Not entirely productive

Thursday morning Ady and I used fillafoam to fill the gaps in the shelter Ady has built for D&S’s bikes. It is pretty much done now, just needs a few wheelbarrows of gravel to give it a more solid floor than the mud in there just now and the bikes can come out of the shed shop and into that. It has 3 sides and a roof and we have a big tarp to cover the bikes when they are in there. We spent some time putting posts in to mount the various signs to direct folk to the shed – one at the fork, one at the bridge and one just after and put some of the signs up. The one at the fork we have covered up for now as we are not actually ready for people to come and look at the shed yet but it’s there ready to unveil when we are. I have another sign ready to put at the bridge in the village and just need to do two more signs which I have the slates for getting washed clean in the rain outside.

Lunch and then down to the village – collected the veg box and then Ady went off to get the animal feed delivery which had come on the ferry while I walked round to Fliss’s for Crafternoon. I walked with Bad Neil and Baby Dougal for a brief catch up chat with him. A nice couple of hours with Fliss and Ali chatting and crocheting. It was the community meeting in the evening but it was at 7pm and I really could not be bothered to go back down to the village so I emailed to say we had forgotten – bad Nic!

Friday – it was windy and rainy and horrible. I didn’t actually go outside at all. I spent the day crocheting and making bread and pizza dough and watching animal documentaries with Scarlett. I did catch up a bit on the blog, put together a volunteer events campaign and set some dates and write an article for Barefoot Diaries though. Oh and organise a curry night for next weekend so not entirely unproductive…

Saturday – I made soup. And crocheted. The ferry was cancelled and it was dire weather again. I had plans to go outside in the afternoon but then Ali and Eve came up so I drank tea and chatted to Ali instead. It was nice though, Ali was telling me about life before Rum which is something noone here ever talks about much. Ady worked at the hostel in the morning and did the laundry.

Sunday – More wind and rain. Scarlett had wanted to bake cookies but we had no butter so she was a bit fed up with me / the universe about that. We watched some more iplayer stuff and I crocheted.  Ady spent the morning with Mike the Fanny doing woodland stuff and came back having really enjoyed that. We all had various leftovers for lunch (soup for Scarlett and I, pizza for Davies, curry for Ady) which made me feel most virtuous. The kids had showers and I brushed Scarlett’s hair. Ady hoovered and then he and I went out to feed the animals together so that I had actually left the caravan today. We fed the birds, I collected a log bucket which had blown all the way down the croft, we walked around the outside of the croft to feed the pigs and then indoors for blokus.

I’ve put together a volunteer info doc and sent it out to everyone who has registered an interest so far and it’s been widely shared on facebook, blog and twitter so hopefully we can get some good group volunteer events happening this summer to push stuff forward.

The wind is howling tonight but its supposed to be a still, dry week so hoping to get lots done.

Home! :)

After the last post the kids and I headed into the town to get some lunch – it was tipping down and we were wet within about five minutes of stepping outside the hotel. The subway under the road in Fort William floods in the heavy rain (we discovered!) and while Davies was suitably shod in wellies Scarlett was in crocs and I was in silly girl shoes so we did a massive detour to cross the roads. We went to Lidl and got pastries and breads for lunch, called into Morrisons and got some ice cream which Scarlett had been desperate for, some yoghurts for dessert later and a bottle of wine and some tonic water for me in anticipation of two more nights in the hotel. The kids went back through the subway as Scarlett decided to just roll her trouser legs up but I walked round the long way. In Lidl we heard about the two missing climbers who still have not been found. Fort William is the scene of regular helicopter dramas obviously but it seems there is still a collective holding of breath when news gets out like that.

Back at the room we asked for a hairdryer, hung our sodden coats over the bath and put our wet trousers over the heater. I had an email from Steve to say the possible lift back to Rum today was back on and so a rapid exchange of emails followed to arrange it and I cancelled the hotel room for tonight. Now regretting the hasty purchase of extra food and drink which would not be consumed and would have to be carried back with us… I did pop out one last time for a wander round the shops but my heart was not in it so I came back for a very long bath instead. Travelodge baths are tiny so you have to decided which portion of your body is going to be submerged at any given point. A cunning plan to assist with this I discovered this time is to have the shower on at the same time, which sprinkles warm water, jacuzzi style over you to keep the unsubmerged bits warm. Fun!

We ate in the Wetherspoons as a sort of last night treat and to avoid walking anywhere (it’s directly below the Travelodge so less than a minute outside in the rain) but it was not really much of a treat as Scarlett’s first, second and third menu choices were all sold out. She ended up with Steak and Kidney pudding and mash which she sort of enjoyed but was not what she was hoping for. I have to say she has Ady’s good nature about things like that, I would have walked out after the second choice not being available! Davies was very happy with his steak though. Back in the room Davies had a bath, we all packed our stuff up and watched Gogglebox which I have rather fallen in love with.

This morning was an early (for us!) start and I had not slept well, I never do without Ady anyway and had kept waking panicking I had overslept and missed the train and boat – the stress of having to meet two specific deadlines is so outside of my normal life now I hate it. We were pleased to see the subway had drained away as we had been prepared to wade across to get to the station and were on the train in good time. Scarlett slept on the train, Davies was in a daze and I read my book. We’d been told the boat would wait for us til 10am and the train got in with seven minutes to spare so we were feeling hurried. Jen was getting on the train as we got off so we had a quick hug in passing.

We carted our heavy bags to where we’d been told the boat would be but no sign of it, we walked all around, asked some people and wandered around like lost souls trying to ignore the worry that we had missed it after all and frantically making a mental back up plan when it suddenly appeared pulling in. It was gone 1030 by then so actually we could have done the quick CoOp shop which I’d really wanted to do but never mind. We had to climb down the ladder and scramble across the boat so I got grease all over my jacket, jeans and rucksack. We sat in the little gally kitchen on the sea level deck and thought it would be fine. One of the crew (there was only him and the skipper) made me a cup of tea and handed round the biscuits, there was a tv on showing This Morning which Davies and I found most entertaining and George (the crew) was very chatty and friendly despite the twin challenge of him having such a strong Scottish accent that I struggled to understand him and him being hard of hearing with a hearing aid which didn’t appear to work fully so being unable to hear me. By the end of the trip we had developed that sort of fellow survivor mentality and were able to communicate in facial expressions…

About half an hour in Scarlett went grey and bolted for the loo, Davies went green and headed for the deck to get fresh air where he remained for the duration. I waited about ten minutes calling through to Scarlett to check she was ok periodically before the need to retire to the deck myself became pressing. At which point Scarlett called through that actually she was trapped in the loo. Between bouts of vomiting she explained that the lock twiddly thing was simply missing so there was nothing with which to unlock the door. Between checking on Davies and spending time restoring my own equilibrium I communicated to George what had happened and we had a surreal conversation with Scarlett through the locked door with me acting as interpreter as she could not understand him, he could not hear her, she was regularly being sick and I was fighting the urge to do the same. Eventually George went upstairs, accessed the bathroom through the ceiling hatch and passed Scarlett down a screwdriver with which to rescue herself by moving the lock across. Adventures abound!

We finally got back to Rum and it was so, so lovely to be home. A quiet afternoon – we got in and unpacked / put everything away, had some lunch. Then Scarlett spent some time looking for Gunther the disabled duck while Ady and I buried the piglets. Davies was catching up with some friends online who are on half term so more available than usual. We walked down to the shop for a few bits and then home to feed the pigs and get dinner on (Ady) and ring my parents (me). I’m not sure how it’s ended up being 1am so I am off to bed!

Mainland Adventures catch up

Thursday – Jen arrived on the 1135am boat and Ady and I went to collect her at the pier. We bought her and her stuff up to the croft, had a cup of tea, handed over with demonstrations of the boiler and solar panels and took her over to the pigs. Tom had not come out for breakfast and was a bit slow on his feet and lumbering which had Ady worrying about him. We talked to Jen about it and decided to see how things went. When we went over to the pigs Tom came out, feed, drank and tried to mate Barbara though so we decided all was probably well after all!

We headed down to the pier, Jen came with us and walked back to the croft to get her bearings and collect some sausages from the freezer and we were off! Fliss, Joss , Claire and Dave Chain were all on the boat with us so it was quite a sociable trip and the 90 minutes flew by. Fliss and Joss were on the same train as us, heading for Glasgow so we sat with them until we got off at Lochailort. Alison collected us from the station and took us back to theirs. The timing had not been as great as we’d hoped for the weekend as their girls had dance classes that evening and a dance exam on the Saturday morning meaning we didn’t see as much of them as we’d hoped – Davies and Scarlett were even more disgruntled about school taking friends away! We had a nice first evening with them and the girls got home just after dinner – unfortunately the sleepover all in one room for the four kids only lasted the one night as the late bedtime knocked their two out for school the next day. Davies and Scarlett shared a room and sneakily used the wifi though so they were not too upset πŸ˜‰

On Friday Alison stayed at the house with slumbering D&S while Ady, Leon and I took their dog out for a long walk. It was very rainy and Ady and I got sodden. Made me covet Leon’s coat which I am now constantly checking ebay for a version of ;). Alison and I went out to Mallaig to the screen machine which was there, collecting a couple of her friends on the way to see Sunset Song  I can’t say I enjoyed it as such, it was incredibly bleak and with more violence / sex than I would usually choose to watch but it was quite beautiful and a powerful story. It is from a trilogy of books which I have got on my kindle and may read to get the end of the story. We went for a meal afterwards which was nice and Alison’s friends were both really good to chat too – Zoe was younger and very interested in Home Ed and alternative education for her 4 year old daughter. Becky was much older and a really interesting character – I enjoyed talking to both of them, I like meeting new people.

On Saturday while the girls and Alison were out Leon took us four for another walk, this time the tide was low enough to walk across to the wee island he uses for some of his bushcraft survival courses so we did that, looking for signs of otters and chatting about the landscape. The girls were home by about 2pm so they all hung out and then Ady and Leon took them all off back to the screen machine to see the new Star Wars. Alison and I chatted, made dinner and talked to a bloke who had come to service their log burner. I like her a lot but I know she disagrees with a lot of my educational and parenting philosophies which can make for some uncomfortable avoiding subjects. I would rather chat and keep assuring her I am never judging and know that mine are the unconventional choices which I am happy to discuss or simply accept as too ‘out there’ for most people but it often feels a bit ‘elephant in the room’. I was pleased when the others came back, especially as they had had such a good time and really raved about the film.

