Monday 30 December 2013

Here comes the rain again!

Friday December 27th.
Laura and I are hiding from the wind and rain!
It’s dreadful. There have been floods and power cuts and all sorts of nasties happening out there. I am so pleased we don’t HAVE to go out in it!
We cranked up Dad’s wood burning stove and the house is snug bug ruggly. Callie and the other dogs try and get as close as they can to it and then, after melting themselves, they wander off into the hall or kitchen to lie on the cool tiled floor! They are so silly!
Had Laura’s Mum & Dad and kid brother round for lunch today. [It saves buying food LOL] Cracked open a bottle of Dornfelder rose from Dad’s old stock which was absolutely gorgeous. Even Eric, who is a BEER man through and through enjoyed his glass!
I was pleased with the black forest trifle, which was a surprise by the Lollster. She used a large amount of cherry liqueur in it judging by its taste. We’ll have to make this again. The whole dishful just disappeared. I was hoping there would be some left for a fridge raid later on but it was not to be. Boo Hoo!
I have a Sydney Oilskin Company Stockman’s Coat, a long one, which I brought back from Oz in 2010. It has not been off my back for dog walks during the last four of their walks! They have come back all soaked through and muddied up to eyeballs. I had to shift one of Dad’s cars from the garage so I could set up the bath inside to wash them down. We have gone through eleven dog towels since Boxing Day morning! Oh bring on some dry weather!
I think volunteering to house sit may have been a mistake. I may end up with cabin fever!
OK, I am over-reacting.
Luckily we have had no floods or power cuts, so I suppose we should be thankful for that. [Dad does have a genny in the garage though so we can still get power if the supply is cut off. Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.]
We banked up the stove with coal to keep it in all night. If you leave it with just wood, it doesn’t make it through the night.

Saturday December 28th.
It made it through the night!
Laura and I seemed to have slept snuggled up together, when I awoke we were still wrapped in each other’s arms. Isn’t that romantic? We can’t have shuffled about at all during the night.
I had a phone call from an old school chum from Norwich this morning. Helen told me it was really sunny there and had been all week. Oh no! We want their weather up here! She was phoning because my Christmas card to her had arrived but she hadn’t sent me one and she wanted to apologise. She also spent half an hour [or so it seemed] telling me all her news. Husband, babies, holidays and the like. I am afraid I just let it wash over me. We haven’t actually spoken for ages, I thought it was a bit pointless us having a conversation now. Maybe she has an ulterior motive?
Laura and I drove into Cockermouth this morning and replenished our dwindling food stock. The River Derwent was still very high. It must be one hell of a worry for the residents as the mega floods were only four years ago! They have put lots of new flood defences in and around the town; they’ve also cleared out the culverts under the Papcastle Road bridge which may have been a contributory factor in the floods last time. They were choked and it allowed the water to back up with disastrous consequences. I was in Oz at the time but I did get lots the news feeds over the internet. There is a marker on Cockermouth High Street showing the height of the floodwater at its peak. It’s about 10 inches over my head!
The road to and from the village to Cockermouth has flooded sections at three points along it and still morons drive through as though the huge puddle isn’t there. I only hope one aquaplanes into Dad’s Land Rover, that’ll finish off any of these crappy modern cars.
Pretty blowy and rainy for most of the day so we hibernated again once we got back from town. The forecast is for a nicer day tomorrow. Let’s hope so. Too much rain is bad for you!

Sunday December 29th.
Gilbert phoned this morning at about 7am looking for Dad. What is it with Dad’s friends? Do they not listen to him when he says he’ll be going to Australia? Or do they think he’ll be there for a few days and then come home again? They can’t have an idea of just how far away it is.
I told Gilbert that Dad was in Australia and he replied, “Can you tell him to phone me when he gets back in?”
What is he taking? If it wasn’t for the fact Gil is an old mucker of Dad’s I would have shouted something rude at him down the phone.
Laura was standing right next to me in the kitchen as I went through this comedy routine with Gil and asked if he was right in the head? I seriously doubt it with some of Dad’s cronies at times. Maybe it’s just a man thing but they all seem weird in some way or another. Perhaps all that testosterone fries their already addled brains to mush as they get older?
The weather showed an improvement by around 2pm so we loaded the pups into Dad’s Land Rover and scooted off to Mawbray Dunes and beach. I figured that we had less chance of a shower on the coast than inland in the national park. I was proved right. While we didn’t get glorious, wall to wall, uninterrupted blue skies and sunshine we did get spells of sun through the patchy clouds. Also it was a warm breeze, must have been well on the way to ten Celsius I would imagine.
We walked the dogs right out to the edge of the Solway and they had a whale of a time, chasing about and playing their doggy tag game. We took a ball wanger each and spent some time simply wearing them out by getting them to fetch the wanged balls. Callie, being the youngest of the pack, was the undisputed star at this game, but she does do it a lot and so is match fit.
We drove onto the land time forgot after the Dunes [Silloth] and had a more sedate stroll down the marvellous promenade there. I will probably have mentioned this place before. Laura’s sister, Avril, lives in Abbeytown so we ended up there and stayed for tea.
I have not been to their house before and it was really, really untidy. I mean mega untidy. I was very twitchy wanting to get up and sort out the mess. I think Laura could sense this as she tried to excuse her sister’s mess. Tea was lovely though, it was simply a cold collation with masses of meats and pickles and salad. I ended up with a scale model of Mount Fuji on my plate which I proceeded to demolish with delight. I love this way of eating up the remains of the Christmas meats. When I prepare this I also have bubble and squeak made from the left over vegetables. The flavour and texture combinations are brilliant.
Back at home we chilled out again waiting for the predicted turn in the weather again. It hadn’t arrived by last walk time for the dogs! It did during last walk time! I didn’t have my Oilskin on and got rather damp. Although not as damp as a few minutes later in my en-suite shower where Laura made me get in, the she joined me and washed me with the loofah mitt naturally I returned the favour. It’s only polite!
What a boring set of entries for the weekend this has been.
I must try harder!



Friday 27 December 2013

Christmas Fell Walking. Death by Orgasm?

Monday 23rd December.

A quiet day really.

I walked the dogs up Tallentire Hill and then emptied a bucket of warm water in the tin bath outside to wash them down as they had found every conceivable speck of mud between Dad’s house, the trig point and back! It’s a good job they are all short haired dogs or I’d have been washing their paws and bellies all day.

Skyped Susannah and found the Aged P and Step-mum had arrived safely. They were a bit bushed and were sleeping. The girls are excited about a party they are going to at Uncle Chris’s on Christmas Eve. I avoided talking about cricket with Peter. I am now rooting for a 5-0 series victory as I will win a silly amount of money for just $50. If they get a 4-0 or 4-1 series victory I get quarter odds, so that will mean 25-1 instead of 100-1. Still, it will be a nice amount.  I can’t really tell Pete that, can I?

We drove into Carlisle and spent about half an hour trying to park! It was bursting at the seams. We did some last minute silly present buying and had lunch in the Cathedral refectory, which is always nice. The big book shop along from the Cathedral has changed from stickers as loyalty rewards to a stamp pad, plus you get more stamps for every purchase. I had almost completed my 2nd sticker card so the kind lady gave me enough to fill it which was very nice of her [I had just spent £50 on books] this means I now have £30 to spend in there when I am next in town.

A lot of phone calls came through this evening for Dad. All of the callers were inviting him to stuff and being disappointed to discover he was in Australia. Did he not tell these people? In in his wake I have been invited to all the things they were phoning Dad about. A Party in Lancaster. A Christmas dinner. A Boxing Day Party. Two New Year’s Eve parties and a Festive Ceilidh. Whispered convos while each caller was hanging on the line has meant we accepted the Lancaster Party, the Boxing Day Party and the Ceilidh.

The Lancaster one is on Sunday, the Ceilidh on Saturday after New Year. We will crash at Dad’s flat in Lancaster after the party. He’ll not mind. That way we can have a drink or two. The Boxing day party is at Errol’s and the Ceilidh in the Lakes somewhere near Ambleside. I have written down the venue as I had never heard of it before. I love a good Ceilidh. If the caller is proficient they can be excellent, they are the one event I have attended where everybody has danced.

We had local bangers and mash for tea. With baked beans. It is ages since I had this as a meal. We ploughed through mince pies with Cointreau flavoured cream for afters. Laura suggested some other places we could spread the cream so the rest of the evening ended up being a bit sticky and messy.

Tuesday 24th December.

