The last week of May is over, and here we are in June!
Just as I am typing this, I realise that I have not yet turned the calendars in my flat: a local history one in my Third Room/study, an "every year" birthday calendar and a calendar printed with my own photos in the tiny hallway, a Yorkshire calendar in the kitchen and a small stand-up one with photos of guinea pigs on the book case in my bedroom (an ongoing joke between my sister and me).
[...]
Right! Job done, calendars sorted, and back to this post :-)
Weather-wise, it was still hot with most days reaching temperatures around 30C/86F, and not a drop of rain until Sunday afternoon. Work-wise, it was quiet-ish in that it's a fortnight of school holidays and many of my co-workers who have children are away (less meetings with and less emails from them).
I was never bored, though, because since Sunday afternoon I have been looking after my neighbours' pets (a cat and two rabbits), and although they are certainly not a lot of work, it is a regular, at least twice-daily task to fit in; cleaning the rabbit hut and open-air cage as well as the cat toilet, feeding them all, and of course making sure that the cat gets his playtime and cuddles.
Monday (25 May) was Pentecost Monday, a public holiday in Germany. It meant O.K. was still here instead of having to drive home on the Sunday evening. Because it was another hot and sunny day, we opted against a more strenuous walk and limited ourselves to the palace grounds and deer park.
| Ludwigsburg Residential Palace |
| in the palace grounds |
| The rhododenron were glorious and will be as good as gone by now. |
| Looking for shaded paths as much as possible :-) |
| Favorite Palace in the deer park |
After coffee & cake at home we rested for a bit and then made filet steaks to go with the tabouleh I had prepared the day before. When my husband left for home at around 8:00 pm, I knew I still had almost 2 hours of daylight left, and the temperature was really pleasant; I waved good-bye to him and then went walking on the fields until sunset.
| Just before 9:00 pm |
| Ten minutes before sunset... |
| ...one minute left... |
| ...and a quarter of an hour later, last look back before reaching the end of the fields and the first houses. |
Working from home on Tuesday (26 May) was uneventful; I went to take care of the pets three times that day, spending part of my lunch break playing with Neo the cat who was clearly missing his family.
Wednesday and Thursday (27 and 28 May) were both office days. My office in our 1990s building (= no A/C) faces north and never gets direct sunlight, which is nice in the summer because it remains bearable even on hot days. Not so good in the winter when I rarely feel really warm enough there.
| Neo was waiting for me by the front door of MY house (not his!) when I came home from work. |
| He loves to roll around on the ground and be cuddled! |
Unlike many Wednesdays, I did not walk home from Zuffenhausen (too hot) nor visit my Mum after work, but I saw her on the Thursday when we met for "Wine After Work" by the lake, which would have been much nicer had it not been so packed.
The queue at the drinks stall was so long that we opted against a second glass of chilled white or rosé; instead, I walked home (which was nice because it wasn't too hot anymore) and my Mum and her friend R drove home together.
| I spotted Neo sleeping on another neighbour's terrace the next morning, but he came running immediately when I called him, and ate his breakfast at his own home. |
I gave the rabbit hut a good thorough clean on Friday (29 May) morning ,and after work it was my flat's turn before I went back again to refill all the pet dishes and spent some more time with Neo. Next was packing my bag and going to the train station - for a change, my trains were on time, and we were sitting on the balcony for our customary late "welcome the weekend" evening meal, the moment I had been looking forward to all day.
At around 11 pm, we went for a short walk in the village, enjoying the balmy night air and starry skies until turning in just a little before midnight.
Saturday (30 May) was so hot we did not go for a walk at all, but in the morning it was still pleasant on the balcony so that for the first time this year we had our first coffee there. We then did various jobs in and around the house, aiming to finish before it was going to be too hot.
A rest in the relative coolness of the darkened living room followed, and in the evening we had a barbecue with my mother-in-law in her yard, where by then we could sit comfortably in the shade there.
| Charly, O.K's Mum's cat, was around the entire time. |
| On my plate: Merguez (spicy sausages), rucola salad, tomato & feta salad, crusty bread. |
We had arranged for lunch with friends on Sunday (31 May) at a restaurant; it was their wedding gift for us. The food was superb and the service excellent, and it really was a very nice treat and an enjoyable few hours with them.
Our table was outdoors, and a few times during the meal we shifted our chairs in order to either avoid a shower or the glaring sunlight. By mid-afternoon when we said our good-byes the long awaited rain arrived properly, and it was very cosy to listen to it fall on the roof windows in O.K.'s cottage while we were having a nap.