My friend Heather in NZ told me that the Fogle show had been on TV in Australia – we got a lovely email from a bloke in Tasmania who had seen it and claimed it was the best documentary he’d ever seen and hoped we live happily ever after on our island πŸ™‚ πŸ™‚

Sunday morning Alison made waffles for brunch which were delicious. When we went there the first time she did that and it had us googling waffle makers but deciding against one as they are really power hungry. There was a papermaking workshop in their village hall which had unconfirmed numbers of attendees and we had all been considering, in the end Alison and I went along while the others stayed behind. I really enjoyed it – making paper from reeds and rushes (which we have no shortage of!) and meeting more new people.

Jenna had to watch My Left Foot on dvd for some homework so we all watched it in the evening. I remember the hype about it when it came out and Daniel Day Lewis won the oscar but had never seen it. We’ve all talked about it since, definitely a film which leaves a lasting impression. Ironic that a family who are so anti screens had us watching 3 movies over the course of our stay πŸ˜‰ πŸ™‚

On Monday the girls headed off to school and Leon gave us a lift to the station to catch the train to Fort William. We got photos done and bought our Highland rail cards and got our tickets for the train journey the following day then checked into the hotel. The receptionist remembers us we have stayed so often so that was a lovely welcome. Davies and Ady stayed behind while Scarlett and I went along to the dentist for her three teeth to be taken out and the impressions to be taken for her brace fitting. The dentist and nurses had seen the Fogle show so we chatted about that with them.

Tuesday was the train journey to Edinburgh – smooth and straightforward but a long trip. Mairi picked us up from the station to take us to the flat. While we were waiting for her a bloke came up and said ‘Were you guys on George Clarke’s amazing small spaces?’ I said ‘No but we were on Ben Fogle’s New Lives in the Wild!’ – maybe I should have just said no! πŸ™‚ We chatted to him for a while, it was weird but pretty cool.

Mairi had bought us food and drink and a bottle of fizz so we chatted and had a drink before she headed off for home leaving us to the flat. We had dinner, watched TV and had a fairly early night – except Davies who was still sending me facebook messages at 4am! That boy!

Wednesday was Charity Shop shopping day – we walked down to the area where there are loads, spent a couple of hours there and then walked into the main city for lunch. Davies wanted to get Sherlock on DVD, Scarlett and I wanted to go to the Lush shop and there was a need to visit Primark for boring clothing so we did all that and collected food to cook for dinner.

Thursday we did Camera Obscura – a really cool place on 6 levels in the city centre. The actual camera obscura is set on the top and we went to the talk about that and watched people all around the city, then walked down the 6 floors looking at all the optical illusions, trick mirrors, holograms and other exhibits. It was good fun, worth the entrance fee πŸ™‚

We found some more charity shops and I managed to get a weekender style large shoulder bag which I had been looking out for in one of them. Pleased about that πŸ™‚ Back to the flat with a load of pizzas to cook for dinner as despite having an oven and hob there is only one pan in the flat so really hard to plan meals for four of us.

Friday – Mairi had the day off and had said we were welcome whenever we arrived at their place in North Berwick but after checking train times and debating the kids decided they would rather have a lie in and lazy morning so Ady and I did one last wander down to the charity shops, dropped off some clothes that Mairi’s daughter had offered to Scarlett but she didn’t want and bought some cakes for lunch. Then we walked up to the station and caught the trains to North Berwick. Another person recognised me from the TV on the train – I really didn’t think I was that recognisable, even with my hair! He said he really wanted to come to Rum, we told him he should! πŸ™‚ Mairi took us along to the beach as her dog Mack was ready for a walk so that was lovely. We dropped Davies and Scarlett off at her house and then Ady and I went her to Aldi for some bits for dinner and a look round. Back for G&Ts and then her friend Jean arrived, soon followed by Jean’s husband Derek. We met Derek before when Mairi brought him to Rum and he is lovely – in the real world he is a Sheriff Principal judge and he and Jean have 6 children of their own and have fostered a further 6. Jean was an amazing woman, small, loud and a ball of energy. Mairi had warned me that she would make Mairi and I look like timid wallflowers of women and she was right. I utterly fell in love with her and she was very complimentary to me too – we really hit it off. They had brought two of their foster kids who were similar ages to Davies and Scarlett so the kids went off to a different part of the house to hang out while we got through countless bottles of fizz and loads of lovely food and were generally rowdy and riotous! A fab evening. Mairi’s husband Patrick joined us a bit later – he is a teacher and was out with workmates having an end of term pint or five so he didn’t need to catch us up ;). A late night all round.

Saturday – We’d been having updates from Jen all week on Tom’s progress – he had gone downhill a bit when we first left but she had been doing a grand job of tending to him and he had seemed to rally. Infact on her Friday morning update all seemed really positive as he was up and about eating and drinking. Sadly she rang us on Saturday morning just before we left Mairi’s to say she had found him dead πŸ™ We were all really sad to hear that news, of all the croft creatures Tom and Barbara have been our favourite, not pets but not quite livestock either. Tom was such a lovely pig, calm, gentle and really nice natured, a great Dad and just really happy with his life. It’s a real blow.

We spent much of the train coordinating with Jen and Doug back on Rum by phonecall and text message when signal allowed. Doug and David very kindly went up to the croft, got Tom out of the house and buried him for us on the croft. A massive relief as it would have been beyond Jen and not a nice task to come home to a few days later. In some ways I think it is best not to have seen his body and to remember him lumbering about healthy which is how we all last saw him. We got in to FW and walked through the town to the Travelodge. The Premier Inn is the better one of the two here in FW – bigger baths but also much closer to the station and the Morrisons, whereas the Travelodge has identical rooms really but is in the heart of the town centre shops. They are less than 10 minutes apart but it feels like more with heavy rucksacks! The Premier Inn was full on the Sunday night and more expensive on the Saturday and Monday though so Travelodge it was. We had also been looking at long term weather forecasts and Tuesday – home day – was looking pretty rough so we had already agreed with Jen that Ady would come home on the Monday so she could get off if the forecast remained bad and I had booked two more nights at the Travelodge just incase.

The kids stayed in the room while Ady and I went and met up with Sean, Ali and Eve who were also in FW having left Rum that day to head south. We had a couple of beers with them then went off to get dinner to bring back to the room.

Sunday – after debate and frantic bus timetable research we decided to head up the Nevis Range for a couple of hours. Bus there, collecting picnic lunch food from Tescos on the way and then a HUGE queue to get tickets. It was so, so busy. Scarlett’s dentist said he’d seen us there but had already skied past us when we recognised us but that it was the second busiest day of the year. Wish we’d known! We’ll go again this time of year but plan a weekday when school is on next time. Gondola ride up watching the snow appear beneath us. It was so, so cold which I know is likely to be the case halfway up a mountain but still surprised me somehow. We trundled around for a bit but I was wary of falling and it was so busy that we were constantly having to leap out of the way of skiers, snowboarders and sledgers. We had a hot chocolate and admired the view – you can just see the very tip of the highest peak on Rum and then came back down to catch the bus back. We had a choice of 2.5 hours or 5.5 hrs there with nothing in between on the Sunday bus timetables and felt 5.5 would be just too long. We walked back through the town, had baths, did a tiny bit of shopping and then in the evening Davies and Scarlett decided they would stay in the room while me and Ady went out for a meal which was lovely.

Monday – Ady had arranged a lift from outside the hotel with Development Officer Steve who was driving through heading for Rum. The kids and I mooched around the shops in the morning, got some food for lunch and then Scarlett and I went off for her dentist appointment. She has had a brace fitted which fits behind her top teeth, held on by brackets around the two very back teeth. I had thought it was a straightforward traintrack style brace and have been googling ever since. I think perhaps we had misunderstood but can’t work out whether she will have the traintrack once this has held the spaces for the adult teeth to descend into due to her overcrowding to then straighten everything up or whether this is the whole thing. Will check properly at her next appointment. I’d over prepared her with you tube clips and googling so we were both just a bit taken aback when he said ‘right that’s you done, see you in 8 weeks’ and didn’t question it at the time!

Scarlett went back to the room while I popped out and bought a little pocket diary – think I’m going to need one to keep up with all the dental appointments this year, bargain at 24p – always worth waiting til mid Feb to buy your diaries folks! πŸ™‚ I got an email and text from Argos to say my reservation for a rucksack had arrived which I was not expecting (I decided to get myself a big one after we got the kids a big one each. Our old wheelie holdall had broken and one of our other holdalls has a zip which probably won’t last the next trip and is also pretty heavy even when empty so we’ve decided to get a rucksack each and then large bags and all carry our own stuff) – it was not due to arrive til Wednesday so I had decided if we were stuck here I’d get it, if not I’d order it online to be delivered to Rum. I just had time to walk along to Argos and back before my opticians appointment as it is a mile or so out of the town. I had time to pop into the Poundstretcher too but was dismayed to see so many fruit trees and bushes and seeds and sets that I couldn’t possibly carry back that I wished I hadn’t looked!

Opticians went well, a slight change in my prescription but I can use up my contact lenses I already have before I change it. Good to have the eye health check too though. Ady will get his done next time we’re off. Ady had arrived home by then and rung with more bad news – we already knew the two muscovy ducks had died (they have been a complete failure on the croft, we’d like some more but will hatch them and harden them up way more than these ones which had clearly been hand reared and hand fed and had no coping skills for the free range life we offer our birds) and about Tom of course but Ady went to feed Barbara and the two girls to discover Barbara in the pig pen with six dead new born piglets πŸ™ πŸ™ We had been pretty sure she was not even pregnant and certainly nowhere near due. Not sure if she has miscarried them and they were stillborn or if they were simply too cold and didn’t make it without assistance. She is fine though which is a huge relief as we could have lost her too. I didn’t take the news well, it was like the final blow to Tom dying really, particularly as it would have been lovely to have more of his piglets and we would probably have kept a boy from the litter to breed on from.  Davies and Scarlett were great, really philosophical and supportive, bless them. Scarlett’s pet duck is also missing, presumed dead although Ady has not found remains yet. It’s been bitterly cold on Rum and this is the time of year we tend to lose livestock, coming out of a cold hard winter with all their reserves simply used up. Even tougher not to be there though.

We all had baths, packed up and went to get McDonalds for dinner. A sombre evening really, all hoping to get home the next day but with ferry on amber alert knowing it was probably not likely.

