After our incredibly
relaxing/working/drinking and eating weekend with Helen and Ian, we’ve been
indoor rock climbing in Birmingham with SMC, I’ve visited old friends where I
used to work at Andantex in Coventry, we’ve moved into Gill’s house in Selly
Oak to look after Sam the dog, Keith the cat and Mr & Mrs Jazzy the fish,
we’ve been ‘down south’ to see Jackie’s niece and nephew Caroline and Charles
and to go indoor climbing with them in Milton Keynes and been for a long walk
over the Malvern hills in Worcestershire with Denise and Paul and Sam the dog.
Keith the cat obviously felt a bit left out, so bought us a present this
morning – more on that later…..
Tuesday evening was our visit to
‘Creation climbing’ indoor climbing wall in Moseley to reconnect with our
neglected climbing skills and catch up with people from Solihull Mountaineering
Club. Arrived just after 5:00pm, before anyone we knew was there, so did about
six or seven routes of grades 5 and 6 before the forearms were complaining and
fingers were refusing to grip holds (Jackie fell off an overhang about 3m above
her last clip, so fell about 6m into space when she couldn’t hold on to a small
hold with one hand in order to clip the next karabiner). Stopped for a cup of
tea (excuse for a rest!) and finally people we knew started to arrive, Jo and
Mike, Mike R, Su, Margaret, Roger, Phil S, Rob and Alex, Richard, Donna etc and
we were able to use the chatting as an excuse not to climb! In fact we only did
about two more climbs before departing at about 8:30pm! We need to do more!
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Martin in the workshop at Andantex |
On Wednesday I left Jackie at
Helen’s house and went to work! Well, not really, it was just a visit to
Andantex, the company in Coventry I used to run before my early retirement in
April 2012. It was good to catch up, the familiar surroundings, the familiar
faces and the same customers and problems. It’s good to see people and really
good to be able to walk away from the pressure of the problems. The old company
seems to be doing very well and Phil (son of Terry, my old colleague with whom
I started the old Kinematic back in 1989, that became Andantex after a ‘merger’
with the French Redex in 2002), now MD seems to be handling things very well.
It’s just as though I’ve never been away, the ‘top customer’ is still ‘top’ and
making even more vehicles, so taking even more product that Martin in the
workshop has to sort out.
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Phil looking like the boss |
Good old Martin, always smiling,
always willing and a great asset to the company. If you’re reading this Martin
(he tells me he’s an avid reader) good luck on Thursday with Tina at hospital.
Tina is Martins wife and is due to have major back surgery after being turned
away twice due to unavailable NHS beds or theatre unavailability, after waiting
all day on each occasion. I hope it happens this time and she is dancing around
again soon!
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Paul |
Paul is still there as the
bedrock of internal sales, taking most of the phone calls and always ready to
do his utmost to help customers, always with a cheerful voice. Rob (didn’t we
see you last night at the ‘wall’?) is still being ‘Rob’, external sales and a
graduate mechanical engineer always willing to get involved with in depth
mechanical applications, the ‘secret’ undersea project application that we both
started together is still looking good, with the possibility to transform the company
if it eventually becomes successful.
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Rob on the phone |
Dagmar is a new person, who replaced both
Heidi and Louise in accounts and office management and seems a very capable
person and very friendly. All in all, a good, compact team, working well
together and very satisfying for me to see the successful company that I, along
with Terry, helped build and see it go strongly into the future, headed by the
‘next generation’. Good luck guys!
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And Dagmar |
A late visitor was Steve, and old
employee of Andantex who now works for their main supplier, but still comes in
to use one of the spare offices there (he’s the guy who came along to Morzine
in France to ski with us, along with Ash, Paul and the others in February).
Good to see you again Steve! I think he could smell the coffee and walnut cake
I’d baked and taken in to them all! “Ah yes, the famous cake” said Martin, “That’s
been mentioned on the blog a few times! Must try that”. I think he liked it.
