And it gets really hard to get back into the groove again, particularly when I have two blogs to be trying to catch up on.
Thursday – we had arranged for Chris and Julie to come up to us in the morning. Ady and I were doing something outside – quite what now escapes me – when I saw a big and little person coming along the nature trail path. I assumed it was Julie and Lorna based on size and shape from a distance but it turned out to be Sandy and Joss once they got closer. They came in and by the time the kettle had boiled Chris, Julie, Lorna and Maisie had also arrived. So a static-full! 🙂 We all chatted in various little groups and everyone stayed for pancakes for lunch. Sandy and Joss left first, followed by Chris, Julie and their Goddard-lets who were all off for a castle tour. We were destined for an evening of meetings so arranged to feed our animals slightly early and head down for a cup of tea with them after their tour and before our meetings.
We did just that and the kids all went off together while we drank tea then we had our monthly RCA (Rum Community Association) meeting followed by a Venison processing company meeting. Plenty discussed and thrashed out at both. We had a beer at the shop before heading home, arriving just about before it was properly dark. A week later it is now fully dark at 7pm with sunset getting about six minutes earlier a night and the clocks due back in just a couple of weeks now I know it will be dark before 4pm before we know it. It does mean it feels *really* late by about 10pm! I can see even me getting in early nights this winter.
Friday morning we’d arranged to meet the other Goddards down at the village hall as Ranger Mike wanted to do an event with so many kids here. He’d invited Eve and Coryla from the nursery aswell as Fliss and Joss to come along too so we had a really good turn out with our five Goddard kids. First we did a matching game on birds and learnt to identify Rum birds and learnt a bit about them, then we headed outside for some running around and shouting games. It was lots of fun and Julie and I spent ages in hysterics after running around in silly hats and wigs. I do miss her.

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I’d put my washing on at the castle so was nipping back and forth checking on that and then we went to the caravan for a last cup of tea before heading to the pier to meet Mum and Dad. Somehow we managed to lose track of time so just about arrived at the same time as the ferry. Davies and Scarlett had done the same, wandering around on the beach with Jack and Maisie so we scooped them up along the way and just about got there in time to wave and smile as Mum and Dad came off the boat :). We were then on a bit of a schedule to get all their stuff unloaded into the static and get back down to the camping pod to load Chris and Julie’s stuff on and get them to the second boat, just two hours later. Ady took the car, drove all the way up to the croft and unloaded everything while the kids, Bonnie and I walked with Mum & Dad catching up as we went. Ady went back down the road to do some culvert fixing while I made a cup of tea for everyone and the kids unpacked all the things Mum & Dad had brought for them including a massive box of lego, various art stuff, new socks, pants, gloves and hats and a heap of food items I’d asked them to collect for us. I then walked back down to meet Ady and load Chris and Julie up, arranging for Mum to walk down with the kids to say goodbye.
We got them all packed into the car and drove to the ferry – most of us walked although Chris and Maisie squished in the car with Ady. Mum, Davies and Scarlett arrived just in time for all of us to say goodbye. Julie and I both got quite teary, it felt way too brief a visit this time 🙁
We all got in the car to come back to the croft and had a really nice evening eating steak that Mum & Dad had brought over for dinner. Dad and I stayed up til 2am talking, so nice to have him here. We sat up til that time on four of their five nights here, talking about not a lot really but enjoying each others company very much. I miss my dad lots.
Saturday We walked to Kilmory for the red deer rut event. We walked part of the way with Mike and with Claire’s brother and his girlfriend who were visiting for the weekend and were very nice. Mum and Dad didn’t really get the event to be honest – I think they were expecting less authentic out there in the wilderness stuff and rather more cups of tea and comfy seats. For all I enjoyed their visit this time I was slightly despondant at their ability to just sit in the static for days on end saying how wonderful the view was but not really being up for getting outside and enjoying the island. Ah well, each to their own. Davies left with Dad and they enjoyed the walk back together and the hour or so they had before the rest of us returned. Mum left soon after and walked back with Mike but Scarlett, Ady and I stayed for another hour or more tucked into the hillside with Ali who was able to tell us loads about the deer infront of us, roaring at each other, more about the research work and little anecdotes about it all. I could have happily sat there with her for days, it was fascinating and so very very thrilling to be say all but in the middle of the whole thing playing out so close to us. The Autumnwatch team were perched on some rocks just across from us getting the last of their film footage for what will go out at the end of the month – this year it is pre recorded rather than live.