We took advantage of a break in the rain and walked around the village, taking in the evening light. More rain fell during the night, and it was quite a relief from the hot dusty 1 1/2 weeks we'd been having.
Neo and Charly are beautiful, though very different in appearance. Balmy summer evenings are delightful, and a relief after the heat of the day.
ReplyDeleteThey are also very different in age and character. Charly is a senior of (we think) about 16 and rather set in his ways. Neo is not yet a year old and still in the course of discovering the world, full of curiosity. I am not happy that he seems to love people so much; there is always the potential danger of running into someone nasty.
DeleteI love that you refer to OK as your husband in this post 🥰
ReplyDeleteSiobhan
I love to write (and even just to think!) those words, Siobhan :-)
DeleteSo your're The Librarian With Five Calendars ! Now we know.
ReplyDeletePentecost Monday : I've never heard these two words together before.
Secularism robbed us of the Liturgical Year ; our culture was downgraded.
Septuagesima Sunday : I remember it in a Barbara Pym novel, a great novelist.
I hope you and O.K. savour every day of June.
Pet caring is demanding. It was Neo who got the cuddles & playtime ?
And the rabbit hutch got a good clean too. Spicy sausage was your reward.
Pfingstmontag (Pentecost Monday) has "always" been called that in Germany as long as I can remember. If you ask the average person on the street about the meaning of most of our public holidays, they won't know. They show this on TV often enough, and often on the main news now there is a mini feature explaining the background of what for the majority of people is simply a welcome day off.
DeleteIn England Pentecost is called Whitsun and was always the Whitsun Bank Holiday and the schools would close for a week. It was a moveable feast along with Easter. However in 1971 it was fixed so that Whit Week always falls in the last week of May now regardless of when Easter is and when the correct day for Whitsun is. I doubt that anyone actually knows what Pentecost, or Whitsun, means in the church calendar and like in Germany it is just a welcome break from work. Sad really because the Pentecost feast day is a very important day in the church.
ReplyDeleteI knew the word Whitsun but didn't know that it stands for Pentecost.
DeleteIf religious holidays were taken more seriously, those who do not profess that religion would not have a reason to have a day off. Germany has between 10 and 12 Bank Holidays (not all of them religious), depending on which federal state you're in. Austria has 13, Slovakia has 15, Spain has 9.
I wonder whether there will be a time in the future when religious holidays are largely abolished.
What a nice post of your last week in May. Tickled me that you had to change your calendars before you could write, that is my job too! Those are two sweet cats but you can tell that one is very young and the other one getting on in years. Love your sunset photos! You are so lucky to live near that Palace! So beautiful. And that bakery where OK buys the crusty bread? Now, I am truly envious! Stay cool! 😎
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kay - it's cooler now, and more rain forecast for later this afternoon/evening.
DeleteI am like that; when I start on something and realise I have not done what I meant to do, I need to do that first before I can continue with what I have started :-)
I'm surprised you have so many calendars! I have one in the kitchen and then now I use my phone calendar much more.
ReplyDeleteI too noticed how you called O.K. "my husband"! So sweet!
The calendar with my own photos is one that I make every year as a Christmas gift for my family, and keep one copy for myself. The local history one is fascinating, and I ask my Mum every year to have it for Christmas. The "ever year" birthday calendar has been with me for many years - several of the names in it belong to people who have died years ago, but I remember them (not just) every time I turn to a new month and see the name. The Yorkshire one I bought for myself last year in Ripon, to have a souvenir that would last me all year and because the photos are beautiful reminders of some of the places I know. And the guinea pigs are an "inside joke" between me and my sister - she gives me a new one every year for Christmas.
DeletePS: I don't use my phone calendar at all. For work, of course I use the online calendar provided by the company - I'd be lost without it; all my meetings and calls, days off, events and so on are in there.
DeleteThat is quite a lot of calendars. I thought I had a lot with two! It is lovely that you have been meeting up with friends and family to celebrate your marriage.
ReplyDeleteFunnily enough, it doesn't feel like a lot of calendars - I have them for the pictures, mainly, and the history one for its very interesting and well written articles on the back of each month.
DeleteThat's a lot of calendars... and I bet I still wouldn't know what day it is, even with so many! Those evening walks after a hot day are wonderful, aren't they? There's something special about early morning and late evening when it's hot. This week we're back to cool and rain showers but I'm happy with that.
ReplyDeleteSame here, Jenny; much cooler and rain showers which are really necessary.
DeleteThe late evening light near sunset is almost irresistible for me to be out it.
With work, I have no trouble remembering what day it is, and when I'm not working, I still spend time at computers or mobile devices showing the date and time (I don't wear a watch) clearly.