Eight years (and 1 month) blogging

It’s late to mark my eighth year of blogging, but even so, I’m not passing up the opportunity of a list. Last year my list was of seven gardens to visit. Well, that didn’t work out so well, did it? Though it was only the Yorkshire and Cumbria gardens we didn’t get to visit, if we’re lucky we’ll be able to at least visit the Cumbrian ones on our rearranged cottage holiday in June.

We’ll see.

I’ve not yet managed to write a reflective post for 2020 - how is it the end of March already? So I’m going to use this post to reflect on eight things that have changed in the past year. I am purposely looking at this through the lens of how my life has altered rather than reflecting on the pandemic more generally. It goes without saying that many people’s lives and families have changed in ways they never expected, with so many losing loved ones in often the most terrible circumstances. This week we’ve had a National Day of Reflection and reflecting on the past year as part of that, and as we continue to hit a series of ‘first’ milestones will I’m sure bring me the full range of emotions.

1 Working at home

I started to work from home on 20 March 2020 and haven’t been back to work in my office since. For an organisation where working at home was far from the norm this is quite a change, and one that I’ve enjoyed on the whole. It’s harder to keep the boundaries, especially when based at the kitchen table, but it’s only almost a year on that we’ve bought a desk for each of our spare bedrooms to help with that delineation.

My new online meeting backdrop

I think like many, we thought it wouldn’t be for quite this long. In my calendar I’ve kept a note of how many weeks it is working at home, to start with I’d announce it Big Brother-style each Monday. I’ve just looked to discover that this is the first week that I haven’t added it to my calendar (I stopped announcing it a while back).

My role has remained busy, if not busier, and will continue like that I’m sure. It is never one that’s very samey-samey, and that’s been even more true this past year, but even I’m amazed at some of the things that are now just normal working life. I’ve recruited a team of two who I’ve never met in person and they’re great. In fact our team has almost doubled in the past year with our new starters all starting since lockdown. I’ve organised an hour-long staff celebration event remotely, coordinating self-filmed content and while it was a lot of work, and there were more than a few fourteen hour days, it was great to see how well this was received by colleagues.

Working from home used to be a time to think and get some headspace, but over the past year it’s become the norm. It’ll be interesting to see how it changes over the next year, I’ve a feeling that it won’t be quite the same as before.

2 Eating (almost) every meal at home

This has been the next most noticeable change, and lunches have been our challenge. We’d usually take lunch into work two or three times a week, so it really shouldn’t have been that hard. But somehow, lunches at home presented a challenge. We quickly learnt that leftovers from dinners would come in useful, a handful or two extra pasta can be a pasta salad, some chilli can be a jacket potato topping and fishfingers are great in pittas.

In the summer salads and grains became our staple, and now it’s chillier soups feature regularly. We need something quick to prepare and have discovered some new favourites, lovingly known as ‘fridge tapas’ and ‘fridge medley’ which as you may have guessed make good use of our leftovers, but can bring together some strange combinations. Leftover pasta with vegetables in an omelette was surprisingly good.

Cooking ourselves an evening meal from scratch isn’t new to us, but we’ve done that more than ever during the various lockdowns. There’s been less eating out, well almost none, but we have managed some restaurant trips when they’ve been open. We’ve had less takeaways too which probably isn’t such a bad thing for us (for takeaways less so) but it’s a definite change and not quite the same after a tough day.

What we have done is support local restaurants and companies by ordering meals to have at home, as they’ve looked for ways to generate income. Most have been cook at home type things, so we’re still cooking, but a lot of the prep has been done for us. They’ve been really good, and a couple have come with plating up instructions which brings an extra level of challenge, and at New Year receiving someone else’s delivery brought a whole new meaning to a mystery box.

3 Missing friends and family

Something we can all relate to I’m sure. Last year I only saw my parents three times - in March, July and October - and that’s not been so great. I’ve seen my brother once, but haven’t seen his new house and nor have I seen my grown-up nieces or even met my new great-niece. At all. We’ve had calls and zooms and Facetimed, but they aren’t the same, are they? Hopefully it won’t be much longer before we can meet up with them, and with friends. Though I think that socialising in pubs and restaurants will feel a little strange for a while when they reopen, and it’ll be great to visit people at home again too.

4 Haircuts, or lack of them

I’m an every six week kind of girl, and my last haircut was booked for the second week of January. It’s now approaching the end of March and I’ve another three weeks to go yet, and I can’t wait. My last colour was in July 2020 when hairdressers first reopened and I’ve the full works booked for the middle of April. My hair is longer, it’s also greyer and my pink and orange will be mostly cut out on my next visit.