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We walked back and then I did two further walks to the shop and back – once with Dad to buy beer, call in to Fliss and Sandy’s to feed cats and chickens and then again to deliver some eggs that Jinty asked for. Nearly 15 miles walked that day and aside from minor gripes from my knees the next morning I felt no ill effects :).
An earlier night all round though on Saturday, I think we were all feeling the late night from the day before and the walking taking a toll.
Sunday Ady and I moved the pigs. Thanks to a very rainy few weeks they needed moving earlier than last time. We were more efficient this time and had it done fairly quickly with some technique modifications. That done we headed down to Fliss & Sandy’s to feed chickens and cats and have a quick bath while we were there. I did a sweep round the caravan floor and picked some brambles along the front while Ady was in his bath, he collected a pallet from the pier while I had mine.
Back to the static for a roast dinner along with a quick nip down to the shop for Scarlett and I which netted a purchase of ready baked yorkshire puddings (we had no room in the oven to make any) and ice cream for pudding.
Monday Ady spent pretty much all day under the static insulating the floor. Sandy gave us some rolls of loft insulation so Ady donned full waterproofs, mask and goggles and got underneath and pushed it all up into the joists of the floor. It has made a discernible difference to the warmth of the floor and hopefully when a skirt is around the base too it will feel much warmer. A very unpleasant task but a job well done. I gathered water from the river, made jam, baked bread, made a delicious soup for lunch and we had venison sausages for dinner. We left Ady to get clean and changed while we went to the shop to collect the veg box in the evening. Another staying up late night.
Tuesday In the morning we did a ranger event walk – Changing Seasons, a walk along the shore of loch Scresort observing wildlife and nature as the season changes from summer into autumn. I don’t think I will ever take for granted just how beautiful this part of the world is. Autumn takes my breath away here, the low hanging sun creating shadows and amazing light, the colours of the trees and heather as it lets all the gathered up sunshine from the summer back out through the changing colour of leaves. It is truly stunning and no matter how much I photograph it I never capture it entirely.

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I love these couple of pictures Davies took of some fungi – totally as the camera captured them, it’s like a peek into a different world!

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We got back to the static for lunch and then Dad and I walked some of the croft as he’d not done that last time. I showed him where we’re planning to build and we walked the nature trail around the perimeter of the croft. I made pastry for quiches for dinner.
Wednesday The week ended much as it had continued really, Mum and Dad had a pretty low impact week with lots of sitting around doing very little. I do find it a bit frustrating but having promised myself I would not get irritated by them I was determined to enjoy their company, look after them well and remind myself that I miss them a lot when they are not here so to try and almost eke out their visit by thinking how many weeks and months it may be before we see them again. It worked and it was actually a pleasure to have them here. The kids certainly got a lot out of it and Ady and I managed to get stuff done rather than allow having visitors to prevent us from getting on with things. We loaded them and their stuff into the car and took them to the pier. I walked but Ady came and fetched me as the ferry was in slightly early so I would have struggled to get there in time. We waved until they were out of sight and then had a bath and some TV time at Fliss and Sandy’s while our washing dried at the castle. It’s nice to have the bolt hole with permission to have baths and watch TV when we want. I don’t miss baths anywhere near as much as I worried I might and actually when you have to get dressed again and go home it’s not as luxurious as simply putting pjs on and slobbing around on the sofa but it’s good to know there are opportunities for bathing when I want them!
We had a lovely dinner of chicken curry and watched Local Hero which we all thought was pretty crap. I’d had grand plans to catch up online but ended up asleep on the sofa at 9pm, waking to stagger to bed around 11pm. The craziness of the last fortnight had finally caught up with me. We had the fire lit briefly which always makes me drowsy and we have candlelight for light once the dinner is finished which adds to the cosy and sleepymaking feeling here.
Today has been a quiet one – it was already raining when we woke up and it’s not stopped yet, 16 hours later. The river is running very high, a massive contrast to yesterday when it was at it’s very lowest after nearly a week with no rain. We stayed in until after lunch, I caught up a little online, the kids played. Then to Fliss and Sandy’s for the kids to have a bath. We called into the shop to hand in veg order for next week and buy some milk – we’ve been on long life stuff since Monday. Back at home we tried to watch Kevin’s manmade house but it kept buffering so in the end we watched some CBBC before the kids went to bed and I’m back to blogging to catch up again. I’m debating whether I want a hot water bottle or not – it is cold, I can see my breath but I know once I’m in bed I’ll be warm…