Chez Spud

Archive for May, 2011

Mollie Makes iphone cover…MADE IT!

Posted under Crochet, Things I make

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Mollie Makes

Nothing like a bit of sewing to while away a wet afternoon. Alas my boys have some kind of thread seeking sensor and miraculously appear from all corners of the house when my sewing box comes out. I relish their enthusiasm for all things crafty and making but, you know, sometimes you just don’t want any ‘help’…you don’t want to get roped in to ‘helping’ with their projects…you don’t want someone to sort out the buttons/cotton/ribbon and you definitely don’t want anyone to take all your fancy coloured pins out of their wheels. But who I am to quash their creative spirit?

So my iphone cover took about twice as long as it should have done. And isn’t ‘quite’ as it should be as the kit (which came as part of issue 1 of Mollie Makes) didn’t actually contain enough felt to make it. No big deal, actually I ‘possibly’ prefer mine though the orange/hot pink combo isn’t my favourite.

Mollie Makes

Quick practice with my macro lens…no hiding some dodgy stitching with this kind of close scrutiny

Molle Makes

Mollie Makes

Next on my Mollie Makes making list is those pointless apple jackets…

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I just don’t think I can resist! Even though it will involve hours of wrestling with small boys and crochet hooks … ‘helping’. Meh.

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Playing by the rules

Posted under Day Trips

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Little Miss Goodie Two Shoes, that’s me. Seems Bertie has inherited my tendencies since he quite often will anxiously enquire as to whether something that we’re doing is allowed. “Are you absolutely allowed to park the car here?”, he asked as we parked up on a grassy bank near to the start of the walk we did yesterday. If truth be known I’m not sure, but other people do it and thus I applied the ‘safety in numbers’ rule.

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What I especially dislike, and actually stresses me out, is going ‘off the beaten path’… I keep to the footpath, strictly. MrSpud? Not so much, he’ll happily wander if it looks interesting enough/isn’t clearly marked as private/is a path that others have clearly trodden.

An interesting kind of pathway was spotted as we pottered along, but it was NOT A FOOTPATH. REPEAT…NOT AN ACTUAL FOOTPATH. They scrambled up a steep bank with me bleating at the back, and they were off.

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I wasn’t happy. Up, up, up we went…leaving the nice and legal footpath down, down, down below. Worse, as we reached the top I spotted – scream – a dwelling through the trees.

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Almost on the verge of tears at this point I sternly ordered my menfolk back. They ignored me. Even Bertie, the traitor. MrSpud pressed on muttering something about it ‘not being marked private’. Hesitating, I followed…heart in mouth and steeling myself for the inevitable confrontation with some old bloke and a shotgun.

No old bloke appeared. But what a weird place it was. All boarded up, locked but clearly still in use given the smell of booze wafting about.

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Who lives in a house like this? It’s very reminiscent of every scout hut I’ve ever been to a dodgy disco in and certainly its position, hidden deep in the woods, would suggest something along those lines. Even stranger, a bunker just along from the hut…

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And signs of a fire a stone’s throw away:

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We scrambled back down to the official path and I instantly felt a lot happier, though slightly giddy at my brush with ‘danger’. I won’t go back, I’m too chicken, I’m too afraid of trolls and shouty old men. But I quite like the knowledge of what lurks in the woods.

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My 5 year old entrepreneur

Posted under People I love

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Monkeying Around

Mr Bertie, finally mastering the monkey bars this afternoon. Until now any attempt at swinging across them has resulted in him hanging off the first bar and screaming very loudly for someone to come and rescue him. Not anymore. Monkey Boy woke me up from a tiny and delicious afternoon snooze to demonstrate his new skill. I applauded and confessed I’m not able to do the monkey bars, and never have been able to. He fixed me with a suitably scathing look and told me that it’s ‘easy’ and implored me to try again ‘with all my might’. I declined. Nothing like the sight of a 40 year old woman having a tantrum over the monkey bars to really put a downer on the day.

Earlier in the day Bertie set up his first business. It’s quite novel, I’m not entirely convinced he’s thought it through or established who his target market is but let’s leave that to one side. He’s decided that he should be a house moving consultant. He can tell you when you need to move house by looking at you and assessing if you’re ‘too high’ and should move house. We were a bit puzzled by this, but closer questioning revealed that he will be looking at your height relative to your house’s ceiling height and if you’ve grown too big then..of course..you need to move house.

He’s launching the business with a handwritten flyer, to be sent to all our friends and family and posted through the doors of unsuspecting locals who, I’m willing to bet, have never even considered whether they are getting too tall for their houses.

