Sunday, August 26, 2018

INDOORS 61



Starting today's post is evidence my spring cleaning is gradually progressing. Here we have the kitchen - finished. The coffee lounge, kitchen, toilet and my bedroom took me 13 hours 45 minutes to complete. As you can see in my next photo, I have now turned the kitchen table around so that it sticks out, rather than have it against the wall. This is to make it easier to get into the coffee lounge and to use the chopping board/table for cooking. Plus, I wanted a change.



I took several photos of my progress - including this gross shot of what lay behind and under the fridge - which I tend to only move out to clean behind every 2-3 years. The sink got a decent clean after I finished the room - for obvious reasons.



My under-the-sink trash sack filled up rapidly with a collection of filthy paper towels, cloths, etc - we put out two trash sacks that week instead of one! Although cleaned, the understair wine closet looks gross. Plans to repaint it at some point before the year closes are in situ. It is on my re-shaped to-do list - which has more added every time something is crossed off, it seems.



It is just 'yukky' looking, even if scrubbed 'clean'. Let's finish today with a shot of some more crops - once again a mixture of poly tunnel and allotment plot.

Tuesday, August 21, 2018

INDOORS 60



Late July, I brought home a bagfull of food - not from the supermarket, but the allotment plot! It was predominantly chickpeas - the feathery podded plant most highly visible in the above picture - but along with apples from the garden, tomatoes from the poly tunnel, there was a selection of edible to wash and sort.



Above are the crops from the next day, which brings us to the close of July 2018.

I have begun to spring clean the entire house. I figured as I had so many projects on at once I might feel more at ease in my mind if I at least got up straight in the basic cleaning, allowing me to progress gradually on: repainting the front door, repainting and reflooring the toilet, having Windsor re-do our bathroom, and furnishing the coffee lounge.

My original plan was to tackle one room a day over the nine days vacation where my evenings are empty. Liz thought it would be better to leave my holiday time free to go out on, and get the chores done on ordinary days, though. I could see her point, though I didn't have any excursion plans and she was likely to be too busy during school holidays to spend too much time with me - but I began on the coffee lounge prior to the vacation.

I started at 9:06am on August the first, finishing just over an hour later. I removed at least 30 spiders, dusted the walls, washed the windows inside and out, vacced the carpet and corners and grotty areas, wiped the heater, plugs, etc, emptied cleaned and replaced the alcove contents, mopped the lino and painted flooring - and gave myself a 15 minutes coffee break, upon which I also washed the spuds I had dug up from the allotment that morning ready for lunch.


I was not very enthusiastic, as evidenced by the photo, but pushed myself to keep going and managed to finish the coffee lounge and start the kitchen.

The second day of the month - I removed 7 spiders who had crept back inside again, sigh. I was not very enthusiastic to start again, but forced myself to do a bit here and there...

Friday, August 17, 2018

OUTDOORS 39



Here we can see that I entered the village flower and produce show for the second year in a row. On the first occasion, I entered rhubarb and longest rhubarb, as I also did this year, but last year I didn't get a placing whereas this year both rhubarb classes gave me a third place certificate! I also came second with my blackcurrants which I showed for the first time. I have also shared the comments I received. Finally, here are the items shown - being prepared to eat.



Here are the crops I brought home from the allotment one day in the middle of July. These include the first cropping of chickpeas from my first time growing them. I was not certain when to pick them - or if one dried them on the plant or on the sill...so just grabbed a bunch of stalks with the pods on to investigate. This is what the pods and seeds look like...



...one is supposed to eat the 'crunchy green' chickpeas in salads raw, and dry the brown ones for storage...
Finally for today - the latest selection of crops to come inside from the plot and poly tunnel.

Saturday, August 11, 2018

INDOORS 59



Here are the before, during, and after on our toilet - which needed replacing due to a chunk chipped off when my son dropped the lid/seat down too heavily. We have a much better cistern, a brand new loo and a softer seat, thanks to our regular plumber and his 6 hours of work. (Thanks also to my best friend Liz, who let me use her toilet while ours was out of action due to the plumber fixing it!)


However, a repaint is now required, as this new loo is not the same size/shape as the former loo. We will also have to relay lino, as the toilet base is also a different shape/size, and the joint behind the loo is visible/a dust trap now the pipe is smaller.



These are both jobs I plan to DIY - unlike our bathroom renovations, which are now at the stage of getting a quote.



Finally for today, I have started to paint the toilet - again.

Friday, August 3, 2018

OUTDOORS 38


This is my butternut pumpkin plant. It was in the poly tunnel until the day I took it out and found it too long to get to the plot. Liz thought the flowers were dropping either from excess heat or lack of fertilization and it needed to be outside - but the garden path has to be its outdoor home as its too traily to get to the allotment and pop in down there.


The potatoes needed to come outdoors too, Liz said - so I brought out 2 of the 3 bucket-grown potato plants, leaving just one inside the poly tunnel. This is also a good shot of my side border now its topped with mushroom compost.


One of my four cucumbers had already escaped the 40-50 degree heat into the patio greenhouse, two more having been popped into a raised bed at the allotment. Talking of which, I took a few photos down the plot early July. The first shows the fruit patch leading towards the behind-shed onion patch.



The other side shows cabbages, tomato/chilies/lemongrass, corn, raised bed of strawbs and nasturtiums, with the chickpeas over to the left in front the bean patch. The following photo is much the same, but seen from the other end.



And here we are - the cucumbers in situ in their new home, a closer shot of the chickpeas, Brussels sprouts, and bean patch, plenty of spuds - and some weeds....ho hum. I spend most of June-July watering as it didn't rain, and cropping fruits..... :)