Sunday, 27 January 2013



Dear All,

Dave Garlick has been here today taking both services. He was worried about the weather so came up Saturday evening. In the event the rain and warmer temperatures have seen off all the snow. John Law came to the evening service and stayed for tea with Dave.
We walked round Swavesey Pits on Monday after heavy overnight snow and took a few photos.


Guided bus  


    Swavesey Pits

We have been sent another batch of seeds for Moldova so I have spent some tome sorting them out this week. We have booked our next trip to Moldova this week for the last week of April. Three of us are currently booked in.
I started a new U3A course this week entitled “Science and Religion” This week was about Hinduism.
Our Thursday walk started fairly locally at Conington and was a rather brisk journey to Elsworth, Hilton and Fen Drayton.

Conington 


                                                          Waiting to go


 In the Bleak midwinter  


                                                           Hilton

The “Biography” subject this week was Charlotte Bronte and although the exposition was lengthy it was still interesting as the presenter dwelt a lot on what drove her to do what she did including the suppressed role of women in Victorian times, her not wishing to be a financial burden and the tragedies which meant that all 5 of her siblings died before the age of 31.
Kate had both her feet injected on Friday for her neuroma problem then we drove down to Hutton. I planted the hedge we bought for Esther at Christmas and Kate was finishing curtains.



Esther’s hedge

Love


Mike & Kate

Sunday, 20 January 2013

20th January 2013



Dear All,

An exciting weeks worth of weather, but fortunately the days which involved most travelling were those with the clearest conditions.
On Tuesday I was speaking at Elsom’s “Diverse Crops” conference at Spalding. The roads were fine from Cambridge and folk drove up from Devon but ironically those from Norfolk did not make it. I drove back through the fens and Whittlesey still has its share of flood water. Elsoms now lead the country in seed treatments including cleaning, dressing, priming, film coating and pelleting. They have recently invested £1m in seed coating equipment so it is quite big business.


Elsoms Seed Processing Plant


Whittlesey Mere

We managed a swim on Wednesday when it was misty and murky all day here, but Thursday the weather was excellent for our walk – clear and crisp and sunny which beats wet and sticky and muddy any day. We started at Great Easton between Thaxted and Dunmow and walked to Little Cambridge, Monk Street and Titley.






Great Easton Walk

My “Biographies” class started again on Friday, this weeks subject was Viscount Alanbrooke of military fame. He came from a long line of soldiers, his ancestor was involved in suppressing the Irish in 1641 and rewarded with a 30,000 acre estate in Co. Fermanagh. 26 of his family fought in WW1 and 27 in WW2. Most interesting was his relationship with Churchill as they argued all the time and his views on other heads of states recorded in his diaries - very few received compliments.
It was “Messy Church” again yesterday and we are still getting new faces attending which is encouraging.



Messy Church
I saw the chest specialist at Addenbrookes on Monday and he showed me pictures of my lung where there is a small nodule. He does not know what it is but said it could be something to do with arthritis. They took numerous blood tests and I have to go back in 6 months to see whether it has grown. An example of technology telling us more than we need to know.


Overcote Road


Muntjac Deer at bottom of our Garden

Love


Mike & Kate

Sunday, 13 January 2013



Dear All,

It was the Church Social at chapel last night which has occupied Kate this week as she was cooking for 50 and me as I was presenting a Review of the Year. It all seemed to go quite well but was a lot of work for Kate.
We managed to swim on Wednesday and walk on Thursday. The walk started at Bartlow and featured 3 Roman tumuli and probably some nice scenery but it was misty all morning so visability was very limited.

 Bartlow” Three Hills”

 Warning sign


Steventon End windmill


 near Ashdon

I took some photographs for Adrian on Monday as he has recently had a wood burning stove fitted in his thatched cottage and it is making his Insurance company rather nervous.


 Adrian’s stove  

  
 and chimneys

Otherwise Stan has been to give my computer a MOT as it was getting very slow, I have written February’s Garden Column and been preparing a presentation for a talk at Elsom’s Vegetable Crop Conference next week at Spalding.
I watched Over 4 v 1 Littleport yesterday – a fairly lively encounter as the fen boys were all large and strapping with more physical presence than finesse!
We have been out to lunch at Merv & Pat’s today together with Adrian and Jane Gregory.

Love


Mike & Kate


Sunday, 6 January 2013

6th January 2013








Dear All,

Happy New Year to you all. Esther, Mary-Ann, Andy and Amélie left at various times on Monday in various states of health. Some of us had visited St Ives in the morning where the floods were still in evidence.











St Ives

Parting was not for long as Kate and I travelled to Godalming on Tuesday afternoon for the Wednesday childminding session.
We used our recently acquired National Trust ticket to visit The Devil’s Punchbowl on Wednesday and although it was misty the views were still spectacular.



Devil’s Punchbowl




Our Thursday walk started at Ashwell near Baldock and took in Hinxworth.
Friday was Rosemary Doggett’s funeral – an old church member who had not been quite with it for sometime. In the afternoon I took Mary Watts new Zimbabwean carer to St Ives to try and sort some bank issues.
Saturday was the U3A Ramblers Party at Newnham College. Preparations are always somewhat fraught as our Lt Colonel leader and the elderly spinster don who is a member of the college have slightly differing methods of preparation. Nevertheless the party was excellent. Members bring food so there is always a slight air of competition resulting in excellent food. Kate made a raised chicken and pork pie and received many compliments.
This year the emphasis was on celebrating our oldest member who reached 80 the week before Christmas and is still rather sprightly. I had to do a PowerPoint presentation of her exploits.

Love


Mike & Kate