Here’s his flyer

Bertie's business

For those of you not fluent in 5yo emergent writing it says:

“if yoo dont now wen too move house yoo need to col vis number” [if you don't know when to move house you need to call this number]

What a genius idea for a business! Providing a service you never even knew you needed and creating and cornering the market all in one. So, who thinks they might getting too tall for their house and needs assessing? Yoo need to col vis number….

 

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What I learnt today

Posted under Lists of things

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Sad face :-(

  • That if you are making a special trip to visit a specific store, it’s probably worth ringing them to make sure they are going to be open…yes Persephone Books I am looking at you. I must have had a sixth sense that something was amiss as I checked their website before I left home this morning, but nothing on there about closing today. Very disappointing. I still haven’t made it in to the shop despite my enduring love for their books. I know I can order their books online, but I want to get in there and SNIFF them…damn it.
  • That the Nikon Hospital must either be very busy or very thorough since it’s going to take 2 weeks for them to diagnose the problem with my camera and give a quote to repair, and another 2 weeks to do it.
  • That my Converse sneakers aren’t comfortable for All Day Walking.
  • That I will probably never find a shade of red lipstick that doesn’t make me look like a clown. I was so sure Chanel’s Rouge Coco ‘Paris’ was going to be a winner, having been pointed in that direction by Hello It’s Gemma but, no, I look absolutely ridiculous in it.
  • That my age is beginning to catch up with me. An unexpected encounter with a full length mirror in a changing room horrifyingly revealed the start of what can only be called a muffin top.
  • That having your eyebrows threaded is exquisitely painful. Normally I would punch anyone inflicting that level of pain on me instead of paying for the privilege. How does that work?
  • That we all love getting something for nothing. The Oyster Card reader was broken on the bus so I rode from Holborn to Liverpool Street station…for FREE. Surprisingly thrilling.
  • That it is totally worth the little extra it costs to upgrade to First Class on the train at the weekend.
  • That the best cake in London can be found in the wonderful cafe at the London Review Bookshop. A totally hidden gem of a shop and cafe.  Oh, and it even managed to be OPEN unlike Persephone Books…
  • That, very alarmingly, I’ve turned in to one of ‘those’ women who live in the country and go ‘Up to London’ sometimes, and dress up for the occasion (Converse sneakers aside).
  • That I missed the company of Kristina, Polly and Blanca (whom I was supposed to meet up with today, but it was cancelled at the last minute)…but I had a wonderful time on my own.
  • That I wish Polly and Blanca would start blogging again…I miss them.
  • That travelling by bus is always preferable to taking the tube. Especially when it’s free.
  • That I don’t miss living in London. Not one little bit.

 

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Ten Treasures 2011 – Treasure Two – Alex

Posted under Ten Treasure 2011

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Alex Cartoon

Showing my age here…this is a cartoon by Alex, the much loved cartoon strip of Peattie and Taylor. Alex is now published in the Daily Telegraph, but was published by The Independent when the one above appeared in 1993.

Peattie and Taylor used to get inspiration for their City cartoons from Real Life Bankers, over Long City Lunches (remember, it was 1993 and long boozy lunches were quite normal back then). One of their sources was the chap I worked for at the time who couldn’t resist poking a little fun at his graduate trainee. So, yes, that woman in the short skirt, pearls and big earrings? That’s me, though I think I must have borrowed someone else’s boobs for the day?

The joke will be lost on anyone not knowing that Whistles is a shop [added for the benefit of my non UK readers]. Even the Whistles joke ages this cartoon, since they don’t do menswear anymore.

But, let’s face it, it’s the length of the skirt that is the real eye-opener. And, yes, like every other women in the City in the early 90s I really DID wear them that short. Move over Ally McBeal.

 

 

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Ten Treasures 2011 – Treasure Number One – Boris

Posted under Ten Treasure 2011

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Boris

I have this little broach…he is small and very funny. Introducing Boris, one of my favourite pieces of jewellery…a love gift on my 40th from The Wife. I don’t wear it very often because I’m worried the felt will wear, or that his cherished green balloon might float off..or that someone might snatch him from me in a rage of jealousy. Plus, he’s actually quite shy. Generally his arms naturally wrap across his body. I had to bribe him with chocolate buttons to show himself in his full bunny glory for this shot.

Treaure number one in the 2011 edition of Ten Treasures. The 2009 edition can be found here.

 

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Mentoring

Posted under Witterings

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Size matters

I couldn’t quite settle on which photo to use for this post, so I chose this one because it always makes me laugh and the bird up top is my best friend (generally known as The Wife) and photography mentor. Mainly I chose it because it makes me laugh and that’s a good enough reason as any. I think we must have both had a lot more time on our hands when we set up this shot a few years back. Happy days.

