Sunday, May 31, 2020

Operation Greenhouse

This is my greenhouse as it looked earlier in the week. I inherited it with the allotment, and this photo does not quite do it justice. The waist-high grass and weeds shown here hide an impressive collection of plant pots, bin bags with dubious contents, some interesting wildlife (I’ll come back to that), and enough glass to rebuild Crystal Palace. 



Renovating the greenhouse has long been on my To Do list, and since the allotment has been the only legal way to get us all out of the house since March, the items on that list are being ticked off at an unprecedented rate. This week I reached a point where there were several jobs at a roughly equal priority level and I had to choose which to tackle next. Some of the beds still to be dug probably should have slightly taken the lead but the great looming wreck of a greenhouse is rather hard to ignore and it was becoming a bit depressing. So on Thursday, when I had completely finished the last job, I made a start. Starting from the door with a pair of elderly shears, secateurs and a lot of brute force, I started clearing away the accumulated thicket and debris. I soon ran into a problem: the bigger the cleared space, the more inviting the boys found the structure, which they had previously ignored completely. When I uncovered a large window frame with its remaining glass arranged fetchingly in great jagged shards, I decided we should probably go home, as in these situations Ben currently has all the self-preservation instinct of a squirrel on crack*. 

And so it was that late yesterday afternoon saw me back at the plot, blissfully alone, hacking away at grass, hauling out junk, prising off the remaining glazing clips, rescuing suicidal slow worms and doing my best not to sever an artery. I had brought the car down to load ready for a trip to the recycling centre the following morning, a thermos of tea was giving out encouraging vibes from the picnic table, and I was armed with my toughest gloves. 

The bin bags turned out to contain manure, which I have a vague recollection of putting in there several years ago, only for time and weeds to catch up with me until they were out of both sight and mind. Underneath lurked several slow worms which, I have learned in the last few weeks, have a habit of hiding in silly places where I am likely to unwittingly decapitate them with my shears. I removed these to the other side of the plot, to the mild horror of my African plot neighbours, who were cheering me on from the sidelines. They pointed out that where they come from, if you see something that looks like a snake you scarper first and think second. They were rather more amused by the frogs - 5 in total, but I would swear there were really just two that kept coming back to check on my progress. 

I knew I would be dealing with lots of glass, so I had a Cunning Plan. A tarp was spread out on the grass and the Window Frame of Doom placed on it. Each subsequent shard was added to it, followed by the large collection of broken panes I have been storing safely out of the way on a shelf at the back of the shed. When I was sure I had all the glass, I carefully wrapped it up in the tarp and lifted it into the wheelbarrow... except I didn’t. I had forgotten, you see, that glass is HEAVY. When I tried to pick it up, there was a nasty crunching-cracking sound (from the glass, not me) and it weighed far more than I was willing to handle on my own. Plan B was put in place: A second tarp was layed out and the glass transferred a bit at a time to that. Then the first tarp was taken to the car and the glass transferred a few bits at a time using the wheelbarrow. What a faff! By the time I got down to it, the window frame had taken pity on me and obligingly parted company with several more of its shards, which was rather less helpful than it thought. I am deeply impressed that I managed not to slip, trip, or otherwise end up fertilising the vegetables with my own life blood (a little extreme even for the keenest allotmenteer). 

That done, I made more journeys with loads of unrecyclable junk dug up, uncovered and generally discovered around the plot - rusty buckets give off inviting tetanus vibes, ancient hanging baskets, and long-buried carpet that would make even Miss Haversham raise an eyebrow. I haven’t got all of it, by any means, but another trip next weekend may do it, if I haven’t caught something revolting in the process. Driving back home with that lot in the car made me want to jump straight in the shower!

By the time I ran out of daylight, the greenhouse looked like this. 



All the bits of frame are there, so it just needs a couple of nuts and bolts to bring the stray pieces back together. Rather than getting new glass, I will be using polycarbonate panels, which are cheaper and allow ricocheting children to bounce off instead of crashing straight through the sheet glass. It will also be less satisfying for passing baby vandals, as the public footpath is just the right distance for a nice stone-throwing challenge. All together, the cost of renovating the greenhouse will cost less than half what a new equivalent would set me back, even before we factor in the cost of removing the existing frame. It’s getting exciting now! 

With so much work being put into it, the greenhouse is developing a personality (or maybe it already had one and I am just discovering it) and I suspect it will soon require a name. Suggestions, please - nothing too sensible. It is definitely male. The shed, on the other hand, is female, though not the pink frilly type (just as well, really). She’s looking a bit apprehensive as I keep eyeing her speculatively. 

As I left the plot, I glanced away from the setting sun into the communal water trough. There, silhouetted against the bottom, were four newts, two of which appeared to be doing their best to increase the number to five. Well, it was a nice evening. I left them to get on with it. 



*Not my phrase but too good not to use. 

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Good Riddance to a Rubbish Day

I really struggled today. Sleep-deprivation didn’t help - I am long past the point where seeing 3am is a good idea, but I had a work deadline and simply couldn’t snatch enough daytime minutes around the children to get it done. 

