Nelly's Garden
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Picture of the Day and Other Matters
Photograph of the day
It is one of my great delights to come across abandoned buildings. Especially fascinating is when the abandoned home is full of the detritus of the lives once lived there. The house I came across yesterday was such a place. I had no camera yesterday so returned today. The people who lived here were interesting folk. They studied, took and developed photographs, made things and painted. They might even have gardened although there was little evidence of it. The garden was so overgrown with nettles and brambles that it was coming into the house but I'm sure the butterflies were very pleased with it.
A fool and his finger are soon parted
This fool I know lacerated his finger on his lawnmower and refused to have medical attention. Surely everyone knows not to poke at the sharp moving parts of a machine while those sharp moving parts are actually in motion. These were my words of sympathy, "Stupid, stupid, stupid!"
He pointed out that at least I wouldn't have to listen to him playing his clarinet for a day or two. I think I'd rather have the clarinet and an uninjured Bert as not. I'll give him this - he is a stoic. He even finished mowing the lawn and it looks great.
Another worry
My car is, in the opinion of my mechanic, not worth fixing. Apparently French cars are parcels of merde. It's true! I heard it on Radio 4. Up to three warning lights can be on its dashboard panel at any one time and according to my friend, the mechanic, the diagnostic machine indicates that everything that could be wrong with it, probably is. Or not - as the computer box is full of clothes pegs. I know. I thought that sounded a bit surreal too. The guy that sold it to me assured me that it had only ever belonged to his parents, a respectable couple of retiring age. They had wanted an estate car to transport a big dog around in. I have to say, Bert and I thought it was odd that the front seats had those little burn holes that come from smoking cannabis joints. We didn't think the oldies were the type. But maybe their dog was the same breed as Brian from Family Guy.
The joyous part of the day...
...is still to come. Hannah is visiting and I'm currying some chicken. I haven't decided whether to buy gin or wine. I'll probably get both. It's been a tough day.
Tell Me Now
Grannymar wanted to know....
What
was the first thing you thought of when you woke up? Should
I take a photograph of the sunrise? I didn't.
What do you prefer to drink in the morning? Coffee
What songs do you sing in the shower? I don't.
Do
you own slippers? Yes,
two pairs, both Christmas presents from sisters.
Worst injury you’ve ever had? I am very lucky never to have had anything other than minor cuts and bruises. Perhaps my right hand, cut on glass, self-inflicted when I was a teenager.
What’s one trait you hate about yourself? I don't hate it but I think I'm an under-achiever. I also eat too much.
What’s
in your pocket right now? Labelling
pen, seeds, pedometer, phone, iPod
Where would you like to go today? Dingle peninsula
Does someone have a crush on you? Certainly!
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Spring
This has been a cold May up until a few days ago. Hardly anything has been growing and the farmers are all complaining that there is not enough grass in the fields. These overwintered calves got their first taste of the great outdoors this morning. Seeing cattle getting out after a long winter indoors is one of my greatest pleasures.
The gardeners are getting busy too. This lot are putting in potatoes. Again, far later than usual but what can you do?
I finished my day by taking a walk up the back lane. We're having campers at the weekend so I wanted to see if the proposed site was all that they'd want. I kept my eyes peeled for a sighting of Foxy but he was keeping well out of the way. Probably scared of my feline companion. Because, strangely enough, not one dog accompanied me on my walk. Charlie was around but he kept a distance. Holly de Cat walked with me every inch of the way meowing piteously if I got too far ahead of her. She loves to take a walk up the back lane.
The gardeners are getting busy too. This lot are putting in potatoes. Again, far later than usual but what can you do?
I finished my day by taking a walk up the back lane. We're having campers at the weekend so I wanted to see if the proposed site was all that they'd want. I kept my eyes peeled for a sighting of Foxy but he was keeping well out of the way. Probably scared of my feline companion. Because, strangely enough, not one dog accompanied me on my walk. Charlie was around but he kept a distance. Holly de Cat walked with me every inch of the way meowing piteously if I got too far ahead of her. She loves to take a walk up the back lane.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Careless
Sometimes when I am
watching old film footage from the sixties, say at a festival or a Rolling
Stones concert and I see all the hairy hippies and flower children
and I find myself thinking how old they must be today. And I hope
that they are coping with this thing we call 'old age'. And that if
they have reached the stage of their lives where they need people to help
them that those people are kind people who live up to the title of
'carer'.
I once knew a lady who
had lost her legs due to diabetes and she told me that her carers
threw her about “like a bag of corn”. She said that the young
ones would be helping her and all the while they’d be talking about
what they’d got up to on a night out. My friend complained that she
crtainly didn’t want to know about how how drunk they'd got or who
had got off with who.Young girls can make
wonderful carers but often they patronize the elderly people they
look after. They can find it hard to fathom that old people were once
young and vibrant and full of vim and vigour.
In a Ballyclare home
there was a lady in her mid-fifties who was suffering from a
degenerative disease. She had lost the power of speech and was unable
to feed herself. I watched a carer spoon food into her mouth all the
while conversing with a colleague and never once speaking to the
person she was feeding.
