Tuesday, March 29, 2022
Home and away
Monday, March 21, 2022
Edinburgh in the sunshine
Daughter 2 came home for a flying visit last weekend. She had a meeting in Glasgow on the Thursday and then came through to us for the night and the next day. We missed Littlest Granddaughter but on the other hand we did get less-interrupted chats without her. We went to the Botanics on Friday morning. Naturally.
And then we had lunch with Daughter 1 and family near her office and then in the afternoon, the Edinburgh Two and their dad came round. They enjoyed getting Auntie Daughter 2 to themselves too. Sadly, she got the 6.30pm train back to London, arriving home very late indeed.
She took away with her the sleeping bag that she'd requested me to make for two toy mice. It was a very quick make.
On Saturday we walked with our walking friends by the Water of Leith in Dean Village.
It was a beautiful day.
And we ended up at the Botanics again. One can never visit too much!
Then we walked up through the New Town to Princes Street and got the bus home.
This is the view of Princes Street Gardens from the bus stop.
The mice appreciated their sleeping bag. (Their children mice had come supplied with their own.)
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Ways of the world
It's spring here, despite the awful goings-on elsewhere in this sad world. The garden flowers on.
And is beautiful.
We went to the Botanics, where it's also spring, and lovely.
On Sunday we walked at Fisherrow and Musselburgh with the Edinburgh family. I do love living near the sea.
There's a playpark, which is still of considerable interest to Big Granddaughter but not so much to Big Grandson, who is growing up. Well, they both are, obviously. Big Grandson's feet are now the same size as mine and he comes mid-way up my forehead. (Granted, my forehead isn't as far off the ground as some people's.)
Today we went up north to play with Small Grandson while Doctor Son worked once again on his day off. There's a lot more paperwork involved in being a GP than people imagine. We found a digger in Dundee, digging up what looked like perfectly good grass and daffodils in a park. Small Grandson was very interested. We couldn't imagine why it was doing it until Son later suggested that it was maybe for a wildflower area. This seems possible: the digger was scraping up a lot of the topsoil too.
It's strange in many ways, being oldish. Practices that were once the thing to do, or at least perfectly acceptable, no longer are. What to do in the garden, for one. Garden programmes and magazines tell us to leave a patch of lawn unmown or nettles to flower. Well, hmm. I can absolutely see the reasons for doing this, but in my little patch of heaven? There's little enough space to grow the things I love, let alone encouraging - can I say weeds? And then there are slugs and snails - all part of ecology, undoubtedly, but it's hard to love them. I don't spray things, though, and do have lots of nectar-bearing plants, so do my best. But I like a neat lawn - now regarded as a desert by gardeners who like the more unkempt, more nature-friendly approach. Guilt... .
My friend is how out of hospital - having been there since her stroke on January 4. I wrote her over fifty letters (on paper) while she was there, because she liked getting them, but am going to move to emails, since she now has easy access to a computer. She can walk a bit on sticks and climb stairs with an effort, and her mind and speech are unaffected, but she has a long way to go.
Tuesday, March 08, 2022
Grandchildren
The children played in the big playpark not too far from where they live and then we went back to their house.
This is the view from their garden in one direction. It's very peaceful. If only it weren't such a trail to get there from here.
On Sunday - also a sunny day - we walked in the local park with the Edinburgh Two and their parents. That was very nice too.
And today we were back up at Son's, looking after Small Grandson while Son worked on the backlog of work paperwork that has built up.
Tuesday, March 01, 2022
Hey ho
On Saturday, Mr L and I took Big Grandson to Glasgow (on two trains, which he much enjoyed) to see the model railway exhibition. It's three years since this last took place, because of Covid. The last time, Big Grandson was only 7, and didn't have the same viewing stamina as Mir L, so this time I went with them to allow Mr L to go round more thoroughly. However, this time Big Grandson's stamina easily equalled Mr L's, so after a while I found a chair and read my book.
So that was a nice day. He had a lovely time - well, they both did.
And it's spring, and the garden is blooming. The news is, by contrast, awful. But what can one really do except hope for the best and admire the beauties of nature?
Today we went to the Botanics and forgot our worries for a while.
I never think I really mind the winter, but when spring comes, I realise that I've missed the light and the colour.
Hey ho.