My hair has a tendency to grow fast and out, so for the shorter side, the back and my fringe I’ve had to tackle that myself, and with no apologies to my hairdresser. By the time I see her it will have grown again and she’ll be able to remedy it (I hope!) though like a lot of hairdressers I’m sure she’ll have her work cut out, and will no doubt see some interesting attempts.

5 Postponed trips

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Unusually for us we had a couple of trips booked for 2020 way in advance of when we’d usually book, and neither happened. Both have been postponed, but I’m hopeful that we’ll be able to get to the holiday cottage in the Lake District this June. That was supposed to be a week after a family wedding, which has now been delayed until 2022.

It’s not all bad though as we were able to get away in October and had a lovely few days in a beautiful cottage just outside Holt in Norfolk.

We will hopefully get to the Lake District this June, and I may even be able to get along to some of the Visit Seven gardens I chose last year. We also have a weekend in Kent (just down the road!) booked in July, which I think will be pretty special too.

We’ve no desire to go abroad just yet, but hopefully we’ll be able to see some more of the UK too this year.

6 Shopping, online and locally

While we’ve continued to use our local greengrocers, butchers and local vegetable delivery service we have been purposefully supporting more of our local businesses. We’ve discovered some great boulangeries whose Madeleines have become a favourite with our mid-afternoon cuppa. The stall holders in our local farmer’s market also welcome the custom and we regularly leave laden with bread, cakes, vegetables and even kimchi.

We’ve also continued our less-often-than-monthly grocery shop online, and supplemented that with trips to our local supermarket. We’ve had the cook at home boxes I mentioned before, as well as some great cheese deliveries - who knew these were a thing, even before the lockdowns.

We’ve had wine deliveries - though that’s currently a sore point. Our most recent delivery has gone AWOL with the delivery company saying the driver’s SatNav shows he was here. It may very well do, but there is no evidence of the parcel being delivered - they say they left it in our front porch and put a card through the door. We don’t have a front porch, and of course there was no card either. The worst of it is, we have no wine, and have paid for the privilege.

In the first lockdown we ordered a new barbecue and were rewarded with some great weather and a few charred edges, and many evenings sitting outside. This week we’ve conceded that we do actually need a printer and a new one is due to arrive; my desk arrived, his is on the way - his is the one I’m most excited about, so I can’t wait to see what that’s like.

We’ve not been to a garden centre, but have had plants delivered - lettuce and chillies last Spring, the lettuce was a great success, the chillies less so. I’ve recently had some hydrangea, dogwoods and cistus delivered and these are doing well in the conservatory waiting to be planted out.

I have previously been referred to by a colleague as the Queen of Online Shopping, but this past year, even I have been surprised by how companies have adapted, and have needed to to survive.

7 Slippers not dresses

This one’s related to working at home and not going out much. My wardrobe has drastically changed - or rather, what I wear has. My office-wear was generally a dress, but I’m not sure when I last put one on. Generally my outfits are much more casual, which isn’t surprising, and my new work shoes are my slippers. Never before have I worn out slippers, this year I have - but of course I don’t like any of the ones online, so I’m biding my time when I can make the move to mules when the weather warms up.

Heels? Nope, not this last year - not even mid-height heels. So that will be interesting when I venture back into those. I will at some point, I have too many not to - I just hope I can still walk in them!

8 Appreciating what we have and each other

For me this past year has been one of rebalancing, even though my work hours are crazier than ever. I’ve not had quite the time I thought I might, or the time that the media makes out that everyone has, but I have had some. I’ve learned new things, like rag rugging, and baked banana bread and sourdough like everyone else. I’ve spent less time here on my blog which is one of the things that’s a negative for me, but I’ve needed to do that to have some time away from the screen and at times to just have a break.

I’ve found I’m doing more crafts, which is great. I’ve several crochet projects on the go and several that need finishing off. I’ve picked up my patchwork quilt again and am making real progress with that, and definitely more than in the previous few years. I’ve made some masks, and have plans to make some more, as I’m bored by the ones I have and I don’t think we’ll be rid of them just yet.

While at times MOH and I have probably driven each other up the wall, I know I’m lucky to have him and hope he feels the same, and actually there’s no one else I’d have wanted to spend lockdown with.

That ended up being a much longer post than I anticipated, but it has been quite a year. While we have a little way to go yet before we can start to resume parts of our life which have been almost on hold, hopefully that can soon start to happen and I’ll have another year of blogging under my belt this time next year.

PoCoLo

My top 10 posts of 2020

Once again in my yearly ritual I’m looking at the most viewed posts here last year. I’m sharing two lists again, the first of which shows the top ten posts created in 2020, the second list is the top ten posts created at any time, mainly just to continue what I’ve started and to satisfy my own inner data nerd.

