The weather has been very changeable here this past week, but then that's only to be expected in March, I suppose. I'd planned to get so much done before I went away last weekend but the weather obviously had other plans. I did get to pressure spray my back terrace last Monday before the rain set in again, but I managed to get some kind of junk in my eye while doing it so I've had to make an appointment with my eye doctor to get that sorted. It doesn't hurt at all but I reckon a speck of dirt must have gotten in my eye and now it feels like I'm looking through a film with a black dot in the middle. I've tried rinsing it regularly but I reckon I'll have to leave it to the professionals now!
So the weather was good enough for me to at least get that done on Monday but when I kept Charlie on Wednesday all that changed and by the time I left Wednesday evening I was driving through a horrendous snow storm (with a naff eye) and it was really tough! It didn't last long, but long enough to make the drive home hard work and for me to realize yet again how much I hate driving in the snow! And now - well the weather has cleared up enough for me to be working outside getting my garden ready and dragging furniture up from the basement in time for the good weather to come. LIDL were advertising small fibreglass "greenhouses" for €20 so I ordered a few of them online and had them delivered last week. The first one took me four hours to assemble (I know, I know) but to be honest the biggest problem was that unlike IKEA, many of the drill holes don't line up. Still, by the time I'd gotten to number two I'd gotten assembly down to one hour and am hoping I can get the others done in about 30 minutes - a kind of assembly line production, if you will. The big problem, of course, is that they then need filling with soil but I decided to start the first two off with used cardboard followed by garden clippings/compost and then adding the soil because (a) it can get expensive and, more importantly, because (b) lugging bags of soil around at my age is "challenging" to say the least. But I hit pay dirt a couple of days ago when I realized that the new recycling bin in the village is absolutely stuffed full of used cardboard boxes!
I've mentioned before that we haven't had garbage pick-up in the local villages for about 20 years now. They have recycling spots everywhere where you sort your rubbish into household refuse, paper, cardboard and aluminium, and glass. Anything other than that has to be taken to the big recycling centre in town. But about two weeks ago I noticed another container had been added for larger cardboard boxes, you know, the kind you get with large Amazon packages or like the boxes my two new garden tables came in! So there I am fishing out as many large boxes as I can and stuffing them back into my car in order to line the base of my new mini greenhouses. Bingo, less soil for me to lug around (but I do hope they don't have security cameras to see me "stealing" their recycling. I'm pretty sure I'm good though)!
Anyhoo, Friday lunchtime we set off for the Jura mountains for our Christmas present from Jen's mom and partner and in order to celebrate Charlie's fifth birthday. The Jura mountains are shared between France and Switzerland and are to the north of Lake Geneva, whereas the Alps (where I live) are to the south. They're very different too, in that I would call the Jura "brooding" and the Alps "majestic" - that's about the best way I can describe them to be honest. It took us about two hours to get there and the short-term rental turned out to be lovely, so nice in fact that Jen's mom really fell in love with it. It was a 4-bed, 2 1/2 bath prefabricated home on the site of an old barn. Jen's mom moved into an apartment about 4-5 years ago but is not happy there so she's been looking for an all-on-one level home and this place seemed to be exactly what she is looking for. Oddly enough, I saw an article on post-war prefabs in England not so long ago and asked my sister if my memory was correct in that Uncle Bob had lived in one in the early '60s. She confirmed that he had, and that he had loved it. Birmingham was very heavily bombed during WWII so I guess people were just happy to have anywhere to call home at that point!
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| Post WWII prefab! |
| The view from our rental. To say it was "isolated" would be an understatement! |
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| The deer will often come over to the visitors as they are quite tame, but it wasn't our lucky day! |
| The wolf enclosure! |
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| A picture of the church opposite sewing club as a storm was about to roll in - just because I love it! |



My neighbor across the street has 4 of those green houses, however only one is actually green, the others are brown. She does a lot of gardening and uses them to winter some of her plants. It's way too much work for me.
ReplyDeleteI've bought the plastic ones before but the only place I can put them is too windy - which always spells trouble. These greenhouses being lower, I'm hoping for more success. Only time will tell, but at least the lid should keep the birds away!
DeleteI can't believe Charlie is already 5. Time goes so fast. I do not have a puzzle brain at all unless with words/letters.
ReplyDeleteI don't have a puzzle brain either (I like that expression). Sad but true. And I can't believe Charlie is five already either. Where on earth did the time go!
DeleteCharlie looks SO happy in that picture by the cake. I can't believe he is already 5. It sounds like your weekend trip was a lot of fun. I hope you get to the eye doctor soon and find out what is wrong.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy April!!
It really was a fun weekend so while we didn't get to see any mamoths, everyone had fun all the same. As for my eye, I can see a small "speck" that would seem to be trapped in some kind of film. It doesn't hurt, but I have got an appointment to see a doctor as I keep thinking an insect is flying past my head!!!!
DeleteCharlie is a darling boy! I remember my son Hank loving his magic kit. He would perform for us.
ReplyDeleteThe right-brain/left-brain thing has been disproven but I am sure that some people are more apt to be artistic and some to be more pragmatic. It's just not related to the different brain hemispheres.
Cynthia (the lady at sewing club) said that when it comes to sewing she can just "see" what needs doing, whereas I can have someone show me exactly what I need to do and my brain and my hands still go in opposite directions. Buggered if I can figure it out though! I'll keep plodding on with the magic kit though, as I probably found it more fun than Charlie!!!
DeleteSome people can imagine in 3 dimensions, I am not one of those people and struggle with putting things together. My husband has not problem with them:)
ReplyDeleteLove the photos, especially of your grandson and his birthday cake.