Sure enough today we got up early and headed off only to get the text notification of the cancelled ferry just before we reached the train station. Could have been worse, we could have been on the train which would have meant a 3 hour circular ride back here, or even worse than that have got off the train and missed the return trip meaning 6 hours in Mallaig waiting for it to come back. It’s wild, wet and windy here, the kids are not up for doing anything much and the promise of a potential lift back tomorrow on a charter boat with the fish farm people has fallen though so I guess we’re here til Thursday.

Ready, steady…

This morning was packing up clothes for me and the kids. I had half planned to chop some wood but never quite got to it. Quite possibly because although I woke up at 8am (early for me, especially at this time of year when it is barely light still at that time) I read my book for an hour or so in bed and got really immersed in it – it made me cry πŸ™ A story based around two husbands in hospital so quite possibly a bit close to home, or to Glasgow!

I did try on every pair of jeans in the wardrobe – somehow I was up to about 10 pairs, some are too small, some are too large and about half are just right, Goldilocks stylee. All are second hand from ebay / charity shops but it turns out that a Next bootcut in my size is still not necessarily going to fit. I packed up our clothes and spent some time writing out contact details and our travel plans for Jen then tidied up the bookcase and shelves a bit. Davies was sorting out his own jeans mountain (8 pairs but only 2 fit!) while Scarlett was painting, for once we were not having clothes related arguments! Our periods have completely synced which potentially means Davies and Ady will probably move out for a week each month, but probably better to get it out of the way in one dire hit rather than have two weeks of hormonal hell!

We had lunch and were listening to some interesting radio stuff – one about film soundtracks which Davies was really interested in and another about a man with Motorneuron Disease who had died this week. I thought it was the guy who had written an article in the Barefoot Diary journal that I write for but looked up his article and found it was not. That was really sad πŸ™ As was the article written in BD πŸ™

Ady was busy doing practical outsidey stuff to prepare for our trip off. The deal is supposed to be that I make it happen with all the planning and logistics and organising and he does all the physical stuff for it. Somehow despite me spending hours organising it and him just a couple of days beforehand he seems to feel put upon that he has done more… I think I am just more efficient at managing my workload πŸ˜‰

I went down to Fliss’ for Crafternoon and had a lovely couple of hours with Fliss, Ali and Debs. Fliss and I were talking, firstly about books I had read before we came travelling – Moneyless Man, No Impact Man, How I lived on £1 a day, Treehouse Diaries etc. Then we had a really interesting discussion about law, justice and punishment. I’ve never really given much thought to our justice system as an adult although it was part of my A level sociology πŸ™‚ In talking today I realised that my attitudes to punishments via parenting don’t really translate and Fliss had some really interesting thoughts. Came home and talked to Davies about it as I love the different perspective teens have on these sort of subjects. Must talk about it more with him and Scarlett. Davies is a real deep ponderer but comes out with some wise words, Scarlett can construct a really good rational argument – her and Ady were talking for ages the other day about tagging wild animals for scientific research purposes.

Ady came to pick me up as he had driven down to collect some laundry and do a rubbish run to the skip, we swung by the shop for mozzarella cheese but there was none so I bought both feta and haloumi to go on pizza, neither cut it πŸ™ sometimes only mozzarella will do! Davies had had his shower but the boiler had gone out and neither of them could get it re-lit so Scarlett had not. Ady stripped the boiler down and cleaned some bits of it which seems to have done the trick so I brushed Scarlett’s hair, did the News From Rum report for the West Word  and made dinner.

Henry

Sure enough Monday was a not leaving the static sort of day for the kids and I. Ady did the two rounds of animal feeding and spent a bit of time outside tying stuff down too. I made bread rolls and soup for lunch, did some crochet and then sat with Scarlett helping her write a letter. A Home Ed woman down in Worthing had seen the TV show and having a few local HE friends in common I had accepted her friend request on facebook and we have chatted a bit. She has 4 kids and the oldest two are similar ages to Davies and Scarlett although the other way round. She suggested before Christmas that they might like to be penpals and I talked to D&S about it who liked the idea so I agreed. Her two wrote to Davies and Scarlett and because of cancelled boats the letters didn’t get here til a few days after Christmas and then we went off. Davies had written his letter when we got back but Scarlett needed help with the writing of hers and it’s just not happened. She was determined to improve her writing as she has previously just written in block capitals in a messy manner but has been working on bubble writing and more fancy styles, particularly as Maisie who often writes to her has really nice swirly writing. We talked a bit about joined up writing and cursive script and in classic leaps and bounds autonomous HE style she has produced a page of really quite nice writing. It is a way from being beautiful but looks like it was written by someone several years older than the last thing she wrote. Infact you can even see the improvement over the course of the letter itself. She also pretty much spelled the whole thing herself. When I pointed out that if she can write and spell then she can read because in theory that is easier she denied that and said that she finds it easy to work out which letters she needs to spell things but finds it hard to keep track of all the sounds in a word with more than one syllable to sound out to read it, which sort of makes sense. I do catch her quite obviously able to read a lot though and think part of it is deliberate which I have read a lot of in late readers and AHE kids.

Anyway, Scarlett and I did an hour or so of writing, getting distracted and chatting, drawing letters and so on and then she had had enough so her and Davies played a game (s Sherlock app) which he was desperate to show her.

Today the wind finally died down after yet another noisy night. Looking forward to our trip off and some time away from mud! My Granny’s will has left Ady and I jointly one sixth of any savings and investments she had. Frazer gets one sixth as does our cousin Dan and my Uncle gets a quarter as do Mum & Dad jointly. A complicated will! Our Uncle also gets her house which was built on his land 20 odd years ago. Listed in the will were premium bonds which have subsequently been sold and it is not clear what else there is so it may amount to very little at all but we have send our proof of ID documents to the solicitor. In the meantime as there has been some falling out between my Mum and Uncle over things there was a cash sum found in the house of £5K which my Uncle has split between Ady & I, Frazer & Kat and our cousin with us getting £2K. Dad had lent us £1000 when Ady was in hospital which instantly went on hotel bills and food for me and the kids, I have not even had the invoice for the hire car yet but that will be several hundred pounds. So I paid Dad back (he would not have wanted it but Mum insisted) and we will spend some of the remainder of the money on this trip. It feels a little frivilous really but I think we need the break.

This morning we walked down to the village to get some stuff from the freezer for dinner and some shopping ready for Jen (croftsitter), then back home for lunch. Scarlett and I finished her letter and then I chopped wood for a couple of hours making some good headway in the woodpile. Not sure whether Jen will keep the fire lit all day long or be keen to chop some wood herself anyway so trying to make sure she has sufficient without leaving so much she just burns all our supplies!

Really tired tonight after a few nights of crappy broken sleep thanks to the wind and the wood chopping has made me all achey too. I was ranty at the kids this evening and think I am really just ready for my holiday now!

Squeezed in between Gertrude and Henry

Ady emptied the Rangerover of wood and seaweed onto the croft this morning. I sewed up my jeans – I won several second hand pairs on ebay just after Christmas so currently have about 5 pairs without holes in so my worst holey pair were relegated to repair material and my second worst have now been patched up and become my croftin’ jeans. Then I went outside too. While Ady moved the seaweed into the walled garden and spread it on the raised beds then carried some of the wood up the hill next to the wood shed ready for splitting, I took the netting off the top of the fruit cage and rolled it back to the sides. It has been getting more torn and flapping in the wind catching on the tops of the fruit trees and damaging them. I had been intending to repair it again but decided that as it is not actually needed on there until there is fruit on the trees and bushes way later in the year it would be more prudent to remove it during the winter storms so did that instead.

We came back up for lunch and then went down to do laundry. We called at the shop for some firelighters and peat blocks then put the washing on. While it was doing we had a wander round the walled garden at the back of the castle where various residents had had allotment plots over the years. We were looking to see if anything was coming back to life for the spring on Ranger Mike’s old plot when Ady trod on a really overgrown shower door and then an old window with perspex in. They were both really overgrown but intact so we dug them out and have put them aside to collect next time we are down in the village with the car. They will make perfect cold frames. The washing finally finished so we stuck it in the tumble dried and walked round to Fliss’ as she had invited us round for chocolate cake. Had a lovely hour or so chatting with her, drinking tea and eating cake, then back to collect the washing.

On the way home we met Mike & Deb who had called up at the Croft to visit us so chatted to them for a while, then Mr Rhys at the croft gate. We fed the animals and then I came in to get dinner on (Scarlett had peeled potatoes, carrots and parsnips in preparation while Davies was tidying his room) and Ady quickly split a load of logs. A round of Blokus before the genny went on, we all talked to my parents on the phone, I had a shower and we had a late dinner and Doctor Who.

Definitely made the most of the window of calm between storms. Anticipating doing very little other than crafting and watching iplayer tomorrow.

Gertrude

Thursday – A one boat day instead of two. We went down to collect a delivery of wine – Aldi are doing wine deliveries and had some good offers on with free delivery.  I got a crate of fizz and a crate of white for under £50 which is an excellent price. Even Jinty’s cheapest of all cheap white (white is basically vinegar!) is not that cheap. In the morning there had been some online facebook based drama with Fliss which had had her upset so Ali and I made a very obvious show of supporting her at the pier too which was good. We went to the freezer and then Ady collected some washing and some firewood which Mr Rhys had chopped up for us while I carried a sack of cat food from Fliss’ car into the house for her as she has a bad back. We collected the post and then came home.

We had lunch and had planned to move seaweed and firewood around a bit but the weather prevented it as Gertrude swept in.

Friday – A bad nights sleep all round and aside from going out to feed the animals, walk the croft and check all was well we didn’t do much else. We watched a cartoon adaptation of Animal Farm which was interesting and provoked discussion about political ideologies, ate pizza and watched Doctor Who.

Saturday – Another windy night. I’d got up in the night to take the clock down and move some candles around as it had gotten really windy again. We had to go to the village to collect stuff from the freezer and post Lovefilm even thought the boat today was cancelled so in a weather window this morning Ady and I did that. Ali had messaged to say she might come up this afternoon and her and Eve arrived with brownies shortly after we got back. They stayed for a couple of hours chatting, Ady went out to empty the two wheelbarrows of seaweed he and I had brought back with us onto raised beds but the almost constant rain, hail, snow and wind meant I didn’t venture out again. I did manage to dehydrate the milk and water kefir grains in preparation for us going off next week but that’s about all. It’s died down a bit now and tomorrow is supposed to be better so we are planning to get laundry done and have been invited to Fliss’ for chocolate cake too.