So onto the top 10 posts created in 2020.

1 Lockdown Learnings #1

Well, how 2020 - in some ways I’m proud that this one is this year’s most viewed post. Though of course in plenty of ways I’d rather I’d never been able to write it at all. The irony isn’t lost on me either, as we’re back in national lockdown, and a lockdown in winter is nowhere like a lockdown in spring. The lunches are quite different too.

2 A growing pile of colourful crochet

Not long after the first lockdown finished I signed up for a six month subscription box of gorgeous yarn, and quickly grew a pile of colourful squares. I’ve received all the boxes now - and they were all fab - and I have the last delivery to make use of. Once I have I’ll be sharing how I got on on here too.

3 My new room crush

Back at the start of the year it seemed like we were out every weekend visiting gardens and houses. This room in Nymans became a new favourite, and it’s easy to see why isn’t it?

4 Azulejos, hand painted tiles

This post is a throwback to our holiday in Portugal the previous year, and a visit to a local tile factory that was just over the road from where we were staying. And oh, so many designs in their shop - and such great craftsmanship in all of the hand painted designs.

5 My garden in March

This is the only visit to my garden that made it onto the top 10 list this year, and it’s a great time of year for our garden. With lockdown we spent more time either in it or close by than usual this year, like many other people too.

6 The loo we couldn’t find at first

This was the loo in our hotel room on our only trip abroad in 2020. And to be honest we were lucky to get that, though a few days in Lyon in February might not be everyone’s choice, it was a great break. It was also the one where we cut it fine and almost missed the plane home, but thankfully we didn’t. Our most stressful airport experience ever, but also one of the quirkiest hotel room loos.

7 Lockdown learnings #2

The second lockdown learnings post, I’d planned a whole series but they never quite happened. Maybe I’ll restart them to complement this lockdown, who knows?

8 Starting another crochet project

The thread was part of the random bundle that I bought in Norfolk along with the tiny crochet hooks. I wanted something to take away with us for our cottage stay near Holt in October, which was also well timed taking place just before half-term and the additional restrictions. I also found a pouch, made by mum, which was pretty much made to measure to keep it all in.

9 A secluded spot

Another successful National Trust visit, this time to Standen on the August Bank Holiday. Quite a novelty as the house was actually open, with everyone required to wear face masks, quite a different experience, but one that everyone was happy to follow. This spot overlooks the terrace and would be the perfect spot to while away some time, and to people spot mostly unnoticed.

10 What a difference a month makes

This was from our trip to Barbados at the end of 2019, and shows off my new beach towel. It’s a great towel, and Barbados is a great place. It was a much needed holiday, and given everything that followed well timed. What we’d give to be able to do this now though.

So another year, and another interesting list. All I ever ask of my blog is that it reflects my life, and with the 2020 posts that have been viewed the most it certainly does that.

Now onto the second list

This list is posts created at any time but viewed in 2020, the year in brackets is the year it was originally posted. This year none from 2020 made the list, and that’s ok. There’s also been some movement which is fascinating, or fascinates me anyway!

  1. Filling our gabion baskets (2017) (-)

  2. Softening our gabion seating area with planting (2017) (+3)

  3. Let’s talk Edwardian house decoration (2017) (+1)

  4. My IKEA hack: HOL storage table to laundry basket (2015) (-2)

  5. Sean Murray’s Great Chelsea Garden Challenge (2017) (-2)

  6. 52 Cookbooks #36: Beef in easy tomato sauce (2014) (new)

  7. Love this 47: Poppy brooch (2014) (new)

  8. Fabulous outdoor planters (and more) from Cox & Cox (2016) (new)

  9. Blinds and shutters with Thomas Sanderson (2018) (-3)

  10. Storing logs in our gabion baskets (2017) (new)

It’s good to see the gabion baskets posts retain top spot and increase popularity. But to be honest though it’s interesting, it’s hardly a scientific study is it. Who knows what the year ahead will bring - we’ll have to wait and see.

I also plan to share my favourite posts from the year - I need to work out if I’ll take the same approach as i previous years or do something different, as I’m pretty sure there’s been less posts on my blog overall.

PoCoLo

Lockdown learnings #2

The first post of this series covered food, this takes the next step and covers shopping. At the start of lockdown there was a focus on buying only essential items, which some took to extremes, with reports that Easter eggs weren’t deemed essentials. They were in this house, and we were fortunate enough to have thought a little ahead and were able to buy and leave eggs with my parents on our visit to see them before lockdown started in March. They were equally as forward thinking and we were able to swap eggs way in advance of the day. We were good, and managed not to eat them until Easter Day, I’m amazed, you’re amazed, but it’s also true that they were demolished in a just a day or so.

