Friday 21 February 2014

Borth's medieval forests have been washed up by storms.

When I returned to university at Aberystwyth I stayed in Borth, Which is a village about 20 minutes from the main town of Aberystwyth.
Borth is a village right on the coast and is one street of houses. that is all. That said, in terms of attractions for such a tiny village it has a "beast" which roams in the fog on the peat bogs (The "beast" is probably an escapee from one of Borth's most amazing attractions..) It has an Animalarium- Where the RSPCA bring abandoned or mistreated pets too big, Dangerous or unusual to rehome- like porcupines or emus or Tigers. They're looked after in the expanse of welsh countryside between Borth and everywhere else.
The other amazing thing about Borth was always the Railway inn- A pub on the seafront who's low prices and huge portions made it a hit with everyone.
They also have a pub called the Friendship, which had a vintage shop upstairs and an art gallery behind the bar. It was quirky, but keeps strange hours.

My room I stayed in was on the sea front, you could see the beach from the window. It cannot have been more than 100m.
I did not realise that this lonely, and frankly ugly, stretch of UK coastline was anything remotely special. Sometimes people surfed there. the beach was all flint and stones (probably put there as a sea wall to be fair the didn't seem to be native and the sea often ended up in the road). Mostly though the beach was used as a tractor park and dumping ground for boats and things local people wanted to keep but didn't want in their gardens. And with rainy weather and high winds most days (Lets face it, that is Wales for you) the locals seemed to think this was an excellent use for the beach.

I have to say- Looking at these photos in the news this morning, I'd happily return to Borth for a last visit, and I probably owe the beach an apology. Sorry, Borth beach, you are more interesting than the beast, Animalarium and the Railway inn all rolled into one.


Rising from the beach in a surreal seascape, the remains of these ancient trees have been revealed by the storms.
Thought to date back to the Bronze Age, the shin-high stumps became visible for the first time when the peat which once covered them was washed away in torrential rain and waves pounding the shore.
Now they stud the beach near the village of Borth, Ceredigion, Mid Wales – an area already rich in archaeology, opposite the alleged site of Wales’s own take on the lost city of Atlantis.
These 5,000-year-old trees have emerged on a beach in Mid Wales after peat was washed away during the recent storms
The oak and yew stumps were once part of a forest that covered the whole area before it turned into a peat bog and was eventually overwhelmed by water
Scientists knew the forest was there as stumps could sometimes be seen at low tide, but these new remains have appeared further north than the previous sightings
According to folklore Cantre'r Gwaelod, or the sunken hundred, disappeared under the waves after a drunken sluice-gate operator failed to close the defences


Another fable about the missing township is that a priestess of a magical well neglected her duties, allowing the well to overflow
The stumps have been miraculously well preserved due to the conditions in the peat bog which are deprive of oxygen and usually have a high alkaline level
The lack of oxygen means microbes which rot things cannot grow, while the alkali pickles whatever it touches, helping to preserve it
The best conditions for preservation occur in peat bogs near to coasts with salty air, such as the one found here at Borth
Part of a wattle walkway, believed to date from ancient times, has also appeared. It is thought it was made from branches, sticks or logs
Scientists came to Borth because after intense storms there is nearly always something uncovered as peat washes away, and then made this discovery
The tree stumps are not the only ancient treasure to be unearthed by the bad weather. In January an ichthyosaur skeleton was discovered on the Jurassic Coast in Dorset after part of the cliff fell away and revealed it

