This bed has a variety of things: verbena, begonia, busy Lizzie. And the garden refuse bin in the background... And of course there are a lot of plants that are way past their best, but I didn't point the camera in their direction. Don't believe all you see on the internet!
Monday, October 27, 2025
Flowers and decisions
Thursday, October 23, 2025
SO busy
It's been a while since I last posted, though I don't suppose anyone has really noticed except our London daughter, who reads this for scraps of home, I think.
It's been BUSY. You wouldn't think that the retired life would be full of things to do, but somehow it is. It's entirely, or at least almost entirely my own fault, since I could in theory sit at home all day and read books. And sometimes that sounds quite tempting... But, though I'm very much not out there saving the world, I don't seem to have a lot of time for thumb-twiddling. Being chair of one of my choirs generates quite a lot of work, though frankly it would be easier just to do it all myself than to negotiate decisions with the 6 other people on the committee, who all have helpful but varying opinions. And then there's gardening and quilting and meeting up with chums and singing in two choirs and learning the music for said choirs and editing the church magazine.
On days that I'm not doing other things, I'm getting on with various tasks such as - oh, here we go - Blogger's put the photos in reverse order again. Well, the list at the bottom shows some of the jobs that I had to do the day before going down to Daughter 2's house in London to try to help a bit while her actor husband is away for some months, working.
And then, in reverse time order:
we had a lovely walk in the Botanics with the Edinburgh Two and their dad on Monday. Look at how tall Big Grandson and Big Granddaughter are getting! Big Grandson towers over me and his sister looks down a good couple of inches on me too.
Then on Saturday, we went for a walk with the walking gang around West Linton.
We had perfect autumn weather, with not a leaf moving.
If one ignores the symbolism of the dying of the year being like one's own (and others') death, autumn can be lovely.
Especially when spent with good friends. 6ish miles that day.
This is Littlest Granddaughter opening her birthday presents. She's 8! How time flies, etc.
This list was just to rationalise the fact that I'd spent a whole day pottering around. I did more after I'd given up writing the list. The foost bin, by the way, is the little kitchen bin that we put stuff in for the compost heap. Foost is a Scottish word for mould, but I don't actually leave it long enough before emptying for it to get mouldy. Foosty. Daughter 2 named her similar bin thus, and it seemed apt.
Better go and do some Duolingo before bed. That's another thing. Why am I polishing up my French and German and trying to learn Gaelic? Am I going to use any of these? Most unlikely, to any extent. Is it saving me from dementia? Well, let's hope.
Edited to add: the first sentence in the German lesson I've just started was -
Ich habe die Maultaschen mit Pilzen noch nicht
.
which means, I haven't yet tried the dumplings with mushrooms. I can't imagine using this. Though I do quite like mushrooms.
Saturday, October 11, 2025
Balerno to Slateford
We went up to see Son and family the other day. Here are the children feeding deer at a deer centre.
I'm sure the deer are perfectly well fed, but they were all very keen to eat the pellets, cunningly sold to us by the centre.
It was a lovely day.
Today we did the recce for a walk we're leading with the walking chums in November. It was a perfect autumn day.
We walked along the river path from Balerno to Slateford. It's all in the city, but feels like the country.
It's mostly along a former railway line. Here, a tunnel has been painted inside, much of it illustrating the poem "From a Railway Carriage" by Robert Louis Stevenson, who often visited Colinton (on the route of our walk) because his grandfather was the minister there. It's a poem that, in my youth anyway, was much anthologised for children, and we learnt it off by heart.
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It's a good poem, full of rhythmic energy, and the painting was splendid.
Here's RLS himself in the tunnel.
The path was mainly very easy and the weather beautiful. This is through the window of a grotto along the way.
Still, by the end of the 6+ miles we were quite tired, and glad to reach the Water of Leith Visitors' Centre for a sit-down and a cup of tea. We're 77 and 75, after all. It was a wonderful day, though.
Wednesday, October 01, 2025
Richmond again
This walk was harder: there were about fifteen stiles of various levels of difficulty and wobbliness, a slanting, tree-rooty, muddy path above a steep fall down to the river, lots of steps, miles of muddy and stony paths which were quite hard to walk on. It took us much longer than we expected.
And by the time we stopped for lunch, we really needed to sit down!
Still, it was fun, especially in retrospect.
We didn't visit the castle, though. We went back to the house and lay on the bed. One of us (not me) had quite a big nap.

































