… of the nicest cheese sauces that I have ever tasted, never mind ever made.
Tonight, everything went perfectly and my steamed vegetables with vegan sausages and vegan cheese sauce were totally delicious, and I’ll eat that again any day of the week.
Another bit of news is that ever since I came back from the Arctic I’ve been trying to make an appointment to see some people. They finally replied in mid-January to say that there were no appointments just now, and the same e-mail has come every two weeks.
But today, I’ve had a different mail sent by a different person, and this has an air of being somewhat more optimistic.
However, that is just about all of the good news today. The rest of it hasn’t been so good.
It all started to go wrong as early as 06:00 this morning.
This was another one of these days where even though the alarm went off, I took absolutely no notice whatsoever. I turned over and went straight back to sleep. Not out of willingness, I hasten to add, but simply because I couldn’t wake myself up.
07:45 was much more like it, and leaving my bed at 08:30 was even more interesting. It’s not my usual modus operandi for a weekday as regular readers of this rubbish will recall, but after the miserable day yesterday when I missed my lie-in, I must have needed it.
I’d been on my travels too during the night. And surprisingly (or maybe not, because it’s the whole point of doing all of this) it was a continuation of a couple of voyages that I had been on several years ago. I was in Brussels working in an office and I’d gone home for lunch. I decided to have a salad but a “fried” salad. So I tossed a lettuce leaf into a frying pan and it singed up around the edges. The rest of the salad I tossed into another frying pan but it was one in which my younger sister had just fried an egg and she’d used lard or dripping to do that. I left my home to head back to work but found myself right outside the city with the high-rise towers away in the distance and I was wondering however I would reach work in time to restart. But there – that weird American company for which I once worked – I was chatting to a former colleague of mine (from another employment) who was terribly upset. She’d received a copy of a bill that someone had sent in, on which she had been described as a “barsteward” – and this offended her deeply. Meantime, there were a pile of magazines lying around in the office. They were entitled “The Flame of Islam”, and although that might sound an inflammatory title, it was actually a Christian publication. Not many people knew that, which probably explains why they looked so astonished when I suggested that we go out and sell them to passing motorists in our lunch breaks.
First thing that I noticed this morning was that I had the kind of thirst that you could photograph. I downed about a litre of my Vitamin B12 juice straight off.
After a rather late breakfast, I settled down to wait for my passport to arrive.
And waited
And waited
And waited.
Meanwhile, I tried to concentrate on the work that I needed to do – such as the photo database and backdating the blog.
After much binding in the marsh I made the blog back to 6th January 2019.
But the photo database was rather slower today. I couldn’t really get going for some reason. But then I have days like this, as regular readers of this rubbish will recall.
And that’s not all the bad news either. I’m having camera issues yet again.
And that’s a shame because the bird-men were out in force today.
I’ve noticed for the last couple of months that the camera is having issues focusing, especially at night. And when it is particularly dark, I have to find a distant point of light to use as a focusing object.
But today, the focusing is simply not working most of the time, and especially when the background is neutral, like a large patch of sky.
I can hear the motor in the lens engaging and the focal length changes, but it creeps in to the beginning and blurs out
And it’s not just with one of the lenses – it’s with all of them.
I’ve tried to adjust the focal settings and that’s not made any difference. I think that the camera is slowly dying.
But that’s not really a surprise. I bought it in Canada in an emergency, back in 2012. It was an end-of-range model then and I paid peanuts for it, so I can’t really complain.
It’s just disappointing.
The only way that I can make it work is to focus on a specific object that is sharp enough to register.
So anyway, I pushed on round the corner to see what things were like round by the lifeboat memorial.
It might look cloudy out there, but it was surprisingly warm. And that had brought out the crowds – especially as it seems to be school holidays right now.
One thing that I have noticed is that there seems to be a spring of some sort here on the Pointe du Roc.
There would have to be, I suppose, otherwise they would never have put a fortified city up here. They would need a water supply in case of a siege.
But today was the first time that I had noticed the water evacuating out into the sea down below.
And here, I had a message. My passport will be delivered tomorrow.
After tea, I went out for my evening walk around the walls.
There was no-one around even though it was a pleasant evening. There was no storm tonight and the tide was quite far out, so we weren’t treated to the spectacle of the waves smashing on to the sea walls.
And so I didn’t linger long out there. I came back here instead.
And I’ll be trying once again for an early night. And this time, hoping that I can get out of bed at something very close to the correct time.
















































































