Thursday, April 7, 2011

What an exciting day.

Breakfast outside in 19°C on the pallets that I'm using as an impromptu terrace for the moment, interrupted by the postie bringing me a huge (and I mean huge) box of goodies from Amazon - my birthday present in fact.

And then the rest of the morning gardening. I've dragged the herb beds out of the smaller cloche (they are in large plastic troughs) and put them by the verandah so I can get at them for cooking, and then spend the rest of the morning clearing up some more raised beds and sowing seeds - putting tons of stuff out in fact. And it was beautiful weather to be out in, that's for sure. Summer is well and truly back.

Lunch on the terrace of course, and by the time I was ready to resume, the water in the home-made immersion heater (that takes its energy from the excess solar power) had reached the magical 50°C (did I mention that I'd insulated it this morning with a load of the left-over offcuts of the bubble-wrap insulation?) and so that called for a washday, and now I've a load of clean clothes drying outside. But isn't it nice to have piping hot water for washing clothes without having to boil an array of kettles?

While I was in the washroom I made a start on tidying it up too - years of rubbish accumulated in there. Only a start, mind you. There's a lot of stuff in there that needs to be sorted and a lot of it can be binned or burned as well. In fact it might be an idea to have a fire around here and dispose of a pile of stuff.

Once the washing was done it was back into the garden and planting herbs in the herb bed and delicate stuff into pots to warm up in the smaller cloche (which is why I moved the herb beds out). I'm now curious to see what my crops will do this year. Last year was rather disappointing as you may well remember, with snow in May that killed everything stone-dead.

18:10 when I knocked off too, and the water in the solar shower was at 38°C. That called for a shower (and we aren't talking about the Executive Committee of the Open Unversity Students' Association either) and so never mind the clothes - I'm clean too (well, at least on the outside anyway).

Back up here I had my coffee, watched the first one of the 41 episodes of Sherlock Holmes - Complete Collection [DVD]  while I sorted through all of my purchases. I must admit I can't wait to watch Bring Me The Head of Turdi de Hatred [DVD] [1974]  sometime in the near future.

Switching on the computer, I found myself the recipient of some astonishing news and it's the best news that I've had since Monday. I'm not going to sat anything about it as yet because it is too good to be true and I'm not going to believe a word of anything until I have a piece of paper in my sweaty little mitt. I've no idea why it is that my luck has suddenly changed  for the better this last 9 months - it's not like me at all. But things have certainly been turned upside-down just recently. So much so in fact that I'm convinced that there's a huge banana skin waiting for me somewhere to compensate. But then again, if this news is as good as it seems to be then it won't matter at all.

So now I'm listening to Made In Japan, and in particular "Highway Star" - the theme song for my trip to the Rockies and the Utah Desert in 2002 - at full volume before I go to bed. But no point in going to bed right now - I won't be going off to sleep.

1 comment:

  1. I just discovered mobile homes and modular homes brand new start at $30,000. This is very interesting indeed and gives me a starting point for negotiating secondhand models. I also discovered a fly in the ointment in the number of slums one can cram into a space. They need .67 of an acre apparently. I shall have to check on this though.

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