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Oh look, it's lunchtime and Martins in his usual position |
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And even the boss has time to put his feet up! |
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Here's little Sam! |
We’ve moved house (again) and are
now in Selly Oak at Gill’s house for week, looking after Sam, the really
lovable 10 year old border terrier, Keith, the two year old cat who loves Sam
to bits and regularly rubs his head against Sam’s (“I chase cats, but I suppose
you’re OK“ thinks Sam) and Mr and Mrs Jazzy, two tropical fish, swimming around
in their tank in the kitchen.
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And Keith the cat |
We didn’t know Gill, she’s a
newish member of Solihull Mountaineering Club, after a lifetime of outdoor
climbing, walking and sailing activities and contacted us after we sent out an
email to the SMC email group asking if anyone needed house and pet sitters over
the summer. She responded after Roger (current SMC chairman) sent out an email
of endorsement, so well done Roger!
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Very affectionate towards one another |
What a little sweetie Sam is, he
really is the most adorable dog and even Jackie seems converted and likes him
as much as Keith the cat. “Sam loves walking” Gill had said, so I took him out
on Friday afternoon for an intended long walk, but the tug back on the lead
indicated to me that, at 10 years old, he’s probably not as sprightly these
days, so the long walk became a ‘less long walk’!
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Even sleeping together |
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Sam isn't a morning dog and needs encouragement first thing |
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But once he's out he's fine |
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Jackie, Charles and Caroline at the climbing wall |
Timing as it was, we had arranged
to go down to see Charles and Caroline, Jackie’s nephew and niece, over the
first weekend at Gills, so she had to find someone else to feed and exercise
Sam on Saturday night and he apparently stopped over at their house overnight
(Keith got his food, but had to fend for himself!), while we went climbing at
Milton Keynes ‘Big Rock’ climbing wall with Jonathan, Jackie’s brother and
C&C.
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Jonathan, Caroline and Jackie |
Like most climbing walls on a Saturday morning it was packed, but we
found space and, with Jackie and me belaying, Jonathan did his first proper
lead climb (which certainly focussed his mind!), while Caroline went up a 6a
and 6a+ on a top rope, not perfectly, she hung on the rope and needed
assistance on occasions, but her determination meant she didn’t stray on to
easier holds nearby, so well done! Charles did a ‘mock’ lead, taking a lead rope and clipping as he went, whilst
still on a top rope for safety, so everyone achieved!
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Charles tackling a mini overhang |
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Caroline, Charles, Jonathan, Lucy and Jackie |
Back to their house in
Edlesborough while Caroline went for her riding lesson, we had a great evening
with them all (Lucy, Jonathan’s wife was also there) in the garden on a
pleasant summers evening, followed by a lazy Sunday morning, before heading
back to see Sam and Keith and cook a Sunday roast for us, plus Gill, who came
back for the night between running a leadership class in the Lake District over
the weekend and going to a residential course at Woodbrook nearby this week.
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Not forgetting their cat Thomas |
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Paul, Denise and Jackie at the start |
Yesterday, Monday, was a day
arranged with my sister, Denise and her husband Paul to go for a training walk
for our forthcoming 10in10 charity walk in the Lake District on 21st
June. Of the four of us, it’s only me and Paul competing, so Jackie and Denise
didn’t want to do so much, so took it as an opportunity to take Sam for some
exercise.
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Paul on the first summit |
The Malvern hills were our chosen target, a much under-rated set of
hills. Most people park in the North car park and walk the two miles or so up
to the top of the Worcester Beacon hill, always fabulous views, rising to over 1300
feet asl (above sea level) with the surrounding plain at 5 to 600 feet asl it
gives amazing views for many miles around, out to the Brecon Beacons and Black
Mountains, plus the Long Mynd. It is justifiably popular, but it is much more
than just Beacon hill, it’s a long ridge of hills stretching from the south in
Gloucestershire, about 11 miles to the north and containing 17 summits, some
with quite a drop and rise between summits, it gives a good, strenuous day out
and always with fantastic ‘good to be alive’ views.
