Spring Blossoms

In the weeks since we got back from our month in Edinburgh – a month we have already booked again in Edinburgh for 2026 – we have settled into a home-based routine.  This has been especially pleasurable due to the exceptional Spring weather.  It has been largely sunny, the mornings have been fresh and clear and, since the clocks went forward, the evenings have been long and getting longer.  It has been a lovely time to be back at home in the country and to see the trees, bulbs and perennials start to come back to life and into flower.

Cherry Tree In The Local Town
Cherry Tree In The Local Town of Nailsworth

The walks into the local town for the newspaper and daily provisions have been chilly on the way in but warm on the way back.  The dry weather has opened up previously muddy routes across the fields.  The paths have offered views in the local woodlands and hedgerows of, first, the last snowdrops, then daffodils, then bluebells and primroses, and, now, wild garlic and cow parsley. 

A Wild Garlic Carpet In The Woods
A Wild Garlic Carpet In The Woods

The bursts of white from the blackthorn and, now, the hawthorn have been terrific while the early flowering cherry trees have now been supplanted in their splendour by later flowering cherry, apple, plum and pear tree blossom. 

Apple Blossom In The Neighbouring Field
Apple Blossom In The Neighbouring Field

In the midst of all of this we have had a late Easter celebration with our grandchildren and their parents.  The weather was kind and made the construction of my Easter Egg Hunt for the grandchildren easy.  First Grandchild in particular, really enjoyed it and we all enjoyed watching him gather up rather too many Easter eggs.  FG and his parents live in a central Edinburgh flat and he really appreciates the contrast of English countryside.  It was so rewarding to see his excitement on the Easter Egg Hunt and on other nature hunts and adventures we had organized.

Our Easter Crowd
Our Easter Crowd

FG also loved seeing and holding the brand-new baby goats owned by some village friends of ours. I was amazed at how gentle both the baby goat and FG were.

Easter: First Grandchild And A Brand New Kid
Easter: First Grandchild And A Brand New Kid

Second Grandchild was too young to join in everything directly but he too seemed to capture the vibrant atmosphere of our Easter weekend.  He always seems to be smiling. That was particularly the case at Easter with so many people around including, especially, his cousin.

The good recent weather has allowed me to catch up on clearing vegetable patches.  There is more to do and I need to be careful not to aggravate joint aches and pains, but I am pleased with the progress I have made.  Plus, the sunny evenings are starting to beckon us out for relaxed drinks amongst the euphorbia, Judas Tree and wisteria and, soon, the alliums and salvias.

Against this Spring backdrop, there have been a few other highlights.  We made a rare trip to London for a wedding (of Jane’s God-daughter) and to see and stay with some old friends of ours.  The finale of a decade-long set of ‘boy’s nights out’ with mates dating back to the 1970’s was arranged to coincide with our trip to London.  Apart from the hangover, it was a splendid trip and very enjoyable, particularly as we got to see our friends’ newly renovated house.  It was great that the final boy’s night out was a little extravagant with a private room, silly hats and a wonderful souvenir booklet produced by the prime organizer.  This included pictures of long-ago evenings together that encapsulated fading but amusing memories.

Also, back in March, friends in the village took Jane and I on an excursion to Dyrham Park.  We have long admired this couple for heading out on quickly arranged short breaks and excursions when the weather looks promising.  This time they took us off with them for a very relaxed and interesting time together.  

Approaching Dyrham Park House
Approaching Dyrham Park House

We didn’t venture into the Dyrham Park house which has been renovated comprehensively recently, but the gardens were lovely.  The daffodils were in peak season and the beautiful pale limestone of the baroque hall provided a great backdrop to views of the planting.  The parkland around the house offers splendid views of the south Gloucestershire and Avon landscape. 

Dyrham Park Gardens
Dyrham Park Gardens

I hadn’t been to the park for several years, when I went with my parents well before my Mum died, but I’m keen to go again in Autumn.  By that time nature will have moved on and the trees and gardens will look very different.

Two other highlights: first a very enjoyable visit to Tetbury Goods Shed to see a band we have seen a few times called Faeland.  They were on good form with an extended lineup and the lead singer’s beautiful clear voice resonating around a well-designed venue.