Must blog harder…

Friday – erm…. nothing at all springs to mind. I know we had pizza, I know we watched Doctor Who. Oh, wait, yes, Fliss came up for lunch. I chopped wood in the morning and Ady did loo emptying, Fliss came up for lunch and chats about craft events.

Saturday – we went down to the boat as we had petrol coming off. It was a busy boat so we chatted to folk, our animal feed delivery came off and we also did our laundry. So we came back from the boat and transfered the animal feed into the Rangerover, then went back down to the village to collect seaweed while the washing dried. We got the car across the river with the animal feed and unloaded all that, then came in for lunch. After lunch it had rained a bit but we managed to get the car across then it died having got water in in it. We loaded the seaweed in but left it there rather than attempt another river crossing.

We’d had a really productive week so I declared it Prosecco Saturday and Ady drank a whole four pack of beers. We’re so rock n roll.

Sunday – the weather was horrid so I dossed in bed with a book having a lie in. Then Ady and I went down to the village to help with prep for Burns Night. Ady took on the icky task of cleaning out the hall kitchen fridge, while I helped peel and chop a load of potatoes, then diced up the tops (heart, lungs, liver) of a deer hind that had been boiled for a few hours. Really interesting the different textures between the different organs. I fried that off and then added it to stock and the haggis mix (oatmeal and spices) and then with Ady’s help stuffed the two massive casings. Doug, David and Lesley were there with us in the kitchen, Ali and Clare and Dan were in the hall laying out tables and clearing up. It was a nice few hours. Baby Dougal prevented Lesley from doing as much as she’d planned so I ended up whipping the cream and making the cranachan too while she supervised and cuddled Dougal. We came home for dinner which was a lovely roast chicken.

Monday – the weather was dire again, Ady and I walked down to collect the battery which had been on charge but several power cuts in the village meant it had gone off. I’d taken down some butchers string to tie off the haggis so did that and we collected the pole from Gav’s old bell tent which we have the canvas for and had thought the pole was forever lost when Neil and Lesley found it under their spare bed in the room Gav and Laura had used – yay!  Reminded me of a very funny afternoon with Clara trying to work out how long or short to cut a huge bamboo pole as a replacement. We managed it and stuck it in a welly with a deodrant lid on top. Back at home for lunch and we watched some wildlife documentaries, I had a shower and wrote our poems and then we got ready to go down to the village.

A fabulous evening down there, lovely food, good poems, some singing and lots and lots and lots of drink. One good thing to come from having been a director is my friendship with Lesley, Ali and Fliss, the four of us are very close now and they all stood by me like sisters when we had our drama earlier this month. There is one particular photo of the four of us from the evening which just makes me smile every time I look at it. I have felt pretty lonely here on Rum at times for good friends but four years in I know that there is a real bond between us four.  It was a very late night, I think Ady and I got home just before 2am.

Tuesday – which of course meant nothing much happened on Tuesday! πŸ˜‰ Davies didn’t even get up until nearly 4pm. I didn’t get up til 11 although Ady had been up and getting on with things much earlier. I mostly drank tea, ate toast and chocolate, crocheted and watched wildlife programmes with Scarlett on iplayer. I was not remotely productive but had a happy glow of a lovely evening and the pleasure of looking through the photos, well over half of which were just unflattering ones of us all in various states of drunken rowdiness and hysterical laughter! I did ring my parents and manage to write a blog post but that was the sum total of my achievements for the day.

Today – much more productive. Ady dealt with loo emptying while I got the remaining six rounds of wood up the hill and chopped, split and stacked them all. It was glorious and sunny, I was actually in short sleeves for a while when I was axe swinging. The weather suddenly turned though and an hour later it was snowing! We had lunch and then I headed off to Crafternoon with Fliss and Ali. Chatter, tea, brownies, post mortem-ing Burns Night and a small amount of crafting. Back up the hill for a round of Blokus and then dinner.

To and fro and back again

It was tipping down with rain this morning so we stayed in. Ady and I spent some time looking at our original croft business plan and talking about what needs to be brought up to date, what has stayed the same and brainstorming a few money making ideas. The kids drifted in and joined in with this and between the four of us we came up with some excellent new ideas for things. More research needed but everyone was buzzing with enthusiasm for something they could be getting on with. We had loads of wind power too so had the internet on all day and being able to fire off an email or google something quickly makes all the difference to being inspired and answering those ‘I wonder if….’ questions. I conversed with Calmac about getting the ferry manifest (the list of freight on board) emailed to us in advance of the boat arriving so that we know whether we need to go down and collect stuff, so have been collating email addresses of everyone on island who wants to be included in that too. I also spent some time researching events funding but have put that aside as a bigger project for another day. I did bookmark some pages to refer back to though.

We had lunch while we were doing all that, sort of in shifts as everyone was having something different. Then it finally stopped raining so Ady and I headed down to the village while Scarlett had a shower. We had left the wheelbarrow down at the workshop so we could bring a battery we were charging down there back up in it along with the veg box. Jinty was open so we also collected some milk, cheese, orange juice (Scarlett is on a real calcium and vitamin C kick at the moment, we’ve all been talking about healthier eating) and got sucked in by out of date bargains too so ended up with a very full wheelbarrow. We checked the car for post and discovered our new battery had arrived – in a box marked ‘HEAVY BATTERY, CONTAINS ACID!!!!!’ quite how that got passed by Calmac without the need for a dangerous goods note I don’t know! They like us at Calmac though, when we came home last week they said they had been holding all our parcels back for us as they knew we were off and didn’t want them to just hang around at the pier πŸ™‚ That proved too much for one wheelbarrow so we left the barrow there and walked back up to collect the car. Back down to load everything in the car and shove the wheelbarrow on the roof rack, chat with Bad Neil who drove by while we were doing so and then drive back up the hill. While reloading the wheelbarrow we realised we’d left the post down in the village still so walked back down to collect that. There is still a battery and a slab of tinned pasta in the car but we can collect that next time we’re passing with the wheelbarrow, or bringing a car across the river…

So, much longer than we planned we got home, feeding the animals and bringing in firewood as we came. Davies put away all the shopping and veg while Ady got the fire going and I brushed Scarlett’s hair. Then we played Quirkle which had arrived in the post. I had been looking at the price on amazon and ebay and bought it off ebay but it arrived in an amazon box which had me really fretting that I had duplicate ordered and got it from both. I guess the seller sells though both and just used an amazon box but it really freaked me out and I had to check all my orders on both to reassure myself I was not going mad.

That took us to genny o”clock, dinner and Warehouse 13 which arrived in the post.

Hurty finger, hurty knee

Finger is my ring finger on my left hand I know why it hurts – it’s from whacking logs with the sledgehammer and axe to split them. Another couple of logs brought up the hill and chopped and split this morning though so hurty finger justified.

The hurty knee is of slightly more concern; my left knee, hurting on the inside. No obvious bruising, swelling or redness and I don’t recall injuring it nor can recall having done anything. I am worried it is arthritis. It is worse in the morning although it has been painful in bed at night too and I am concerned it is the cold and damp. Will see what happens with it…

In other news we watched an interesting but quite sad documentary about a woman studying giant otters who raised an orphaned otter. It left her and she was worried it had died but she never found it.

This afternoon was Crafternoon, so Ady and I walked down to the village, visited Clare and her new compost loo building down at the yurt, then Ady came home and I went to Fliss’. It was one of those afternoons when the conversation about parenting made me all bitchy so I came away feeling low level grr-y about it but otherwise nice to hang out with Lesley, Fliss, Ali and Debs. I got home without a torch πŸ™‚

Scarlett was painting, Ady and Davies were watching a James Bond film. Davies had proclaimed it ‘a travesty that I am 15 and have never seen a James Bond film’ recently so Ady got 3 dvds in a box set for him to watch with him while I said I needed him to hear my monologue about sexism and how women are portrayed before he watched it. Not sure which one they were watching but Scarlett looked deeply unimpressed and Davies chose to turn it off so we could all play Blokus when I got home. This may well be for my benefit rather than a deliberate eschewing of all things 007 of course…

Spoke to the friends we are staying with for a few nights when we go off in a couple of weeks to finalise plans and realised the Screen Machine (mobile cinema lorry, very cool, like a micro machine!) is in Mallaig while we’re staying with them. Alison and her friend had already booked to see a film so I am joining them for that and then Ady and Leon are taking Davies, Scarlett and their two girls (these are the friends D&S met at Outward Bound) to see the new Star Wars. Alison had suggested we all go but I declined πŸ˜‰ which is excellent as that was on the kids’ list of things they wanted to do while we were off and they get to see it with mates too :).

Dinner was pork mince bolognaise – it worked well for bolognaise but Davies didn’t like it for meatballs. Made me realise how very lean indeed our usual venison mince is though – this was our own pork mince but so much fat came from it.

We did, we did get that seaweed

A very productive day in which teenagers acted a bit like teenagers which I found annoying.

After Popmaster this morning we all went down to the village, called at the shop to post letters, buy stamps and get milk, then along to the pier to meet the boat and send off empty jerry cans for petrol. We caught up with a few people there too which was good. Then along to the freezer to get some stuff out for dinner tomorrow and put some credit in the electric meter there, then along to the beach to gather seaweed. It was way quicker than we expected thanks to a good tide and a load of seaweed washed up. We filled about 15 bags really quickly, stashed them all on the roof and then drove back to the fork. We transferred everything in to the Rangerover then Bonnie and I walked back with the wheelbarrow while Ady and the kids drove across the river and part way up the croft. They went up and got lunch ready while Ady and I put the seaweed around all the fruit trees and bushes.

We watched the final part of the Gordon Buchanan polar bear diary and then Ady and I collected some wood and brought it up the hill while the kids cleared up lunch. I chopped the wood up while Ady cleaned out the chimney, then we went and got another wheelbarrow full each. I chopped a bit more and then Ady and I fed all the animals and walked around the top of the croft. It’s been a really still, misty, damp day but being outside for most of it has been good.

We came in and played a couple of rounds of Blokus and a game of frustration before putting the genny on. Roast pork (our own) for dinner and a desperation for lovefilm to get here as we have nothing new to watch which is causing friction!