The weather forecast for Christmas Day looks dreadful for up here. I really do miss Norwich’s weather. It always seemed to have been sunny during my childhood. When we came up to the bungalow [Dad’s home] we used to joke that we were going to get our “rain-fix”. I have just checked the weather stats for the last 10 years for Norwich and Cockermouth. The latter has had over 30 times as much rain in those years on average! No wonder I remember a sunny childhood – it was!

The dogs had a run at Maryport prom this morning. I think they were surprised to be bundled into the car and driven off instead of stepping out up the lane for their first walk of the day. It was blustery on the prom but dry. There was a fair amount of sea weed scattered over the pathway, a sure sign that the weather had been rather stormy recently. We walked right down to the Golf course and then back up along the cliff top path. Once again the Roman Museum wasn’t open for me to have a hot chocolate drink. Never mind, eh? 

Driving to Maryport was useful in two ways. It meant I could buy the food items we were missing from the Maryport Co-op and the dogs don’t get anywhere near as messy as they do going up Tallentire Hill.

I left the Lollster pushing zeds when I left, when I got back she was up and raring to go. I had forgotten we had promised Molly a trip to Keswick for Christmas Eve. So a swift brekkers and off we went. We took Callie but left Dad’s three indoors. They looked a bit miffed, I hope they don’t bully Callie about it later. [Is that anthropomorphic? It probably is.]

Parking in Carlisle was tricky on Monday, I didn’t even chance it in Keswick. I went straight down to the Theatre By The Lake car park. This was quite empty for the time of day, plus it meant we had an excuse to wander out to the end of Friar’s Crag with Callie before strolling round town. Town was pretty busy but Molly and Laura and I had a whale of a time. I do like Keswick, I don’t think I could live here though [the tourists are avoidable, it’s the weather that is the problem]. We had lunch in the Dog and Gun which is a dog friendly pub – I guess it has to be with that name – and then we finished our purchasing and zoomed back to Dad’s.

Molly and Eric are expecting us for lunch tomorrow at about 2.30pm which has hit my Scafell Pike walk on the head big time, but we are still planning to do Catbells instead. I have made a bet with Laura that we will meet over 50 people out on that little fell alone. I hope the weather stays fine for us.
Back at Dad’s I cooked the turkey crown ready to make sangers for the morning and we sat down to watch live TV for the first time in ages. It was the last episode of Last Tango in Halifax. I really enjoyed it. It has become a bit soap opera like in this second series but it is still a really heart-warming programme.

We skyped Australia at just after midnight [UK time] and had a silly chat with everyone down under. They all liked their pressies and we had loved ours too. It was really hot over there and it was strange to talk to the kids who were in the bathers! They are planning to go off in the yacht on Boxing Day, for a couple of days at their mooring on Rottnest Island. Dad had that seafarer’s look in his eyes, I wonder if he will be buying himself a new boat when he gets back, after being in Suze and Pete’s?

We finally hit the charp at 1pm and were dead to the world within minutes. Well, I was at least.

Christmas Day, 2013.

Cloudy and dry at the break of dawn, which boded well for a walk in the fells.

Dogs walked and sandwiches made by 8am. Out with the woofs by 8.30. We drove through Cockermouth and saw that the River Derwent was really high as it flowed through the memorial gardens. Not a good sign. It means masses of rain has fallen over the fell tops. The road to Keswick was deserted and as we went through Portinscale we could have been the only ones on the move. At the car parking area at the foot of Catbells my Dad’s Citroen was the second car there. We had our walking boots on already so all we had to do was clamber out and clamber up. Out of the car; up the fell.

The weather was cloudy and a bit overcast. Grizedale Pike had a cloudy top but it’s over 1200 feet higher than Catbells so we weren’t unduly worried. We struck out up the steep zig-zagging slope for the first brow. Novice walkers think this is the summit; they can get disappointed when they see the real one stretching away in the distance. It was quite windy at this point which didn’t worry me much as there is always a sheltered side if the wind is blowing.

The pups just loved chasing about on playing on the slopes. Callie and Dad’s Weimy get on quite well; his two labs tend to ignore her a bit. They all have so much energy when out on a walk. It makes me very envious of their stamina. [Or lack of common sense!] At 10.25 we hit the flat top of one of the most climbed fell in the Lakes. It had a few less than the fifty people I had predicted on the summit but we probably whizzed passed a good 25 on the way up, so my numbers for people being on the fell were, most likely, pretty close.

I pulled out the groundsheet and we plonked ourselves on the leeward side of the summit to avoid the gale. The view over Derwentwater was pretty spectacular, with a cloud topped Skiddaw looming over it in the background. Laura produced the flask of tea and I got out the turkey sandwiches and bags of crisps. I had smeared some cranberry sauce over the slices of turkey and they were so tasty. There were quite a few families who had made it to the top and they were tucking into to whatever snap they’d brought with them too. I am afraid to say the pups went around every seated group giving them the “feed the poor doggy stare”; luckily nobody succumbed to their mute appeals. I did have a sanger for each of them, made with chicken paste, so the little beggars didn’t go hungry.

Our dessert was a mince pie each and a Jazz apple. The pies were the last two of Christopher’s Mum’s mincemeat ones. I can’t believe we have eaten our way through them so quickly. The pups wolfed their sandwiches without them even touching the sides and then they polished off a half an apple core each. Laura and I had seconds of tea and sat looking at the view and secretly praying that the rain would hold off. I just love this place so much. By that I mean the whole of the Lakes, not just Catbells. I am so pleased I was able to persuade Dad to let me keep my bedroom in his bungalow when he and Mum divorced. I don’t think I could afford to come and stay here as often as I do otherwise.

Sitting on our groundsheet, sipping tea and trying to pretend we weren’t getting chilled to the bone, my bloody phone rang! I was mortified! It was Mum, phoning me from Phil & Jane’s and wanting to wish me a Merry Christmas and to thank me for her presents. I then spoke to Phil, Jane, Angela and Peter who all thanked me in turn for their presents, too. Laura was sat next to me giggling, as she knows how much I criticise other people for blathering into their phones when out on the fells and here I was doing the very same thing! I nudged her in the ribs with my elbow and she nudged me back. If I hadn’t been in the middle of a phone call I think a serious skirmish might have broken out on the fellside.

When the call ended I flicked her ear, so she flicked mine. I pulled her hat down over her eyes and she snatched mine off my head and sat on it. I tried to retrieve it by pushing her over put she rolled away clutching it, so I leapt across gave her a bear hug and pretended to kiss the end of her nose. I nipped it with my teeth instead. She pulled her head back and rolled some more and somehow we bashed foreheads! It really, really hurt. I mean, it was very painful. We both started to say, “I’m sorry!” at the same time. She pushed me over onto my back. She sat on my chest with her knees pressing down on my shoulders and pinning my arms to the floor and proceeded to kiss the tip of my nose and then give it a nip too. Then she started to kiss me.

There must’ve been loads of people watching our impromptu wresting match and subsequent snog on the fell top. But we didn’t care. I don’t know what we’d have done if we hadn’t been rudely interrupted by two silly Weimaraners who, thinking we were hurting each other, tried to head butt us into less violent behaviour. Callie has been known to bark and even bite people with whom I have play fought in the past. This time she and her partner in peacekeeping were content to try and lick us to death instead.

We then had to spend a few minutes trying to find my phone which had gone west in the melee. Luckily it hadn’t gone far and didn’t seem damaged. I was a little embarrassed that we had behaved like a pair of infants but I am convinced that nobody actually either noticed or cared.

We whooshed down the path that takes you off Catbells down to Brandelhow and walked back to the car park along the lake shore. There were far more people (and dogs) along this section of our walk than had been up the fell. Plus there were lots more children. It is nice to see children being brought out into the countryside. One demographic that seemed noticeably absent was our age group, the early twenties type of person. Perhaps they were all busy having mock fights on mountains?

Dad’s two bloody Labs decided to put on a show at Hawes End landing stage and go jumping off it into the lake! Arrgghh! There were only three dog towels in the back of Dad’s car and we got all three thoroughly soaked drying off the dippy duo. The two Weimys had to make do with a cursory wipe and hope for the best. At the car park, where we wiped down the dogs, people were actually waiting for our parking space. This git driver got out of his car [non-local plate, unlike Dad’s] and asked us if we couldn’t just get in and go instead of drying off the dogs! We went on a go slow and made the arsehole wait even longer! In fact we were so slow at drying them off another vehicle left before we’d finished and Mr Git drove into that space. Some people are just so rude.

