Mr Foxy

No words. I’m feeling smug.

The war of Frances versus the tablet and peecee is nearly won. Home to Shetland tomorrow.

Edited to say über smug now. I’ve just taken this film having put out some Chappie with added Mum’s stinky Camembert!

Just Don’t Talk To Me!

I am currently mid row with my Mother’s Samsung tablet and her aged peecee. They will barely talk to each other.  Tasked with getting the “favourite” photos off the ruddy tablet and onto a USB flash drive, I feel like this small chick on the edge of the dam.  It is a daunting task.

With only 1,674 photos to look through while looking for their identical “favourite” twin, I then drag and drop it onto the flash drive.  There is no favourite folder anywhere. Believe me I have looked.

So, just don’t talk to me. I will do it. I may be some time because I have to take the USB drive home with me.

On a good note, though, I almost saw a fox and am going to set out food tomorrow and see what I can film. I think the Gods owe me an all-singing, all-dancing performing wild fox for this.

 

And back to the computer I go.

Fascinating Family History

Every morning Mum and I walk Teddy on the golf course that surrounds her house.  She has their permission.

We like to walk before the golfers get there so are up and out by 07:00 (not my normal waking hour but it has to be done for Teddy’s sake and I like to keep Mum company).

He loves it racing all over the place obediently returning for calorific gratitude.

It was a soggy but beautiful early morning walk.

The rest of the day has been spent researching my never-ending family tree that I have been working on for many years. I usually spend the dark nights of winter adding to it but Mum has many family photos and recently put together a photo album labelled 1860 – 1960.

I was fascinated and found this superb invitation.

Mr and Mrs (Philip and Lucy) Boyd are my great-great grandparents.  Charles Green was an illustrator for Charles Dickens and friends/associate of Lucy’s brother, Fred Barnard, who was also an illustrator for Dickens.

This is Philip (they loved dressing up for the camera).

His wife, Lucy.

And her brother, Fred, dressed up as Henry Irving playing Hamlet.

And this is Charlecote, the house which had just been built. I guess it was being duly warmed with a party!  All fascinating and wonderful to piece this history together.

And I made this little chap today.  Sheep Number 4.

The Creation

I drove Mum to the Sacred Temple of Marks & Spencers.  We trawled around looking at everything and even bought a few things.   This shop used to be one of my regular haunts when I had a “proper job”.  A Middle Class heaven but I don’t miss that life.

  

Home, lunch and on with our needle-felting. I made another sheep for the collection – the one in the middle was today’s efforts.

Meanwhile Mum (now on Day 2) was creating her Shetland pony.  She’s says if she is learning something new, she will always make a horse or pony so rather like me and sheep then.

Here is the finished pony.  It is amazing but even Mum would say it was a lot of work.  Incredible for a first attempt and I think she enjoyed making it.  It took longer than she anticipated, though.

Outside it it has been almost constantly raining which is good for the beautiful garden.

The huge catalpa tree in the middle is now dropping its flowers.  It looks like the aisle of a church at a wedding.

Here is the obligatory photo of Teddy who has been unimpressed with the felting. When we go out we have to hide everything from him as he is convinced we are just making wonderful toys for him to play with.  Imagine two days of hard graft reduced to its component parts by the dog! I would weep.  Off to hide the pony NOW!

Butterfly

It has been raining, which is good for the garden and which, of course, I spent an hour watering last night!

  

After a quick nip to the shops, Mum and spent the afternoon making things.  I made a curlywurly sheep to take back and to add my potential shop stock in Shetland.

Meanwhile Mum ambitiously decided to make a Shetland pony.  I think she realised later that needle-felting is harder than it looks.

After a good few hours spent stabbing everything on the kitchen table, we had a break with a wander around the garden to regroup and regain our sanity, whatever that might be. Stabbing takes a lot of concentration if only to miss your fingers and not cover said creation in blood!

While we were walking, Mum noticed a butterfly had landed close by. I crept up on it and took photos totally enchanted by its beauty and colour.

We then looked it up and identified it as a Red Admiral. I adore butterflies. We don’t really have many, if any, in Shetland.  Not beautiful ones like these.

Teddy, of course, remains his usual wonderful self.  He is so happily settled now and such a different dog from the anxious little chap who arrived a few years back.  Mum and Ted are inseparable which is just as it should be.