Friday, July 14, 2023

Things come in fives...

 
This was a more domestic week. On Monday the two sisters, and the sister-in-law, of the husband of my American second (or something) cousin who came to stay with us a couple of months ago - are you following this? - visited Edinburgh briefly en route for a cruise ship, so I gave them a walking tour of the city and then they came back here for dinner. So that was very nice. Their cruise goes to Orkney, Norway, the Faroe Islands and Iceland, which sounds lovely. The only snag might be the weather, which in Britain at least has been, on and off, very rainy this week. On Monday it was only very briefly, but torrentially, wet. We had just left the cafe at Holyrood Palace and immediately decided that another cup of coffee would be very welcome - back in the cafe. 

Other than that, there's been some coffeeing with friends, some lunching with friends, some being with the grandchildren - that sort of thing. Yesterday we took the Edinburgh Two up to see the Unbloggables, which was lovely (and not wet, or only a tiny bit). 



Son lives in the country, in a scenic but (for us) inconvenient area. Still, I can see the appeal. If my life were different, I too would like to live in the country. At least in the summer. 


Only one of the children sat down in the water. 



Their bloggable cat, in catmint (I think). 

Since we got back from being away, we've had a series of minorish, but tedious, problems.

1) While Mr L was still in Hamburg, I found a dead rat in the back garden! Now, firstly, a rat! and secondly, I don't deal with dead things. I'm a vegetarian and very squeamish. However, I had to deal with it. Please applaud. 

2) Also while Mr L was in Hamburg, I looked up at the bedroom ceiling - the fairly newly decorated bedroom ceiling - and there was a damp patch, clearly a leak. The roofer has now fixed the leak, at least we hope so. The brown patch remains to be dealt with.

3) The cord of the blind in a spare room broke. Mr L has fixed this. 

4) The dishwasher stopped working. It needs a new bit, which a dishwasher chap is going to get for us. Let's hope.

5) We have two skylights in our kitchen, made out of some sort of plastic. This is one of them. A huge brown ... splodge? burn? who knows what? - not us ... has suddenly appeared on it. It's as if an ostrich had been flying overhead and done something unmentionable on it. However, the very heavy rain of the last few days has had no effect. We can't imagine what it is. We are no longer willing to climb on roofs to investigate, so contacted a handyman who we've used before. Sadly, he's about to go on holiday and can't come and look at it till late in August. Could it be a burn? We don't get aeroplanes flying above us as a rule, though we do get the occasional helicopter nearby. Do flying vehicles drop hot things? 


Oh well, these are all minor things compared to the disasters suffered by many people in the world and no doubt something will be able to be done about it in due course. But that's enough little problems, thank you, world, for the moment. 

5 comments:

  1. I smiled at 'Only one of the children sat down in the water' - they always manage to do that when far from home with no spare clothes, in my experience.
    Living in the country sounds so appealing, until one thinks of the disadvantages.

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  2. I do applaud your handling of a dead rat. I too needed congratulation when I dealt with a dead fox cub.
    Our washing machine suddenly stopped working with a full load of towels. Replacing it is torture. The conflicting reviews, the price comparisons, the model numbers to try to differentiate, the extra charges for deinstalling, installing, unpacking and taking away packing, disposal of the old machine and finally, giving you anything less than a whole day to sit glued to the front door. I am paralysed. And when did washing machines start getting their own apps and ‘connectivity’?

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    Replies
    1. Ooh a fox cub - even worse. When we needed a new washing machine we just went to John Lewis and chose a middle priced one. So scientific. That was maybe 3 years ago, though. Apps and connectivity, oh dear - scary!

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  3. I do dislike (actually hate!) household issues; I rarely know how to deal with them and they're always costly and stressful. Hope you can figure out that brown patch. I applaud the handling of the rat; there was a dead one at Older Daughter's place in the backyard and I called VERY loudly for son-in-law to come and dispatch it. Coffees sound delightful; I have one scheduled for Tuesday.

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  4. Ooooh, very large round of applause indeed! Well done with the rat -- happily, he wasn't IN the house. Houses are such work, aren't they? We have a long list of little annoying things that need to be fixed - I always thought when we were retired we'd have tons of time and fix things right away. But, it appears that because we have tons of time, there's no rush, so the list goes on and they just get done when we feel like it. (Unless it's a leak - those get handled right away LOL.)

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