Dad’s fun but spooky poem….

My dad loved his daughters…..didn’t matter he longed for a son to carry on the family name…..he welcomed us all equally.
(He did eventually get a son – 4 years to the day our ‘little sister’ was born)
Everywhere we went he was up for fun – hauling us up onto the big gun for a photo in Ward Park Bangor had mum complaining we’d get dirty. Doesn’t matter he said, they’d had a bit of fun and would remember it

I think I’ve mentioned before he was an Irishman who loved to sing….I’ve never met one who doesn’t – I wonder if the breed exists??
We grew up in a house full of music
Never knowing when Dad would burst into song
or what would come out when he did

Belting it out at the pub

He could croon like Bing Crosby and Mum would pretend to swoon
There’d be the fun Irish songs
and then some days he’d come out with something by one of his favourite singers
Josef Locke
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Now not only did he sing but he was a dab hand at recitation
And what I was going to tell you about is what we used to call his spooky poem
One he performed with just the right amount of emotion and flair…..one we loved yet had us curled up together, retreating into the chair, anticipating what would come next

It began like this…..
Up the hairy mountain
Down the rusty glen……
Oh no, that’s not quite the way it goes but to very young ears that’s the way it sounded🤭

The Fairies – 1850
William Allingham 1824 – 1889

Up the airy mountain,
Down the rushy glen,
We daren’t go a-hunting
For fear of little men;
Wee folk, good folk,
Trooping all together;
Green jacket, red cap,
And white owl’s feather!

The first verse is what we usually heard but now and again we were treated to the full poem. Which didn’t please mum as she said it upset us. Not quite true, we loved it – even if it is a little confronting for some children……..dad had fun reciting it and seeing our reactions to the words. It’s just right for Halloween!

Down along the rocky shore
Some make their home,
They live on crispy pancakes
Of yellow tide-foam;
Some in the reeds
Of the black mountain-lake,
With frogs for their watchdogs,
All night awake.

High on the hill-top
The old King sits;
He is now so old and grey
He’s nigh lost his wits.
With a bridge of white mist
Columbkill he crosses,
On his stately journeys
From Slieveleague to Rosses;
Or going up with music
On cold starry nights,
To sup with the Queen
Of the gay Northern Lights.

They stole little Bridget
For seven years long;
When she came down again
Her friends were all gone.
They took her lightly back,
Between the night and morrow,
They thought that she was fast asleep,
But she was dead with sorrow.

They have kept her ever since
Deep within the lake,
On a bed of flag-leaves,
Watching till she wake.

By the craggy hillside
Through the mosses bare,
They have planted thorn trees
For pleasure, here and there.
Is any man so daring
As dig them up in spite,
He shall find their sharpest thorns
In his bed at night.

Up the airy mountain,
Down the rushy glen,
We daren’t go a-hunting
For fear of little men;
Wee folk, good folk,
Trooping all together;
Green jacket, red cap,
And white owl’s feather!

Irish poet William Allingham ~ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Allingham

Published in book form by Thomas de La Rue. Illustrated by Emily Gertrude Thomson
Fabulous photographs and text from the book can be found HERE

The book can be found HERE at Internet Archive (https://archive.org)

It’s been a bit cloudy and grey recently…..

My waiting time view at Costco car park

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Out the front

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On the way to Healesville
A quick snap from the car coming home from Healesville – the blue sky over the newly growing vines gave a false sense of security

Because this is today’s forecast.
Certainly not cold but very grey and miserable……with a ‘promise’ of things to come

I took time in yesterday’s afternoon sunshine to calculate how many more squares I’d get from the ‘left over’ yarn. These have been easy (portable) knits which is what I’ve needed recently. Those in the group who do the putting together say they like 36/20x20cms all the same weight so I’m about half way through at the moment……adding more colours once these are done.
Making one now and again has been calming, only having to remember to stop increasing at a certain number then begin to decrease…….oh, and remembering once decreasing has begun not to count the stitches then begin to increase again because you think you hadn’t reached the target figure. You end up with a funny shape doing that🤭

Then a quick look at a ‘oh, you must read this – you’ll love it’ book.
Take a newly formed book club, the lives of the female members plus their families and the storyline starts there. I’ll see how I go but there seems to be an awful lot of relationships and situations to get my head around and that’s just in the first chapter

Pop over and see who’s been visiting Kat — Unraveled Wednesday

Hidden benefits…..

Your know some of that time spent sitting around watching tv during the lockdowns (all those years ago) did actually have hidden benefits.

According to some paper notes found during a clear out I’ve just discovered that the old adage about never being too old to learn is true

Courtesy of Millionaire Hot Seat  one evening, in the short space of one hour I learnt that:-

  • Polar bear females are called sows, not cows
  • Young turkeys are called Jakes and Jennys
  • Mangos are in the same family as Cashews and Pistachios
  • The stumpy bits on a giffaffes head are called Ossicones
  • Dolorous means sorrowful

And….

  • If I want to go on a really really long trip, the distance from Earth to the Sun is about 150 million kilometres.  How many days drive do you think that might be??