Settling back in

Saturday – Post office for me in the morning, good to be back behind the counter again πŸ™‚ I was busy with visitors rather than anyone actually needing the shop or post office though. Ali, Fliss, Stevie, Mike, Trudi (3 times!) and Neil all came in. Stevie, Trudi and Fliss all hung around a bit as though they wanted to talk / ask something but seemed to all be in each others’ way so none of them did. I had a cup of tea and chat with Neil though which made everything feel a bit more back to normal. I was supposed to collect some food from the freezer but Trudi walked part way home to the croft with me which distracted me from the detour so I forgot. I remembered just as I reached the croft gate so came home anyway for lunch.

It was snowing, sleeting and raining on and off but after lunch it turned into proper swirling snow for  a while and Ady and I went down to the village together to the freezer. We took a dead battery down to charge up and collected a bag of coal, some peat blocks and a sack of dog food from the car on the way back up.

I did our tax returns online when we got home. We are about to draw up a business plan for the next three years here on the croft which will help shape our tax returns for the year 2016-2017 and make things a bit more comprehensive. On the list of things to do while indoors…

Sunday – In the morning Ady emptied the loo. It does not drain as quickly as we had hoped so we have been pondering ways to sort this out. For now we have invested in a wet and dry hoover which allows us to pump it out to put on a humanure heap and means it is a much, much quicker task to do. Ady is really pleased with this idea and it worked well. I cleared all the shelves above the windows in the lounge and started on cleaning up the kitchen area, taking all of the herbs and spices off the shelf and throwing out and cleaning up that area. It looks much better. In the middle of that Ali and Eve came up for a visit. Scarlett and Eve went out to feed the animals and then Scarlett sat and played with Eve for a while, while Ali and I chatted and Ady came in and joined us. Scarlett was really good with Eve. We needed to get some stuff from the freezer so Ady and I walked down with Ali and Eve to the village. We had planned to go and collect seaweed in the afternoon but the day got away from us with them coming up so we postponed that.

Today – we had planned to postpone it to today but it has rained all day long so instead we have caught up on various downloaded iplayer things which were running out (two David Walliams book screenplays and the first two in a Gordon Buchanen polar bear series), I have crocheted, mostly finished the monthly newsletter, written the info sheets to send to Jen who is croft sitting for us in a couple of weeks and done an inventory of the seeds we have and a list of the ones we need to buy. Ady fed the animals and did some tidying up, Scarlett watched animal documentaries and did some painting, Davies watched stuff with us and did some modelling clay stuff. It was a nice day.

Maybe tomorrow we’ll get to that seaweed…

How to catch up?

A quick whizz through I guess:

Tuesday – the scan happened. Ady was booked in for 4pm. I’d been told by a radiographer friend to ask when the results would be back on the ward so did so and was told probably the following day. We were still a bit despairing at that point, not really knowing what to expect next. Ady was fading a bit, having convinced himself there was going to be something more sinister than gallstones found on the scan. He was struggling with the hospital environment, I was stressing about money and general logistics. The rest of the world was ‘getting back to normal after Christmas’ – we were finding it hard to grasp on to any sort of normal at all.

Wednesday – I went in first thing and we sat, feeling utterly surreal on my birthday. The clock on the car dashboard, the date on the BBC morning news, my usual 10:10am phonecall from my mum (the time I was born) all making it even weirder. Then suddenly at about midday the doctor came in and said that the surgeon was on his way to talk to us. He swept in, explained that gallbladders were his personal special interest, drew us diagrams, congratulated me on my googling and understanding of it all, talked best and worst case scenarios and everything inbetween, got Ady to sign the consent form and then swept out again, presumably to scrub up, while a team of nurses came in and prepped Ady for surgery. There was a brief moment when we were alone, Ady lying on the wheelie bed they were taking him away on, the echoes of the risks explained to us for the consent form hanging above us like speech bubbles in the air. Ady said to me “I’m really fucking scared”. I told him he’d be fine and I’d see him later, focussed really hard on not crying all the way down the lift to the carpark, phoned my Dad and held it together, went back to the hotel and told the kids Ady was in surgery, then walked across to the shopping mall for  more clean pants and clothes for Ady. While in there, in one of those unexplained and utterly random acts I decided to mark my birthday to myself by having my ear pierced, something I’ve been wanting to do for ages. I don’t know if I wanted some pain, or a tangible reminder of that day or whether I was trying to just be utterly irreverent but all of my ear piercings have had some sort of personal meaning to me – usually rebellion against someone or something. As soon as we could return to the carpark (2 hours away) we went back and sat in Ady’s room waiting for him to return. The surgeon came in, having left Ady in recovery to tell me it had all gone well, it had not been a complete removal of the gall bladder as as suspected part of it had adhered itself to his liver, it had been really nasty and infected but they had managed keyhole surgery, Ady had remained stable throughout and that he could not have been happier with how it had gone. I wanted to hug him but felt it would have been inappropriate. I think he felt the virtual hug from me nonetheless. A very groggy Ady was wheeled back in about half an hour later. He slowly came round and despite being clearly post op and a bit rough the relief was tremendous. When we finally left the kids and I went to Frankie & Bennies to have dinner in honour of my birthday and Ady being OK. We went upstairs to the amusement arcade and had 50p each to blow on silly arcade games. The strangest birthday I think I have ever had…

Thursday – Ady was recovering but it was slow and it was clear he would not be out of hospital that day. I had my usual stint there during the morning, in the afternoon the kids and I attempted to find a laundrette but failed. We got some half price tickets to the circus which was in the grounds of the complex we were staying in so decided to visit that. We went into the hospital slightly earlier for our late afternoon / evening visit, then on to the circus before getting takeaway pizza for dinner.

Friday – Release day! I massively overstayed my 4 hours in the carpark as we were kept waiting ages and ages for the discharge letter and the final meds from the pharmacist. Ady had been kicked out of his room so they could clean it ready for the next patient so we were just in the day room waiting along with a couple of other people for about 2 hours. Finally we were handed the letter and bag of meds and that was us, free to go. Several of the nurses / catering staff came to shake Ady’s hand and wish him well, as usual he had made an impression on the ward and seemed quite beloved to all πŸ™‚ . Leaving the hospital and stepping outside felt monumentous! I showed Ady all the landmarks I had been familiar with on the drive to the hotel. The receptionist who had checked me and the kids in when we arrived on NYE was on duty again so got to meet Ady. It was amazing having him back with us – the longest in all our 22 years together that we have slept apart. The first new year not seen in together since I was 18 (I had spent NYE with Ady and other friends the year before we got together), the first birthday in as many years too. Davies had remarked that I’d been sleeping on the wrong side of the bed in the hotel, I think it felt wrong to sleep on my usual side so I had slept on Ady’s instead because then I didn’t miss him so much, the space was not on my left because there was no excess of bed on my left anyway…

Saturday – we took it easy. We had a cooked breakfast as Ady had been craving toast and sausages. The lovely receptionist told us breakfast was on her when we went to pay for it. She said we had had such a crazy week we deserved it and she was just so pleased to see a happy ending to the drama of our arrival. What a lovely, lovely girl πŸ™‚  Ady wanted to walk a bit so he, Scarlett and I walked across to the mall and wandered round for a bit. Ady was taking two baths a day in an effort to keep his wound clean and because he found the water soothing so we spent lots of time in the hotel room too. In the evening we ate in the hotel restaurant downstairs which was dreadful but the service was so friendly it made up for it. The staff there were so wonderful all week.

Sunday – I wanted to be on our way fairly early to ensure we did the drive in daylight. There were horror stories of diversions and closed roads due to snow or flooding and although it should be 100 miles and about 2.5 hours from Glasgow to Fort William it can easily be double the miles and time if the snow gates through Aviemore or the road around Loch Lomond is closed. We called in to the Sainsburys for food and drink supplies for the drive and headed off. Ady dozed for much of the drive and it was completely smooth and straightforward. Our room in the Premier Inn was not ready so we walked around the town for a while until it was. We had dinner in McDonalds and everyone had baths and slept very well.

Monday was a restful day of more baths, some mooching round the charity shops, buying some thank you gifts for folk on Rum and then a two for one dinner in the restaurant (I had found so many vouchers and promotions for food while we were off). It was a fairly early night as we had a fairly early start the following morning.

Tuesday – Homeward Bound. We loaded our stuff onto the van and were greeted by Calmac staff who knew all about the whole drama – so lovely to feel ‘home’ even in Mallaig πŸ™‚ The ferry was us four, an SNH staff member coming to Rum between boats and one bloke heading to Canna. The pier was quiet but we got help loading the car up and then drove into the village. We caught up with Fliss and Ali and then came back home. The kids walked to the croft while Ady and I swapped the stuff into the other car and drove across the river. All was well on the croft and in the caravan and we were just bringing the second load of stuff up when Bonnie appeared ahead of Ali. She was utterly thrilled to see us all.  Ali helped with the final load of stuff and came in for a cup of tea. The table was laden with soup, bread, venison stew and a cake – so all the food we’d need for lunch and dinner that day, along with a welcome home card made by the school and signed by everyone on Rum and all of our various batteries fully charged up by Ali. Fliss had been in and lit the woodburner so it was warm and cosy. We have such wonderful friends here.

Ali headed off and we slowly unpacked and settled in. I walked down to the village to collect Bonnie’s crate as Ali had not been able to work out how to dismantle it, I stayed for a cup of tea and a chat with her while Ady fed all the animals and reoriented himself on the croft. It was amazing to be home.

Wednesday – we wrote up a list of things to achieve this week and agreed to just go slow and do one thing each day. That day was clearing out the food storage space under the sofa and putting things into plastic tubs. We also cleared through all the Christmas food and tidied the kitchen up a bit. In the afternoon I went down to Fliss’ for Crafternoon.

Thursday – Laundry Day – we had bags and bags of dirty clothes, some from before we went away and all the clothing from while we were away so Ady, Scarlett and I went down to the village to get it all washed and dried. While we were down there I caught up with Ali at post office, spoke to Jinty on the phone, we gave Ali a joint of pork, Ady caught up with Mike, Ross and Doug, we collected the post and got stuff out of the freezer for dinners for the next couple of nights. In the afternoon we ran the spare genny for a bit to charge up some of the batteries and for Davies and I to do some bits on his laptop.

Friday – Ady and I did a stocktake of animal feed, checked the pig fence and chatted with Stevie who appeared while were out on the croft. In the afternoon Ady helped Scarlett start a big bedroom declutter, Davies was doing some animation and I spent a couple of hours chopping firewood before coming in for a shower and to make pizza dough. We all played Blokus which I got cheap in the amazon sale  and is the only sort of game I like – quick, with minimal rules, no reading, counting or complicated ideas.