But back to shopping, and how it’s changed and how we’ve all quickly adapted.

1. Queuing to get in

Shopping during lockdown has become very different, even as more shops have started to open, and probably especially so. We are excelling at queuing, this time to get into shops, who’d have thought? The queues for the shops near us are orderly, everyone does it, keeps their distance and is polite - in some ways it’s quite the revolution. We’ve learnt that the best time to visit our local small-ish supermarket is around 6pm, which is fine, unless we want to go to the butchers too. He’s now closed on Mondays and Wednesdays so it needs some planning in advance, and knowing which day it is, which is another of lockdown’s challenges.

We’ve seen more and more people wearing masks while out shopping, and I think that’s what will continue to happen, with the government extending advice - or maybe stronger - to wear them while in shops as well as on public transport. The fact that Boris has now been pictured in a mask seems to indicate this, and is quite a departure from the early stance of wearing them not being backed by science.

What we noticed in the early days of people wearing masks in shops was a sense of invincibility. Theirs, they seemed to think wearing a cloth or more substantial face covering gave ultimate protection and they would swarm around people taking care to socially distance in aisles. Looming in and reaching over you as they picked something off the shelf. It’s true that face coverings protect others, but so does socially distancing and I think respecting both is a better approach all round.

2. Baskets vs bags

Queueing to get into shops isn’t the only thing that’s changed. We’re still not using those metal shopping baskets, or trolleys, instead we’re using our own bags, and no one bats an eyelid. It feels odd, it feels wrong, and I feel guilty, but we’re still doing it, no one’s objecting, and we’re not the only ones either. We are of course honest and do that very British thing about making a big show that our shopping bags are empty once we get to the till. I’m sure no one notices, but we feel better for it.

TALKING OF BEING BRITISH:  TEA AND A TEAPOT HAS BECOME OUR AFTERNOON TRADITION

TALKING OF BEING BRITISH: TEA AND A TEAPOT HAS BECOME OUR AFTERNOON TRADITION

3. Tactics, and a waiting game

In the earlier days of lockdown getting an online shopping slot was hard, to say the least. It required skilled tactical moves, late nights and often quite a bit of luck. I was happily tasked with securing online slots for my parents too, and once we’d sussed out when their supermarket released their slots, it was easier and more of a waiting game. Waiting to see what slots they had, which would be available and how long the virtual queue would be to get into the online shop. Another queue.

I had more luck with Tescos than Ocado, which having been an Ocado customer for many years was pretty frustrating. And that’s when I realised that…

4. Loyalty is different for everyone

And while I might have been loyal to Ocado over many years, they weren’t as loyal to me. So much so that at one point I wasn’t even able to get onto their site. I was all for taking my online shopping elsewhere, and I did. Tescos online shop booked and delivered. The only thing is, I wasn’t so keen on their products, partly because I wasn’t so familiar with them.

With Ocado splitting from Waitrose later in the year, my split from Ocado was always likely. Our local supermarket is an M&S store, and while it’s good for top up shops, it’s not somewhere I want to do my monthly shop. Tescos was being tested as a replacement too, and let’s just say they’re no longer in the frame, well not for everything.

What’s changed is that I’ve realised I can shop around, even with online deliveries. Tescos didn’t sell the Quince Jelly I was after, or in their online shop at least, and so I went direct. I bought a little more than I would have in one go, but the only jar that I’d not bought before was the salted caramel spread (which we’ve yet to try), but otherwise these are all things we buy.

I can see that this will be a way for me to shop in the future, going direct to buy the products I want. We already use a local butcher, greengrocer and veg delivery company, and so it’s just a further extension of this. I do wonder if the bigger supermarkets will start to see a downturn from a way we’ve shopped for the past twenty or thirty years.

BOUGHT DIRECT FROM TIPTREE

BOUGHT DIRECT FROM TIPTREE

5. Growing numbers of carrier bags and cardboard boxes

During lockdown we’ve amassed more of these than we usually would. Normally we’d hand these back to the driver, but lockdown rules are different. While I know they can go into our recycle bin, I still can’t quite bring myself to do that, yet. We’re reusing some, especially cardboard boxes, but I’ve genuinely less use for carrier bags.

We’re recycling the packing from parcels as we usually would, but the boxes that our veg come in especially, are useful. I’m loathed to chuck these out (in the recycling bin) as the company could reuse these and reduce their costs. I know there’s different rules in this lockdown, but I am reluctant to see the increase of plastic and unnecessary waste, but also I’m close to the point where my carrier bag of carrier bags is overflowing. And besides that, just think of all those 5ps!

PoCoLo