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Paul at Giants Cave |
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"Just over there" he says |
Paul and I got dropped at Chase
End Street and walked up the very first hill in the chain, Chase End Hill, on
seldom used public footpaths, with careful navigation. It’s a bit different
from the popular end, where there are wide, obvious paths and it took us about
two hours to do the first two summits, making us wonder if we would make our rendezvous
with the girls on Beacon Hill for 3:30pm. Fabulous views though and great to be
doing the bit I’ve never done before. Thereafter the going became a bit easier,
the paths a bit more obvious, the views ever more splendid, but the legs ever
more tired! Meanwhile the girls with Sam, drove into Malvern town and stopped
for a coffee at a café, sitting outside in the sunshine admiring the views and enjoying
the attention caused by Sam looking cute!
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Little Sam struggling up behind |
Our walking picked up as we got
into the walk and we made good progress over the following summits, quickly
counting them off: British Camp, Jubilee Hill and Perseverance Hill (well
named), only to walk over a rise before Summer Hill to find them sitting on a
bench in the sunshine chatting away, Sam relaxing on the floor by them. I
shouted “Sam” and he came running over, much to my delight, but Jackie told me
how he’d struggled up the hills, walking very slowly behind them looking very
sad for himself.
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Jackie with Sam on the trig point on Beacon Hill |
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A break on the summit. Paul, denise, me, Sam and Jackie |
We set off up Summer Hill and our pace immediately slackened
as little Sam found the going tough. Once on the summit his pace quickened, but
only until the next rise, poor old Sam, but lots of water and crunchies kept
him going and soon we were on top of Beacon Hill, admiring the fabulous views
and taking a few pictures of Sam on the trig point and us all sitting by the
Queen Victoria monument on the summit.
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Poor old Sam struggles on behind Jackie and Denise |
There were now four more summits
to complete, Sugarloaf Hill, Table Hill, North Hill and End Hill, Sam would be
unable to go up again and the girls were keen to go down, so Paul and I set off
to tick those last four off, just so we could say we’d done every summit on the
Malverns! We watched them set off down and, on a slight rise in the path, we
could see little Sam doing his best, but plodding along behind them trying to
keep up. We got down a little after them and apparently Sam got back to the car
and just lay down on the floor, unable to even climb in, so Jackie had him on
her lap on the drive home and we could hear him snoring!
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But we made it to the last hill! |
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Sam can't even make it back into the house! |
This morning we had a lazy start
to the day and, when I woke up Sam and Keith were lying across Jackie, so I
went downstairs to make breakfast in bed. Keith came down and went outside, Sam
continued his snoozing on the bed. Drinking our coffee and stroking Sam, the
bedroom door was shoved open as Keith walked in, Jackie looked down at him and
said “Oh my God, put your coffee down and take mine, he’s got a magpie in his
mouth!” It was a fully grown young magpie, very dead and almost the size of
Keith.
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And when he did he didn't know what to do with himslf! |
He’d got it in through the cat flap and got it upstairs to us, but he
placed it on the floor by our bed and then went out. It was a present for us
and, in his mind it was the best he could do. Very thoughtful of him, but not
quite what we expected or wanted, so Jackie took it downstairs and put it in
the bin. Its mum and dad were outside in the garden very unhappy, squarking
away and dive bombing Keith when he next went out, all very sad. I know Keith
was only following his natural instincts, but I felt really sorry for mum and
dad magpie.
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Gill, Brian and Jackie |
We’re now here until Thursday,
when we go back to Pauline’s (Jackie’s mum) to repack and head on up to North
Yorkshire to meet up with our friends Dave and Pol, who we haven’t seen for a
couple of years, so our travels continue…
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Gill is a bit of an artist. This is one of hers, isn't it fantastic! |
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Our friends Sarah and John have a webcam in a nest box in their garden. There are seven Great Tit chicks in that nest |
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And here's mum Great Tit back to feed them |
1 comment:
Fantastic blog! It occurred to me half way through that all these adventures are had so close to home. We do live in a lovely country and should all just get out more. Of course with Brian's enthusiasm for everything a trip to the Bullring shopping centre would probably be blogged so well we'd all wish we were here! Perhaps you missed your vocation Brian?! Hope Sam recovered ok, we remember Lucy and Roddy getting slower and telling us that the walks needed to be shorter as their ages got into double figures. Hope all goes well travelling up north! Lots of love xxx
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