These 5,000-year-old trees have emerged on a beach in Mid Wales after peat was washed away during the recent storms
The oak and yew stumps were once part of a forest that covered the whole area before it turned into a peat bog and was eventually overwhelmed by water
Scientists knew the forest was there as stumps could sometimes be seen at low tide, but these new remains have appeared further north than the previous sightings
According to folklore Cantre'r Gwaelod, or the sunken hundred, disappeared under the waves after a drunken sluice-gate operator failed to close the defences
Folklore has it that Cantre’r Gwaelod, or the Sunken Hundred, a once-fertile land and township, was lost beneath the waves in a mythical age.
The land is said to have extended 20 miles west of the present Cardigan Bay, but disaster struck and Cantre’r Gwaelod was lost to floods when Mererid, the priestess of a fairy well, apparently neglected her duties and allowed the well to overflow.
Archaeologists knew the 5,000-year-old forest existed on the beach at Borth and stumps were sometimes visible along parts of it at low tide.
Another fable about the missing township is that a priestess of a magical well neglected her duties, allowing the well to overflow
The stumps have been miraculously well preserved due to the conditions in the peat bog which are deprive of oxygen and usually have a high alkaline level
The lack of oxygen means microbes which rot things cannot grow, while the alkali pickles whatever it touches, helping to preserve it
The best conditions for preservation occur in peat bogs near to coasts with salty air, such as the one found here at Borth
But the recent storms revealed a whole new section thought to include oak and pine near Ynyslas, further north than the previously seen remains. The stumps are preserved because of conditions in the peat. 
Part of a wattle walkway, believed to date from ancient times, has also appeared. It is thought it was made from branches, sticks or logs and used for people to cross wet ground without sinking into it.
The discoveries were made by Deanna Groom and Ross Cook from the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. 
Part of a wattle walkway, believed to date from ancient times, has also appeared. It is thought it was made from branches, sticks or logs
Scientists came to Borth because after intense storms there is nearly always something uncovered as peat washes away, and then made this discovery
The tree stumps are not the only ancient treasure to be unearthed by the bad weather. In January an ichthyosaur skeleton was discovered on the Jurassic Coast in Dorset after part of the cliff fell away and revealed it
Yesterday Miss Groom, a maritime archaeologist, said: ‘The site around Borth is one where if there’s a bad storm and it gets battered, you know there’s a good chance something will be uncovered as the peat gets washed away.  
‘It’s regularly monitored and that’s why we went to have a look there again now to see if anything new had emerged.’ 
The whole area was once under forest which, over time, became peaty and was then submerged under the sea as the coastline changed over thousands of years. 
During finer weather in the summer, the beach is sandy. Further tests will be conducted on the walkway to try to establish an exact date of origin.


Read more
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2564285/5-000-year-old-forest-unearthed-storms-Beach-washed-away-reveal-ancient-oaks-pines.html#ixzz2twovKGAt
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Monday 17 February 2014

Cambridge

Today I met my parents in Cambridge- My Dad had never been before, and my Mum had only been when she lived at Newmarket and she and my Nan, Grandad, Aunts and Uncle got the train to the coast for a holiday- We're talking the 1950s and a steam train here. The story goes that everyone wore their Sunday Best and my Nan wore high heels, As she got onto the train she lost a shoe and the guard had to retrieve it with a hook on a pole.

Anyway, Today we didn't get ant trains or lose any shoes.
We went shopping.
I got new bobbins, white cotton and a 20mm crochet hook. My mum bought the whole of Debenhams. or thats how it felt anyway.

All that retain therapy left us starved, so we went to Don Quixote in the market square for Italian food- I rather like it in there as the food is good and the walls are artexed.


This was my giant gorgonzola pizza!
:D


After dinner we went to have a look around the market- We looked at fossils and bread and flowers and clothes and then spent ages looking at books.
I almost got some new margaret Atwood books but talked myself out of it, In favour of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca but by the time I'd decided someone else had snapped them up.My mum bought some books on birds and advice on planting a small garden.


I also took note of the bikes in Cambridge- I'm wanting to strip and respray my bike (I think Orange with pink glitter) so I've been looking for vintage bikes which have been resprayed to try and convince myself it's ok to completely change a vintage item if it makes it better and keeps it from ending up a rusted useless mess.
I found this one which looks pretty snazzy:


And then I found my bikes younger, sleeker cousin and went back to worrying about ruining my bike as it could be beautiful if I restored it properly... but that might be more difficult that starting again? and I's stull have to strip the paint from most of the frame to sand the rust..
Argh.
My head and heart and in conflict.


On the way back to the car we stopped off at the sweet shop. This is quite possibly my Dad's natural habitat.


He looks so happy and at home.
He's always said he'd love to run a sweet shop.
Finger crossed one day he will!

And when he does he can stock the harry potter sweets and then I wont have to pay £4 a pop to buy them! I think they're probably imported from America. I wanted to try Bertie botts every flavour beans!

Sunday 16 February 2014

100 Days Happy Challenge

Ah, I'm aware that I've been a right grump lately- It's definitely reflected in my posts!

I think being stuck in the house lately and being exhausted from hopping about on my crutches (I'm going to have back and shoulder definition like Arnie if I have to use them for much longer! A day at work is more of an upper body work out than the body pump classes down the gym!) have made me less appreciative of what I do have (And more focussed on what I can't do right now).

(Incase you've never seen Arnie's back, here it is! Mine is a little way off this yet, but we have 8 weeks of crutches to go- that said my arms are bigger already.)

I'm thinking of doing this:
http://100happydays.com/

The deal is that you take a photograph of something which made you happy every day for 100 days in a row.