Christmas dinner at Molly and Eric’s was packed. How the hell Molly coped I don’t know. I bet Eric was sat on his fat backside all morning squeeze blackheads and watching trashy TV while Molly slaved away in the kitchen preparing a lunch for 11 people! Kirsten and Rob’s children being 3 and 1 don’t really count, I suppose, but even so there was a mountain of beautifully cooked food which we all attacked with gusto. Afterwards, I volunteered to help with the washing up, but of course they have a dishwasher, I guess with three girls and a boy Eric and Molly needed one. So I helped load it up instead. I noticed that Eric did absolutely nothing at all. It was Rob who carved the turkey, not his father in law!

I suggested a post prandial walk to help the lunch go down and Laura’s sisters and their hubbies joined us on a stroll to the wooden seat half way up Tallentire Hill. They left the littlies in Molly’s charge playing with their Christmas toys. I snuck round to Dad’s to get the pups to join us, so they wouldn’t be left too long alone in the house.

I had also sneaked a shop bought mince pie for each of us into my duffel coat pocket to scoff at the seat. We had a pleasant chat as we walked and Laura told them about me getting a mobile phone call on the top of Catbells. She claimed I behaved like a Southern Oik, talking loudly and pretentiously down the phone as though I owned the mountain. I had to pinch her bum to stop her!

Kirsten informed me, in a quiet aside, that she always knew that Little Laura was different but this difference was unexpected. However, since she’d been “going out” with me there had been a definite change in her kid sister. She is more out-going and vivacious. She seems completely happy in her own skin, which (according to Kirsten) she didn’t before, at all. Kirsten can actually remember meeting me and Richard a few times and she thought that the way Laura and I interacted is almost identical to the way Rick and I did. Apparently, when she first heard about me and her kid sister, she was worried that I was just messing about with her emotions and playing at being a lesbian with her. Now she has seen us more clearly she can see how wrong she was. I was sort of insulted and flattered at the same time. So I told her. She laughed.

The mince pies had got a bit squashed but we all scoffed the wreckage at the seat and admired the view over the Solway Firth to Scotland. It was clear enough for me to point out all the landmarks on the far shore which I knew. The girls were amazed that I had even been round to all those places to see what they were like. I was amazed that they had grown up looking at them all their lives and had never, once, ventured round to see what the Southerness coast was like!

Rob had to admit he’d never even climbed a single one of the Lake District Fells! At which point Kirsten corrected him and told him they had climbed Latrigg [from the Skiddaw car park] so he had done at least one! We had to laugh at that because from the Skiddaw car park, Latrigg is a very slight slope of about half a mile to the summit. Even a granny in granny buggy could manage it! [I have seen women with babes in push chairs walking that little way to one of the most marvellous view points in the Lakes.]

I offered to let them accompany us up Scafell Pike tomorrow if they wanted. They all declined!
Back at the Thomas’s [after taking the woofies back to Dad’s] we sat and watched mindless TV for a while and then played some silly board games for a while longer. It was quite a different sort of Christmas Day from the ones I have had in recent years and was lovely. Even misogynistic Eric didn’t spoil it.

I have to admit I did shed a tear at the end of Dr Who! I loved Matt Smith as the doctor and I can’t see how Peter Capaldi can match the excellent standard Matt has left. Laura said she thought Jenna Coleman was hot, which resulted in her being bombarded with a hail of cushions from all parts of the room, I pretended to be in a sulky huff too!

Laura and I wandered our way back to Dad’s at about 9pm. I was all set for a slow and sensuous bout of seasonal love making but we both felt too tired. Hardly surprising really, I suppose.

I was woken by a handful of investigative fingers at about 2am on Boxing Day morning and we both found the energy for a little festive frolicking after all!

If I have been good for Laura [as Kirsten said] then she has been so good for me too!


Thursday 26th December. Boxing Day.

I awoke at an ungodly hour, as usual, and walked the dogs, as usual up Tall Hill. I returned to find the Lollster busy making sandwiches for our assault on the highest fell in England. The view from Tall Hill overlooks the Lakes and there was a broken blanket of cloud covering the central giants but it looked promising enough to give it a go anyway. I had mentally revised my route and changed from a Borrowdale ascent to a Wasdale ascent instead. It takes a bit longer to drive round to Wasdale but the climbing is more direct and offers good chances of escape if the weather turned unpleasant on us.

We piled into Dad’s Land Rover at just after 8am and were at the foot of Lingmell, in the car park by 8.40. The car park is right at the head of Wastwater and you can see any weather approaching along the valley floor.

The fell is part of the Scafell Massif but is really pretty in its own right too. Our route was taking us up the grassy and rounded south west side. On the northern face it is a wild and rugged mountain and has some very tricky sections for a walker to manage [counting as scrambles rather than a walk in several spots] the south west side is much more user friendly. My plan was to climb Lingmell to the summit and if the weather held, descend to Lingmell Col and work our way up to the summit of the Pike using the top end of the corridor route.

That is what we did. We crossed the beck on the old footbridge and then simply followed the line of fence posts, up Brown Tongue [that always makes me smile] all the way to the top of Lingmell. At 840 metres it did take us a considerably longer time than Catbells on Chrimbo Day morning. Wainwright’s old summit cairn on Lingmell Crag has been rebuilt in recent years and is one of the more unusual in the Lakes. The view from here to Great Gable is brilliant. You can even spot Napes Needle, a climbing spot on the old lady where I progressed to climb when I was about 14. [With Dad, naturally.]

Our problem was the clouds. From Tall Hill you could see they were hitting the central giants but seemed to be leaving breaks, from the top of Lingmell we could tell that the breaks were becoming fewer and fewer. Looking down Wasdale there were banks of the buggers lining up out on the Irish Sea, waiting to whizz inland and rain on Laura and me on the top of Lingmell.

I haven’t mentioned Scafell Pike at all so far, for the simple reason it wasn’t there! Someone had stolen it and covered it in clouds! From Wainwright’s column we had a swift confab and examined our options. There were a few. We could drop into the Col and climb up to the summit of the Pike in cloud on a bearing [although the path is very clearly defined at first, the boulders tend to hide it after a while]; we could drop to the Col and head back down to the car park almost retracing our steps so far; we could cross the Col, hit the corridor route [which is like a bloody motorway these days, it is so distinct] or fourth option - we could take the little used path to the east of Piers Gill and have a mini scramble down to rejoin Moses Trod above Wasdale Head. There was a fifth option of sitting there for an hour or so with four bored dogs, getting colder and colder, waiting for the clouds to lift.

I thought the Lollster, being only a novice fell walker would opt for the retrace our steps option, but the little treasure went for my favourite, the tracking of Piers Gill, over Middleboot Knotts and back round to Moses Trod. You have to be very careful along here as there is every chance of falling into the Gill in one or two spots but I was sure we’d cope as long as the cloud didn’t fall any lower. The ceiling was a bit higher than the Lingmell top but we kept getting wet wisps or lower stuff from time to time wafting around us. Off we went to the Col. Here we met a handful of idiots who were yomping up to the summit of Scafell no matter what. We wished them luck and headed north along the edge of the gill. 

This is one of the most spectacular rock formations in the whole of the Lakes. Yes, Mickledore is impressive [even after the rock fall] but the gill is simply awesome as it is so much longer than Mickledore and you can’t walk along it. [Well, you probably could if you knew what you were doing, I suppose. I certainly wouldn't attempt it with Laura or a dog in tow. Too Dangerous!]

At one point past Middleboot we had to slither over the rock face on our bottoms, which was decidedly trickier than I remembered. I guess it is because I had last done this on a dry autumn day, not a wet winter’s one, and the rocks were not so unforgiving. I sort of sat on my hands and shuffled down in a most unladylike manner with Laura following on behind me. The fall from here is straight onto grass, as we were way over from the edge of the gill by now, but it is still a worrying spot to be in. I turned round and looked at my Love coming slowly behind and she looked a bit concerned. Not terrified, but rather more worried than usual.

I shouted back, “It’s fun this bit, isn’t it?” as a bit of moral support.

I caught a snatch of one of my own sayings coming back to me: “That’s obviously a new use of the word fun I wasn’t previously aware of!”

I wanted to turn around and hug and kiss her, but it was a bit too precarious for that. The dogs had gambolled down the face as though it wasn’t there, they do have four wheel drive, I suppose. They were waiting by the huge arrow, someone has painted on the rock face, showing the route; engaged in a bout of ‘bite the ears’. A common favourite among dogs of my acquaintance.