Do you have a mentor? I have a couple of people I turn to for help and advice on a professional level, but I wouldn’t say I have a mentor as such at the moment, but that’s not to say I wouldn’t benefit from one. I’ve had a couple of absolutely stellar mentors over the years but I’ve either moved on from them, or lost touch with them…another sadly died. I’m absolutely confident I wouldn’t have achieved what I have, career wise, without the wise counsel and advice of this group of Wise Ones.

One of my previous mentors is now Very Famous and I would think probably a bit busy to help me out, a shame because she was a fantastic supporter and ‘champion’ for me as I was just starting out in my current career. I’ve reached a stage in my career where it’s me being the mentor now, and I enjoy doing it. About 10 years ago I was a formal mentor for 12 months for a vulnerable child though the charity Chance UK. It wasn’t an easy year and I’m not sure what lasting benefit 3-4 hours a week made for the boy I worked with. But he, his mother and his school were adamant at the end of the 12 months that his behaviour, concentration and self-esteem improved enormously. Does mentoring really have such power?

I have always chosen mentors whom I admire and want to emulate, both in terms of their success, they way they deal with other people and the way that they are perceived by others. I’ve had career mentors, mentors who helped me learn how to manage difficult teams, ‘technical’ mentors who’ve helped me learn my craft, ‘life’ mentors (aren’t they called friends?), photography mentors (waves at The Wife), blogging mentors, crochet mentors, grief mentors…you name it, I’ve sucked the lifeblood out of some poor soul about it…mwah ha ha.

A friend of mine is having a well-publicised mid-life crisis. To help her through it she’s hired a life coach, which is surely just a grand title for a paid mentor? Together they have mapped out some Life Goals which is helping my friend assess options and make choices about what she wants to do with her career, her family and their life together. At first I was rather bemused by the whole idea though, really, it’s no different than working with a mentor. The significant difference, I suppose, is that a Life Coach comes with an independent eye and ear..in a way that a mentor doesn’t. Personally I’d prefer to work with someone who really ‘knows’ me, but perhaps I’ll feel differently when my own mid-life crisis comes around…assuming it does.

I hadn’t really noticed the absence of a mentor in my professional life until my old one hit the news over the last couple of weeks. Perhaps that just means I’ve outgrown the need for one, and it’s just nostalgia kicking in? I’m somewhat treading water, careerwise, and have been for a while since that has suited the needs of our family. But troubling ‘Is this it?’ thoughts waft through my mind every now and again. I bat them away and remind myself how fortunate I am to have the role that I have, but I don’t think I can ignore the nagging doubts forever.

I either need a mentor or a jolly good kick up the backside. Any takers for either?

 

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The Gallery…My Backyard

Posted under The Gallery

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Garden

I’ll admit it, ‘yard’ isn’t perhaps the best word because there’s no getting away from the fact that our backgarden is alarmingly large. Nor from the fact that it’s been horribly neglected for years and years. The ‘lawn’ is now mostly moss, interspersed down the middle by Ragwort Alley. The ‘croquet lawn’ (on the right) is no more and is now littered with the Megaboys’ assorted garden tat. To the left it gets messy. Greenhouse, a collection of birdfeeding stuff, vegetable beds cocooned in mesh and wire to keep the Bunny Brigade out, washing line, pile of gardening stuff awaiting a home.

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Closer look at the veg patch, complete with early morning sunflare. Can’t detract from the pile of canes waiting to do someone a mischief.

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Behind the veg patch is what the boys call ‘the forest’ which is somewhat stretching the truth. Kind of hard to know what it is or used to be, probably an orchard at some point, very possibly a formal garden since there are remnants of walls knocking about. Mostly it’s just a pickle of trees and nettles, the boys have a den in there.

92 365 If you go down to the woods today

More scrubland, plus {bonus} the optimistically named ‘conservatory’ which is known as The Shack.

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MrDiggy, perched at the bottom of the garden earlier in the year, just keeping an eye on things

55 365 At the bottom of the garden

It’s going to be an enormous to job to get the garden in to any kind of decent state. We need to take down a lot of trees, clear years of neglect, create a terrace, mark out a proper vegetable garden, re-lay the lawn etc etc. I reckon the house will take us 2-3 years to get it straight. The garden? 10 years I reckon. Sigh. Want to see the best bit of the garden?

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This is round the side of the house…nice…wooded..shady etc…but that’s not what I’m talking about. See the gate, at the back in the middle? That leads in to our neigbours’ property, home to two little girls the same age as the Megaboys and they’ve known each other since birth. How lucky are they all? Their own little access to each other. Pity about all the nettles on our side. And the dead rabbit carcases strewn about. But then you can’t have everything can you? And what’s a crop of nettle stings and a bit of myxomatosis between friends?

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