A list of activities that could potentially earn Grown-Up Girlies a badge – so far.
- Craft activities – knitting, sewing, crocheting, embroidery badges, BUT you have to make something useful and grown-up for each badge – knitting an iPod, quilting a laptop bag, for example.
- Nature activities – finding leaves from 5 British trees, drawing the footprints of three different animals, following the Hockley Woods trail.
- Cooking – coming up with a meal based on three main ingredients, designing a dinner party menu for six people where one is vegetarian, one is wheat-intolerant and one is on a diet (see, grown-up issues).
- Exercise – we’d have to be able to manage a minimum level in five different activities – running, swimming, lifting weights, skipping etc.
- Literature – reading a book, and then giving a three minute review back to the group. Maybe have a creative writing slot, where we have to write a 500 word short story in a certain genre.
- Work – all I can think of this is creating a 2-page CV that has no spelling mistakes or lies.
- Music – be able to identify 5 No. 1 hits from each decade since you were born. Go to an opera. Learn to play one tune on a musical instrument (and the recorder DOES count).
- Gardening – grow one thing in a pot from seed to ‘fruit’ (or flower). Pick up a worm. Cook a meal using something you’ve picked form a garden/allotment (if you don’t have any food/herbs growing, you can ask a fellow GUGAS member if you can pick something from their garden).
- Fashion – I want to have this, because I’d like to learn something, but I’m not sure what to do. Maybe it could involve the personal shoppers at Debenhams.
- Housework – how to clean things with green/eco products and very little effort. How to declutter without throwing away everything you won. How to persuade the other people in your house to do their fair share. Sorry, this one’s a bit dull, but I like the idea of a badge for this.
- School subject-orientated things – history, geography, maths and religion ?
- DIY
- Drawing, painting
- Fencing, indoor wall climbing, ice-skating
There, my list so far. N (work) and I were discussing whether drinking 1.5 litres of water a day should count as a badge-worthy activity – and as GUGAS is yet to be a proper organisation, and the rules are open to change, we decided drinking water should definitely be on the list.
Today for lunch, I’m trying bacon and Gruyere scones. While it sounds like a nice idea, I’m not really sure what you eat with it to make it a proper lunch. The greedy person in me says “LOTS of scones” but I’m wondering if baked beans or a salad will be good.
Can I blame work again, for how tired I’ve been ? Or just the fact that not going to the allotment has made me feel really guilty and I haven’t been in the mood to blog ? Anyway…
Had to stop with the compost making as we were invaded by fruit flies, drawn by the kitchen caddy. So, I haven’t been to the allotment for over a month now. It’s raining this week, so there’s not much point going to dig up beds, but that’s my next thing to do.
Have been very active on the knitting front. I am almost finished Notting Hill Vest (just the sides to sew up); finished the armband on my Veste Everest (now completed); darned my favourite work top (but not very well); darned my Lord of the Rings socks (again, not very well, it’s more of a patch rather than a darn); started and finished the Thuja socks from Knitty; and the WIP box looks better as a result. I still have four more days of leave, so I’m hoping to finish the NH Vest, finish a scarf I started today (moss-stitch in the last of the Rowan Polar I have) and maybe start a pair of socks in some Lorna’s Laces stuff I bought last week. I was also hoping to start a long-line cardigan but Angel Yarns have been a bit naughty, by advertising sale yarn that they don’t have in stock. Which is a pain, and not particularly trust-inspiring. So I’m unlikely to get the yarn while I’m on leave, which was the whole point of ordering it last week.
I got Nigella Express and have been making a few of the meals from it. We’ve had the mini meatballs (lovely) and the pollo cac-something-or-another. The green eggs and ham pancakes were delish but very filling. Today we’re having the naan pizza and for dinner, the mustardy pork chops, as seen in the first programme. Oh, I also made the sauerkraut dish but it was pretty heavy and I didn’t put in the juniper berries.
The job is better. I met my first befuddled scientist (his hair was disappointingly neat though) and I think I scared another one by telling her how I’d been known to burn books I hated – she’d been asking my advice on what to do with 30 year old textbooks, thinking they had a value of some sort. Rather than snort ‘Pshaw!’ in her face, I gently recommended the recycling service offered in the building, but even then, she didn’t want to know (because developing countries want out-of-date textbooks, and antique collectors quiver at the thought of getting their mitts on university textbooks ?). So, I told her what I’D done with unwanted books in the past… To be fair though, it was just the two, and I’ve never regretted it. I would never have read them again, and I didn’t want to inflict them on others.
And speaking of books, I seem to have started a book club at work. There have been 40 responses to my post about joining or starting one up, but luckily, someone else seems to have taken the helm with me. We just need to find somewhere that can cope with 40 people. The first meeting is in two weeks’ time and we’ll just be discussing books we like. I’ve just read “The Girls” which was a lot more fun than I expected. It didn’t make me cry though, so I was a teensy bit disappointed.
Have taken a colleague’s advice and went to the allotment to cut back some of the excess foliage on my tomatoes. Unfortunately, it might be a bit too late. A lot of the beef tomatoes I was growing have fallen prey to a brown stain, which affects part of the stem too. I cut away as much as possible, making sure I gave the rest of the tomatoes some sunny room, but it was a shame, throwing away lovely big tomatoes. At least they were still green, so it wasn’t as if I’d been planning on picking them any time soon. Still…
Have finally finished the sleeves on Gigi. I had to go back quite a way on the first sleeve, as I’d lost count of how many rows I’d done. Finished the second sleeve tonight, so I’m ready to cast on for the body (worked in the round, so I’ll be commuter-friendly, no long needles poking anyone sitting next to me).
Oh, in addition to the fab old knitting patterns, I also received a brand new knitting book, The Knitter’s Handbook. My ex-colleague got it for me for a pound, which makes me very happy (not that I paid, but it’s still nice to hear of someone getting a bargain). J gave me a crafts book once, which was also a real bargain. All that information for less than the cost of a magazine – and longer lasting.
Haven’t blogged about the new job yet, and won’t for a while, not until I get comfortable there. That might take a little while, longer than any job I’ve had since the Co-op, and that turned out to be very friendly in the end. I just can’t see that happening here, especially with my attitude at the moment. Latest bugbear – they won’t give staff time off to donate blood. And for those who know who I work for, consider the irony… Sometimes it’s more than money you need to give. I can stuff a fiver in every collecting tin I see, but if people need O positive blood, I think they’d rather have that than cash. It’s a bit petty, I know (on both my side, and the Organisation’s) but still, it irks.
ETA : I did get the time off in the end, but only after I’d sent an e-mail outlining how I was going to make up the hour in 10 minute increments. Petty on my part, no doubt.