Smoky update: in the tub

For the first couple of days we saw Smoky only in the evenings. He spent most of the day upstairs underneath the bed on an ad hoc arrangement of folded up blankets, which I dubbed his ‘nest’.

Tonight though, after crashing out on the sofa most of the evening and sleeping through most of Gardeners’ World (like any sensible creature should) he finally made up his feline mind, hopped onto a comfy beanbag we’d put down for him, and from there onto the tub chair in the corner: the one with the big soft cushion. He seems to be finding his niche at last.

In other news, Shana found a couple of snooker-size polystyrene balls. Smoky has, with a little encouragment, been batting them round the living room like he’s in training for Olympic ping-pong. I don’t want to start making judgements on pro sports stars, but I reckon our Smoky has as good a forehand as Andy Murray any day of the week; his backhand (or should that be ‘back leg’?) ain’t too bad either!

Smoky: the arrival

Smoky, our cat, pic number 1

This is Smoky, a beautifully marked grey tabby, who arrived here this afternoon. He has a chequered past, having got into a fight with a car and (obviously) survived. In the process he lost one hind leg and most of his tail; legend, however, has it that the car was a write-off. Strike one to Smoky!

He’s still getting settled in at the moment, and this may take a few days. He doesn’t seem to mind having his picture taken, though. And he is rather photogenic, don’t you think? (Click on the pics to see just what a fine creature he really is.)

Our cat, Smoky

Put the flag(stone) out, we’re slab-fee at last!

Ever had something you wanted to get shut of? Something that took up much-needed house room but for which you couldn’t find any legitimate method of disposal (what with the Council being picky about what they let you put in the communal dumpsters) and so you just had to put up with it.

Well now you know how Shana feels!

But I digress…

For the last five years (i.e., ever since we moved in here) we have been lumbered with a relatively small but inconvenient quantity of builder’s rubble in the garden. Apart from about forty red bricks, it’s mostly broken concrete slabs. Originally used as the base for a free-standing wooden shed by our house’s previous tenant, Mad Harry Burton of the King’s Own Slight Infantry, they are what a concrete expert would describe as ‘past their best’. They’re more broken and wrecked than the Spanish economy and have, without a word of exaggeration, more chips than Harry Ramsden. They’re not much use for making a patio or crazy paving and, bearing in mind that you have to pay if you want someone to remove such things, it has been a constant headache trying to figure out what to do with them.

Gathering together most of this mound of miscellaneous masonry, I first tried my hand at a spot of drystone walling. However, I created not a dry-stone wall but a heap of builder’s rubble roughly six feet long by about three feet high. This sat at the end of the garden for about one year as a testament to my skills.

It had to go. But where?

Next, we laid some of the biggest slab sherds on the rear border behind the main lawn. They lay for most of a year on top of a sheet of anti-weed membrane. This year, though, we have other plans for that border, so the slabs had to be moved again.

This time, I stacked them in our downstairs shed where they immediately caused a brand new nuisance: on opening the shed door, i could enter for about one metre before being halted by a miniature display of the ruins of brutalist architecture. Forget Johnnie Ruskin‘s Stones of Venice: these were the Stones of Menace. The only place left for proper gardening tools was wedged on one side. Open the door in a hurry and you could be instantly pronged by a wayward lawn rake. (If printing out this article, feel free to insert your expletives of choice here.)

Naturally, this situation was less than ideal.

Then, late last week, a chance conversation with a neighbour brought an instant solution to our lingering problem. The neighbour in question, Mrs Woman, said I could sort out a few slabs and place them underneath her bushes to discourage the local cats from pooping there. So that’s what I spent yesterday afternoon doing: no, not pooping under the lilacs, but chucking carefully placing every last one of those dratted slabs under the bushes (literally where the sun don’t shine) and quickly, before the lucky recipient could change her mind.

So now everybody’s happy. The local moggies can find plenty of other pooping venues, the neighbour’s (presumably) pleased, and I can at last get into the shed and use it for its proper purpose–hiding from the housework.

If I’d had a pound for every time I’ve shifted those slabs, I’d be a rich man, or I’d have a fiver anyway. And the exercise has kept me fit. But still I can’t help thinking: if I’d known about those mucky moggies when we first came here, I’d have lobbed those slabs over the fence five years ago and good riddance to them. Ah well, better late than never.

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Hail fellow, well wet

Sunday afternoon brought several hail showers our way. As it is still April, though, I guess it’s still ‘anything goes’ as far as the weather’s concerned. Even so, it was quite a sight. Hailstones were bouncing off the window ledges like lemmings off a cliff, and the noise on the glass was so loud we thought we’d come under artillery fire from an entire battalion of pea shooters.

For a while, the grass in front of our house stayed white where hailstones lay slowly melting. ‘If you dash out quick,’ I said to Shana, ‘you should have just enough time to build the world’s first hailman.’

‘What’s a hailman?’ said Shana.

‘It’s like a snowman,’ I said, ‘except it hurts a lot more if one smacks you in the face.’

Waiting for Smoky

Four posts in one day? Goodness griefus!

Well, I don’t want to overwhelm our readers (either of them) but I should mention that our new (actually, our first ever) cat should be arriving on Wednesday afternoon. He’s a grey tabby and we’ve named him Smoky. More news in due course.

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The Mascara Massacres

What an intriguing title! That should attract plenty of hits on the blog. Be a good title for a movie too. Or one of those best-selling thriller novels. Frenzied fisticuffs lead to fashionista fatalities; catwalk killing sprees; mayhem and murder in the make-up department. It’s sort of Jackie Collins meets Agatha Christie, all pumped up on botox and hiding a small handgun and some spare eyeliner in a package that’s certain to appeal to primetime audiences all over the world.

So good I should get cracking on the screenplay right away.

Except it’s not a book or film synopsis, sorry to disappoint, but just Shana’s misreading of a couple of words in one of the faux-Scrabble games she was playing online yesterday. Which goes to show yet again how one can sustain a blog by using even the flimsiest of material.

If you do decide to go ahead with our outline idea, however, remember (as the ads traditionally say) where you heard it first, and don’t forget to bung us a tenner as a mark of gratitude; it’s the least you can do.