21 May 2010

New horse



Our walk to school passes between two fields where there are usually horses. Lately, there's been a new little horse. About two weeks old in this picture. Right before I took this, she was standing up and I wanted to show her all gangly-legged, the way foals are, but she decided to sit down, and we couldn't hang around...

09 May 2010

To photograph or not to photograph...


Well, I somehow failed to take photos of either of the main things I did this weekend - school Spring Fair on Saturday (completely rubbish weather), where I do have the good excuse of spending most of the afternoon talking - on the PA, making announcements, etc - so no time to take pictures even if I HAD remembered my camera.  And today, the Girl Guiding Mother/Daughter picnic (completely rubbish weather), where even if I had taken my camera, and been willing to expose my hands (as opposed to keeping them under my legs for warmth) long enough to take photos, you wouldn't have wanted to see them - can you just imagine a handful of photos of cold people sitting around eating picnic food in the grey drizzle? Not really blogworthy, I fear.

So, you get supper. Dinner. Tea. Whatever you like to call it - an evening meal. In this instance, potato, cheese & onion pie. We also had salad. The pie was excellent. There are leftovers. Mmm, lunch tomorrow...

02 May 2010

A walk in the bluebell woods



We had arranged to meet up today with friends, originally for a picnic and walk in our favourite woods (good for bluebells - normally it might be a little late for them by the May Bank Holiday, but everything is late this year due to the dire winter). As the weekend approached and the weather forecast got increasingly yuck, plans were changed from picnicking to a pub lunch, with the walk to follow unless there was a real deluge. Which, happily, there was not.




Here's the view from the pub window - nice view of the South Downs. So, we ate, and in due course, walked, with only a small drizzle of rain. The walking is fairly dry underfoot, despite the rain, due to the chalk hills, so at least it wasn't at all muddy.

Bluebells were indeed spotted, as can be seen in the top photo - they never look quite as magnificent in photos as they do in person in the woods, I think, but you get the general idea.




Here's one chap a bit closer up,



and another thing I love this time of year, ferns, bracken and other plants just unfurling.



And a snail - Helix pomatia, the Roman or edible snail. Apparently the Romans brought them over (a staple food) and now, they roam the South Downs. In as much as a snail roams.... One of our friends is a biologist with a PhD in snails (not this snail, as it happens, a different type) so we had fun searching for them in the undergrowth. There was a lot of turning rotting logs over to examine the bugs underneath, as well, which is good fun. It would have been nice if it had been nice enough to picnic, but after all, you can't have everything --where would you put it?

25 April 2010

St George's Day Parade


Alex's scout district was due for a parade along Wimbledon Common and a short service today; this morning about 8, it looked like the parade was doomed - raining steadily. Luckily, it cleared up (then started, then cleared up again!) and the sun even came out for a while.


They assembled on the common, then went off to line up.



I didn't follow the whole parade, just watched them head off...


...then caught up with them a bit later to see them all come along. It was quite sweet actually -


despite Mr "I must make faces at the camera".


Once they passed, another mum and I went along to the village for a cup of coffee... Apparently, if the shop is posh enough, you don't get handles on your cups!


And here they are, waiting to be collected.

22 April 2010

Jack Petchey Awards



Sarah and I attended the Jack Petchey Achievement Awards Ceremony (for Guides) tonight - she received the award for her dedication to Guiding - I think because she nearly always attends, including extra-curricular things, is enthusiastic, responsible, sensible (I know what you are thinking!) and happy to take on responsibility. Here she is receiving her award - it's a medallion, plus she gets £200 to spend on her unit (they bought some new tents - badly needed).

18 April 2010

A birdy day



Today was the last day (boo hoo) of the Easter Holidays. And, astonishingly, it was just as gloriously gorgeous as it was yesterday, so we decided to have a trip out* - the Wetland Centre is a nice destination on a day like this and as we are members, it's, while not precisely free, at least pre-paid. It was great, actually - not at all crowded, despite expectations. We decided to take the official guided tour - despite having been members for a number of years we have never done this before - largely because we usually have small children in tow. It was great - nice to go around with someone who is an expert.



We saw a variety of birds - both exotic and common - the kids were, of course, the most delighted with the baby ducks. Although they did also like the cranes.



Here were are watching the sand martins fly back into their nests in the sand martin bank - it astonishes me the speeds at which they manage to fly straight at the bank and into their nest holes without crashing.



We saw a few other animals as well - still haven't managed to see the elusive water vole, but there was a rather nice marsh frog. And we saw a baby slo-worm, which is technically a type of lizard, though it looks like a little snake.



It was a lovely day out - gorgeous weather, and despite some initial reluctance on the part of the eldest child, the kids had a good time...

*when I saw "we decided", what I technically mean is that I decided we should be outside on a day like this, so I put my foot down and told the children that we were going out.

17 April 2010

Waveboard



This is Olivia's new gadget - it's a kind of skateboard called a Ripstick, Waveboard or Street Surfer - the thing is, it only has two wheels, which makes balancing on it a bit challenging. The neat thing is, you don't push off the ground to make it move, like a traditional skateboard - it's all in the hip movement, which is a kind of twisty movement, like the dance. She's getting very good at it, as demonstrated by her ability to turn a circle!

15 April 2010

Sign of spring...



It's not that we don't make ice-cream in the winter, but when the warmer weather comes, it's somehow that much more enticing. Today's is just vanilla (I say "just", but really, vanilla is the King of ice-cream, let's face it) but it's a harbinger of summer treats...

