general stuff

Treasures

Gobsmacked! That is the word that springs to mind as I look over all of the comments left on the previous post for the little Christmas mouse. Thank you all for taking the time to leave comments, so many really lovely and kind ones too. It would be nice to be able to give everyone a prize, but obviously that is impossible with just one of me and so many comments but I will ponder on new free patterns and giveaways for next year and will keep you posted.

The lovely Emma of Silverpebble recently posted a picture on Instagram of some of her collected treasures and when I commented at how lovely they were and that I too had a collection of special bits she asked to see, so here is my treasure collection that I keep in a couple of old OXO tins.

From top left corner:

  • 2 silver bracelets which were my christening presents;
  • a heart shaped stone found on a beach on France on my first holiday with H;
  • a 1922 Belgian 5 cent coin with a hole punched in it (from my great Grannys sewing box). I’d love to know why there is a hole in it – perhaps it was given as a keepsake;
  • a collection of shells from various beach holidays;
  • a rat tooth that reminds me of a holiday when I was 14. I’d gone up into the sand dunes for a bit of kissing with a French boy who was my holiday romance and we found this skull. We both kept a tooth as a souvenir and now I can’t even remember his name!;
  • a little hand sewn leather wallet that belonged to my Great Grandmother with a cross and prayers (see below)
  • broken pottery shards from our garden – our soil is full of broken pottery bits of indeterminate age;
  • in the little tin are some lumps of amber, an old 3 penny bit, another old key and a feather from Berry the blackbird who we raised years ago
  • along the bottom are other finds from digging in the garden: a knapped flint and various fossil like rocks. The next town from us is one of the oldest continuously inhabited places in Northern Europe and whenever I find bits in the garden I wonder how many people have stood on this spot in the past;
  • a pretty feather found in the woods;
  • a squashed locket that 10 year old me found in the road – it had been run over by a car and inside has a faded picture of a baby and a lock of hair. I made a ‘found’ poster and stuck it to the Post box nearby but sadly no-one ever came to claim it;
  • a curl of fur brushed from Poppy, my beloved cat who I adopted from stray on the streets of Hull when I was a student. She lived with me there for 3 years and used to sit on my lap and look out of the window on the long train journey from Hull to Reading in the holidays. When I left college she came too and lived with H and I in our first flat in Ealing. She was a much loved and pampered old lady cat until her peaceful death in her sleep 4 years later.
  • a little black bakelite cat that I stole when I was 18 from the cluttered attic of my first landlady. I’d gone off to art college and lived with my best friend in one attic room with only cold running water. We wereย  allowed to have one bath a week each (by appointment only), cooked on a 2 ring table-top stove and had no heating. We liked exploring the other end of the attic – which was stuffed with loads of old clothes, furniture and even a real tiger skin rug ๐Ÿ˜ฆ
  • my great Grandmothers wedding ring;
  • two very old keys, whatever they fitted has long since been lost (again from my Great Grandmothers house)
  • a silver sixpence from 1956
  • a little green glass monkey that was my mothers until I badgered her to give it to me when I was about eight or nine. I have kept it safely ever since Mumย  ๐Ÿ™‚

This little wallet is a mystery. It was returned by the undertakers with all of my great Grandmothers effects after she died and until that point I don’t think another person had ever been aware of its existence. Clearly it was hand made and she had worn it about her person for most of her life. It contains a medal from Our Lady of Mount Carmel P.F.U., a crucifix, a ‘Battleship Prayer’ cloth badge from ‘The League of The Sacred Heart of Jesus’ B.O.W British made and a little handwritten pledge which reads:

????…ย  God because Thou art so good. I am very sorry that I have sinned against Thee and I will not sin again.

It feels a little sad to know so little of her life but she was my great grandmother so I only knew her as a slightly cantankerous old lady who smelt a bit funny and she died when I was 12. I would love to know what this little wallet means but that is no doubt lost in time now. I keep it as a poignant reminder that everyone was young once and becomes old and unless they pass on their story it is lost forever. Perhaps this blog will survive in some format when I am long gone and be all that is left of my story – that is a nice thought.