This evening I have been sorting out the details for our Edinburgh trip. We almost called it off after the drama and expense of the last two weeks but actually we could all do with the ‘holiday’ and have already arranged to have a croft sitter here, to meet up with friends in Edinburgh and Glen Uig and Scarlett has her first two appointments for her brace fitting. Lots of debating Travelodge over PremierInn, saver deals you pay for now with no cancellation or flexible rooms that cost more but can be cancelled up til the same day, train ticket prices in advance with no refunds or a railway card for Highland residents. I think we have it sorted now with a balance of all of the above…

Tomorrow I’m being Mrs Post Office, so on that basis I am off to bed.

So last year…

The day before New Years Eve. Is probably one I will never, ever forget.

In the morning we had one of our Family Conferences. We had had a lot of the four of us worrying about what each other was doing rather than what we were doing ourselves – me as much as anyone else – and I was feeling really pissed off. So I made everyone write a list of how they wanted their life to be, what they would like everyone else to do and read them all out to see how much our expectations of ourselves and each other differed. I wanted us to all talk about stuff like time of getting up in the morning, going to bed, how much time we spend together and how much of our own space we have, what is important to us as individuals and as a family unit. They other three always roll their eyes when I do stuff like this but it always makes everyone feel so much happier and empathic towards each other and helps shape the choices we make.

I have also been wobbling madly about life on Rum generally, these last few months have just been too bloody hard being away from Sussex, my Mum, Dad and Frazer’s little family. I have always said that I can justify living so far away, offset the challenging living conditions and put up with all that life on Rum has to test us with if living there is fulfilling enough of the dreams that the four of us have. I needed some affirmation that it still does. I cried and ranted at everyone and explained that from my point of view I was prepared to re-look at what we all wanted and move back to the mainland. I have always been the one leading the other three and they have followed along on a lot of my wilder plans, that dynamic has altered as the kids have gotten older. I told them all that ‘I would get on the ferry and leave Rum tomorrow. I am not sure this is meeting all our needs and it’s too tough living this way if it is not doing that’.

The lists were very interesting reading. We talked about our ideal day and how the other three fit into that, what our expectations are on each other and debated whether they are fair or realistic. Ady would rather everyone was up fairly early, Davies and I are not really prepared to do that as we both value our time alone after everyone else has gone to bed – me in the lounge, Davies using his phone in bed, to catch up online with friends, blog etc. Scarlett wants to spend more time together doing family activities like walks, Ady wants more help and input on feeding the animals, he is less interested in the growing crops side of stuff, he wants to spend more time with me on taking the croft forward. I am keen to continue with writing work and it’s important to me that we eat lunch and dinner together every day. Both Ady and I felt we wanted to get more involved in volunteer stuff down in the village, particularly around the things we are passionate and interested in – socialising and events. Davies wants to develop some more business ideas and wants help with that, Scarlett wants to do more crafts with me. I feel the children should be helping more with some of the practical tasks which keep the croft running. It was really positive to talk about all this stuff and articulate some of what niggles us. It’s interesting to vocalise calmly what makes us cross with each other especially as it doesn’t always manifest itself as related to that. I was really concerned that living on Rum was making our lives harder without adding much, the lists from the others showed me that actually many of the specifics of living on Rum are essential to the aspects of their life which are really important to them.

The end result was a list of things we are all going to be more tolerant and accepting of in each other, a list of things we are allowed to nag / berate in each other, a bit more of a shape to our days and some more motivation for all of us. It’s far easier to be accepting of someone’s behaviour if you appreciate how important doing that is to them, far easier to modify some of your actions if you fully realise the impact on others. I spent so many hours trying to make my parents have conversations like this with each other when I was a child / young teen and not understanding how if you claim to love someone you would want to change everything about them, particularly if it is going to make them unhappy. It’s all too easy to lose track of that clarify when you live in the situation yourself though.

So, a fairly intense and emotional start to that day. I was already knackered as a result. We’d also been debating long and hard how to spend new years eve. Our first year on Rum we had attended a communal meal, our second had been with the Barts visiting, last year the weather was poor and the four of us stayed home alone up on the croft. This year we had a couple of possible options down in the village – beers at the shop with some live music happening later in the hall, a party at Fliss’ or we could stay home again. I was wanting to spend it with Rum friends but Davies and Scarlett were not keen on Fliss’ party as they other little kids would be there and the last few times we’ve been down for an evening the kids have left early to go home. That’s fine on a normal evening and I love that they can do that but on NYE I wanted to be with them at midnight so was worried we’d either get dragged away from a good evening with friends to go home with the kids when they’d had enough, or feel bad that they were hanging around waiting for us but not enjoying themselves. We were still undecided.

Ady and the kids had gone to bed but I was aware Ady was not right. He was uncomfortable sitting watching a dvd and kept wriggling about but claimed it was indigestion. Then he got back up and said he was now in pain. It sounded like trapped wind so he took some tablets for that (which I had had previously in the year so had stocked up on) and we googled exercises to help with that and he did some lying on the floor bringing his legs up. He was getting worse rather than better and then started being really sick. That was the point, retrospectively, when I should have taken over and called the helicopter but we are still in mainland mentality and don’t want to be a bother or hysterical or waste precious medical experts time. I think dialling 999 was drummed into us as kids as something you ONLY do in an emergency and as such I have only ever dialled it once before in my life when there was a car crash just outside our house. It was obvious Ady needed some attention though so I rang 111 and spoke to NHS direct. I would probably not bother doing that again, it took about 5 minutes (which is a really long time when you have a groaning husband throwing up) to even speak to an actual person and they were reading down a checklist of heart attack symptoms which I had already long since done myself. I was pretty sure it was not a heart attack and suspected food poisoning or appendicitis, both of which I thought would require off island assistance. On the mainland I would have taken him to A&E, as that was not an option to do myself, I should have taken the Rum version which is helicopter but it always feels so dramatic to airlift someone off the island.

NHS direct had no one available to speak to me so said they’d ring back. 15 minutes later he was in worse pain and starting to scare me so I wanted to ring 999 but he was with it enough to tell me not to so I rang 111 again. They told me to give him paracetamol and that a doctor would call me back. Finally I spoke to someone who was able to make the call for me that it was beyond anything in our first aid kit and that he needed to be seen by a doctor so he would sort out the helicopter. That all took well over an hour and I would not have done it that way with hindsight.

From then on I was talking to coastguard and helicopter control units. Ady laid on the sofa and although I kept checking on him he said he’d rather be left alone. He dozed a little but with in a lot of pain and I was more worried he was falling unconscious. Scarlett was asleep but Davies was wide awake. I went in to him and he was just sitting on his bed looking terrified so I got him up and we sat in the bedroom where there was phone signal and we could see the helicopter if it came. We saw lights start moving around in the village and then a car coming half way up the croft, moving both our cars out of the way to get past. It was Sean and Dave in coastguard mode. Sean gave Ady some of his own asprins (Sean has had heart problems and a bypass op) and then they started clearing and lighting up a spot on the croft. I had been discussing with the helicopter where to land – usually they land infront of the castle but I had explained it would mean me walking Ady down to the village and that the croft would be better as 20 acres of open grassland and a caravan as a marker. We’d had all the lights on so that we could be seen from above and that ran the lighting battery out so I had to disconnect that as it was buzzing so we were down to torches and candles.

Finally at 415am the helicopter landed behind the caravan. I had been told he’d be being taking to the hospital in FW so had booked accommodation for that night for me and the kids and Bonnie as there was a ferry later that day. It was a naval helicopter and the guy who came in said they’d be taking him to Glasgow for the cardiac unit though. I then started to worry that actually it was his heart as that was clearly what everyone was responding to. He asked Ady to grade his pain on a scale of 1-10 and Ady said 10. Then they swept him away. Sean and Dave headed off and suddenly it was 5am and everything was quiet. Scarlett made us all a drink and then I sent the kids to bed to try and get some sleep. I wanted to give the helicopter the 30 mins needed to get to the hospital and then speak to someone for an update once he’d been admitted, particularly as it now sounded like it might be his heart. Except I had no signal suddenly. This was the scariest part, although I knew Ady was now on the way to hospital I could not reach him, they could not reach me, it made me realise how lucky I’d been to have signal earlier to ring everyone. It was freezing cold as the fire had long since gone out, dark because the battery had run out and it was not safe to start the genny as I thought it probably needed refilling with petrol which Ady usually does in the morning. I was knackered from the whole day’s adventures and wondering if I’d ever actually see Ady again. I debated waking the kids to say I was going down to the village to use someone’s phone but didn’t really want to leave them alone after everything and didn’t want to drag them down with me either.

I decided to book a car for later that day and try and change the hotel booking to Glasgow so put the internet on, reckoning I had about 30 minutes worth of charge in that battery. I got that done and then decided to see if there was an app to make a phone call using wifi to the hospital. I found one, downloaded it, it didn’t work because it needed to send me a text to verify which needed signal to get the text (which later came through about 7am just as I finally fell asleep), I found another one and actually got through. They put me on hold and then suddenly Ady was on the line. He sounded drunk with the morphine, and very far away but alive. It was 6am and I knew I had a really long day ahead so I went to bed but was so cold and hyped up I couldn’t sleep or read or anything. If it had been light I could have started tidying up but it was gone 8am before it was light so I laid there trying to compose a plan and a list of what needed doing.

At 830am Sean, Ali and Eve came up having been down at their house doing the same since Sean had gotten home. Sean was helicoptered off with a heart attack the year before we moved to Rum. He had a bypass and a full recovery but Ali with baby Eve had been in the same situation as me (albeit in a house with landline and power) so they really understood what I was going through. They offered to drive us down to Glasgow and to take Bonnie and look after the animal feeding. I took them up on the Bonnie sitting as I had planned to take her with me but knew she would hate it and be another burden for me, and the animal feeding but had already sorted out car hire and felt I would be better having a car at my disposal. Ady had rung to say they now suspected gallstones and his heart was fine so the initial panic was abating and the more practical side of everything was starting to feel overwhelming.