10 April 2010

Nest in the shed



We had our (usually) annual Spring Clean of the shed today - we take everything out, give it a good clean (it's a brick building, fairly good sized, very popular with spiders, etc), decide what can go to the tip and what stays, and then put everything back. In one corner, near the roof, we found this lovely little nest - I should have put something in for scale, as it's very small - the eggs (which sadly, were unhatched, were very old - probably even last year's (we didn't clean the shed last spring, as it happens)) were about the size of Cadbury's mini eggs - the candy coated ones. About an inch long, for those who don't speak Cadbury's. We think it's probably a blue tit nest, as it's one of our smallest birds - wrens are smaller, but they have a different nest type.

09 April 2010

Adventures





I took the kids to Chessington World of Adventures today (amusement park right down the road from us), as it was a lovely day and they were doing a special promotion for Nectar points (a loyalty card scheme for one of our supermarkets plus other various shops), so we got a very good deal. It was fairly crowded, though not as bad as Legoland usually is. Still, we did do a bit of waiting to go on the more popular rides, but it all worked out in the end. Alex is finally big enough to go on most of the rides, including some roller coasters - he enjoyed both the Vampyre (what we are queuing for above) and the Dragon's Fury, as well as other rides. As it happened, Sarah went with a friend today as well, but they were both too cool to want to spend to much time with us (or with Katharine's dad, who took them, I suspect).



Here's Olivia waiting for our turn on the swings in the new Wild Asia section (those of you who know Chessington may recognise the swings from when they were part of Beanoland - though they did completely move the dodgems and the bus!).

Anyway, the weather was gorgeous - sunny and warm - which no doubt contributed to the crowds - and we had a lovely day out.

Picnic in a park



Today the weather was so lovely that while we were out running our various errands in Wimbledon (orthodontist, passport photos, birthday present for the weekend, trousers for a boy who keeps growing, rechargeable batteries, parsnips, etc) we decided (or rather, I did, unilaterally - the advantage of being the person in charge of transport!) to grab some lunchy things and head to the park for a picnic lunch. Traffic in Wimbledon being awkward, we abandoned the first plan of going up to Wimbledon Common, and instead ended up at Morden Hall Park, where we had a nice stroll as well as our picnic.



We spotted this lady in the river with a fishing net - turns out it was a kids activity where they were racing plastic ducks - she was the person in charge of making sure no ducks made it into the wild...




I am sure that in my photo collection somewhere, I have a similar picture of the kids picnicking on this particular tree stump, but I think it might require some digging. However, I did find another photo, which was from that occasion (or a similar one), which shows them on the bridge above, playing pooh sticks...






02 April 2010

Marbling!

Finally, the Easter Holiday is here. After sleeping in a bit to celebrate not having to get up at 7am, we basically spent the day lazing around. This was largely helped by the still disgusting weather - which hopefully will get a bit better over the next two weeks. Otherwise we are all going to go stir crazy!

Anyway, yesterday we decided to play around with some marbling inks I had knocking about - I had thought they might work nicely on eggshells, but that wasn't very successful - the ink didn't stick as well. However, paper and card did work well, and Olivia and Alex (Sarah being out with a friend) made lots of bits of lovely marbled paper to use in later craft activities...





27 March 2010

At the park





There is a park right behind our house, which we often go to. But a bit further away, near school, there is another park in a fairly new housing development (which was built on what they call brownfield land, which means it's land that used to have an industrial use - I think this used to be some sort of water treatment facility). Anyway, as part of the development, they have built a wetland area and we pop over sometimes to see how it's all going. Plus there is playground stuff. Yesterday we were collecting Olivia from a friend's house (who lives in this development, called The Hamptons) and Alex and I had a bit of a turn around the wetlands and the playground. There was a pair of swans in the ponds, chasing all the geese away - I hope that means they are nesting there!

Pinata fun



Some of you may have seen this photo on Facebook, but I forgot to blog it over here - this is a paper bag pinata that Alex made with only a little help as part of a project on Mexico for school. It was very simple, and I highly recommend it if you need something along these lines or just want some rainy day fun.

20 February 2010

Sunshine = Farm!



We finally got a bit of sun today, so I insisted that the children in the house (which at the time was Alex, Sarah and Sarah's friend Ellen, who had stayed the night) go OUTSIDE somewhere. I gave them the choice of everywhere I could think of that was outdoors with some indoor bits, and they decided on Horton Farm, which just goes to show that 12YO girls aren't always as grownup as they like to act, a fact which was reinforced at the farm itself, where they climbed all over the climbing stuff, along with their 7YO excuse for being there, and spent ages feeding the animals - and by ages, I really mean ages - far longer than I was interested in feeding them for!



Here's Ellen and Sarah in a cage feeding bunnies - and before anyone gets the idea that a cage for pre-teens might be a good thing, it was only waist high, so they could easily get out, even if it had been locked...



Alex wasn't too sure about feeding donkeys, alpacas and llamas, but we worked on him, and in the end, he really enjoyed it.





There were some baby animals, though not as many as there will no doubt be in a few weeks' time. Here are a couple of very cute black lambs, and some baby piglets, which were incredibly sweet.





But the rabbits were definitely the biggest attraction. One of them was particularly friendly, and kept trying to eat Sarah's boots.





There were other animals, too - chipmunks, peacocks and a duck with a funny haircut, which we all liked.







And lots more, which I didn't take photos of.

There was also a fair amount of playing in the wooden climbing areas, though it was a little muddy, so perhaps not as much as there might have been otherwise.




And in the end, Alex came home with two new friends, by way of being a birthday present from Grandma Kathy. They are called Bramble (the darker one) and Caramel, after actual bunnies at the farm, which is rather a nice change from most of Alex's toys, who are called things like Doggie, Catty, Bunny, Sheepy, Snakey and so on.