Wet and Aggressive Corella challenges Magpie

Wet and Aggressive Corella challenges Magpie

Wednesday 9 February 2011

..shoes and ships and sealing wax...

Yesterday I went for a swim - and managed a little over a kilometre which I am pleased with.  It may have looked like the great white whale lumbering up and down the pool but I can't see me.  So there.  And I swim to reduce the pain and mostly it does.
Then I had a small reward and met a friend for a cup of tea.  She also invited a friend and a good time was had by all.
Home again, home again, jiggety jig.  By which time the smaller portion was up and had (joy and bliss) done the grocery shopping.  Not a task I enjoy.
For the rest of the day I read agreeable trash (Little Vampire Women) and thought about the things I should be doing.  Liking wrestling with the weeds in the garden.  Perhaps today.  Or perhaps not.  If I get down onto the ground I have HUGE difficulties getting up again at the moment and while I have crawled across the lawn to pull myself up on the front steps before it is not a good look.  But a number of companies have been sending me gardening pornography in the form of bulb catalogues, and if I am to succumb (I will) I need to clear a space for things to go.
And this morning I was greeted when I opened the daggy old curtains in the lounge with a pair of King Parrots - mother and baby.  Wonderful.  We haven't seen the king parrots for a few weeks and it was lovely to see them back.

7 comments:

  1. Over one kilometre? Hooley Dooley as my mum would say.... I think that gives you 100% clearance to ignore every single weed in your garden.

    I don't have MS and can't swim that far and *I* ignore every single weed in my garden...

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  2. I'm very much with Kath. I consider weeds to be nature's fight back against too much civilization of gardens. The ivy and I have an agreement that if it comes across the bluestone boundary then it's for the chop and with all the rain we've had, it's ahead of me at the moment.

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  3. 'daggy old curtains.'

    Golly, I do like that.

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  4. We've got a few of them, king parrots, I mean (although they tend to be in next-door's garden because of our cats). We have daggy old curtains too, but that's a whole other story.

    The Smaller Portion sounds like a good sort.

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  5. "Daggy"? :-)

    And what is this "swimming" you speak of?! Am here in Minneapolis, where the temperature at the bus stop this morning was 8 degrees below zero Fahrenheit -- I think my eye balls may have begun to freeze for a bit there.

    No doubt I'll forget all about that once it hits a hundred this August!

    Pearl

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  6. I am a bit jealous of your temperatures Pearl. I hate, hate, hate the heat. But it will end. Or so I keep reminding myself.

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  7. A baby King Parrot - oh how gorgeous. Get pix please. (oh OK I suppose I could just search online images)
    Dear Pearl - dags is the name for the mess in the wool around a sheeps rear end. farmers go out with clippers and clean them up and that is called dagging. So 'daggy' means anything that's pretty crummy/crappy. daggy old trousers, a daggy old car.
    a Dag is a person who is lovable but a bit of a dunce. Just recently I have forsaken a life trying to be cool and hip, and just embraced my own Inner Dag, and feel good.
    isn't slang fabulous?

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