All Lit Up

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Yesterday was my birthday. No special milestones but simply another year around the sun. It was a quiet day but as with each Sunday for the past several months I played Scrabble with a couple of other people I have met. Yesterday was one of my more successful outings as I won 3 of the 5 games that we played.

This year I shared my birthday with Easter Day, the first time this has happened since 2014.

As part of the Easter Festival in our town the tower on Mt Tarrengower is lit up. I like to think that was in my honour!

Thank you to everyone who sent birthday wishes. They are really appreciated and I am feeling very loved.

No Visible Change

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I have spent most of today decluttering but I have very little to show for my efforts.

This is the view of the storage in our office and it looks exactly the same as when I started.

The reason is because I sorted out some of the paperwork which lives in one of these drawers. Some might say that it is not clutter if it fits neatly in a drawer. However, these are papers that are no longer required for a variety of reasons so I shredded them.

The drawer now looks like this. There are now 6 cardboard folders for different categories – 2 were discarded as the contents were all obsolete. It is hard to believe that we once had a 4 drawer filing cabinet.

I ended up with half a bag of shredded paper.

So, why bother doing this when I have plenty or space to store it? The documents I shredded are entirely obsolete and/or I have digital copies. They included tax returns and bank statements more than 5 years old and the like. I generally clear these things out every year or so. By having less it make the important things easier to locate when required.

Rhubarb Is Ready

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I have been away from the blog this past week as other things have taken precedence. We have enjoyed visits from two groups of guests. I has been a delight to show them around our town and the surrounds.

Here are a couple of photos taken from the summit of Mt Tarrengower which overlooks the town.

An almost full moon as we looked east towards the town.

Sunset in the opposite direction.

Our house guests of the past few days departed this morning so I need to get back to some food prep and meal planning. The first step was to cut a generous handful of rhubarb from one of the clumps which are happily growing near the back fence. We usually have some stewed fruit on our cereal each morning so I chopped and stewed the stalks and have containers of stewed rhubarb ready to go in the freezer.

Not My Garden

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There is always plenty to do in our own garden but we have recently been working in another garden. It is the garden area of our local Neighbourhood Centre which has been planted and tended in the past but was in need of a bit of care.

Along with another volunteer, GMan and I have been gradually working on a few areas. He slashed the grass around the fruit trees which number about 12. I am not even sure of exactly what they are yet.

I found a few raised gardens so have dug one over and planted some lettuce seedlings which are doing well. My friend planted coriander seeds in another and we have added garlic as well.

This photo is from a couple of weeks ago when GMan had cleared a lot of previous pruning to go to the tip as green waste. I had dug over the bed on the far left of the photo for the lettuces.

The other day I turned my attention to a massive clump of assorted succulents. They will probably not stay in the long-term plan but are OK for the time being. The most important thing was to remove the dozens of dead seed heads that would just self-seed everywhere.

The seed heads are in the bucket and the pile is dead foliage and stalks.

It certainly looks better now.

This is no massive garden blitz but more of an ongoing volunteer commitment to a community space.

An Average Autumn Day

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Although I often post about the significant and eventful happenings here, there are many days that just hum along as we do the things we do. I find this particularly so during autumn as the extreme heat and occasional storms of summer are behind us.

Autumn weather brings a benign mildness as the leaves begin to turn and we continue to harvest the last of the summer produce.

An outdoor view.

Picked from the garden.

The tomatoes I grew were from gifted seedlings from 3 different sources. I am not sure of all of the varieties but some were definitely ‘Beefsteak’ which is now my favourite tomato. So, when I discovered that one of these tomatoes had been attacked by some wildlife I decided that it was the perfect specimen from which to salvage some seeds.

Tomato seeds drying on some paper towel.

I did two loads of washing which included our bed linen. I remade the bed with the freshly laundered linen after it had dried in the warm sun and breeze.

An inviting bed at the end of the day.