Do you have a treasure collection or an object that you keep for the memory it conjures up? I’d love to hear about it if you have time to leave a comment.

crafts & knitting · general stuff

Weekly roundup

Last week brought a change in the weather here – it’s been getting colder and we’ve had such strong winds that most of the beautiful autumn leaves are now in puddles on the ground.

Friday was a bright day and I made the most of it by getting out into the garden to plant some spring bulbs – narcissi, muscari and bluebells and some hawthorne whips which will grow into a hedge to replace the overgrown leylandii conifers that we had taken out a few months ago. The front garden has looked very bare ever since but hopefully these new plants will fill in the gaps and provide lots of shelter and food for wildlife.

There’s been knitting of course – bunnies as usual, and another pebble beach shawl in a paler shade of Walk delicate merino – a yarn that lends itself really well to wispy shawls. I’m only on row 20 but am not in a hurry so it will continue to grow slowly in between other projects. Here it is next to my lovely new mug which I bought this week from a talented potter on Etsy.

This week has seen me taking lots more pictures than usual because of joining instagram – my page is here. I’ve really been enjoying snapping away at whatever takes my fancy without necessarily having to think of words for a full blog post. Not that I’ll be giving up blogging (this will always be my first home) but I’m wondering whether to do a regular blog post like this one, which is a kind of hodgepodge summary of my week using images that I uploaded to Instagram. The thing I can’t decide on is whetherย  people will be bored seeing the same images in both places. It probably depends on whether you look at both – if you have an opinion on the matter I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Well, have a good week, and Happy Thanksgiving on Thursday to everyone in the USA x

autumn · countryside · general stuff · in the woods · wildlife

Autumny things :: out & about

The woods in Autumn are one of my most favourite places to be. It’s such a sensory experience – a wonderful rich smell of damp earth; a rustling sigh as hundreds of leaves part company with the trees at the slightest breeze and a sparkling quality to the light as the low-angled sunlight is shimmered through all of the leaves still clinging fast. There are good things to eat too. I’m not confident enough to gather mushrooms but a handful of sweet chestnuts or blackberries instantly evokes childhood memories of autumn Sunday afternoons spent foraging in the woods with my Mum, Dad and brother. I do love being out in the woods on a bright autumn day.

Sadly though Toby seems to have gone off wood walks at the moment. He’s been getting rather agitated when I’ve shown him the PECs card for the woods and biting his hand a lot (you can see it’s badly calloused in the picture below). I did manage to coax him out with custard cream biscuits for one rather short stroll over this half term break but he was keen to get back to the car.

Amy walked with me on wednesday afternoon, both of us with our cameras in hand as she’s preparing her coursework for her photography GCSE. We took a lot of pictures because there’s lots going on in the autumn woods. We saw mini beasts; snails, butterflies and beetles, tiny fairy-tale porcelain fungus and toadstools and out on an open stretch a muntjac deer was crossing an autumn-sown field and stopping every now and then for a quick nibble of the fresh, green shoots. There was a fair bit of good-natured elbow barging between us over the best position to photograph from and lots of her shots came out better than mine. It was a memorable afternoon out with my lovely girl.

Back at home the late afternoon skies have been crossed with migrating flocks of birds. I love watching them heading south to keep ahead of the colder weather and wonder how far they are journeying.

Autumn is in full flow here and I hope to make it out to the woods lots more before the leaves are all on the ground. Hopefully I’ll be able to keep tempting Toby to come out with me and he’ll re-discover his woodland mojo.

Pictures taken at:

Amwell nature reserve, Hollywell Lake with the dragonfly meadows and Amwell walkway, September 26th

Bencroft wood, Hertfordshire, October 26th

Panshanger Park and Osprey lake, October 28th