Scarlett fed the animals and cleaned up the muddy footprints all over the static, I washed up (there was so much washing up!), tied up the wind turbine, found holdalls and packed trying to remember stuff like contact lenses, sat nat, chargers and stuff. We’ve never had a speedy departure from Rum before. I managed to cancel the Bonnie part of the booking. For someone who is mildly phone phobic I spent more time on the phone in 8 hours than in the last 5 years! Scarlett was amazing at all the supporting role stuff – doing all the making breakfast and insisting I eat, packing up stuff for lunch, emptying the fridge into a carrier bag to take to the freezer so we didn’t come back to a fridge full of gone off food etc. Davies is excellent at the supportive presence stuff and making me laugh. We were a good team.

Finally it was nearly ferry time so we drove down to the boat via the freezer, dropped off the rubbish I’d thought to bring down and a few folk came to see us off – Neil & Lesley, Sean & Ali, Fliss. On the boat I started to panic a bit, the next issue was not having the code for the key safe with the car keys in it. I had rung everyone I could think of to ask and got nowhere. The bloke who manages the practical stuff works for Calmac on the pier so I was hoping the reason he was not answering his phone was because he was at work, meanwhile folk on Rum were trying to find out the code for me too. By the time we docked I had a text message with the code and Stewart was there to meet me with the code too. Into the car and on the road by 4pm. We stopped at FW to get some bottled water and sweets but otherwise drove straight through. It was a hideous drive really, I was so, so tired, it was snowing or raining for most of the drive, all in the dark, on windy potholed roads. Hitting Glasgow was a relief in some ways as the lighting was better but scary in others as I’ve not drive at motorway speeds for 5 years! It was NYE though so traffic was very light and we found the hospital easily, parked up and dashed in.

Ady looked dreadful. Old, ill, in pain and like a 20 years older version of himself. I was trying so hard to hold it all together as I didn’t want to upset him or scare the kids. We didn’t stay very long as we were hungry, tired and as yet had not told anyone other than those on Rum what was happening. We drove to the hotel, found a restaurant within the same complex (it’s a huge place with cinema, shopping mall, supermarkets and loads of food options) and got some food ordered. I rang my parents with a very brief ‘this has happened, it’s all fine, I don’t know much more at this stage, I’ll let you know as soon as I do’ call, persuaded the staff bringing our food and being horrified that we had *children* in there after 10pm to let us at least eat before we left and then pushed food around our plates. Checked in to the hotel and saw in 2016 with the London fireworks on TV and the curtains open over Glasgow. Finally got into bed around 1am, a full 24 hours after I should have done…

New Years Day was back to the hospital in the morning. Ady was looking a bit better. I asked for some soap for him to have a shower and we then realised he had not got spare clean pants in his rucksack, so the kids and I headed off to Asda to get food for them and clean pants and shower gel for Ady. We stayed with him until about 7pm. I did manage to find a doctor to talk to and asked all the questions Ady had not about what was happening, what they thought it might be and what the possible options for treatment were and what the various medications he was on were for. I felt a bit better for having had that chat. The evening got late again but I slept really well.

Saturday – I left the kids to have a chilled morning and went into hospital on my own. I was there for the consultants morning rounds and got a clearer picture and was able to ask lots more questions. We were told Monday / Tuesday for the MRI scan and learned it may be a few weeks before he is ready to go home which rather floored me. I left and rang my Dad and had to sit on a bench outside the hospital to have a bit of a cry before going into the car park. The relief of knowing he is ok and it’s anything really, really scary tempered with the come down of the adrenaline of the previous couple of days and the realisation that this could be a huge amount of time off Rum was starting to sink in. I think I have now managed to drive every possible route to the hospital and have a very intimate knowledge of the road layout between the hotel and hospital and every landmark inbetween, along with all the ways to get back on track after you take the wrong exit off the roundabout! πŸ˜‰ I collected the kids and we went into the mall on the hotel complex – considering it was selected in the middle of the night for proximity to the hospital we have been really lucky – it has a huge shopping mall, cinema and restaurants all nearby. Perfect for people who left home in a hurry packing enough clothes for just 3 days and only have croftin’ clothes anyway. Davies needed shoes, they both needed pants and socks, Scarlett needed pjs, Ady had conceded that slippers might be useful for him to start walking around inside the hospital (he left Rum in wellies) so it was Primark to the rescue! Then on to the hospital. We finally had our KFC for dinner that night – the previous 2 nights they had been closed by the time we arrived there thanks to NYE and NYday.

Sunday – We decided that getting breakfast would be sensible as kids eat free so if we ate late and lots then we would not need lunch. We did that and then the kids went back to the room while I had an hour or so shopping by myself. I needed stuff like contact lens cleaner so I can make my small amount of disposable lenses I brought off with me last a few weeks if needs be. I also needed some more tops so found some very cheap in the sales. I went along to the hospital then back to collect the kids to bring them back with me. We went to Sainsburys on the way for various supplies and then spent a couple of hours with Ady. He was looking much better and had been put onto tablet antibiotics rather than iv drip so was feeling much freer. We had a walk down to the foyer and back up (nine flights of stairs!). The kids and I had Pizza Express for dinner which was an unexpected triumph! We saw the fox we’ve been watching out of the hotel window in the car park on the walk back to the hotel and Scarlett got really close to it – a proper urban Fox and the Child moment πŸ˜‰ Scarlett had a bath and |I brushed her hair meaning a very late night.

Monday – This morning Ady woke me from a very lucid dream about NYE on Rum where I’d been having a great time with friends but Ady and the kids had made me leave early to go home. We’d arrived home in time to see midnight but then they disappeared to do something else meaning I spent midnight on my own. I had been so furious and upset with them in my dream so when Ady rang it really disorientated me. He was delighted to have had his cannula finally removed and had not realised it was still early (for me πŸ˜‰ ). We all went in to the hospital where he was looking sad and ill again having been sick πŸ™ He is also really bored and lonely and struggling with doing nothing and being inside all the time. I have offered books, puzzle books and all sorts of other options, he has TV, radio and internet in the room but really wants company or to just not be there. So tough πŸ™ If we were nearer to anyone he would at least have more visitors although I am there for at least 6 hours most days that still leaves lots of empty hours and none of the communal eating, watching stuff and just being together we normally have. It’s the weirdest week of our lives I think. Mairi who had mysteriously not been in touch finally rang me yesterday to say she;d been away for NY and was now back and had caught up having had no phone or wifi signal for the whole time. She offered all sorts of support and help and came to take the kids and I out for lunch today, bringing her dog so Scarlett could get a dog cuddling fix πŸ™‚ She brought Ady a book and me a bottle of fizz too. She took us back to pizza express as the kids new favourite place and we had a really good couple of hours. I really needed a friend in real life, it was wonderful.

I dropped the kids back at the room and went to spent another 3 hours with Ady. I’m planning to go in early tomorrow to hopefully be there for the doctors rounds and everything crossed maybe he’ll finally have this scan and we can get some answers and start making some plans.

And so that was Christmas….

Christmas Eve – Ady did some outside stuff in the morning, can’t remember what but it took longer than he expected. He came in and we were getting stuck into making Christmas crackers when Faye and then Dave turned up for a cup of tea, which rather disrupted that. We finished them after they had gone though. Scarlett was suffering with her cold so the kids didn’t come down to the shop but were happy for Ady and I to go, so we left them with the genny on doing online stuff and headed down for a few drinks. Ady did Whisky Club (all interested parties put a fiver in and club together for a bottle of whisky to share, they rate it out of five stars and write comments in the official whisky club book. It’s great fun. I don’t join in with the tasting because I get a bit nasty on whisky but I do bully everyone into writing in the book which is always worth it because it’s so funny to read the comments the following day. I bought a giant bottle of prosecco to share with Ali, Lesley and Fliss though, which felt somehow symbolic as it was the end of our reign together as directors / secretary for the trust. There are aspects of spending time with those three that I will miss having stepped down. Many, many more aspects I won’t miss about it to compensate however πŸ˜‰

We’d said we’d be home for 8pm and got in pretty much dead on. I made pizza and we watched Nativity 2. The kids were in bed just before midnight, we listened to the midnight service and put stuff under the tree, Ady made me a cup of tea and we were in bed just before 1am.

 

Christmas Day – all up by about 730am. Even the kids were not as desperate to be up early this year. Pressies opened and bacon sandwiches and bucks fizz for breakfast. We put the genny on for a couple of hours for Davies and I to set his laptop up. Dave and Faye came over with gifts for us all (Lush stuff, a bottle of fizz, some chocolate) and we gave them their photo mugs. We went outside in Christmas jumpers to get our traditional Christmas day photo, were joined by Waddles the piglet. The kids elected to stay home rather than come down the shop so Ady and I went down for a couple of drinks – Jinty was there, as was her Dad, Bad Neil called in for one and Dave and Faye came down. We walked back up with them. The dinner was all but ready but we decided to ring the Sussex Goddards which took longer than planned so dinner was late. Delicious though. Home made crackers pulled and silly hats worn. We then rang my parents before slumping on the sofas. We watched The Snowman and Father Christmas on dvd and everyone faded off to bed.

 

Boxing Day – Slower start obviously ;). We headed down to the bunkhouse, via the shop and bumping onto Lesley and her Mum, then Neil and his mum, out for separate walks for a Leftovers Party. We’d done this last Boxing Day in the hall and it had been quite a good afternoon but there is no heating in the hall just now so we had moved it to the bunkhouse where Kirsty (Jinty’s sister) and Ewan (Neil’s brother – a couple!) were staying. There was not a massive turn out but it was nice to hang out and chat for a couple of hours. We had fun playing with Ewans gift of a remote control copter drone thingie. We left before it got dark to come home and feed the animals. Ady and I swapped over all the stuff in the Jeep and the Rangerover – all the amazon subscribe and save food had come on Christmas Eve so the Jeep was filled with that plus our veg box, the Rangerover had an empty gas bottle and loads of rubbish to go to the pier. We had buffet style dinner.

Sunday – we are expecting dreadful weather coming in so had decided to spend the day getting stuff done outside. Davies was now coming down with the cold, Scarlett still residing in Snotsville so they stayed home and kept the fire going. Ady and I took the laundry to the castle, took the rubbish and gas bottle to the pier, collected some bags of hay from SNH (old unwanted stuff we are using as pig bedding), swapped the washing into the drier and then came home for lunch. I had put the ham to boil so swapped that over to bake. We chopped some firewood, got everything up the hill from the day before, all the amazon stuff put away and then walked back down to collect the laundry. In the evening we watched the first Sherlock. Both the kids enjoyed it.