At the bottom of the face Laura half jumped, half fell into my arms and I kissed her. I squeezed her really tightly and we ate each other’s faces for about a lifetime. When we broke apart she said, “Jeez, that was a bit hairy!” Oh, I love her so much. No moaning, no whinging, no berating me for having taken a route which I knew would stretch her ability to the limit, simply; “Jeez, that was a bit hairy!” How can you not love someone who has that approach to life, eh?

I kept looking back up to the place where  Scafell should have been in the hope that the clouds didn’t suddenly vanish and make us wish, “If only…” But it stayed resolute in its determination to deny us access, so I felt quite pleased as we stepped down the Styhead path heading for the Wasdale Head Inn. My main worry now was we get all four dogs into the bar section? I knew dogs were allowed in as Callie and I have been here before, but Four Dogs?

As usual, I was worrying about nothing. We wandered in, had a pot of tea for two and some of their hot soup and bread rolls. The bar person even brought over a bowl of water for the four pups. Revived by the soup and tea I treated us both to a swift dram of Lake District Whisky [the compnay has only been going for a few months]. Laura had hers diluted with lemonade [there is no hope!] but I had mine neat. It is quite a pleasant drink.

After getting the blood in bodies back to normal temperature, we struck out along the river side towards the car park. This was a bit of a challenge as the water level was quite high and the point where you cross the river was much deeper than usual. Normally you can hop from boulder to boulder to get across but they were all covered by the torrent! I bit the bullet and just waded across, confident my boots and gaiters wouldn’t let too much of the river into my feet. They didn’t. Laura was more circumspect but eventually she did what I had done and just waded across. Her left foot was treated to a mountain stream spa, however! For which I was told I would be held to account later!

At the Land Rover the car park had filled up quite a bit. Which I found surprising. I hoped that the idiots who were going on to the summit of the Pike had arrived there safely. Getting a mountain rescue team out on Boxing Day would not be too popular, I imagined. We drove back to Dad’s feeling tired but happy. It was a new Wainwright for Laura and even if we hadn’t got to Scafell Pike’s summit, like we’d planned, it was still a great day out.  

Errol’s Party, in the evening, was a bit of a damp squib as far as we were concerned. Instead of being the life and souls of the party we were just really tired. I sat on Errol’s sofa for almost all the time and Laura, who came and joined me [after a while] fell asleep, resting her head on my shoulder. Errol sat at the far end of the sofa and we talked over Laura’s head, mainly about Dad and Louisa and their trip to Australia. I apologised for being such boring party guests but he was amused by the fact we were so tired out. I had thought about pretending we were exhausted because we’d spent the day shagging the backs off each other but in the end I told him the truth. We had been out on the fells for two days in a row and were feeling the effects.

He did perk up when I told him about the Ceilidh and he said he’d quite like that if I could promise to stay awake long enough to dance!

We wandered home at about 10pm. I know! What party poopers! The dogs weren’t all that bothered about their last walk either. We didn’t even make it to the car parking space before all four had performed and were off home. At home my Lollster was fast asleep in Dad’s kitchen armchair. As we made our way upstairs to my bedroom she muttered, “You know, I was really, really scared on that rock face. If you take me anywhere as scary again I’ll kill you!”


Lying in bed a couple of minutes later she said, “Can you get death by Orgasm?”

Monday 23 December 2013

Talking with Dad about f*cking! (Well, sort of!)

Friday December 20th

Usual morning, dog walking, swimming, breakfast etc. Had a chat with Sarah at the pool to explain how we were going to be away for almost a month! She thinks we have too many holidays! LOL

Laura drove me into work and was scheduled to pick me up at 1pm to drive to Cumbria.

I passed a fairly quiet morning at work. There was no sign of Mr Mistletoe, thank goodness. I spent a relaxing few hours back on the task of digitising our records. I felt a bit guilty at about 12.30 when Mrs B came over and plonked a small, gift wrapped box on my desk. “Don’t tell anyone and don’t get into a panic about buying me anything, but I bought you this as a thank you for all the concert information and other musical things you’ve done for me over the year. Just put it in your bag and pretend nothing happened!”

You don’t argue with Mrs B.

It was like a second Secret Santa, we got the first (official) one on Wednesday. I haven’t opened mine yet. You don’t open Christmas presents before the twenty fifth, do you? I bought a beautiful scarf and gloves set for Emily, who had admired mine earlier in the year. I hope she likes them when she opens her present. She may guess who gave it if she remembers telling me how much she liked my scarf.

At 12.55 Laura was at the door of Archives ready to zoom off, good old Mrs Briggs said we were to go. I was expecting a huge amount of traffic but it was just like an ordinary day really. Maybe it would get busy later? The M61 and M6 were almost clear!

At Dad’s the Citroen was packed with two suitcase and two flight bags all ready to depart in the wee small hours. Louisa had a chicken concoction on the go for our evening meal and I got a stern telling by Dad that we were not to touch this year’s wine! If we wanted any, we had to finish off last year’s. There are still about 2 dozen bottles left, despite The Old Wine party. I solemnly agreed that we would not pinch Hilmar’s wine. What does he think we’re like?

Dad and I walked the dogs up Tallentire Hill for their last walk of the day and we had a long gossip about everything nothing in particular. I told him Suze had his and Louisa’s Chrimbo pressies waiting out there [which he thought was a neat surprise]. I didn’t tell him I had bought them in the summer and left them waiting for their arrival. I moaned about Felice leaving me to meet our supervisor alone while she was whooping it up with Mr Radford in Lancaster.

He told me that Mike and Felice were behaving like a pair of kids when he met them in town. They had just been to see the Hanging Room in the castle and Mike was impressed by her knowledge of Mediaeval History. Had the drongo not the wit to realise she was a Med. Hist. scholar with an MA to her name already? Dad thought that it was infatuation blindness!

He reminded me that as usual he had left a roll of cash in the teapot. We were to use that to top up any food we ate from the pantry or freezer (as we always did) and to slip some to Molly for the times she would look after his three dogs when we whizzed back to Sheffield for the theatre and concerts we’d booked. There was a turkey crown in the freezer bought specially for us, if we wanted a small private dinner and two other joints – a beef one and leg of pork. We could have those too if we wanted. We just had to remember to cross them off the freezer list on the kitchen noticeboard. I have a freezer list like that too! [OK, it was Mum’s idea originally. I am often surprised that other people are surprised by it. How do they keep track of what is in their freezers any other way?]

For the last week of January, the dogs were having a holiday at Errol’s house, while we went back to Sunny Sheff for the two Sheakespeare plays and the conclusion of the Autumn semester. {Sheffield Uni is weird like that.}

I was treated to my usual kiss on the forehead at the top of the hill and we walked back down hugging each other round the waist, more like lovers than Dad and Daughter (to any casual observer). I broached the subject of Louisa and a baby and he was quite open and frank, saying he thought they may be unsuccessful but he was prepared, for her sake, to keep on trying. [For her sake? Yeah, right Dad!] It is very strange talking to your Dad about fcuking!

An early, drink free night was had by all.


Saturday 21st December.

Up before the larks. The dogs had the mini walk this morning (to the small layby on Tall. Hill and back) mainly because we needed to get off and also because it was raining!

Dad drove his car all the way to the airport and Laura and I snoozed in the back seat. She lay with her head in my lap and was zed pushing before we even hit Carlisle and I was in dreamland by the time we were on the M74. Waking up still in darkness was nothing new, I am an early bird after all. We parked up in the car park and strolled with the Aged P & Not so Aged W into the terminal. Our plan was to see them through check in and head off to the restaurant to eat masses of cooked breakfast.

We had mega hugs after they had cleared baggage handling and Dad whispered, “Maybe the mile high club would help Louisa conceive!”

Daad! Nooooo! Inappropriate subject matter for your baby daughter’s ears!

We shouldn’t have talked about babies last night. He was probably joking and saying it to wind me up. I should know, I do exactly the same thing with most people too. Still I dropped him in it as they left for the departure lounge with, “You can buy a T shirt on board afterwards. I’ve still got mine somewhere!” Explain that to Louisa, I thought was they left.

Laura chuckled all the way through breakfast at the thought of Dad trying to explain to Louisa what my lie meant! I actually got a text about 30 mins before they took off with the message, “1-0. But don’t worry. I will get an equalizer!”

Laura said I should e-mail Suze and get her to ask him if he bought the T-shirt, when they get there! What a brilliant idea.

