Three Things Thursday: 15 December 2016

As usual I’m joining with Emily of Ms Emily’s Home for Full-Grown Nerds (and others) for Three Things Thursday. As she says…

*three things that make me smile: an exercise in gratitude – feel free to steal this idea with wild abandon and fill your blog with the happy*

First, my local  swimming pool. In mid-January I decided that I would start going swimming regularly in order to exercise more. I’m lucky enough to be able to afford to pay up-front and so I bought a year’s pass, allowing me unlimited swims. Originally I intended to swim twice a week, but since October I have been going three times a week. I started off doing breast stroke and swimming with my head above the water… this had to stop because it was not doing my neck any good. So, I bought some swimming goggles and learned to do ‘proper’ breast stroke. Later in the year I trained myself to do front crawl – I started only managing one length of this stoke per session, but now I use it for half of the distance I swim each time. I started swimming 40 lengths (1km) per session, but now I do 50. Over the eleven months I have been swimming 102 times! None of this would have been possible without my local pool, so I’m grateful for all the staff who keep it going, and especially to Ollie who gets up to let us early-morning swimmers in at 7am three times a week.

Second, new food inspiration. For some time now we’ve been intending to have  a clear-out of our spices. Many of them were old and stale and not a great addition to any dish. So, in a fit of enthusiasm the other day I ordered an Indian cooking pack from a company that I had recently discovered. The pack included spices and other ingredients, plus a cookery book. This may be one of the most inspirational cook books I have ever bought. There are so many simple recipes in it that I want to try. I will certainly be reporting back on what I make. It’s good to get out of a cooking rut and I’m looking forward to trying making my own naan and a whole variety of new curries – first on my list is a squash curry.

Third, food with friends. After a bit of a lull in terms of socialising, in the past week we have had two different lots of friends round to eat with us and we’re just about to go out to a shared pot-luck lunch. I’ve  been a bit remiss about cooking for others recently but, hopefully, I’ll get back into the habit of inviting friends round to share food with us as it is a real joy in life. Possibly, everyone will be getting curry!!

So, those are three things making me smile this week – what about you?

Three Things Thursday: 8 December 2016

As usual I’m joining with Emily of Ms Emily’s Home for Full-Grown Nerds (and others) for Three Things Thursday. As she says…

*three things that make me smile: an exercise in gratitude – feel free to steal this idea with wild abandon and fill your blog with the happy*

This week all three things are from a single trip out that we had on Tuesday. We went to visit Plantasia in Swansea… it’s one of the places that inspired the Eden Project and it’s about 25 years since I last went.

I was delighted to find several things there that I’m now growing at home.

First, this amazing hanging Nepenthes pitcher plant

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A Nepenthes

Mine has a long way to go before it can compete with this one, but it’s certainly grown since I first got it.

Second, a selection of other insectivorous plants: Sarracenia (pitchers), Drosera (sundews) and Dionaea (Venus fly traps), species of which I have growing in the limery.

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A community of carnivores

Third, Lithops (living stones). I have one surviving in the limery from the seeds I sowed back in 2014, but it has a long way to go before it looks like these:

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So, those are three things making me smile this week – what about you?

And we have Lithops…

My Lithops have started to germinate:

Two little Lithops seedlings

Two little Lithops seedlings

They are tiny (about half a millimetre across at the moment) and I can only see three in total, but it looks like I’ve got my very own living stones!

They don't look very exciting at the moment

They probably don’t look very exciting to anyone but me

Woohoo! Sometimes you should grow things for the pure joy of it.

 

Très bon

One of the unexpected yields of blogging is coming across other people’s good ideas. Yesterday, for example, the Dorset Finca mentioned that she has been growing living stones (Lithops) and I was so excited that I immediately found out where to get the seeds and ordered some. These little succulent plants have fascinated me ever since I was a child, but I have never owned any. That, hopefully, is about to change if my seeds germinate. Without that chance reading of a blog post, I probably would never have thought to have a go at growing these little plants, despite my long-standing interest.

Other blog posts have inspired me with recipes, gardening tips and creative ways to reuse and recycle. But perhaps my favourite inspiration comes from the folks who knit and crochet and then share their patterns, ideas and links. And so, when Nice Piece of Work posted her guide to making a Bonbon hat a couple of weeks ago I was smitten and knew that I must have a go. All did not go to plan to begin with and I had one false start, but I’m not easily put off and my second attempt has been much better:

The finished BonBon

The finished BonBon

The technical bit

The yarn I used was double knitting wool acrylic blend and I worked with a 4mm hook. I followed Jill’s basic instructions with the following modifications: I increased 7 times on round 9 and 3 more times on round 12. I worked 23cm from the top before I started the brim. To make a snug brim, I crocheted front post trebles (fpt), but I missed every fifth stitch on the first round… that is on alternate ridges I only worked one stitch rather than two:

Detail of the start of the brim

Detail of the start of the brim

I worked about 6cm of fpts, which I folded over once to expose the horizontal reverse.

Finished hat

Finished hat

If I was making it again, I think I would use a slightly larger hook, perhaps 5mm, for a floppier texture (this will depend on your tension). Once you get going, it’s a really straightforward pattern and very adaptable, as this post from Jill demonstrates. It’s certainly a pattern I would use again – thank you Jill!

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