I was talking to one of my friends about this, and he's put off from taking part as he thinks that the idea of "failure" from not managing to find something "happy" every day for 100 days in a row would undermine the point of the project.
I sort of feel differently.
I think that even if for just a few days in a row you can take a photograph of something which made you happy, at least you're taking the time to consider what it is that does.
100 days is a very long time.
But then, every day should have something which makes you happy! Even if you have a really really horrible day there is always something that cheers you up.

I guess we're just so busy in our lives we don't always take the time to appreciate the people and beauty around us. (And no, I haven't been drinking).
Perhaps I should clarify- I'm not unhappy. I'm pretty chipper really, but I do think I take my friends, boyfriend, family, house, job, surroundings etc for granted, which is not something I'm proud of.

I suppose this sort of follows the post I made about a week ago about happiness- Studies show that our own happiness increases (and remains increased) when we show other how much we appreciate them, rather then concentrating on doing things to try and make ourselves feel "happy" (like spas or make overs or girly films or ice cream) I sort of would expect that over 100 days you'd have a split of both ways of improving happiness, but as you're paying more attention to it, perhaps a lean towards the former (friends, strangers, companies who impact on your happiness- which in turn leads to an overall increase in happiness, not a transient increase and decrease)?
Let the 100 days begin.

Saturday 15 February 2014

Poxy proxy servers and Apple "care".

Today has been enlightening and enraging in equal measure:

I was on Buzzfeed this morning, just mooching, scrolling through images of cats and images taken from twitter showing peoples rage at interflora and marvelling that anyone would spend £70 on flowers.. and then.. Nothing.
Nada.
Just the beige "no internet" screen with a message about how my computer couldn't connect to the internet using Proxy servers and to speak to the system administrator.

I tried the usual stuff.
First I tried re-connecting to the internet, Then restarting the router, Then the computer. Then repeated. Then I tried to co-erce the computer. Then threatened it. Then pleaded with it. Then sulked.
Then Traff repeated these actions whilst I looked exasperated.

Then I called the Apple store in Milton Keynes.
They put me through to Apple care.

In fairness I've never needed any Apple assistance before- all my computers have worked perfectly until I've blown them up by using the wrong power supply.
Which I can definitely categorise as "user error".
My Ipod got stolen when our house got burgled in Splott, but until that point worked beautifully. So again, That can hardly be Apple's fault.
I didn't have any trepidation in calling apple, I assumed that their after care would be as efficient as their computer products.

My call was answered after about 3 minutes- which was speedy- and seemed to be a call centre based in Europe- The call handler was very professional and helpful, until I gave him the serial number of my computer.
"This computer was new in 2008- your Applecare contract expired in 2011- you'll need to pay £35 to continue this call- or perhaps you'd like to consider a newer product?"
I told him I wasn't going to pay him, he told me to download a new operating system and see if that fixed the problem.

So, I connected the computer to the router with the ethernet cable,  found the operating system- Mavericks- And downloaded it (I did not install it).
This is where my day became enlightening- Downloading the latest OS upgrade gives you 90 days free applecare.

My second call the apple care was even less helpful than my first. The call handler told me to turn my computer off, and then on again. When I told him I'd done that he told me to do it again. and hung up on me.

So, I called again.

My third call was much more successful, as I was now entitled to my apple care I got the works in terms of assistance.
The guy talked me through setting up loads of stuff I'll never use again- but I still couldn't get on the internet using my wireless.
In the end (After about 40 minutes of premium rate phone call) he put me through to his boss.

He told me not to install the new OS as my computer is too old and I'd lose all my versions of Microsoft word etc, but instead asked me to read him the proxy server settings.
I used to use this computer at work- which is a secure server- so I had loads of crazy settings on my internet which for some reason had suddenly become a problem Today (I'd love to know why, but not for £1.80 a minute or whatever the standard 0845 call costs now). He talked me through changing them back to the standard settings and Voila.
6 and a half hour after the initial issue all it took was 4 seconds to fix (And probably about £20 in call fees).

Obviously I'm grateful for the help and assistance provided to me, but equally I'm frustrated that the first guy I spoke to couldn't have spent 4 seconds to tell me what the standard proxy settings should be for the internet, instead of spending 10 minutes demanding money and trying to sell me a new computer!

So, Lesson of the day:
Download the latest OS.
Get 90 days free applecare.
But don't expect that to stop people hanging up on you. O_o

(You need to download the OS using your apple ID- if you don't have one set one up to download it- although if you have an I tunes account it's usually the same thing- because when you call up they ask for your ID so can see your download history)



Sunday 9 February 2014

Didcot

I've had a lush weekend- and been extremely grateful to escape from the flat for a change!