Like most of us, I have days when I’m fine. Not wonderful, perhaps, but coping. But something really small can tip me over the edge. I lose motivation, I snap at the kids, and then I get even more depressed because I haven’t got anything done. Today was one of those days, after something unbloggable kicked off in the morning. 

I had a work meeting just after lunch so we needed to get down to the allotment early. There have been issues with the site rotivator and I am several weeks behind on digging beds and getting things in. Lots has been started in the conservatory but it’s beginning to look like the Eden Project in there and I am becoming mildly concerned that I may wake up one day to find a butternut squash has crept up the stairs overnight and is lovingly strangling me. 

The boys generally enjoy the allotment but have decided that it is THE LAW that each trip should be preceded with at least two hours of moaning and flatly refusing to don socks, wellies, or sometimes anything that isn’t a pair of slightly grubby pyjamas. By the time they had fulfilled that requirement and we had finally left the house we only had an hour and a half before we had to head home again. I made pretty good use of the time - the first potatoes went in, I made a start on digging the next bed, and several other future beds were covered with weed-suppressant fabric in the hope it might make the digging easier when I get to them. It felt like a drop in the ocean compared to everything that needs doing down there, and the kids spent a lot of time winding each other up and complaining to me rather than sorting out between themselves. Eventually I blew up at them and we trudged home for a scratch lunch before my meeting, where I discovered half the work I did in the wee small hours had somehow been irretrievably deleted. Nothing catastrophic but several hours of very intense and tedious work that needs to be done again. 

The rest of the afternoon was a marathon of teaching online, interspersed with sorting laundry and throwing a casserole into the oven and breaking up arguments and finding long-lost important documents to try to resolve the issue this morning and ignoring the collapsed shelf in the kitchen cupboard and the full cup of milky tea dropped all over the floor and and and... I have a headache. 

Great British Sewing Bee and cup of tea, and then I am declaring today finished. Good riddance!

Monday, May 11, 2020

A Funny Sort of Birthday

"It doesn’t feel much like a birthday" Daniel said sadly on the day he turned 8 a couple of weeks ago.
He was right, and it broke my heart a little bit. With all the siblings on top of each other all the time I try to make birthdays really special and I felt like I had completely dropped the ball on this one. I hadn’t, actually, and I know full well that everyone else is struggling with lockdown birthdays too, but I still felt awful for him.

But you know what? We turned it around. (I may have wallowed a bit first!) Each of his grandparents called or FaceTimed to have a chat, and we had his choice of menu for each meal - waffles for breakfast; tomato soup for lunch; roast beef with French mustard, roast potatoes, and peas and broccoli (the latter because the RT dislikes peas and "I want everyone to enjoy my birthday") for dinner. Dinner ended up being rather late as, in true lockdown-discombobulation style, I completely forgot he had asked for chocolate soufflés for pudding until about ten minutes before we were due to eat. My trusty Mary Berry recipe book leaped to the rescue and the day was saved, with the soufflés declared better than his (not sure about that) and much hilarity when the centre of the soufflé turned out to be so hot that it melted the bottom of the candle I had stuck in it! He also opened the presents from those of us in the house (his brothers’ in the morning, ours and the RT’s in the evening), and by the time he went to bed he had completely cheered up.

The following Saturday we had his ‘party’, to tide him over until the promised proper one when it is safe to have it. He had requested a few party foods and we had discussed his cake requirements, but I refused to let him see any of it in progress so he wasn’t quite sure what was going to happen.

We started, as with every Saturday during lockdown, with online synagogue services. We have been joining a large synagogue in north London whose senior rabbi officiated at our wedding. The half hour Tots Shabbat before the main service is on Zoom, and a quick message to the rabbi got him a public shout out, followed by everyone singing Happy Birthday to him (always entertaining with internet lag) and yelling their good wishes. It was the first time Daniel had joined Adam and Ben in one of these sessions and he was blown away by the attention and how much people cared. He was glowing for hours afterwards!

After the services (a much-needed break for me after a late night baking), he was banned from the dining room and DH watched a movie with them while the RT and I got everything ready (RT had declared a willingness to do pretty much anything if it meant not having to watch the Emoji movie!). Daniel had no idea I had already got some of the Harry Potter themed party supplies we had talked about before lockdown, so a banner went up and a table cover and plates/cups/napkins went on the table.



The chocolate frog mould (which he knew about) came with six boxes and chocolate frog cards (which he didn’t) and the RT spent a couple of hours valiantly wrestling with the instructions for putting the awkwardly-shaped boxes together so that everyone got a box with frog and card on their plate. I had some biscuit stamps with the Hogwarts and house crests and the resultant massive biscuits came out beautifully. Then there was the cake, one of my best yet (dreading having to do it again for his post-lockdown party!) and lots of his favourite party food, a pile of presents from extended family, and as a final touch we put on his favourite song as we finally let him in.



He was blown away! Hugs all round, then zooming round the table exclaiming at everything, and as we sat around the table together munching and comparing chocolate frog cards and enjoying his rather eclectic taste in music, he kept saying thank you over and over again.

When we finished eating we made video calls to his grandparents so he could open their presents with them.




"I had a lovely party." Birthday restored :-)