give a longer season and exclude grasses in the mixture. In fact, the ground needs to be cleared
before sowing. The range includes various mixes from Pastel to Volvanic and
both annual and perennial mixes. The colours
of the meadows alter as the seasons progress and the flowers are a magnet for
birds, bees and butterflies. This is a
change from the norm; wildlife is no longer attracted to the fields in the
countryside where pesticides are used. You
probably saw the results of the pictorial meadow seeds at the Olympic Park in
East London. For more information and
photos, see www.pictorialmeadows.co.uk
This
independent cinema is 100 years old this year and has seen huge changes over
that period; sound, colour, non-smoking, digital. Although it has been refurbished, it still
sports the old gas lights and a tour of the building revealed vintage
telephones and Victorian sinks. Run mainly by volunteers, it is
one of the few independent cinemas in the area, which means that it shows some
really good films rather than the commercial blockbusters
Our writing group had the
opportunity of a tour of the building and we produced some pieces inspired by
what we saw and learnt. We were shown
two short films, one of which wasthe entertaining Conversation Piece http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYsdGqPfhW8
Holidays
Enjoyed
having the family for Pesach/Passover; reminiscing, debating, singing and
catching up across the generations.
Helping to lay the Seder table with personalised name cards. This has become their tradition. |
We
had to find indoor activities to amuse the grandchildren during the school holidays,
so we painted these. I’m not putting
names to paintings!
Caravan
Although
the season opened two weeks ago, the weather has prevented us from going to the
coast. We took the usual paraphernalia
needed to observe Pesach and went for the day to open up the caravan. Half way there, all traces of snow had disappeared
and the temperature rose a degree or two.
We saw daisies in the grass,baby lambs and, whilst not a sign of Spring, a pair of peacocks strutting across the road near the children's playground. It was like a real holiday!
Blue sky! |
Goal! |
Helter Skelter at Far Grange |
Written:
Hanging
on in there with the weekly challenge.
Managed a factual piece for local radio and a fictional piece inspired
by my picture house visit.
Some
exciting news! I have been matched up with a fellow writer
through The Matchelor on Falling for fiction blog to critique
each other’s work.
Read: Ice and
Slice by Della Galton. I can highly recommend it; try it and you’ll see
what I mean.
Seen: Not worth a subheading this post.
And
ditto The Healthy Writers Club (with apologies to Shallee McArthur) although I'm not quitting!
Looking
forward to Good Health, good weather, good gardening and good writing.
I wish we had a Tropical World nearby. March sucked.
ReplyDeleteDropping by from A to Z Challenge. This is my first year participating.
Brett Minor
Transformed Nonconformist