Maybe I’d better hang on to the bit of paper I jotted it down on because how long I’ll retain all that information is anybody’s guess
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It’s Monday Morning here, I’m enjoying my early cup of tea but it won’t be long ‘till breakfast time when The Golfer will join me. We’re on day4 after his cataract surgery – eye drops are a feature of the day (5 times daily) so like when Mummas were ‘on call’ because new babies had to be fed regularly I can’t go far as I have to be around to do these…..because he found he couldn’t see where the drop was going.

Out of curiosity I’ll bring up the subject of the lockdowns (6 here in Victoria- 262 days) with him over breakfast and see what he remembers. I know what one of his answers will be…….he couldn’t go to golf for what seemed like an eternity 😊

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COVID-19_pandemic_in_Victoria

Who said that…

It seems strange that the next book I picked up to read is this one by Geraldine Brooks.

An historical novel and love story set during a time of catastrophe, on the front lines of the American Civil War.  March, an idealistic abolitionist,has gone as chaplain to serve the Union cause. But the war tests his faith not only in the Union—which is also capable of barbarism and racism—but in himself. As he recovers from a near-fatal illness, March must reassemble and reconnect with his family, who have no idea of what he has endured.

Considering all the recent and ongoing problems in the world this is almost topical.  Relating to a time when it seems men were men and women were women  (and not all were equal) it covers history I’m not too familiar with.

We learnt a small amount at school but didn’t go into depth – ask me about kings, queens and relevant battles of the British Isles and I probably would have the answer, unfortunately the whys and wherefores of American history are a mystery.

Yes I know it is about a fictional character …..the absent father from Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women…….taking that aside maybe I’ll ‘learn a little’ from reading it.

It’s been a while since I actually read Little Women although I’ve seen big and little screen versions which maybe glamorised the whole period but I loved the thought of sisters banding together helping their mother, worrying about their father, tolerating the rich aunt, doing good deeds, falling in love, accepting sickness.and gaining a little bit of independence.

So when I found this quiz online …..me,  usually wary of this sort of stuff, had a go; I didn’t get all the answers correct but then as I said it’s been a while and my memory isn’t quite what it used to be

Little Women – Which March sister said it

Why don’t you have a go and see if you remember the dialogue from the ‘well loved book’

Oh, and lovers of Mr Darcy and The Bennet sisters might be interested in this

Pride and Prejudice – Which Bennet said it

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Today is Friday – so lets have some Friday Fun with a Fun Quiz just right for the day we set aside to forget all the worries of the week

Don’t forget to tell me how you went!

To comment please click on post title and scroll down

Coming in threes….

Sometimes I wonder about that old saying about things happening in threes – good things come in threes, accidents and deaths come in threes, we say third time lucky and three cheers.  I’m not saying I don’t believe those thoughts but I really sat up and took notice and began to think about them recently……

I’ll start by saying years ago I read The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce.

The story about a man who hears an old friend of his is very ill and decides to walk to another town quite a way from where he is living in the hope that she will still be alive when he gets there.  Long and at times a bit ho hum it tells of how he copes with the journey, his attitude and feelings to the hardships he experiences also the people he comes across on his way and how he is a changed man at the end of it.

Later that year while we were away overseas I mentioned the book in passing to a friend and she suggested another book with a similar title.  Called What the Psychic told the Pilgrim by Jane Christmas this is not a novel but a tale (true recording) of the pilgrimage she made in Spain along the Camino de Santiago de Compostela (try saying that in a hurry lol).  So very different (much easier to read) and yet quite similar to the other pilgrimage book, this deals with similar hardships and attitudes and feelings Jane has to her fellow pilgrims as Harold had to his.  They both wanted to give up their treks but continued without all the fanfare around them and by the end both had ‘found love’.

That was the year Simon Reeve’s Pilgrimage documentaries were released
Simon Reeve retraces the adventures of our ancestors, and learns about the forgotten aspects of pilgrimage – including the vice, thrills and dangers that awaited travellers.
We watched but like many things these days I can’t remember a thing about it🙁

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Fast forward to last week visiting the library what do I see on a display stand but the Harold Fry book. Curiosity got the better of me and I looked along the C shelf wondering if Jane Christmas’s book was there……that would have had me giggling if it was.

No not there but it turned up on a free internet site (https://archive.org) when I was looking for something else……and look what else I found😊

I’m now wondering how long it’ll take me to finish reading the books I brought home – then I can set to ……reread both books, then rewatch the different episodes of Simon wandering the world

This goes with that…..

https://www.yarraranges.vic.gov.au/Our-services/Waste/What-can-I-put-in-my-bin

Two years on the council is still trying to ‘educate’ rate prayers

Remember the little stickers I mentioned here the other day
The supermarket says they need them to identify the item/fruit so the consumer is charged the correct price.

