25th
March 2018
Dear
All,
There has been plenty on this week without a single
night in one way or another. On Monday swimming was followed by the dentist,
allotment digging (after kale), and erecting four bird boxes which were part of
Esther’s birthday gifts. In the evening I was at Mepal for a Garden Club talk
on “Alliums”. This caused a little excitement as they were expecting a talk on
flowering Alliums and I was talking about Leeks, Onions etc.!
Kate has designs on re-carpeting my office while I
am in Moldova so we had to visit Dentons in Cottenham to choose a replacement
on Tuesday – this was fairly painless as we chose from the first book we were
offered. The garden had dried out enough to start planting: early potatoes, onion
sets, peas from a gutter, and sowing beetroot and carrots. In the evening we
had a long church meeting mainly about changing or stopping the evening service
– predictably there were enough of the elderly who are not keen on change!
On Wednesday we went to St Ives on the guided bus to
finish Moldova shopping then a bit more digging in the back garden after leeks.
In the evening it was our annual 10 pin bowling expedition to Pidley. This is
always popular with 24 bowling and another 4 or 5 just there for the meal.
Spectators Agog!
Action shot
Thursday’s jaunt started at Shepreth and followed
clear ex chalk streams through Barrington, Meldreth and Melbourn. It was an
excellent walk illuminated with daffodils, violets, kingcups and primroses. In
the evening it was the first Over Fruit & Vegetable Show Planning meeting of
the year. As ever the minutes and agenda were of prodigious length.
River Mel
River Cam
Meldreth Mill
Kingcups
Our final “Biographies” of the year features “James
Murray” a Scottish lexicographer who was heavily involved in starting the
Oxford English Dictionary. It was predicted that the first edition would take
10 years to produce on 7,000 pages; in the end it took 60 years and 12 volumes
with 301,000 entries. This was followed by a meal in “Cote Brasserie”. The
service left a little to be desired as after one and a half hours we had only
had starters and some people had not ordered a starter so were getting rather
hungry! I was presented with a couple of bottles of wine for taking my
projector in when needed which made for a tricky bike ride back from the guided
bus with the projector, wine and another bag. In the evening we had a Deacons
& Wives meal at Kate & Gordon’s at Haddenham followed by more long
discussions.
James Murray
Riverford have been in touch for some more work on
their cropping programmes so I spent much of Saturday morning working on “Winter
Brassicas” mainly savoys and purple sprouting broccoli. They find with mild
winters in Devon, crops come in too early giving surpluses in the autumn early
winter and running out later on.
Football this week was Cambridge University Press 0 v
2 West Wratting - for the 4th time in 5 weeks a player was sent off.
Love
Mike & Kate