Wednesday, 30 July 2014

30 June

I am finally feeling better today.  F has been asking to see S for days so I took her round to J this morning while I ran some errands. F is such good company but there are a few things I've enjoyed today senza tot-in-tow.
Walking at my own pace from leith links to the bus.


Calling the tax office, picking up essentials at grocery store, visiting the bank for loft conversion advice and getting up to town to get my phone fixed in the space of - get this- one hour.

Sitting quietly at the phone shop for an hour and a half doing my paper accounts while my phone gets fixed.

Meeting Simon at a tiny tiny restaurant for lunch where it didn't matter there was no room for the stroller. Then going down at least one flight of stairs to the ladies room all by myself instead of having to find a disabled toilet with a diaper change and having company throughout the procedure.

(Going to the top of the bus!



 Fun with panarama mode!
 Blue light through bus windows. Maybe they should make them rose tinted.


2014 summer distilled - trams, commonwealth games and best of all - sunshine!)

Walking with my hands in my pockets.

Typing this blog without someone trying to borrow my phone! ('See pictures mommy...I want to see pictures.')

Looking forward to picking my sweet baby up soon knowing she's having the best time right now!

Monday, 28 July 2014

29 July 2014

Felicity talks in her sleep sometimes. This morning I overheard her say -

'My eating the hippo! My eating aaallll the hippos!'

That's my girl.

Sunday 28 June 2014

I lost the weekend.  I got ill on Thursday night, managed through Friday and then completely crashed on Saturday and Sunday.  Simon has been a hero in keeping everything together while I've slept this weekend.


I watched this movie for the first time last night and really enjoyed it.

In other news, we're also interviewing building companies to do our loft coversion this week, and getting our finances organized to start the building.

So grateful this illness has hit during the summer holidays when I don't have to worry about missing work!

Saturday, 26 July 2014

A garden story

We moved into our house on October 11th 2013.  We have a shared entrance to our 30' long x 15' wide plot of backyard.  It is overlooked by our tenement block and the tenement block behind us, but that little rectangle of land belongs to us alone to do what we like with it.  Except to make a soap works, a tannery, or to use for steam engines of any kind, according to the title deeds (dated 1890-some such).

So, my mission and my joy.  Design a place which gives us 1) something pleasant to look down on all year round 2) a place to grow food and flowers 3) a safe place for F to play 4) a place to enjoy creation 5) a place to show hospitality (BBQ anyone?) 6) a means to bless our little community and make connections with our neighbors.  In other words: a Garden.

Trying to find a first 'before' picture.  It was basically overgrown grass and a lot of rose bay willow herb!

I spent the two crazy months from October to December (when dark days, Christmas concerts and other obligations make time in the garden scarce) planning out my garden on paper.  Looking at lots of pictures online for ideas and calculating which layout would look nicest, be practical to build and give us the most growing space.  In the end, I opted for a very simple layout, that would let me build it quickly, give good access around the different beds and let the plants do the showing off.

So, my first days of Christmas holiday, I measured off the back half of the garden and dug the sod over to make a 15'x15' square.  This took about 3 days as I only had my hand shovel to do it.  The digging kept me warm.

One square of the garden would be fenced off for vegetables and flowers, the other half would be kept as grass and a place for F to play.



My blue pots and strawberry planters are survivors of our move from Musselburgh two years ago.  I'm glad we kept them.


Up in the attic I noticed a lot of old planks lying in a corner so I dragged them out in the garden to make amazing raised beds.  Simon put up the posts and we threaded three wires (roughly a 1 1/2' apart) up them to make a 'fence' to train apple trees on.


Then, my wonderful husband built me a sweet garden fence.


Fence construction complete.


The raised beds taking shape.  If I had had enough spare soil, I would have just laid it all down on the turned over sod.  But I didn't have any compost to fill up the beds to the right levels.  So, I tried to dig out pathways under the weed-suppressing material and use the earth to fill up the main beds.  It was harder work than I thought and it meant I needed to do a lot of weeding.  It's difficult to get clay even especially when it's wet, so I will have to level out my pathways with sand when we get to that stage.  It also means that I will have to improve the soil over time.


On a different note, here is the front garden when I first planted it with herbs in January.


Fast forward to March - here is the garden with the first of the grids over the main bed.  I am using the square foot gardening approach because I like how it maximizes the output for small spaces.  I'm surprised by how much you can plant within 1'square.  And the grids allow you to have a happy-sort-of-ordered-chaos.

This is later on in March when we put up the central trellis in the main bed.  The little polytunnels were a great find at the pound shop (£5 for 10ft of protection!) because they fit perfectly over 2'square lengths.

