AWOL

Teaming.  Second day indoors.  Take the opportunity to catch up on some blogging.  180 (or so) mm of rain by this morning and the rain gauge is steadily filling again.  The road is closed by a combination of rain and high tide.

Things seemed to be moving along very slowly this time last year but by comparison with this year it was positively sprinting.

We wait.

While builders and surveyors were out here last month we decided to move the house site about 2 metres towards the sea.  It makes a difference to the height of foundations on the seaward end and gives us more space to built a sauna and bath-house between the house and the cabin.  The move needs, however, further approval from the building inspectors.

They are taking their time.

I'm ready for a change.

While we wait Mr B has been collecting toys....

...we have been clearing tall gorse....(and making a firewood pile)...

...taken a trip to Rarangi (a beach settlement east of Blenheim) where we bought peastraw to mulch the veg garden and took a walk on a windswept gravel beach piled generously with wave-sculpted driftwood.  I can't resist a curly bit of drift wood ... how's this for a Thai Dancer (with a big ornate headdress)?


My course in teaching (mat) Pilates continues; tomorrow a full day seminar in Nelson to learn the most advanced exercises and their 'full expression'.  (I think that means their most difficult form.)  I hope we are able to get out.  The teaching component of our practice is up to 4 hours per week for me now and I have one student who was intermediate level straight out of the box - very strong, very stable, very aware of what muscles she is engaging, good spacial awareness.  I need to challenge her a bit more.

Autumnal mornings have been densely foggy but the days have been golden and calm once the fog evaporates.  I have put in a few miles in my kayak, and joined Mr B in some very tame dinghy sailing a couple of times.



Scully has been around most days, but as her humum had a hand operation about 6 weeks ago and has been off work since then Scully turns up late, waits as long as might represent going for a walk (whether we walk or not) then spends her days trotting back and forth to test where she might get the most attention: levying cheese tax here then going home to see what might drop out of lunch time sandwiches there; coming here for doink ball, heading home when we start clearing gorse again.  Rugby season has resumed.  As her older human sister is a representative player and her humum a coach of younger teams, their late night returns home have resumed a couple of times a week.  Scully barks as their car passes our place but is remarkably resistant to being coaxed out into the dark and accompanied home.  I really do have to WALK her all the way to their door and hand her over.

Knitting season has started again.  I should knit in the summer to have winter pullovers but I am not a dedicated follower of any fashion so a jumper finished this winter will last me the rest of my life (as will garments made last year or earlier).  I still have a pullover I made over 40 years ago.


A mouse moved into the caravan.  I have no idea how it made entry.  Mr B said "go around the outside looking for grappling hooks....". All foodstuffs have been repackaged in mouse-proof containers.  All evidence of mouse have been vacuumed up and disinfected.  A mousetrap is on the shopping list and will be set in the area via which we suspect the mouse gained entry (where a pipe to the water tank goes through an ill-fitted hole in the floor - under a bunk.)  

Sorry mouse, but this is war. 


Comments

  1. Hari OM
    Excellent update post... I admit I was wondering if I might have to send out a search party! I do hope the planning gets approved very soon now, and things can get going for the full home.

    I love Drops yarns (have got quite a stash myself) and their patterns are pretty reliable, too. Looking forward to seeing progress - and completion - of that jumper!

    Van-lifers use peppermint at points of entry to deter rodents... YAM xx

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    1. Peppermint (or Eucalyptus) oil is already on the shopping list.

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  2. It’s all happening. It might feel like it’s taking ages to start but I’m sure once it’s going you will see it come together quickly.
    Or I hope it does
    Scully Scully does have a wonderful life living between the two homes and getting treats from each of them

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    1. Just as well we didn't have big holes in the ground with the flooding we've had in the last 48 hours. When it rains in these parts it can really do a number - road closures, river over the bridges.

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  3. I hope your planning people get a move on, though I suppose the rain and floods are putting a stop to progress. Beautiful, misty photographs.
    Scully has you well trained. 😃

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    1. Scully has also well trained Mr B now too.

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  4. Good mouse hunting. They can get into such tiny spaces and leave their damn traces everywhere. Don't like them! Scully hasn't scented it out for you I presume.
    She's a canny wee dog.
    I love the jersey design. Good knitting

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    1. Scully did alert me to the mouse but caravans being what they are mouse can flit and Scully can't fit....

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  5. The toys in the yard are most appealing! I have envy! Your fog looks very like our fog except that our fog is long lasting. Spirits trying to materialize, it has been said. Scully is such a darling dog- has a pretty good system set up- the best of all worlds. Lucky for you to have a dog yet not have a dog!
    The colors for your not yet jumper are so gorgeous! That will be one beautiful garment eventually!

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    1. I like the idea of spirits trying to materialize. The knitting wool is all remnants or odd balls from thrift shops. I need some more blue tones.

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  6. Smitten Kit.chen blogger, who cooks from an apartment kitchen in New York city says that stuffing steel wool in any possible mouse/cockroach crevice/ingress has prevented any infestations in their home. I’m not entirely sure what steel wool looks like or where to actually purchase any, probably a hardware store(?), but I’m wondering if that would help you too? MRachael K

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    1. You are deadright - it does work; they hate chewing on it as much as we do. (potscrubs). I have some somewhere and will block the holes I can see and get too. It might need me to lie on my back and scooch under the caravan. Mr B will set traps for the one that got in (and possibly set up camp in a hidden corner.)

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  7. Rarangi is nice...quiet, apart from the elements.
    I've an acquaintance living there and a friend nearby(although he and wife were selling their house)

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    1. I like Rarangi but glad I didn't go for it straight out of the box - great wild beach but not a place for those toys and no hills to wander about in.

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  8. Loving your scenery, the fog looks like a bit like the barber that we get in Greymouth. Ive been doing lots of crochet too, mostly blankets to give away. have a nice weekend.

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