Not really any new challenges to report at the moment, but I'm enjoying Emma's Count of Monte Cristo, I'll try & read 60 "mind-improving" books & comment on them as I go. It will take much more than a year, any sensible suggestions welcome. I'm ruling out things I've read before. This year I can list Darwin's Barnacle, not as geeky as it sounds, as bit technical in places but a fascinating insight into him & his obsessional & hypochondriacal traits. I think I mentioned Periodic Tales, a quirky quest to collect all the elements, with their histories, again not too technical for us normal people.
The kitchen disaster counts as a new challenge (16), we got a good second hand cooker for Amy's house, but found it was 4mm too wide for the space. The previous skanky one was a small one, much too small for "normal" space. Problem solved by removing the top, dismounting the units from the wall, sawing off a bit of skirting board in situ as water pipe was put in after it, like a 3D puzzle, then just sliding the whole lot a centimetre & reassembling it all. Graham the Wonderful has a machine which can cut the 1cm off the worktop. The best bit is that the floor tiles now fit the space beautifully as I had to trim it round the pipes, so better than before.
Walking in Somerset last weekend with Gail, Eve Denise & Roger I found a fly orchid, a first for me, but not really a challenge. Finding all the British ones would be!
Finally, I went into the bank & was served by a nice young man I'd met before, in a wheelchair, I suspect from a cervical spine injury, he said he'd remembered me because I had been polite last time, how sad that that's memorable.
im very impressed by your kitchen puzzling! thankyou :) cant wait to come home next weekend to get stuck in myself!
ReplyDeleteI'm reading an evil cradling by brian keenan, i don't know if you remember, but he was captured in the middle east. its interesting but a bit heavy going :s i need to read something nice after this!
xxxx