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Saturday, December 30, 2017
Letter from Espargal: 29 December 2017
The sun rises on the final week of the year, a week whose days have emerged, merged and submerged.
In the park, Slavic and I trimmed the dead wood from our copse of oak trees. All the trees struggled through the hot, dry summer and not all made it.
The dogs made themselves comfortable in the undergrowth to watch the action. That's Mini posing on a rock.
We burned off piles of cuttings as did the farmers down in the valley.
A circular loaf of bread that Jones was removing from the boot burst through the bottom of the plastic bag holding it and made a bid for freedom. It took us several minutes to discover it hiding in the hedge.
The week started out sunny with morning mist in the valleys
which made for some beautiful pictures.
The last few days have been dull, with intermittent drizzle.
The dogs liked to settle down around the fire.
Whatever the weather, Llewellyn and Lucia would head to the beach
where they made themselves as comfortable as circumstances would allow. They are motoring back to the UK over the weekend.
We opened our Christmas presents, some with labels we couldn't read.
Others were more familiar.
Santa brought Barbara a watch and me a new phone. He seemed to know that I'm an HTC fan.
We sat down to coffee and Christmas cake. A gift from L&L with whom we shared meals most days.
Sun or drizzle, the dogs insisted on their walks - and a treat on their return home.
And here's a picture of Bobby contemplating the year ahead. May it treat us gently, one and all!
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Letter from Espargal: 22 December 2017
Last Friday evening we attended a fado evening dinner at the Hamburgo. The restaurant was booked out for the occasion.
That's us in the picture with (an invisible) Anneke behind the camera. Michael, on my right, was sporting one of his fine waistcoats. I had to rely on charisma.
The group's two guitarists were outstanding and their red-jacketed singer was very good. The applause was prolonged and sincere.
A drop of rain was ever so welcome. The Algibre still runs dry and the dust still lies thick on the ditches in the valley.
On Saturday Slavic's big task was to repair a section of wall that had given way. Although the traditional dry stone walls were cunningly constructed, they bulge over the years and eventually give way, generally after rain. These days we hide mortar inside.
ON THE SHUTTLE IN THE CHUNNEL
On Sunday afternoon Llewellyn, Lucia, Hazel and Douglas arrived after a brisk 2000km-plus drive from London. They are staying next door in one of Idalecio's cottages.
They are beach people who are relishing the sunny days and empty strands.
SOLSTICE SUNSET AT THE TALEFE
When the sun goes down, temperatures fall sharply. Llewellyn has a fancy watch that tells his camera when to take pictures.
SUPPER AT O REGRESSO
We've dined in and out. This was our first visit to a newish restaurant on the fringes of Salir. We were impressed. To our regret, three of our favourite haunts are closed for the season.
NOTE THE SPARROW ON THE HANGING
Thursday Jones and I idled away a couple of hours at the Algarve Forum while Honda replaced faulty airbags in the car. Sparrows in the dining hall waited hopefully for customers to share a few crumbs.
DOG DEEP IN THOUGHT!
Warning: What follows is about dreams - my dreams! Other people's dreams are generally about as exciting as their aches and pains. But what if the dreamer, while dreaming, doubts the reality of dream and tries to test it? Consider the following:
PREPARING TO CLEAN RUSS'S EARS.
One night I had several dreams in a row. From each unsettling dream I awoke to reassure myself that I'd been dreaming, only to plunge into another equally unsettling moments later. I recall them quite distinctly.
The first concerned the visit of a man and two children to our very large house. In the second I struggled on a high roof to survive a storm that was threatening to topple a structure looming above me. The third had me trying to phone Rosebank Convent (in Johannesburg), to talk to my sister who was head girl (she once was). And the fourth was located in a large crowded hall where I suspected the occupants were ghosts.
As I was immersed in each of these episodes, part of my subconscious questioned whether the episode was real or I was dreaming. Things came to a head in the hall where my doubting voice urged me to touch people to see if they were corporeal or merely illusions. I eventually clasped a woman - middle-aged, plump and not very attractive - and concluded that I wasn't dreaming - only to wake and find I had been.
TIME TO CALL IT A DAY
If you've had enough dreams, so have I.
Meanwhile, it's nearly Christmas. I hope you have a lovely one. Ours looks damp. That's suits me fine!
Too soon and too scary even to think of 2018! Miserere nos!
