It's been another quiet week. I like quiet weeks. The most excitement was that Shafaq and Ali arrived back in Australia safely after their flying trip to Pakistan to visit Ali's terminally ill father. They have tested negative to Covid twice since arriving back a week ago. They bought me two of these phone pouches. I am delighted to know their family is safe and well, and delighted to have the pouches. I spent some time earlier in the week looking for a similar one amongst my bag collection. I thought I had one somewhere and couldn't find it. I had put on a loose summer dress with no pockets, and needed a way of keeping my phone on my person.
VoilĂ !
After Pilates on Thursday I called at Bunnings and bought some more plants for the empty planter boxes on the Eastern balcony.
The other bit of good news is that my Vergola is once again operating. The abseilers have gone, taking their coverings with them. The new plants don't show up very clearly - but the idea is blend into the landscape.
I've done a bit of checking as well. These Adelaide bats are the biggest in the world, with a wing span of 1metre. They roost during the day at the Botanic Gardens, and feed at night in the Morton Bay Fig tree in our Square.
Barbara joined us stitching on Friday. We were all knitting. That's a little unusual in the height of an Australian summer, but somehow we've all landed here.
Susan helped me work out what I should have been doing with the Mosaic bag. I think we've got it sussed. I have written the story of the bag to date in my embroidery blog In summary, this is the completed adapted bag. I am now working it as it should have been worked.
I have not, however, abandoned embroidery. I've been working on creating some large embroidered cushions using the Bush Sentinels, created by Dijanne Cevaal during the 2020 bushfires. I am writing more about these in my embroidery blog, since there's a lot to work out, but in the meantime, these are the fabrics, which arrived this week.
I also finished reading a pre-publication copy of The Way From Here by Jane Cockram, to review for NetGalley. In spite of it switching back and forth between several time-frames, a technique that I don't much like, I was very moved by and engaged with it. It unravels the secrets of women across three generations. The woman of the oldest generation is Nellie. Part of my engagement came from the fact that I am trying to tell the story of my maternal grandmother, also Nellie, and struggling in the process with her family secrets, some of which she knew and tried to share obliquely with me, some of which belonged to earlier generations and were probably not known to, but undoubtedly impacted, her. Jane Cockram has done an extraordinary job of creating a world in which many women's experience and secrets are made manifest. My goal is much simpler - to tell what I know of my grandmother. It has helped me immeasurably on many fronts to have read this book.
This time two years ago I was preparing to travel to Stratford for the retreat that initiated this blog. An email this morning from Genevieve indicates I am not the only one missing the gathering of those friends. While we can't gather, I am so grateful for and enriched by the ongoing friendships.
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