It was still dark when their flight departed and we decided we’d drive into the city and do a bit of last minute Christmas retail therapy. We stayed until about 11.30, when the crowds had become quite large and a couple of the shops we went into were heaving. We walked down to look at the Clutha bar. Which, I suppose, is quite a morbid thing to do, does it make us ghouls? It is still surrounded by those tall steel, interlocking fence things. It brought a shudder to think about the horror of it all. We are so lucky that more things don’t fall out of the sky onto the people below, there are so many up there.

The drive back down was uneventful. Dad’s car at over 100mph is a brilliant drive. It doesn’t half make travelling at the normal speed limit seem really, really slow afterwards though.

The dogs were so glad to see us when we got back, and despite the rain we took them to the trig point on Tall. Hill as a treat. Loll and I had a major snogathon at the trig point. I said that in the summer we ought to come back up here and have sex. It would be brilliant bonking with a view of the Lake District as your backdrop. She was worried we’d get caught, but I told her that I have never seen anyone wander off the track to come to the trig point in all the times I have been up here. I am not sure she was convinced. I nearly blabbed how I had given Richard a BJ at the summit of every fell we had climbed together but common sense prevailed. That is a memory I don’t think I will share. We actually made the beast with two backs on the summit if there was shelter there, several times too.

As we had been up so much earlier than usual, even for me, we decided another early night was to be had by the two house sitters, although we didn’t go to sleep immediately, we did what we’d been talking about at the trig point instead.


Sunday December 22nd.

It was still windy this morning but no rain. We went for a stroll in the Lorton Valley. I parked Dad’s Land Rover at the foot of Rannerdale Knotts, walked up Rannerdale itself and down into Buttermere. Had a cuppa at the café (which was open, surprise, surprise) and then down to the shore of Crummock to the sleeping dinosaur. From there we followed the shore to the road and cut across the foot of the Knotts to drop back to the car. It is a brilliant walk on a windy and cloudy day, if it had been sunny it would have been marvellous. In May Rannerdale is full of bluebells. At the foot of the Knotts we put the dogs into the lake to wash them down and then let them dry off in the car as we drove back home.

It was fairly quiet moseying up Rannerdale, with no other souls about. The path into Buttermere was full of people climbing out of the village, heading towards Wandhope and Grasmoor. The village itself was quite busy and the path down to the lake was full(ish) too. There were no campers on the camp site, however!

The sleeping dinosaur is a series of boulders that stick out of the water at the head of the lake and looks like the plates of a stegosaurus breaking through the waves. They are in a slight curve too, which makes them more animal like than a straight line would have. Often rowing boats are for hire on this stretch of the shore. There were none in use today.

Lunch was a bit late but consisted of eating up whatever was in D & L’s fridge. This meal was salmon steaks. Tea would be salad. Tomorrow would be sausage. Then there are a couple of lamb chops; apart from a pile of vegetables and salad, there isn’t much left in it to be honest. We planned a food shop for Monday morning and drew up a Christmas week menu. I still want to walk up Scafell Pike on Christmas Day but Laura isn’t too keen on the idea.

We may hit a compromise and climb something diddy, like Catbells, which would only take an hour or so and is no real effort at all! Either way it means Turkey sandwiches for lunch, which will mean I’ll cook the bird on Tuesday! If I get all the veggies prepped then as well, all we’ll have to do is come in from the walk, switch on the oven and Robert is your father’s brother!

There was an 8pm showing of the Hobbit 2 in Workington, so we went across to see it for a second time. It was even better than the first time. It still doesn’t seem like a long film and I now think the inclusion of the female elf was a good idea. After the first viewing I wasn’t so sure, but now I am. Good call Mr Jackson! The scenes with the dragon were better for having advance knowledge of them too, as it were. I can’t wait to own it on DVD and watch it again and again.

Felt really tired out when we came out of the cinema but as we’d come down in Dad’s Land Rover again, I had to drive us back home. [Laura isn’t on Dad’s insurance.] I had to open the window to let a cold breeze keep me awake even though it’s only 7 miles from The Plaza to Dad’s!

A debauched evening wasn’t really on the cards. If the spirit was willing the flesh was definitely weak! 
After tonight, only two sleeps until the Myran Bishop’s appearance. Rah de rah rah!


Friday 20 December 2013

Coping with Mistletoe. Deciding discos aren't for me.

Monday December 16th.

Dog walked and swam as usual then after a swift visit to the Uni realised we aren’t in this week; all we have is just a couple of meetings. Laura sat with a smug grin on her face in the car as I explained this to her. She did have the good grace not to say, "I told you so." I could tell she was thinking it.

I contacted Mrs B, and explained the situation and asked if I could put a full week in at XXX & Y and then take the time off in lieu after the Christmas break. She thought it was a good idea. So the Lollster drove me round to the office and I spent the day wearing my Archivist’s hat.

The office is winding down for Christmas. They leave a skeleton crew on board [reminded me of the first Pirates of the Caribbean film the first time I heard the expression] and the rest of us have a fortnight, starting this coming Friday arvo. So, with time served I won’t be needed on any Wednesdays in January. Rah, rah, rah. This makes house sitting so less complicated.

I met Laura for lunch and we wandered round the new market hall on the Moor. It is very good. It beats the old one which was getting a bit run down, to be honest.

Christopher was pleased to see me and was all set to bring in the extra mincemeat tomorrow. I am going to make a mountain of mince pies with it. He was full of excitement about the “Staff Do”. This year we are going to see “Oliver” at the Crucible Theatre on Wednesday night. There will probably be a breakaway excursion to a night club as well. There has been after every “Do” so far. The younger ones go there, I don’t know where the boring old farts go; home probably. This year whatever we decide I will not end up snogging a complete stranger with mistletoe as I will have Laura with me. I sort of think that may have been why Christopher was so excited because when I mentioned I was bringing Laura his face fell! No doubt someone told him about the effect of alcohol and mistletoe on Ms Jay and he put two and two together to get the chance of a snog! Poor boy.

I was picked up by the Lollster after work, who zoomed us straight off to Dominic’s. This was a complete surprise. He had closed the restaurant for the night and had cooked a meal for his staff. He calls it his ‘Saturnalia Thank You’. I hadn’t realised he employed so many people. There must have been thirty of us in the place.

I had meat balls and spaghetti, Laura had the lasagne. If her lasagne was as tasty as my meatballs she’ll have had a treat. Dominic gave a little speech before the desserts where he thanked various people for the contributions throughout the year. Praise fell heavily on Luca who is the main chef, and quite rightly, he is a wizard in that kitchen. He also singled out Carmina who works as FoH and the manager of the place. [Dominic’s wife] I got a brief mention for introducing him to a whole selection of wines he had never even heard of before, never mind considered. [That was nice of him.]

They have a sweepstake on tips during the year. Micky won having been given the highest amount and Lollster [who only started in September] came third! Dom is of the opinion that Micky will lose the title next year if she keeps it up. The prize? A week’s stay with Dom’s family back in Italy; to be taken during the summer sometime. That is pretty neat, isn’t it? They get told now so they can book really cheap flights down to Brindisi – Salento Airport. Easy Jet fly there regularly and are so cheap it’s laughable. If Laura wins next year we could have a holiday in the instep of the boot!

We rolled back home at about 9pm which gave me plenty of time to have a long play with Callie, who was looking so doleful and then to take her on the complete Hill Top Wood / Onesacre circuit before bedtime.

Two messages from Feli were waiting for us when we got back. On the first she was having a whale of a time in Lancaster. On the second she reminded me of the meeting with our supervisor on Tuesday morning. Erm… Thanks for that! She is staying with Michael for a few days longer, before coming back to Sheffield, gathering up her gear and flying down to Bordeaux to have a family Christmas au bord de la mer. Bassin d’arcachon.

Tuesday December 17th

Dog walk and swim and then I went into the meeting which Felice should have been to! I was there at 8.30. What the hell was going on? She had e-mailed me a who list of things to mention and a crib sheet of answers if I got asked questions. It lasted 25 minutes and seemed a complete waste of time, I think it was just a box ticking exercise. No wonder she passed the buck to me! I am seriously thinking of killing her when I see her next.

I was at XXX & Y less than five minutes when a flustered accountant appeared in Archives with a large box filled with jars of mincemeat. He was even more flustered when I gave him my keys and asked him if he could take them to my car for me. Well… It looked heavy.