Then I worked a couple of
shifts in a care home in Ballymena. It was tremendously well run and
luxuriously appointed and the standards of care were very high. One evening towards the end of the shift when the work was all done
and carers were waiting to go off duty, to pass the time, I went over
to chat to a bright nonagenarian who came from my part of the
country. She had attended the same country school as my father and
was full of interesting stories. When I returned one of the permanent
staff said to me, “Why were you talking to that old bore?” I’d
previously spent my tea break in the company of this particular staff member and
had found her very dreary. All she had wanted to talk about was her
Christian faith and to criticise other staff members who didn't live
their lives according to her high standards.
Carelessness happens here too. Pearlie's carers came in the other morning chattering
nineteen-to-the dozen. It was all “she said and then I said and she
said and if they don’t like it and imagine putting in a complaint
and Jill said to Nancy that Lorna said and I said and then I just
said and she goes and…”
And by this time they
were in with Pearlie and I heard the clank of cot sides going down
and the conversation never stopped. No “Good mornings, how are you
today’s?” to the lady in the bed. They continued with washing and
changing Pearlie and never lost their momentum or missed a beat.
Then I heard Pearlie
pipe up,
Can you turn out the
light again?
And this reply…
Just wait Pearlie. Can
you not see I’m doing something else?
Then (rather shortly)…
There that’s your
light off.
No goodbyes, no see you
laters. Just out the door with them.
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Quiet Night In
Our first visitor came at just after 10am. He and his friend arrived moments after Bert got up. I'd been up and around for a few hours but was not quite ready to start the day. Oh well.
After H & D left I went out for an hour or so. On my return the yard was full. Rod and his mum, Les showing us his amazing cauliflowers, Aunt Lizzie and her new dog. I started to make lunch. We were just about to serve when Young Rooney and his young lad turned up. The boy headed straight for the sand pile and began digging. Young Rooney came in to oversee our lunch. He did not stay long but before he left Young Loveheart appeared. Rooney and Loveheart used to be close friends but they're odd with each other these days. Bert and I don't mind. We're used to people being odd with each other at our place.
I had a phone call from Swisser. We chatted about this and that. she said she thought she might call up. I agreed that this sounded like a good idea. Loveheart and Bert were working in the polytunnel, Lizzie was stroking about with her new dog. The phone went. It was Jazzer. They were thinking of coming up. Why not says I, just the two of you? No Erin and Ben and the dog. Sure. Why not? It'll only take a moment to change the beds.
Jazzer wanted to cook but I dug my heels in. I care too much about getting vegetables to let Jazzer cook so we spent half a week's grocery money on an Indian take-out from the Khyber. Bert went to fetch it and said he'd seen Mel in town although she hadn't seen him. Then I got a phone call. It was Hannah. Are you at home. Oh yes. Jakers, Mel and I are thinking of calling out. Sure that will be lovely, see you soon.
So - 17 people and 2 dogs. Just another ordinary day at Nellybert's.
After H & D left I went out for an hour or so. On my return the yard was full. Rod and his mum, Les showing us his amazing cauliflowers, Aunt Lizzie and her new dog. I started to make lunch. We were just about to serve when Young Rooney and his young lad turned up. The boy headed straight for the sand pile and began digging. Young Rooney came in to oversee our lunch. He did not stay long but before he left Young Loveheart appeared. Rooney and Loveheart used to be close friends but they're odd with each other these days. Bert and I don't mind. We're used to people being odd with each other at our place.
I had a phone call from Swisser. We chatted about this and that. she said she thought she might call up. I agreed that this sounded like a good idea. Loveheart and Bert were working in the polytunnel, Lizzie was stroking about with her new dog. The phone went. It was Jazzer. They were thinking of coming up. Why not says I, just the two of you? No Erin and Ben and the dog. Sure. Why not? It'll only take a moment to change the beds.
Jazzer wanted to cook but I dug my heels in. I care too much about getting vegetables to let Jazzer cook so we spent half a week's grocery money on an Indian take-out from the Khyber. Bert went to fetch it and said he'd seen Mel in town although she hadn't seen him. Then I got a phone call. It was Hannah. Are you at home. Oh yes. Jakers, Mel and I are thinking of calling out. Sure that will be lovely, see you soon.
So - 17 people and 2 dogs. Just another ordinary day at Nellybert's.
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
Disgusted of Cully
In the early days
of Flickr I routinely accepted contact invitations from people I did
not know. These days I am rather more suspicious and check a prospective contact's photostream before agreeing. This came about a few years back when I noticed that a perfectly sweet and decent photograph of Pearlie and Aunt
Lizzie had attracted a lot of interest. I checked the commenters'
profiles and got a horrible shock. I regret to say that these were
men with a special interest in the elderly. Each to their own, as the
saying goes, but not on my photostream you won't!
Then there were
the specialists who took, in my view, an unhealthy interest in
some pictures of my friend's horse-trodden toe. I had to block
toeamps99 - the weirdo.