Pruning and Planting

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We have plenty of plans for developing various aspects of the garden further but in the meantime we are pleased with the parts which are established.

GMan recently participated in a one-day workshop on pruning techniques and more particularly, the benefits of summer pruning of fruit trees. He has since purchased some new equipment and yesterday he applied his newly-acquired knowledge and pruned our 3 espaliered fruit trees. There are 2 Nashi pears and a nectarine.

Meanwhile, I have planted a punnet of pea seedlings.

The summer garden continues with tomatoes and zucchinis ripening and ready to pick every day or so.

I have at least a dozen packs of grated zucchini in the freezer which I can use to make zucchini quiche throughout the year. Of course, we have had fried tomato and zucchini as a side dish with plenty of meals recently.

The tomatoes have been especially prolific. I used 6kg to make sauce and there is more than enough to eat with almost every meal. There is nothing like the flavour of homegrown tomatoes.

This is what is on a rack on the kitchen bench at the moment as I constantly use some then add more from what I harvest almost every day.

Wardrobe Wonder

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It seems like forever but in reality it is a bit less than 6 months since we emptied and dismantled our walk-in wardrobe in preparation for the extension of the pantry. This post from October last year explains our plans.

Once the pantry was finished GMan still had to do some finishing filling of gaps and nail holes then he painted the whole wardrobe area and then it was time to decide on the fitout. After researching several options we decided on the Boaxel range from IKEA. It is very similar to the system we had installed in the wardrobes in our previous house. Unfortunately, the shelves we wanted were on backorder so that added quite a delay.

However, we picked up the remaining components on Tuesday when we went to Melbourne and we have spent the last couple of days working on assembling it.

The size of the reduced wardrobe is 1800 x 1800mm (6 x 6ft). It is not huge but definitely enough for our needs. We have a total of 3.2 metres of hanging rail as well as several shelves for shoes. I have a couple of handbags which will live on the shelf below my shirts and tops. The high shelves will be for a box of beanies, gloves and winter scarves as well as hats and a couple of small backpacks. The hooks at the end hold belts and dressing gowns.

We are really pleased with how it has turned out.

The view from the doorway.

My clothes and shoes as well as longer coats and suit bags.

GMan’s clothes and shoes.

Riding the Rails

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On Saturday we had a day out that was very close to home. The town where we live is one end of the Victorian Goldfields Railway, the longest broad gauge heritage railway in Victoria. Although we have lived here for nearly 2 years this was our first trip on the steam train. It was a glorious day and we thoroughly enjoyed the trip.

It was a special occasion to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the opening of the heritage railway between Castlemaine and Maldon.

Two different first class carriage interiors.

Ready for the return trip.

Rounding the bend and almost home.

It is good to be able to mix responsibilities at home with community volunteering and days out as well as our more extended holiday adventures.

Home From Holidays

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We arrived home from our holidays on Wednesday and I am pleased to report that in less than 24 hours after our return I had completed a significant piece of organising.

I had sorted, curated, numbered and labelled all of the photos from the trip. To be fair, I had begun deleting and curating them during the time we were away but the biggest portion of the job was after we arrived home.

There are a total of 135 photos from our 3 week trip and this is how they are arranged within a folder.

The naming convention I use is 001, 002 etc followed by a description.

We have looked at them all on the large television screen which definitely provides the best experience, apart from being there in real life.

My ability do get all of this done fairly promptly has reminded me that I should go back and do the same with all of the other folders of photos from various holidays.

Checking In

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I did not expect to make any more posts here until we return from our holidays.

However, this is a brief update on Cyclone Alfred which, whilst not particularly strong, is inching ever closer to Brisbane and the equally densely populated Sunshine Coast to the north and Gold Coast to the south. There are over 4 million people in the region who are under threat of strong winds, torrential rain and storm surges over the next 24 hours or so.

Brisbane is my hometown and I have friends and family who are directly in the path of the cyclone/hurricane right now, including one of our daughters and our 2 teenage granddaughters.

Please take care.