Clockwise from top-left: Runner beans and lettuce, sugar snap peas, lettuce and celery, onions, a bunch of thyme, rosemary, lettuce.
In the lower right hand corner here you can see the top of one of two bay trees.  It's a standard trained tree that I was pleased to find 1/2price - great architectural plant that is evergreen and so will make a good anchor-plant for the garden all year long.  Other evergreen perennial plants here are thyme and rosemary.  I like landscaping with herbs (instead of box for example) because they can be manipulated in the same ways by trimming and clipping, but they smell wonderful while working around them and they are useful in the kitchen.  Thyme and rosemary also have the added advantage of flowering in early summer when they are established.
May brings apple blossoms on my Discovery apple tree!

Work in progress....

JUNE means STRAWBERRIES.  The red-gold of the garden.


This border by the garden fence will be my flower-cutting herbaceous perennial bed.  A gardening magazine was giving away 48 tiny baby plants of different herbaceous perennials for the price of the postage (£6.) While I admit I wasn't able to keep all of them alive, I have a good 15-20 of them growing in the space and coming on well.  Considering that each one of them would have cost me between £3 and £5 each in the garden stores as mature plants, I think it's still been worthwhile!  Just takes a bit more patience as they grow.


Google auto-awesome shot of my strawberry poly tunnels.


June growth.  The black box in the left-hand side was built from an old shelf and I earthed up potatoes in it.


The sugar snap peas have hands-down been the easiest and most prolific growers this year.  A healthy snack raw or great in stirfrys.  Also rewarding to pick my own pak choi, though I've had to wrestle them away from the snails.


This is when all the work toting water and food down to the strawberry patch becomes priceless!  First strawberry of the year.


And if that dribble down the chin doesn't make your mouth water, you've never tasted fresh strawberries straight from the garden before!

So, that's my little garden story so far and it puts into context any future photos I decide to upload.  I'm amazed that a 15ft by 15ft piece of ground has been so delightful and productive.  On the grassy-side, we've got a swing, Felicity's house, compost bins, my big blue pots, a laundry drying line and flowering shrubs.  Our kind next-door neighbors don't mind if Felicity uses side-walk chalk on their paving slabs.  We've gotten to chat to almost all of our surrounding neighbors while pottering around in the garden.

Now, if the council would just give me that allotment I have my name down for.....



July 24th 2014

I can't remember a better summer in Edinburgh.  We have had consistent sunny days for the last 3 weeks.  I have a tan for the first time in years.  I've had to put sunscreen on Felicity and make her wear a sunhat.  Even the tomato plant I planted outside (realizing that I had probably given it a death sentence in doing so) is thriving.  It's amazing.

G and I took the girls to Portobello beach yesterday.  I should have taken a picture of all the bodies in the sand - it looked like something out of a travel agents' advert for the south of France or Spain.  The girls had a great time.  S wanted to stay on the beach and play in the sand.  F kept asking to go back out into the sea.  Amazing at 2 years old their personalities and preferences are already showing themselves and giving us so much joy!


I thought they would be running off the moment we got on the beach - but they were fascinated exploring the sand and sat themselves down by the walkway to play.


They brought along cuddly toys which now definately need a run through the washing machine.


I think this photo would make a lovely painting.  Maybe I'll do it one day when my world slows down.


So happy together - these little girls are like sisters.


Cute explosion!


We took turns burying our feet in the hot sand.  The top of the sand was hot and dry and crumbly.  When you dug down an inch or so, it became cooler and damp and stickier.  We buried mommy's feet and F's feet and S's feet and Toti's mummy's feet and kitty cat's feet....

and I see from previewing these photos on my laptop that I need to practice keeping my horizon lines straight on the camera!

July 23rd


I got a new phone on Monday and I've been trying to figure out the myriad of ways to use my google account.  I don't usually have time to be on the computer for long (especially when little fingers want to 'share') but I'm impressed at how connected-up the different programs are now.  When I get the hang of it all, it's going to save me time and allow me to communicate more effectively.

All the different apps out there now can be intimidating and I am suspicious of those 'services' which seem too eager to 'help' you promote and publish yourself.  Technology makes it easy to communicate with people I know who are far away - which is wonderful.  However, I'd rather not be on display for the whole world to see.  A fine line to walk.  Facebook has been my vehicle for sharing photos with my family, but it is becoming impersonal and my content seems to become too public too fast.  Time for something different.  So I'm going to experiment with this blog thing and see how it goes.

This picture is from December 2012 when we were all together.  If you are someone who should be reading this blog, you'll know who these people are and why this picture makes me happy.  :-)

July 22nd



Last day of my dad's visit to Edinburgh.  We stopped in for a coffee before wandering up to Gladstone's Land and the Georgian House.  Felicity had just woken up from a nap happy.  Lovely weather and lovely light for some pictures.  Had a great time.