On Saturday I drove to Henley to meet Kirstie ad Phil- We had a very big lunch at the Thai Orchid restaurant- they have a lunch menu for something like £8.50 where you get a starter (Chicken Satay! although, I stole some of Kirstie's Tempura and that was really good too), Salad with either beef or duck, A main meal and rice.- I had masaman Curry. Possibly it's my new favourite thai dish (It's really "fusion food" the bloke in the restaurant in peterborough said it was a south indian inspired thai dish but however it came to exist, I'm very grateful it has.).


After lunch we tried to walk around the block but the road was pretty flooded from all the rain! It's weird because it's barely rained here- it's been windy and cold and grey, but not really rainy.
I was very good because Kirstie and Phil made me- and didn't walk very far.
See, It's sort of resting.

After Lunch we headed to Kirstie's (It's so weird now my sister and Parents have moved away as I have nowhere to stay in Didcot- We saw the new people who live at my old house! they looked nice).

I made candles. and a mess. Kirstie made bread and dinner and tidied up after me because it turns out pouring wax is more difficult than I'd expected.
I will be attempting to recreate the steak salad at home. And when I've worked out how to cook the rice maybe a rice pudding too (Kirstie made it with Almond milk which was really lovely).

We mooched and watched TV after dinner- It was really lovely to just chill out- Thank you very much for having me!

Today we mooched round Didcot- and visited the aquatics centre- I do still kind of want shrimp even if they're cannibals. :S

Later in the afternoon Kisrtie and I met Sophie and we all went for cake and hot chocolate at Boswells. (They sell really good carrot cake!) We just caught up and talked out work and what we've been up to- but it was really nice.

I will make an effort to be in Didcot more often. I will stop being so lazy! I'll even brave the weather being much ickier than here in the East for your excellent company. :)






Tuesday 4 February 2014

Gummy bear Thumb print cookies

Right, To preface this, I'd promised myself that this year I'd post fewer things I wanted to make- and only post them here after I'd made them.
I'm making an exception for this one- I've made hard boiled sweet window cookies before and eating them made me feel like I'd break all my teeth.
This looks better. Less.. solid...more jammy.

AND the lady who made them on "a beautiful mess" said they tasted kind of pop-tart-y.
I WILL make these as they're easy and appeal completely to my taste in foods- but only when I'm done with my slimfasting. so, not too long to wait.


1/2 cup butter, softened
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 egg yolk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup flour
1/8 teaspoon salt
10 gummy bears (plus more for snacking)
Cream together the butter and sugar. Stir in the egg yolk and extract. Then stir in the flour and salt until well-combined and crumbly. Cover and place the dough in the freezer for ten minutes.Best thumb print cookiesShape the dough in to twenty small balls. Place them on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper. Use your thumb to press a swallow bowl into each cookie. Or, if you're totally cliche like me, create indented heart shapes in each.
Bake at 305°F for 8-9 minutes.Gummy bear thumb print cookiesWhile these bake cut the gummy bears into four pieces each. You'll need two pieces (half a gummy bear) per cookie. Once these are partially baked, place the gummy bear bits in the hearts. Bake for another two minutes.How to make gummy bear cookies

Monday 3 February 2014

Machine sewing, pattern cutting, Valentines cards and home-made chocolates.

In crafting terms this weekend has been a good start and bit of a washout:

On Saturday I cut some patterns for things I want to try and make with my sewing machine- some from the book I bought last month and some from patterns I'd cut myself.
I'd been waiting to try the book patterns until I had some baking paper to trace them onto- I have no idea if thats standard dress making practice or just my mother eccentricity- but that is what I have done.

I've also cut my fabric, so it's all ready to stitch together.
I can see some flaws with some of my xmas prototypes- one of them certainly looks too small so once I've made it up and seen what it's like finished I'll try to figure out a way to adapt it.

To make space for the sewing machine I've cleared my dressing table of make up- it looks pretty weird having such a clutter free bedroom.
I've even managed to find a plug for the sewing machine- but sadly that means I can't listen to records whilst sewing.
I must choose.

I've also found the instructions for threading my sewing machine:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7SxLOq6sd4


As somewhere on one of our many house moves I've lost the instruction manual. I have a john lewis mini sewing machine in pale pink- they're pretty good value really for £50- and the needles and bobbins are £1 for a multipack so that makes it even better value! It only does "light" fabric (which is why I don't have a  1950s style cape yet for Hednas, as I'll need to swap sewing machines with someone to make it.).