He came back in ten minutes in a panic saying he couldn’t find it. The bloody drongo had been looking for my old Picanto! I went outside with him and showed him my new pride and joy. The Quokka. He couldn’t see why I had chosen to give it a name. He thought it was a typical female thing to do and rather silly. So I told him he had just blown his chance of a ride in it. I think he wasn’t expecting that kind of reply and began stuttering and apology. So I promised him a trip over to the top of Wyming Brook in it at lunchtime.

What a bloody stupid thing to suggest. He was at the door to Archives almost before lunch break had started. I grabbed my coat and bag and wandered out to the car. He was quite impressed by the inside of the car and even more impressed by the deal I’d bagged from Monty’s. He couldn’t believe how little I had paid. At Wyming Brook it seemed silly to just turn around so I said should we have a stroll to look at the reservoirs? He didn’t even know there was a reservoir just round the corner. I had a sandwich in my bag and started munching on it as we walked. He hadn’t thought to bring any of his lunch, of course, I gave him the second half of my chicken salad sanger. I was looking forward to that, but I had another full round in the office so I wasn’t bothered too much.

The reservoirs are just a spit around the corner from the car park. They are collective called the Redmires Reservoirs, and there are three of them. It takes a few minutes walking and the weather was pretty nice so we just strolled on eating my lunch. We stopped to look at the views and Christopher said, “I have brought something with me…” He fumbled in his coat pocket and brought out a sprig of mistletoe!

I just turned and started walking back to the car. He rushed to catch up with me and started to tell me how much he had liked me and he was sure if I got to know him properly I’d see he was a really nice guy and he knew he had blown it big time at the concerts. A kiss under the mistletoe would show I had forgiven him. He wittered on like this all the way back to the car. 

What a bloody drongo!

I just couldn’t believe it. The guy is a complete numbskull! As if I was going to do anything of the sort. I honestly don’t think he has a clue, to be frank.

I made him sit in the back seat before we drove off. I berated him once he was inside and continued to give him total aggravation of the ear-hole all the way back to the Office. I won’t put down here what I told him but I think at the end of the drive he’d got the picture.

I think I was shocked more than anything. I also knew that if he had tried anything I would be able to deal with him because my old University Self Defence for women course is still fresh in my mind, even after all the time that has passed. [OK, I had shown Laura a lot of the moves and hold breaks when she moved in with me, just for my own piece of mind really.] I felt relieved he hadn’t tried to grab me or anything because I would have had to hurt him and probably even left him up at Wyming Brook.

I had calmed down at the work's car park and was able to explain that I was in a serious and committed relationship with Laura and that I had decided men weren’t worth the hassle any more. I would not mention the incident with anyone but if he tried a stunt like that again I would cry “Sexual Harassment” so loud they would hear it in America! If he couldn’t manage to be a friendly face at work then he had better stop coming down to Archives to see me. I would forget it had happened and would treat him in that way if he could do the same.

He agreed. I hope I haven’t over-reacted. I wasn’t really sure what to do for the best. I mean you can never tell what a guy’s reaction will be when you don’t respond in the way they had hoped.

Wednesday December 18th.

We both walked Callie this morning and then zoomed off to swim as usual. I told Laura about the mistletoe incident and she was amused by the fact that Christopher could be such a pillock. I think socially inept may be a better description. I mean he is in his late twenties, has no girlfriend and lives with his Mum & Dad still. It sort of sounds like the archetypal  male loser to me.

I was worried I was making a mountain out of a molehill but Laura, quite rightly, said that if I had done anything more about it; told my line manager or his, for example, that might have been mountain building. She thought what I had done was reasonable and proportionate and I shouldn’t worry. She does have a wise head on young shoulders.

I needn’t have fretted at all. Work was just as normal. No incidents or hassle from the man in accounts. I don’t really know what I was expecting to happen but nothing did. Maybe it will be water under the bridge.

I was kept busy during the day by a last minute request for relevant case law for a trial that had been brought forward, so the whole of ARR hunkered down and did a mass search together. It was the first time we have done that for years. The last time I can remember was 2011! At 4.15 we had a huge wodge of paper ready to go upstairs when we got a note down telling us the panic was over, the date had been mis-transcribed, the 20th of the 12th should have been the 12th of the 1st! It was really quite fun, though, all of us searching for the same things; sharing what we’d found and sparking ideas from each other.

The evening “Do” at the Crucible was brilliant. I have loved the film version of Oliver for as long as I can remember. Despite the way Dickens has Nancy murdered by Bill Sykes. That made me cry when I first watched the film. The dance routines to accompany the songs are just stupendous. Obviously we weren’t expecting film standard set pieces from a theatre company BUT they were very very good even so. The Dodger was brilliant, so was Fagin. I think it is safe to say that everyone who went thoroughly enjoyed their evening. Christopher made no effort to speak to me, or catch my eye or anything. I think he thought I might have killed him - he would have been right! LOL

Afterwards the younger crowd went off to a nearby night club. As it was before 11pm the ladies got in for free. Laura and I went along to be sociable but it was every bit as horrendous as I has suspected. The music was too loud to be able to have anything like a conversation and to call it music was definitely a misnomer! I yelled at her, after a few minutes, “Are you OK with this?”

She replied, “No, not really.”

“Shall we go?”

She nodded, so we left. I know I am an old stick in the mud but I can’t see the enjoyment of have your ears pounded by such a cacophony in the pretence of having fun. It would have been nice to have had a dance but, in the twenty minutes we were in there, the “Music” was abysmal; it was way too loud and the place was far too full. I must be getting old. It would have been nice to have danced to the sound of something I, at least, could recognise!

We strolled through the town, arm in arm, and looked at the Christmas lights – they are really pretty this year. I suppose they always have been. At the top of Fargate we stopped and had a major snog, surrounded by a fair number of people who were on their way to who knows where. They seemed to find nothing unusual about two women kissing each other in the middle of the street. One wag shouted, “Get a room!” As he passed, at which we broke off and laughed. The car was parked behind the City Hall so we continued on our way through the mass of night time revellers, dressed in very little, heading to more drinking or dancing spots to celebrate their Christmases. A part of me was thinking, “Wouldn’t it be nice to be part of these crowds off to their parties and discos and the like?” while a second part was thinking, “Thank god I am not a part of all this. I can stand and watch as a detached observer, without having to get involved.”

In the car, “Well, Ms Jay. Shall we hire a room? Or... should we go back to the one we've got and use that?”

“I think, Ms Thomas, using the one we have is a brilliant idea. Let’s do it.”

We didn’t use the room. We stayed in the lounge, in front of the wood burner, and used the sofa, the floor, the armchair, the window sill, the footstool, the stair way.

Thursday December 19th.

One day to go before the Holidays begin. We walked Callie and swam as usual. Before I left for work I started on making some mince pies with Mr Mistletoe’s Mum’s mincemeat. Laura said she’d finish them off during the morning.

At work I got a call from Mum saying she was at mine, helping Loll with the mince pies and did I fancy lunch? Did I? Mum and Laura were waiting in the car park in Mum’s car and we drove off to the pub out at Ringinglow for a smackerel. Mum had baked a lot of mince pies in our oven too and was going to collect them after lunch when she had dropped Laura off. Loll said we now had 36 pies waiting to go up to Cumbria and still had two jars of mincemeat left. It will keep pretty well, so there is no need to go mad and bake any more.

Mum asked if we’d thought about getting a second car, one for Laura, because when I was using my Kia it meant Laura was stuck at home or reliant on public transport. We have discussed this before and always arrived at the conclusion that it would really be a bit of an unnecessary expense.

Mum seemed disappointed so I asked her what her ulterior motive was. She accused me of being a cynical, untrusting baggage and then told me that Mrs Potts, in her village was having to give up her car on medical orders (she is 84!) and she was looking for a buyer. She had asked the women at her WI meeting on Monday first and was going to put adverts in The Star after Christmas.

Mrs Potts car is a Nissan, on a 57 plate. She has had it from new and it has done just under 10 thousand miles. It is a bright red, 1.2, 3 door, with air con. She will be advertising it for £3K. I could see Laura’s interest was piqued by the idea. According to Mum it does around 55 miles to the gallon and has never been driven at over 60 miles an hour in its life!

After we had scoffed (homemade meat and potato pie for me) and I was dropped off at work, the pair of them went over to Holmesfield to look at Mrs Potts car. I could tell Laura was quite interested in the idea and it does sound like a bargain.  I got a call at work from Mum and Laura who were both quite excited and giggly about the car. Laura had been for a drive in it. She thinks it is pretty nippy.  It is so clean inside, it is like is has never been used. The boot space is a bit small, smaller even than my Picanto was, but she thinks there would be room in the back for Callie.

