Sunday, 31 December 2017
‘How Do You Know Nothing Is Coming?’ 29th, 30th, 31st December
Thursday, 28 December 2017
That Inbetween Bit. 26th 27th 28th December
Llangollen Basin
After all the build up and excitement for Christmas we are now into that bit that lies inbetween.
Presents have been played with, homes found for them (especially important if you live on a boat) and old tired things sent to the bin or bagged up ready for the charity shop.
The fridge is still holding it’s breath in, crammed full of left overs.
The cheese that hasn’t been touched yet, gradually getting smellier each time you open the fridge door.
The empty bottles clinking their way to the recycling bins.
The realisation that you forgot to do pigs in blankets which means there are even more sausages and bacon in the fridge than you thought. Is it physically possible to eat sausages three times in one day?
Intentions of going for walks never materialising.
The tickly throat that started a few days before Christmas actually meaning it now and needing drugs at regular intervals.
The second Christmas dinner not using up all the leftovers.
A good tidy up so that when family arrive there might actually be space for them and their things.
Trying to find a home for the third fire extinguisher, still not solved. But instead realising there is a small leak coming from the shower tray.
A cat who despite being bored of it here would rather be outdoors than in.
Planning food for five not two and wondering where you are going to put it all.
Wondering if the forecast weather will put a kibosh on arrangements.
Boats have gone and more arrived, even in the dark.
Gold Licence put off for a year. But a booking to go onto the Monty made.
Tuesday, 26 December 2017
A Kate Filled Christmas Day
Llangollen Basin
The big man visited us during the night and left all three of us plenty of goodies to open in bed. Tilly wasn’t too impressed by the refills for the lint roller, but Father Christmas must have known what she was getting as her main present as her stocking was full of balls. I’m really looking forward to see how many friends I can attract with the fat balls in trees!
In London my nephew Josh had set up a motion detected camera on Christmas Eve to see if he could disprove the existence of Father Christmas. Unfortunately for Josh the batteries ran out before anything could be detected and recorded, or was this just the magic of the man in red!
Scrambled egg with smoked salmon accompanied by some Bucks Fizz went down well before we opened our Christmas presents.
This year Oleanna had joined in with the present giving. I never thought I’d be the sort of person who’d be pleased to receive a mop and sweeping brush. These have telescopic handles and quite easily sit under the gunnel in the bathroom. The broom is especially designed for narrow spaces, what more could you ask for.
Mick’s quandary on the socks and sandals front was solved and here he is wearing his warm Pip made jumper.
I got a box of holes! All apart from two are big enough to get my arms in. They kept putting balls inside it and I kept taking them out. Why would I want balls inside a box of holes!
Before we got settled into cooking we headed off on a walk to the Chain Bridge and Horseshoe Falls.
The Horseshoe Falls was designed by Thomas Telford and diverts water from the River Dee into the canal. The last section of canal is very shallow and only the horse drawn trip boats can now make it this far, they have slight V shaped bottoms which must just fit down the shallow channel. When Thomas Telford was appointed as the general agent for the Ellesmere Canal in 1793 he had no experience of waterways and together with William Jessop they came up with the engineering that makes the canal so famous today. As a result Telford became one of Britains most famous engineers.
Plenty of people were out for a Christmas morning stroll along the canal and despite the drizzle gradually turning into rain we enjoyed ourselves. A few boats were moving, NB Harnser came down to the basin to wind and wave.
An Anglo Welsh boat came to moor, but the gusting wind made manoeuvres very difficult for them. Plenty of people came out to offer advice, but in the end they had succeeded in winding so returned back onto the cut where there wasn’t going to be quite so far to be blown!
Our Christmas dinner was exceptionally tasty, the duck one of the best we’ve had. All the accompanying veg made a mountainous plate of food and we have more than enough to keep us going over the next few days. A lull with another glass of wine to watch Dr Who before it was time to open my birthday presents and cards and blow out the candles.
My cake, a Queen of Sheba Cake, was maybe a little bit under cooked, the recipe I have is really quite vague as to temperature and cooking times. The advantage is that it’s meant to be gooey in the middle anyway, just this time it was bordering on runny.
0 locks, 0 miles, 3 over full stockings, 1 horseshoe, 10 CD’s, 1/3 by Kate, 1 broom, 1 mop, 11 pairs socks, 1 tumblehome fitting tree, 19 holes! 5 balls, 1 very tasty duck, 27 noisy ducks, 1 new Dr, 4 empty bottles, 1 window vac, 2 overly full boaters.
Monday, 25 December 2017
He’s Been!!!!! 25th December
Sunday, 24 December 2017
Ready! 24th December
Llangollen Basin
Today has been busy. After realising last night that we had no birthday candles, they had been culled when we moved boats, we had to buy some today.
Most of the day has been spent chopping, bubbling, stirring, baking, rolling, cutting, baking, crumbing, steeping, saucing, mixing, baking, cooling, eating, slicing and icing, with a little bit of wrapping up too!
The majority of time consuming jobs have been done, so tomorrow we should just have to pop the duck in the oven and roast it.
Happy Christmas from all three of us.
We are even ready for the big man.