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Letter from Espargal: 15 December 2017
Saturday we had to choose between the Christmas fairs in Alte and Loule. We preferred the former. In truth it was a modest affair although the vendors did their best to spice it up with seasonal hats and festive fare.
At least the coffee that Dona Rosa served at her cafe on the corner was hot and strong. Dona Rosa has been running her snack bar for as long as anyone can remember. She attends to customers while hubby scrutinises the paper at a table beside the window - although he responds swiftly enough when needed. Back on the main drag we acquired several bottles of Tor wine and an alien succulent that took my fancy. The vendor didn't know its name; nor did I although it appears from similar pictures to be a variety of Haworthia.
Tor is an inconsequential village midway between us and Loule. The relatively new eponymous vineyards are lined up in regiments across the hillside above. Although the Algarve is not known for its wines, the vintners at Tor produce a most acceptable range at a typical €5 a bottle. Their syrah, with an exceptionally heavy 17% alcohol content, is acclaimed and hard to find.
Sunday we waited for the promised rain. It was due to arrive after lunch but, as usual, it was late. All afternoon I received emailed bad-weather warnings from weather bureau. We were fast asleep in bed at 03.00 on Monday morning the bad weather itself arrived.
WIND-BLOWN WATER TUB AND SCATTERED OLIVES
And what a storm it was! Hurricane strength gusts of wind (accompanied by horizontal streams of rain) knocked over the pots, hurled water tubs into the garden, tossed chairs across the patio, terrified the animals - several of them in bed with us - and generally made merry.
The following morning we found the roads paved with fallen olives. They click clack under the car's wheels and are treacherous to walk on - like oiled ball bearings. For our own safety, we've swept up most around the house.
ALOES IN FLOWER IN OUR GARDEN
Monday brought my last English lesson of the year. My class includes three smart women and one fellow who struggles to stay up. The ladies, who like to sit together, enjoy discussing and translating the text of the day - and don't waste any time doing it. But their male companion struggles - and while he flounders, they start gossiping in Portuguese. They're worse than kids. The whole thing becomes more of a circus than a lesson. T'was ever thus.
WAITING BESIDE THE CHURCH
Tuesday we attended the funeral of a neighbour who had died of cancer. Maria Coelho was a woman of much our own age who for years had leaned heavily on a crutch. The workshop of her son, Vitor, is located just below her house and I would chat to her when I took my tractor down to be serviced or when we stopped at the post-boxes nearby.
As is customary at funerals, the great majority of (male) mourners waited outside the church while the family (and most womenfolk) attended the service within. Then all fell in behind the hearse as it made its slow way down the cobbled lanes to the cemetery, led by the priest and an alter server bearing a cross to proclaim a Christian funeral.
The cortege fills the road for the deceased's final journey. Traffic comes to a stop and shops close their doors in respect as the procession passes. I'm not much into funerals but, as they go, there's a lot to be said for the way they're conducted here.
In the afternoon Natasha and I visited the accountant in Benafim. From next year our employee officially becomes an independent worker although in practice very little will change.
RIVER OF MIST BELOW BENAFIM
Wednesday dawned sunny and crisp (and with most welcome news of the Alabama election result). Our nights are cool now, well down in single figures, prompting us to light the wood-burning stove early. Our sunny days reach into the upper teens. It's lovely weather - my kind of weather - and we've a few thankful months of it to come before the next torrid summer.
DOWN THE VALLEY THE MISTY RIVER FLOWS
The paths we follow through the hills are still damp following the downpour, with treacherous greasy stretches awaiting the unwary. I make my way cautiously, with unapologetic walking sticks in either hand, the better to keep gravity at bay.
Jones feared (unnecessarily) after dropping a mini-toothbrush (an interdent brush if you insist) down the basin plug hole that she might have gummed up the works. We could see it lurking low in the pipe, too deep to be seized by pliers or scissors.
Ronald rode to the rescue with a drop of superglue at the end of a stick. Clever fellow! Another beneficiary of the superglue ("Dear Beneficiary": that's how my West African scammers address me) was this ceramic bowl.
The storm had hurled it to the floor on the patio, shattering it into more than a dozen pieces. It's restoration wasn't exactly up to British Museum standards but Jones is not complaining. Nor is the flower occupying it.
Thursday pm. On the way back from a back tune-up with Jodi I was intercepted by a courier with an item I'd ordered from Amazon. It's the second time this week that he and I have met fruitfully on the road. Now, there's a coincidence to reflect on.
JONES DAWN
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