Here’s the latest letter box drop that came from the council on Wednesday- guess what they’ve singled out as a No No

Those pesky little fruit stickers!
They are plastic but they’re the the wrong sort of plastic to go in the recycling bin so they have to go in the household rubbish
It seems the consumer is saying……I’m fed up trying to work out what goes where so I’ll just leave them on and let ‘them’ sort it out

So now we have three bins with various coloured lids each with its own scheduled pick up week…….thankfully all on Monday morning .
Spare a thought for Sue in Suffolk (in the UK) plus those around her because most of them are soon going to be responsible for 5 – yes, five bins. Where on earth would you house them all
https://attheendofasuffolklane.blogspot.com/2025/10/all-change-in-village.html

🧶 Bright is right….

Yes, that’s what she said……”Bright is right”.

I never fail to marvel at the connections people involved in charity ‘work’ have. I’m not talking about large so called Not For Profit ones where they’re all competing for your donation dollar (monetary or in kind) but small local groups like my knitting/craft one.

My social worker acquaintance that I helped out previously (here and here) has made contact with and approached our leader with a request for simple woolies for slightly older babies. Her young mums and bubs group are struggling financially and are worried about not having warm jumpers/cardigans for next year.
Second hand is all they have known – tiny sizes are passed on more frequently because babies grow so quickly but not so for, say, 12/18 month because they will usually last a season. And that’s the size her little ones will be when it starts to cool down again.

Could you make them bright please she said, bright is right…..
the brighter the better
My ladies have enough ‘dark’ in their lives.
And if you could manage a bit of fun, that would be good😊

Lovely to enjoy flowers on the deck again

There had to be a reason I was gifted those balls of Orange. They’ve been sitting there for a long time….now is their time to shine.
I have plans for fun…..later!

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And then there is this…..
something else that was gifted to me a while ago. Overlooked when I packed for Bowen so now’s its chance to entertain me. Self published so not a lot online except the back of the book blurb:-

A Handful of Pebbles is a mystery-thriller where consequences of events occurring during the final months of World War Two shatter the peace of the early fifties. Innocent people, and a small ship trading along the south coast of England, are engulfed in a web of smuggling and murder, bringing lies and deceit, which makes the truth hard to find…at any price.

Should be good…..I’ll find out soon

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What do you have tucked away in the background of your life that needs to come out of hiding and shine

Sharing with Unraveled Wednesday

End of season….

We’re definitely coming to the end of the Mandarin season here and all of a sudden the fruit & veg department in a certain supermarket seems to be flooded with a single variety. I have never tasted this variety so I’m not judging the fruit itself…..my favoured one is Imperial which is available just for a short while early in the season.

Anyway you can buy this particular fruit loose (complete with its own little plastic sticky identifying label) from the market style displays doted around the fruit & veg dept. The fruit is as it comes from the supplier – as picked, various sorts of sizes so you’re free to choose how many you want/like the look of.
Keep that $3.90 kg price in mind…..

If you want your fruit all the same size and don’t want the hassle of picking through and choosing, just wander to another section and you will find these there. For just a little more you can have all the same size bagged ready to pick up and pop in your trolley….


But hang on, did you noticed the weight. It’s only 750gms not a kg……
……..which if you look at extra price on the label (mandatory unit pricing) means it works out to $6.43 kg

I wonder if the actual fruit inside the peel tastes any different to those that cost about $2.40 kg less

Playing the waiting game….

My little car is just the right size for me…..most of the time

The Golfer uses it occasionally but prefers his own, which we use if we’re off somewhere together. There are times though when it’s the other way round and I’m the one driving him in my car

Now….
I don’t mind playing chauffeur (as I’ve done for the last two years) when The Golfer needs a lift to the eye specialist even though he squirms around muttering about small seats.

I don’t mind waiting around an hour on average because it’s not worth while driving home and coming back

With several specialists consulting at the same time the waiting room gets crowded so I wait in the car

Where I can eat and drink to my heart’s content – listen to the radio – or read while I knit at the same time

The thing is….
It’s a bit of a tight squeeze trying to set things up with a steering wheel and gear lever in the way so one time I tried sitting on the passenger side……more leg room and nothing in front of me – but it just didn’t feel right…..so I moved back to the driver’s side which for some reason is more comfortable

Tuesday morning- 30 September

The nearest (free) undercover car park is at Costco – out of the blazing sun and pouring rain. It’s close to the railway station plus a huge shopping centre so there are large ‘we are not a public car park’ signs so if I’m challenged I’ll just produce my card and say ‘I’m waiting for someone’. Not actually a lie is it…..waiting….not for someone turning up with a trolley full of groceries but for a ‘I’m ready’ text from someone 🤭

With several more appointments (plus two surgical procedures) coming up over the next couple of months I reckon I’ll be dab hand at the waiting game by Christmas

A little glimmer….

You know those things that take you out of yourself and help you realise things aren’t quite as bad as they feel…..

Glimmers are small moments that make us feel a sense of calm, connection, peace, and safety. They are the little things we notice that instantly elevate our mood, even when we are feeling down or are in the midst of a bad day.  Source

Well, visiting friends with acreage at Silvan up in the hills last week, this appeared on the horizon.

A little zoom in and those distinctive colours ‘rainbow’ colours became more apparent

Much much better when visible in real life….not a full arch but enough to put a smile on my (and my friend’s) face…..and forget all our troubles and woes😊

Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, and Violet – almost but not quite