Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Orchids and books

 In February we were given an Orchid as part of a thank you present.  I wrote about it at the time - here.

About three weeks ago the last of the flowers died off so we freed the plant from its wire support and let it grow as it wanted.  Soon more flower buds appeared and now we have more flowers on the first of the two stems and buds enlarging on the second.  I'm hoping we can keep it going for a while longer.

In my last post I promised recent reading and more wallabies.

I've been reading quite a few books that had been reserved at the library over the last couple of months and as often happens they were ready for collection almost at the same time.

I enjoyed reading Gill Hornby's novel The Elopement, just as much as I did her first two Miss Austen and Godmersham Park.  All three feature the Austen and Knight families and are well researched and easy to read.  The fourth novel from the Reverend Richard Coles A Death on Location is just as gently amusing and entertaining as the the first three.


The Red Shore by William Shaw introduces a new detective called Eden Driscoll.  I've read all of William Shaw's DS Alexandra Cupidi novels which are set in Dungeness.  The new setting for this novel is Teignmouth in Devon.  I have many happy childhood memories of Teignmouth as we spent a couple of weeks there each summer over a number of years.  We stayed at the same guest house and always had a beach hut belonging to them on the back beach where the ferry crosses the Teign estury to Shaldon.  The setting for the book is in the area where we had the beach hut. I hope there are more books in this new series as I really enjoyed this one.

Above me and my cousin John on one of those holidays.  I'm not sure how old we were, perhaps nine or ten.  John was just two weeks older than me.  He would have been seventy five this coming Friday.

Death in Blitz City by David Young is set in Hull and has quite a convoluted storyline with several different elements shooting off at tangents until all is revealed.  It took a while to get into but I did finish reading it.

Another book I read on e-books Cloud Library  was Death at the White Heart by Chris Chibnall.  (I forgot to take a photo of the cover.) I hope this is the start of a series as I enjoyed it. 

I have three more books reserved but I suspect they will be longer getting around to my turn.  They are The Black Wolf by Louise Penny, Deadly Remains by Kate Ellis and The Hallmarked Man by Robert Galbraith.

Two more Wallabies spotted over the last few days.

Wobbly painted by the Rachael and Phillippa Corcutt Collective in collaboration with Borderland Voices.  He's at the Manifold Valley Visitor Centre at Hulme End near Hartington.


We treated ourselves to a coffee at The Tea Junction tea rooms.



The Wallaby above is Bere painted by Nellie Shepherd and Briony Eyre from the Bullclough School of Art in collaboration with Beresford Memorial First School.  This one is outside the Peak Wildlife Park.

All for now.

7 comments:

  1. My friend has managed to keep several orchids for many years. Fingers crossed yours might be as long lasting.
    It's lovely to see the 'new' wallabies. I especially like Wobbly. Xx

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    1. Thank you Jules, I like Wobbly too. It has such a wonderful setting at the top of the Manifold Trail. Keeping my fingers crossed about the Orchid as I'm not used to house plants other than a money plant which was 99p from Ikea years ago and is still going strong and about 20 times it's original size:)

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  2. Your orchid looks beautiful, you're obviously treating it well. I've had to move mine from the windowsill as this intense heat was too much for it, still in the same room but a shadier spot. I love snowdrops and was sad I had to leave mine behind when we moved, but I'm going to buy some in flower and plant in our new garden. Xx

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    1. Thank you Gill, it seems to like where it is at the moment. Our front windows face west so it gets the evening sun but is mostly sheltered from it through the heat of the day. I have both snowdrops and lily of the valley that I would love to take with me if we moved but I expect it would be kinder to leave them. I hope you get some new ones for your garden:)

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  3. I wonder why they chose wallabies, they do look very nice though good to see them so colourful and happy. The real ones are really cute when you see then hopping about on rock faces in the outback. Thanks for all your info on books as I am a keen reader and always have a book with me in case I have to wait somewhere. From Shirley in Perth OZ.

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    1. Thank you Shirley. Glad you enjoyed the wallabies, they are very cute. The reason for the Wallaby trail is that during the second world war a group of five wallabies were roaming free across the Staffordshire moorlands, they gradually got to about fifty before they eventually died out a few years ago. I wrote about them in more detail in my post of 20th July. There are wallabies at the nearby Peak Wildlife Park too. I too like to have reading available if I have to wait anywhere:)

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  4. Oh I love that photo of you in your younger days. For me setting is one of the key elements in any book I read especially if it’s an area I know. I shall note down all those titles as I haven’t read any of them . I think the wallabies are a great idea for young and old alike. I can’t wait to see what Jersey comes up with next. It was tortoises last time. B x

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