On Sunday I had fully planned to start sewing- everything was ready! All I needed to do was fill the bobbins with thread and thread the machine up. Instead I've re-read the first 4 Harry Potter books- and started the 5th (The order of the Phoenix). Traff asked me how I can re-read the same books over and over again. I didn't have the heart to tell him that I have an embarrassing schoolgirl crush on the dark and brooding Sirius Black- to the point where I've marked the pages/chapters worth reading more than once (The reason I didn't watch the films was that I didn't think the actor they cast did him justice- In my head, Sirius Black is HOT).
And that has taken up my entire day.

However, this means I've followed doctors orders and kept off my foot and it has remained elevated.It's less puffy so I should probably admit that the man who's studied medicine for 7 years and "practiced it"for as long as I've lived here, if not longer, might be right.
And been bored out of my wits.

On Monday I started out by doing my chores- I had to go and buy an ankle support as I'll be in work tomorrow, and I'm supposed to support my stupid bashed up foot all the time anyway. (I'm finally taking this advise as my ankle feels uncomfortably like it's fizzing... Is that good? or bad?)
I tried boots but the pharmacist just kept telling me all I needed for my "sprain" was a tubigrip. Sometimes I catch my sock elastic on the back of the foot and it makes me vomit a bit in my mouth, I don't want that full time!
I did get a wrap thing for my ankle in TKMaxx- and on the way out, I spotted some seriously reduced Levi jeans. Mine now!

Obviously, I can't show you EVERYTHING I've managed to make as some of this stuff is practice runs for my xmas crafting- but these I can show you (I promise thats not just a cover- I really have done loads today as I'm off "resting" my foot and Traff's on a course):

I made baby bootees (From the slipper instructions I posted in December) and a baby dress (modelled by my hot water bottle cover!) and then a scaled up pair of bootees for Kirstie. :P
I've got some other patterns to try later in the week too.

This was me trying to learn to use all the functions on my sewing machine- that video is really helpful (link posted further up the page) Even if the lady doesn't rate my sewing machine! "you get what you pay for" humph.

And at Brownies we made valentines cards, Chocolates and chocolate boxes- Very cool. We get them back next week in time to give to the beau of our choice.
Or eat them ourselves...

No, I think maybe I'll treat the wife to some chocolates. It is Valentines day, after all.. To be honest, we never celebrate valentines day- we both think it's a bit silly. We love each other 365 days of the year- and I object to paying jumped up prices for something just because it's February!

Also, As part of my procrastination today, I found this video on happiness- I have no idea how you can do this in "real life" without it sounding like you're about to do something either dramatic or stupid, but It's a good idea:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHv6vTKD6lg&list=PLzvRx_johoA8PC6S5k5S2SszRQOR8oSEa&feature=share&index=1

Sunday 2 February 2014

Harry Potter "Shocker" from BBC news


Harry Potter would have been a better match for Hermione Granger than Ron Weasley, author JK Rowling appears to suggest in a new magazine interview.
Speaking in Wonderland magazine, the writer said she made Ron and Hermione a couple "for very personal reasons, not for reasons of credibility".
"If I'm absolutely honest, distance has given me perspective on that," she told guest editor Emma Watson.
The actress played Hermione in the film versions of Rowling's fantasy novels.
In the interview, published in full in the latest edition of the Wonderland quarterly, Rowling admits she made a mistake in having Hermione marry Ron at the end of her seven-novel cycle.
"I think there are fans out there who know that too and who wonder whether Ron would have really been able to make her happy," Watson responds in excerpts from the interview printed in the Sunday Times.
Rowling said she could "hear the rage and fury it might cause some fans" of her work and that she hoped she would not be "breaking people's hearts" with her revelations.
Ron and Hermione, she reportedly goes on, would have needed counselling to sustain a relationship the best-selling author describes "as a form of wish fulfilment" on her part.
Potter fans will be aware that Ron and Hermione eventually marry at the end of the Potter saga, and that Harry himself marries Ron's sister Ginny.
Daniel Radcliffe played the title role in the eight Harry Potter films, while Rupert Grint and Bonnie Wright played Ron and Ginny respectively.

It's amused me that this has made the national news- and in fact, the international news, and the papers and everything! We need to keep a sense of perspective here people- these are fictional characters not real people- even though I suppose they are fictional national treasures.
I have to admit though- my first reaction on reading this is- "well, yes, I did think they'd get together in the end"

Part of my sort of wishes she'd write a prequel to the first book- an insight into Harry's Parent's school days or lives during Voldemort's power. 
Annndddd then I remind myself it's a CHILDRENS' book. It doesn't quell my curiosity though.