I told her if she wanted it to go for it. She was not going to decide there and then but would wait until I came home and we’d discuss it. I spent some of the rest of the arvo researching insurance for a 2007 plated Nissan Micra and found it would be cheaper to insure it under my name as part of a multicar deal with my Cee’d (with Laura as the only named driver) rather than try to insure it under Laura’s name in her own right.

The talk at home was all about costs and running it. She has some money saved up and her tips have made a fair amount in just four months. She sat down and did a spread sheet of all the expenditure involved in its purchase and then a second cost benefit analysis of ownership of a second vehicle. The figures, in her mind, just don’t add up. If we hadn’t been committed to at least another 2 years at Uni for me and 1 year for her after the summer, getting a second vehicle might prove necessary. As it stands, we both travel to the same place every day, we go out together virtually all the time too. Nothing in our current lifestyle means we actually NEED the expense of owning and running a second car. So she phoned Mrs Potts to tell her the news. She also said she should ask for £3,500 for the car in the paper but be prepared to accept £3K. She then phoned my Mum and they had a chat about cars and Christmas and Me and my Dad!

After a light meal (lunch was pretty large) I drove Laura down to the restaurant for the last time until January and (back at home) made a call to Phil & Jane to let them know where I’d be over the holiday. I tried Feli’s number but there was no reply. I phoned Bordeaux and her Mama told me she was driving down as we spoke. She was going to stay at a Formula One near Calais overnight and continue on tomorrow. Why had she not phoned before she set off? [Checking the voice mail on my mobile later, I discovered she had. But not to the home phone as she thought we may have gone to Dad’s already and she didn’t know his number!]

I called the Aged Parent who was as excited as a schoolboy about going home for Christmas. It is weird to hear him say that. I always think that England is his home, but obviously deep in his heart he is still a good old Okker boy! He was full of how Feli had been staying with Michael for a few days and how they seemed to have hit it off really well. [That was all I needed to hear!]

XXX & Y close at lunchtime on Friday so I told him we’d be up pronto ballero. Laura was dropping me off in the morning and then picking me up at 1, so that we could zoom straight off without any of the tedious mucking about in hyperspace that is packing.

I picked Loll up at 11.15 and she was bead beat. Another Christmas “do” had filled the place out. All of the diners were from just one company. That was a first for this season. It had meant that the atmosphere was a bit more raucous and unruly than usual. It also meant the diners were much less inhibited. One of them had actually stroked Laura’s bum as she served his meal! She told Dominic who went up to the guy in question and very quietly told him that if he touched one of his staff again in an inappropriate manner he would be calling the police! Good old Dom. Although, this is not the first time this has happened to Laura in only four months!

I thought she would be shaken by what had happened but she was quite sanguine. Plus the guy had the grace to apologise to her when she came to clear the main course away, which she thought was good and on leaving he had slipped her two twenty notes as a tip! I joked and said if she was going to start charging for a quick feel how much could I have for 20P?

She slapped me. Then kissed me. Then cried. Sometimes I am a complete fucking idiot.


Tuesday 17 December 2013

Magical Weimaraner turns a pheasant into a rabbit!

Friday 13th December.


I am not superstitious. Touch wood.

To be honest I think a lot of superstitions are hokum, although some like never taking the third light from a match, for example, is based on common sense. It originates from World War One because by the time of a third lighting of a cigarette, from the same match, an enemy sniper would have drawn a bead on the light, making a shot towards it inevitable. Spilled salt thrown over your shoulder defies logic, though.

After we got back from the pool, I had a call from Steve just before we left for Uni asking if I’d like to bring Callie to walk up on a shoot tomorrow. They want new pickers-up [a rarity in itself] and I have been suggested. I am to go tomorrow with Callie to introduce her to the shoot and the idea of picking up. She has only been on rough shoots with me and a couple of other people, not a formal driven one, so she will be wearing “L” plates tomorrow. If she passes the test we will be put on the rota! She is a good retriever and knows what to do.

I am so excited. It is a good way to keep my dog in sharp form and get paid for doing it. The shoot is not too far from me, over some moorland and coppices near Ladybower. So it’s hardly any distance to travel at all. Although I have not been on one of these events before I am sure we will not disgrace ourselves.

At Uni there was no news of the Union’s letter but things did develop during the day elsewhere! I have been researching patterns for caskets and found a wealth of designs for 17th Century ones but the Tudor and Plantagenet times seem to be less common. There are a lot of designs for stripes and bands of embroidery but nothing on the lines of the 17th century ones. I have a lot of floral shapes and geometric patterns which remind me of early Islamic artwork. I’ve also uncovered some very naïve figures and scenes. The majority of what I have found is, quite understandably, ecumenical; altar cloths, vestment decorations and the like. There are masses of pictures of these available and quite a few extant examples to view although the stitches are also quite limited in their range.

Isn’t it bloody typical, fcuking politicians get hold of stuff and turn it arse about face. It seems though, that in this case twatneck Cameron’s inept bumbling about UUK may produce results despite his useless, and lacking any comprehension, intervention. The interview with the UUK spokesperson on PM [BBC Radio 4] was an embarrassment to listen to, as the Students’ Union rep tore into her facile and specious arguments. At times she had the poor idiot drivelling around try to get a handle on the proceedings without success.

Then on the 6 o’clock news fcuking bastard Cameron opens his gob and says he is against segregation, without seeming to have a clue what the fcuk he was talking about. That is typical for him though. Still, if it means a change of policy from UUK then it can’t be a bad thing. Even if it has been achieved by default as it were.

I have now seen all my tutees for their final time before we go down. They are mostly whacked out from a long term and new experiences. I remember my first term at Uni only too well, I was whacked out from being drunk so much and on my back so often. I cannot believe how wanton I was during those three months. [I did pay for it though in February of the following year!]

Interesting gossip, Felice is driving over to Lancaster this weekend to see a certain Mr Radford! 

Mmmm…. I hope she doesn’t get her fingers burned. He did seem to be a bit of an opportunistic sleeze bag to me, but maybe that was because I wouldn’t let him fcuk me after Dad’s reception. Perhaps he and Felice will make a good couple. [I don’t believe I am writing that. Ha ha ha!]

Laura was rushed ragged again at the restaurant. She has come home absolutely dead beat three times this week, I wonder if she is overdoing stuff a little? Tonight she sat in the boingy chair in the lounge and asked for a glass of something nice of my choosing. By the time I had brought her a chilled and iced Kummel she was sparko!

She wound her weary way up the wooden hills and hit the charp without even having a shower! So unlike her. I snuggled up with her and stroked her hair. She was fast asleep in minutes. I kissed her on the forehead before going back down to sort out the lights, the dog and the washing up. As I did so she muttered, “Night Mum!”


Saturday December 14th.

I asked Laura if she wanted a lie-in instead of going swimming but she was raring to go and we had done our 100 lengths [Yaay, back up to target!] as usual by 7am. We gossiped with Sarah over our hot chocolate from the vending machine about Christmas plans. She is looking forward to some time off work but is dreading Christmas Day. The in-laws are coming round and it is becoming a bit of a tradition. We advised that she books a Holiday over the Christmas period next year then she can avoid the boorish rellies!

Callie and I were out and ready by 9am. I had put my gun in the boot but I didn’t need it. There were a good dozen people there with around 20 dogs all ready to sweep up the fields and pick up the game. 

Callie and I were put in the middle of the line with Steve and told to observe rather than go. If we were asked then we could put her training into practice.

She had proved herself pretty sensible and calm after the first two drives so on the third they'd organised, a guy called Dave said I could work Callie too. She absolutely loved it and found everything I sent her for. Most of them were blind marks, obviously, but she works really well to the whistle and hand signals. We had lunch after the third drive and sat in an old shepherd’s hut eating our sangers and drinking from flasks. I had brought a wodge of Chicken salad sandwiches and I could have eaten the whole lot again!

After lunch we had two more drives at different locations and we were transported there in a wagon pulled behind a tractor. It was a good job it wasn’t raining or we’d have been drenched. Callie brought all I sent her for on the next drive with no problems at all and Dave actually commented on how good she was, for a Weimaraner! Cheeky sod!