Today – the ferry was cancelled meaning some folk are stranded here and others are stranded off. Not sure how the village is faring as the winds are mostly southerlies which don’t really affect us but its not been as windy as we’d been worrying about. More forecast tomorrow though and it has rained loads tonight. I made leek and potato soup and Ady made turkey soup, both using the stock from boiling the ham. All eaten and very delicious – a whole loaf of bread eaten with it, Scarlett had three bowls and four slices! We watched the second Sherlock and a film from the library, some animation about a knight called Justin, it was quite good. We rewatched Be Kind Rewind with dinner, the rest of the cold ham and chips.

 

Busy being sociable and festive and stuff

Saturday – Ady was working in the morning. We had diesel going off so I walked down to the shop and got various bits and pieces and cadged a lift to the pier with Neil, dropping all the shopping off at the Jeep which Ady had at the hostel on the way. It was a busy boat with several people going off and several more coming back. I got a lift back with Fliss. The last few parcels I’d been waiting for had arrived. Fliss dropped me off at the hostel where I caught up with Ady and we came home together laden with post, shopping and laundry.

I spent some time in the afternoon wrapping up stuff.

Sunday – More wrapping in the morning, got it all finished πŸ™‚ Then it was off to the kids Christmas party in the afternoon. We were also doing Secret Santa although there was only a handful of us there. We arrived first and I got the mulled wine on. I’d managed to pick up white wine from the shop the day before instead of red so we called in there on the way to swap them over. Jinty had finally done wages from post office for November and December and totted up all that we owed her from various veg orders and bulk buys of tinned stuff. The remainder was £25 to me πŸ™‚ She also gave me a giant bottle of prosecco as a Christmas staff bonus πŸ™‚

The bunkhouse party was fun if a little stilted. Good to see Lesley who I’d not caught up with a while. The kids all had fun, secret santas were gratefully received and all the mulled wine was consumed. Davies and Scarlett left a little before us but we were all home by about 8pm. I cooked our own sausages for dinner.

Monday – we thought it was the solstice although realised later that it was infact solstice the following day. I never knew it was ever any other date than 21st! I chopped firewood in the morning. It was Fliss’ Christmas party from 4pm so we headed down the hill to the village. We stopped at the shop first to do a big Christmas food shop of cheeses, booze and bits as the rent had gone in that morning. We left all the chilled stuff with Jinty to collect on Christmas Eve though. Then to Fliss’. Sean, Ali and Eve were already there but everyone else came along a lot later. Jed, Neil & Lesley, David. It was a fab evening, lovely food, loads of drink, good music and lots of laughs with excellent company. Fliss’ house is always really pretty at Christmas with loads of lights and candles and it was a really good night. Davies and Scarlett left around 1030pm, we were quite a bit later, getting home just before 1am I think.

Tuesday – Poor Ady, Neil & Fliss were up super early, meeting at 7am to skin and butcher two deer for Fliss. We were given a haunch for Ady’s help πŸ™‚ Fliss was really rough, Ady & Neil had been more mindful of the early start but Lesley, Ali and I were all a bit worse for wear too. I walked down with Bonnie to meet the ferry, calling in on Fliss & Ady before we went to the boat, collecting food from the freezer and pick up the car which we’d left in the village the night before. Neil, Jed and I were first at the pier and the ferry was really late in. Ali joined us and then Jinty and we had a post mortem of the night before, which is often as much fun as a good night I always think.

Then along to the bunkhouse for the IRCT AGM where I finally got to resign as a director. Ah πŸ™‚ It was a strange atmosphere with some undercurrents but thankfully no longer in my direction. I am massively relieved and happy to have stepped down, I will go back to it again at some point but for now I am really looking forward to 2016 being All About The Goddards. We came home bringing the car back with all the stuff back up to the croft. Big Dave and Faye had arrived on the ferry and Dave called over briefly in the afternoon. Ady brought up the shopping but we were all pretty knackered from the night before and had a hearty carb filled dinner and an early night.

Today – Steve turned up this morning with Christmas gifts, the news he has been diagnosed as bi polar and would like us to help be his first responders of noticing signs of manic or depressed states. He stepped up to be a director yesterday so was anxious about that too so I chatted to him about that for about an hour before he headed off. Meanwhile Ady had killed the turkey and was plucking and gutting that. Ady then did toilet maintenance while Scarlett and I made gingerbread and mince pies. The mince pies are delicious, the ginger bread houses were a disaster! I had thought that making gingerbread static caravans would be cool but I had rolled the mix out too thick and made them too big and not cooked long enough for them to be solid enough to stick together. I rapidly lost patience, Davies had a go and also gave up but Scarlett stuck at it and from a massive pile of gingerbread has constructed something resembling a house, using marzipan as a sort of polyfiller!

Festive film tonight was Sleepless in Seattle which turned out to be not very festive at all and infact a bit boring. Ah well. It’s pretty windy with some big gusts shaking the walls, Scarlett has come down with a cold and is feeling a bit sorry for herself. Tomorrow is supposed to be just making Christmas crackers and staying cosy.

Firewood and festiveness

This morning was firewood. It was sort of raining and not very nice but this afternoon was dreadful so definitely the right way round to spend the day. Ady unloaded the wood from the car onto the croft while I split and chopped four rounds / four bucketfulls. Hoping to get more done tomorrow / Sunday / Monday and have a decent stash to see us through the next couple of weeks. Every year I have excellent intentions of being more on it way back in the summer but every year we are not.

Back in again for lunch and the weather utterly stopped anything else from happening outside. I made mince pies, marizpanned and iced the Christmas cake and made pizza dough for dinner. Ady and Scarlett watched Christmas films on Netflix, Davies did stuff on his Doctor Who forum. It was all very companionable and nice to be inside all together. I finished Fliss’ secret santa gift – a candle in a jam jar which I have now decorated, a jar of home made cranberry sauce which I made a nice label for and a little crochet Christmas decoration in the shape of a wreath with holly and little tiny bells. I think she will really like them all πŸ™‚

Hmm, short but sweet today!

A list of things I want to….

learn more about, research, try and think about in 2016.

New things to learn for possible selling stuff from the shed:

Rum map crafts – Christmas baubles, magnets, boxes, pendants, clocks (Rum time?!)

Baskets, willow weaving etc.

More stuff with Ady’s photos – mugs, bags, canvas prints

Things to try and do on the croft

Livestock

Beekeeping – work out how it would work, where is the best location on the croft, cost out getting started, make some contacts, look at courses. Explore actual potential of honey / beeswax etc.

Sheep – where from? Logistics of getting them here, feed and health regimes, best breeds.

More with pork next year – curing, smoking, more experimenting with recipes.

Crops

Feed for pigs, can we grow crops for that?

Make more use of polytunnel

 

 

Musical cars

I’ve just been reading January’s posts to start writing a 2015 round up and was most amused to see that we are doing the almost exact same things just now as we were this time last year.

Post office this morning to send Mum & Dad’s present to them, it cost 95p so well worth getting it posted here free with other orders and then sending it on πŸ™‚ We got a few bits from the shop and then headed off to the boat. We had quite a few parcels come off and gave Steve the Man a lift back to the village. Dr Butt the worm guy has been over but we’d not seen him so far this visit so caught up with him at the pier. Had a nice chat, talked about the TV as he’d seen it and general chit chat.

We collected laundry from the castle, put some credit in the workshop electric meter and got some stuff from the freezer, went to where Mr Rhys had cut down some more wood for us and loaded that into the car, collected the post from Derek, paid Mr Rhys for the wood and then drove to the fork to transfer everything from the Jeep into the Rangerover. We left it at the bridge as the river is too high to cross at the ford but we can wheelbarrow the wood from there tomorrow and it can start drying out left in the car anyway. We brought everything else up, literally just getting in before the rain came.

I unpacked everything, folded laundry etc, Scarlett made lunch, Davies helped put stuff away and Ady made drinks. We watched The Apprentice with lunch. Then Ady untied the wind turbine and the kids did stuff on tablets, Ady had some outside stuff to do and I got out all of the presents that have arrived so far. I’m still waiting for 3 deliveries but all should be here Saturday if we get a boat. Annoyingly I’d ordered a small gift for Scarlett which is showing as due to arrive in mid January – not sure if I just didn’t notice when I ordered it or whether they have changed the date. It has been despatched but is from Hong Kong so may or may not arrive. Ah well. I’m planning an afternoon of wrapping at the weekend, need to get some wrapping paper from Jinty.

There is supposed to be a Christmas Fayre in the hall on Sunday, an all encompassing mince pie contest, secret santa exchange, school play, Christmas turn type party and Debs has asked if people could do a song or poem or joke or similar. I wanted to sing a song but no one here will sing with me so I have recorded one part of Baby It’s Cold Outside on my phone to sing with myself – a Goddard duet can still happen even if it’s just me doing it! πŸ™‚

Christmas films were two budget animations tonight – The Littlest Light which I picked up in a charity shop in Fort William because it had a character called Timothy in it, and Santa Claus Brothers which had been 30p in the second hand dvd shop in Inverness back in the summer.

Tomorrow is firewood and festive baking.

Sausages

Down to the hall after Popmaster this morning. We all went including Bonnie and the kids sat playing with tablets while we were in the kitchen. Scarlett came and helped a bit and Davies came and took some photos.

I couldn’t get Fliss’ / The community mincer to work and when Ady came (he’d popped along to the pier to collect the petrol) he couldn’t get it to work either, so we called for Neil who had used it last but he couldn’t make it work either. He suggested we use the venison company one as Steve and Clare who are running it now are off island, so Ady whizzed along and picked that up.

Mincing took ages and we had kilos and kilos of it (over 30 I think in total). Then it was weighing and mixing in sausage mix and water and re mincing. I must have bought bigger packs of sausage skins last year because 2 packs went further then than the 3 packs I bought this year and we needed more than double what I had bought. Foolishly didn’t realise that until after I’d mixed the mince into sausagemeat, should have just left it as mince, never mind.

Then sausage stuffing til we ran out of skins, then sausage making which was trickier than it should have been because I had over stuffed them a bit really. Got 12 packs of sausages though, over 100 sausages in total. Scarlett helped me weigh out the rest of the sausage meat into 800g packs to freeze, we can make square sausages with that instead of link sausages. Ady cleaned down everything.

The kids walked home with the dog while Ady and I went to put the mincer back and put the meat in the freezer. It was gone 5pm and pitch dark by the time we got home, way later than I’d expected us to be.

Our own sausage and bacon for dinner though, that feels pretty cool πŸ™‚