In the past two
days I've had two new contact invitations both from middle-aged,
podgy men. One had only a few photographs up. They were of his wife, who looked a lot like Marcia Falkender. He seemed to welcome salacious and creepy
comments from other men about how beguiling she was. Aaargh!
Begone horrid man. And then another unwelcome invitation today from a
goofy French-sounding man. His entire photostream consisted of five
unflattering pictures of a male person, I assume to be himself, with
greasy hair, wonky teeth and fat slug lips. His interests he stated
to be swingers and teen moms - the brute! Blocked.
Does anyone else
have this problem? I do have pictures of elderly ladies, I do have
pictures of sore toes, I do have a few pictures of young women
holding babies - none of whom are teen moms. They might be teen
aunties, or teen big sisters, or teen the girls next door, or even
moms that look a bit teen but aren't and are me many, many years ago.
Perhaps I should
stick to posting photographs of Slemish and gardens and flowers as these seem
not to attract weirdoes. I can't even be sure that there aren't
people out there getting off on my photographs of dogs. I am also
going to have to consider changing my Flickr icon as it makes me look
far too free-spirited and fun-loving. Which I'm not.
Sunday, May 06, 2012
Sunday Morning Musings
Our telephone display lets us know if the call is coming from outside the UK. The display will read 'OUT OF AREA'
These calls are almost always from call centres and are very, very irritating. Often, the moment I speak, the call is terminated. I can't not answer them because I have family living outside the UK and I am always very keen to hear from them. I have now come up with a new tactic, which I hope annoys cold callers as much as they annoy me. I don't speak so this keeps them on the line a little longer - then they hang up. I get a little burst of pleasure thinking of their frustration.
Realistically though, they are so thick-skinned (they'd have to be) that they will hardly give a toss if the call doesn't work out for them.
Bert is hanging about this morning waiting for the AI man to call. The AI man, for those not familiar with the term, sells and administers sperm. The AI man looks like Henry VIII as portrayed in that famous Holbein portrait although nowhere near as well-dressed. Henry VIII is coming to see if the heifer took from her New Year's Day insemination. We are not hopeful as the procedure has failed with her before. Her friend (and half-sister) the other heifer has a sweet little calf already and this will be the first time the AI man will set eyes on her. I said to Bert,
Pearlie has returned from a two week respite visit to the Home For The Bewildered and Sometimes Belligerent. She is in her usual good form. Not. I had her best eiderdown in the wash and got her a new wastepaper bin and she was not best pleased. I was that annoyed with her this morning that I left the crusts on her bread and butter. But we'll get used to each other again and get to rubbing along just fine.
You know what is the best bit about her not being here? It's not her not being here. It's her carers, her district nurses and her visitors not being here. There is a lot of footfall through Pearlie's part of the house and it is sometimes hard to put up with. There are days when there will be up to seven lots of people in the house. I do get fed up with it. And although I know we're lucky to have the care team I'll not be sorry when the day comes that we don't need them.
FOOTNOTE
It is with great pleasure that I can announce that the New Year's Day insemination has worked. The heifer will be calving some time in September. Yippee! This means she will not be going to market for slaughter.
These calls are almost always from call centres and are very, very irritating. Often, the moment I speak, the call is terminated. I can't not answer them because I have family living outside the UK and I am always very keen to hear from them. I have now come up with a new tactic, which I hope annoys cold callers as much as they annoy me. I don't speak so this keeps them on the line a little longer - then they hang up. I get a little burst of pleasure thinking of their frustration.
Realistically though, they are so thick-skinned (they'd have to be) that they will hardly give a toss if the call doesn't work out for them.
Bert is hanging about this morning waiting for the AI man to call. The AI man, for those not familiar with the term, sells and administers sperm. The AI man looks like Henry VIII as portrayed in that famous Holbein portrait although nowhere near as well-dressed. Henry VIII is coming to see if the heifer took from her New Year's Day insemination. We are not hopeful as the procedure has failed with her before. Her friend (and half-sister) the other heifer has a sweet little calf already and this will be the first time the AI man will set eyes on her. I said to Bert,
D'ye think when Henry VIII sees the wee calf he'll glow with paternal pride?
Pearlie has returned from a two week respite visit to the Home For The Bewildered and Sometimes Belligerent. She is in her usual good form. Not. I had her best eiderdown in the wash and got her a new wastepaper bin and she was not best pleased. I was that annoyed with her this morning that I left the crusts on her bread and butter. But we'll get used to each other again and get to rubbing along just fine.
You know what is the best bit about her not being here? It's not her not being here. It's her carers, her district nurses and her visitors not being here. There is a lot of footfall through Pearlie's part of the house and it is sometimes hard to put up with. There are days when there will be up to seven lots of people in the house. I do get fed up with it. And although I know we're lucky to have the care team I'll not be sorry when the day comes that we don't need them.
FOOTNOTE
It is with great pleasure that I can announce that the New Year's Day insemination has worked. The heifer will be calving some time in September. Yippee! This means she will not be going to market for slaughter.
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