On the last drive I had an embarrassing moment though. I had sent for a pheasant at the edge of the coppice we were clearing and she took ages to find it. When she did come waddling back, little stumping wagging like billyo, she had brought a rabbit! I was completely astounded. The bird was a pheasant! OK, it was a blind mark but a pheasant had definitely gone down in the trees at the far end. 

What the fcuk was the silly pup doing with a rabbit in her gob? To say there were hoots of laughter was an understatement. We [Callie and I] had to endure all sorts of stupid comments, the best was, “You’re right, you know. Weimaraners are Magic! She’s just turned a pheasant into a rabbit!” I had defended Callie’s corner from the scorn and derision of the Labrador owners when we first arrived. One of the things I had said was, “You’ll see, she is magic!” Oh how the things we say come back to bite us on the bum, eh?

How the hell the dead rabbit had got into the coppice we had no idea. It couldn’t have been shot by any of the guns. Steve, Dave and I looked more closely at the rabbit after Callie’s perfect sit and present. The damn thing had been shot but was very cold. Obviously it was a previous day’s [or night’s] kill which hadn’t been found. Rigor had been and gone which meant it had been shot quite some time ago.

The game keeper wandered over to see what the strange bird the Weimy had brought back was. More laughter ensued. It is a good job Callie didn’t understand what was going on. The keeper dispatched his spaniel into the coppice and found nothing either. So, the supposed blind mark couldn’t have been a kill after all, it was quite probably a runner once down! I think the fact Callie had kept going until she found something to bring back for me showed what a well-trained puppy she was. I didn’t say anything though.

The keeper went back and had a laugh at the Guns’ expense pretending one of them had shot it, and couldn’t they tell the difference between a pheasant and a rabbit? I was hoping I’d get to keep it and cook it to match Laura’s surprise but the Keeper held on to it instead. That was a blow. After all it was Callie’s rabbit!

At divvy up time we all got a brace of birds and £35. Not an earth shattering amount but it was a local syndicate shoot, made up of ordinary people. There were no Lords, ladies or Right Honourables among this lot. Just a few Policemen, a doctor and several other assorted professions who had clubbed together to form their own group. The plus side of all this was they were quite happy to chat with us “pickers up” and even had time for a laugh and joke before we all got tractored back to where the cars were parked. My dog’s magical abilities were a source of more amusement to those who hadn’t heard the story yet.

I was told that I should change my dog’s name to Harry [Potter], I had to reply that I hoped their eyesight was better than that when looking down their guns because their Harry would have to be a Hermione! That got a laugh, too! I was asked if I shot as well as worked Callie and was met with nodding approval when I told them I did and then told them what  gun I had. [Beretta 686, over and under, multichoke, single trigger, 26” barrel.] I explained I had done a fair bit rough shooting but not any driven formal ones like this. They thought me thinking their little group formal was amusing, and I was regaled with tales of shooting on the grouse moors of Scotland, where some of the guns flew in using their own, private helicopters!

A couple of the policemen went up to Scotland each summer for the Grouse and earner over £100 per day doing what we had just done. Apparently the money was splashed about like confetti and a day’s shooting could cost each gun up to £20 thousand!! I nearly choked on my mug of tea at that. £20K for a day’s shooting? That is just silly.

Steve was of the opinion that Callie and I had done well, and the rabbit incident would certainly get me remembered for next time. I hope so. It was a really enjoyable day, tiring but great fun and a good work out for Callie. She flopped on the floor of the trailer and snoozed her little head off.  She did the same in the boot of Steve’s Freelander too, on the way back home. He asked me if I wanted both birds and I said one would do, why? He could get £40 for a brace at one of the pubs in the village, if I was interested? So I agreed and just took one pheasant to hang in the shed for a few days until Chrimbo. Steve will give me the dosh after he next goes to the pub.

It was dark when we got back and I had to wash Callie down. She was as mudded up as hell. Laura filled the large old linen basket with warm water and I made the magical pub stand in it while I washed her down. I then used two dog towels to dry her off. When I had done Laura came out on the back yard and said, “OK, strip off and get in. Your turn!”

Rather than strip in the back yard, which I have done before, we actually decamped to the bathroom where I did what I was told. Mmmm…. Delicious.

I was so pleased with the dog, the day and Laura’s reaction to my going. I had thought she might object but she was fine with it. It seems she had spent the day making a scrumptious beef casserole with suet dumplings and doing the entire backlog of her University work, so she has now completed her end of semester assignment a week before the semester ends. She has the same work ethic as me!

We spent the evening just chilling and playing each other songs with a connection. We had to guess the connection. This was rather silly and quite mentally taxing; especially with two Laura played where the connection was - “My sister bought them for me!” How was I supposed to know that?
An early night was the ideal end to a very busy day.


Sunday December 15th.

I had a bit of a lie-in this morning. 7 am! I think the puppy was whacked out after all her exertions yesterday. Certainly her mistress was.  Callie didn’t pad upstairs at 6 as usual; she was finally out of her bean seat at about 6.50. I then spent a good 10 minutes play fighting with her on the bedroom floor whilst Laura slept on.

We had a ‘potter about morning’ made even less busy by the fact there was so much beef casserole left we didn’t need to prep anything for our lunch, just add a few more veggies. I did cook some spuds for a mash to go with it, but that was the extent of our efforts.

I Skyped Suze in Australia and was pleased to learn that my three boxes of pressies had arrived. Always good news.

The kids had wanted to open them immediately but Suze has told them they are Christmas presents and will wait until Christmas Day. Peter came on screen to gloat about Australia being just about to win back the Ashes. I have teased him about the last two Ashes defeats so much he is glad to get his own back. [I haven’t told him that there is a betting ticket, hopefully still in Annabelle’s purse, from the summer where I got 100-1 on a 5-0 series victory for Australia. I put $50 on at those odds. It seemed like a silly thing at the time but if the Okkers win the next two tests there will be $5K in prize money!]

I thanked Suze for the Western Australia calendars. She always sends two, a desk one in a CD case and a huge wall one. The wall one goes in my kitchen, I am going to take the desk one to my “broom cupboard”. She was surprised the present parcel hadn’t arrived though. She posted it ‘surface/air’ at the end of November. I told her I would call as soon as it got here.

They have all enjoyed looking at the CD of Jane’s ultra sound scans. It sparked a whole load of discussion in the family about babies and pregnancy and the like. Apparently Jeff is just grossed out by the whole idea. Not really a twelve year old’s thing I suppose.  Suze asked me the question: “Has it made you broody?” Sometimes my sister can be a pain. The girls wanted to know what being broody meant and Suze left me to explain. Thanks a bunch!

Annabelle asked her if she had been made broody looking at the new baby. She told Annabelle that three were enough for any one and anyway she was too old! She’s just turned 39! I had to bite my tongue at this, as part of my forward thinking is that I may delay children until my late thirties. The last thing you need to hear is that it is too late at 39. Especially if these words come from a nurse!

We spent a good 55 mins on the net together and I have promised to call again next Sunday from Dad’s house. He will be in transit to Warnbro by then and I will be house sitting. I hope he has got his broadband sorted out. It was buggered last time I was there, and the mobile phone mast was fcuked too, by the gales, so I was virtually incommunicado for the whole weekend!

I love being able to talk to the whole lot of my family like that. It is Star Trek technology in the 21st century and it is so much better than writing or e-mailing. They all thought Callie’s turning a pheasant into a rabbit was funny and Suze did express the thought that she missed snow! They have been out in Aus since 2002 and haven’t had any white stuff at all. Jeff didn’t even know what snow was! How weird is that?

I told them if we got some in Cumbria [which we will] when I’m at Dad’s; I will parcel some up and sent it over, especially for them!

I had several more calls during the arvo. Mum. Felice. Phil and Jane. Mandy. Laura called her Mum, too, and explained what was happening over Christmas [again]. We are going up to Cumbria on Friday evening and driving Dad to Glasgow airport early on Saturday morning. We are staying in Cumbria until the end of January, returning to Sheffield for a week in the middle for two concerts and then again at a weekend for a play. That way we will not leave my little house empty for more than 30 days [insurance complications if we did] and we won’t miss the things we’ve booked in January. Molly has invited us both to her house for Christmas dinner – this will be a packed affair as her two older daughters [Kirsten and Avril], their spouses and their children are coming for it too! Laura has asked if she can decide in the week as I have silly plans afoot. She didn’t tell her Mum what those silly plans are.

I saw in the paper that UUK has decided to withdraw its segregationist guidelines to all Universities. Rah rah rah. Result for common sense.


We had a second early night in a row. We didn’t get to sleep immediately though…