Faeland At Tetbury Goods Shed
Faeland At Tetbury Goods Shed

Second, I finally pickled the crop of shallots that I harvested well over six months ago.  They have been winking at me from the string bag I had stored them in every time I went into the shed.  Two years ago, I set myself a New Year resolution to do something creative at least once a month; I have failed on that. But pickling well over a kilogram of stored shallots counts as being creative for April – even if I haven’t actually tasted them yet.

My Spiced Pickled Shallots
My Spiced Pickled Shallots

Not everything in March and April has gone smoothly.  My knee and ankle are improving slowly with help from physiotherapy but both have been annoyingly painful at times.  Plus, a couple of weeks ago, I had a ‘fall’ (when approaching 70 one seems to call them ‘falls’ rather than a ‘trip’ or a ‘slip’ which would have been a more accurate description of the event) which wrenched my shoulder.  But, overall, it has been a very good early Spring and I have appreciated being retired and so able to fully appreciate it outdoors rather than from an office window.

Expanding Family

Easter is a time when we tend to think of the emergence of the new.  For the religious Christians, there is Jesus’s resurrection, for me there is the coming of Spring blossom and warmer weather, and for children there are Easter eggs. 

Spring Is Sprung In Nailsworth

This year, for Jane and I, there was the magic of a new life: a Second Grandchild (SG).  What a marvellous thing!

SG’s mother and father (Middle Son) are absolutely besotted with the new arrival and seem to be coping very well.  SG himself has seemed very chilled during the two visits that we have made so far to his Bristol home.  He seems so much smaller and longer legged in comparison to First Grandchild (FG) at the same age.  But maybe that is my faulty memory; all babies seem impossibly vulnerable, tiny and yet so full of potential.

Second Grandchild In His Easter Chick Suit

SG’s arrival has been a great excuse to drag out old photo albums to look for similarities and differences between him and his father as a baby.  Certainly, like his Dad, he has a fine head of hair!

Our Easter weekend was also blessed with a visit from Eldest Son (ES), his wife and First Grandchild (FG).  It had been almost three months since we had last seen FG and I had been suffering something like withdrawal symptoms from not having seen him for such a relatively long time.  It was great to see his development since the New Year and now we have a whole new set of videos and pictures of him to look at on repeat.

During a spectacular sort out and tidy up of our top floor storage (following on from a huge effort to sort out her late Mum’s heirlooms and other stuff), Jane had dug out some of my, and our kids’, old and very battered Matchbox and Corgi model cars and a whole bag of old plastic animals. 

Thunderbird 2 And Lady Penelope’s Car: Battered But They Have Been Through A Lot!

FG loved these old toys and it was great to see him using his imagination (and his new regard for Batman) as he played with them.  He was also demanding in his requests that we also participated in his play.  The refrain: “Grandad (or Granny), come and play” was frequent.  When I did get down and play, but also tried to have a conversation with someone else or do anything else at the same time, I heard him plead “Grandad, come and play, you keep stopping!”  Irresistible!

Batman’s Batmobile

A highlight was an Easter Egg hunt around the garden following chalked arrows pointing to the route and egg hiding places.  FG struggled at first with the concept of arrows pointing to things but he loved finding the eggs with a bit of help and then collecting them in a little bag.  His parents were left with the awkward problem of how to manage the unprecedented volume of chocolate in his possession.

The Easter Egg Hunt

The anticlimax that always follows a visit from the Edinburgh branch of the family is offset this time.  First, it is only three weeks before we travel to Edinburgh to babysit for a few days while FG’s parents go to Spain for a wedding.  Second, we now have a Bristol baby just 45 minutes away to fawn over.  We are loving the prospect of seeing SG’s development, and the developing parenthood of MS and his fiancé, in a more ‘little and often’ way than is possible with FG.

It’s all so exciting and it’s enhancing the bounce I always get as Spring arrives. 

Spring Is Coming In Our Hamlet

Various (so far) minor but irritating health issues have reminded me of my mortality in the last year or so.  This was underlined by the death of one of my friends from university just before Easter.  I once thought that as long as I lived to see my sons settled and had a grandchild, I would be happy to ‘pop my clogs’.  Now, of course, I want more.  I want to see more of my expanding family and see the grandchildren grow up.  We can’t have it all but, so far, so good.