Friday, June 30, 2023

Friay Smiles# Week 26

I am writing this on Thursday evening as it has been too hot all day to do anything! I am still melting here but the fan is on at full speed so I expect I'll survive.

It was nice to see our Town Hall bedecked in a rainbow flag for Día Internacíonal.


The warmth and recent rain has brought a lot of wild flowers out and when I went outside the kitchen this week, out neighbour's yard look like a field of grass and daisies.

As you can see here, the white was not daisies, but these little white trumpets. They must be related to our common bindweed, but these are a ground cover 'weed' that grows prolifically around here. I think it looks so pretty.

A close relative to this is the slightly larger pink one. We have some just over the back railings and you see patches of it on all the road-sides, campo area and anywhere it can force its way through. Again I think it is very attractive. (They are actually a lot paler pink than this, but these were in the shade when I took the picture).

Growing in amongst the white ones is areas of this plant.

It is Echium Plantaginium. It is mainly this pretty purple-blue colour but some plants have pink and deep red flowers on them too. It has several medicinal purposes but is seen as a bit of a nuisance as well as it can be very invasive. It is not fussy what type of soil it grows in though it does like full sun. I tend to leave it alone as the hairy stems and leaves can irritate the skin and my skin doesn't need much to irritate it! But you don't get that many true blue flowers, and I like to see it growing everywhere it can find a bit of soil.

While I was sitting in a shady patch of the porch the other afternoon I heard the sound of heavy bells and I knew it meant there was a herd of goats nearby. Soon they appeared in the green zone behind our house, foraging for anything to eat. There used to be a lot of goats around, each herd with its own, usually elderly, goat herd and his dog, and he led his animals from one area of campo to another for hours on end. But I haven't seen any out and about probably since covid, so it was nice to see them back. The animals are very well cared for. They are so agile, often climbing half-way up a tree to strip the leaves at the top, and they are very obedient, reacting to the slightest command from the herdsman.

Their bells remind me of the cow bells on the mountain sides when I visited Switzerland many years ago. The back of our house is more shielded by growing almond and olive trees than it used to be, so I could only glimpse the animals through small gaps. 

It was a large herd; fifty or more animals, but it may have been two combined as there were two goatherds chatting together and one had a lovely sandy coloured dog. They came into the clearing behind us, and I managed to exchange a few words with them which I was pleased about. My Spanish must be improving a bit! They were upset by the amount of dead vegetation etc and said it was a danger for wild-fires, which I have to agree with, especially as there are a good few bottles laying around, left by the groups of yongsters who gather there during the summer. But we don't know who owns the land, only that it is a designated green zone so can't be built on, so there is not much we can do about it.

The pink bouganvillea that we planted just outside the back railings on the corner of the house, is looking splendid right now. I think it gets better every year. It is beginning to encroach on our bedroom window so we will prune it back once this lot of flowers have died down. 

Now, while it is at its best, it is lovely to see the true flowers opening. They are the tiny white flowers that form in the centre of each colourful bract, like little stars.  Pretty aren't they?

Tea-time is a bad time for me to go outside as it is when the biting bugs come out, so I have been dipping in the pool for a cool down around 5.00 and then sitting in the porch watching the swifts and house martins ducking and diving around us catching there fill of insects.

I did go out once it was properly dark and I took this photo of the half moon. 

I was also pleased to see our little row of solar lights are still functioning and making their patterns on the end walls. They have sat there untouched all winter. One is not working so well but the rest are looking good.

I was sitting here at my computer having a long video chat with Ben when when I spotted this cloud outside. It was big pile of fluffy white cloud, and one section of it was reflecting the setting sun. I had to make Ben wait while I took a quick photo. It is not perfect because I have netting covering my windows, but I got enough to catch the beauty of it.

Now I am going to prepare this to publish and link up with Annie's Friday Smiles in the morning. Tomorrow will not be such a smiley day as we say Good-bye to our lovely Kim at lunch time. But we won't allow ourselves to be too sad as we know he is struggling every day.

And so as not to end on a down note I will add a little meme I spoted this week. It is my cats down to a T and made me smile, so I hope it makes you smile too.




Friday, June 23, 2023

Friday Smiles 2023 #Week 25

Week 25; almost half way through the year! In fact next Monday is our eldest son's 52nd birthday, and a long time ago I worked out that his birthday is the exact middle day between the two Christmas Days!

This will be short and sweet as I really have nothing to write about. It has been a difficult week for Kim who is feeling every bit of his ten years now. His hips have collapsed and last Saturday it took us ages to get him on his feet. (You can see in the photo that all the muscles in his rear end have wasted away). We have put our winter rug back down to give him something to grip on as he slips on all our tiled floors. Once up on his feet he can walk around fine, but he cannot sit, only lay down, so his life is not very exciting. He spends most of his day laying in the fly free area or in the sitting room, with meal times still being the highlight of his days. 

Chris spent some time making a shallow ramp for him as he sometimes refuses to come up the two little steps in the porch. He can do it, but tends to stand at the bottom and just bark until we entice him up with treats. I bought an extra long rubber backed mat to go on the ramp so it wasn't slippery for him, but we have yet to see him use it voluntarily. I have brought him up on a lead a few times, but we need him to feel comfortable doing it on his own.

Anyway, I was also becoming concerned that he has a skin condition which is worsening so this morning we took him to the vet. She felt he had lost a lot of weight since she saw him last and has taken some blood for testing as she thinks there may be a more serious problem. So we are getting our heads around the fact that we will probably not have him for much longer. His quality of life is not good now and I don't want to reach the point where we are keeping him alive more for our sake than for his. But tomorrow we will go back for the results of the blood tests and we'll take it from there.

That aside it has been a pleasant week. I have achieved a lot in my craft room and will soon have finished all the things I wanted to do before my summer break. I haven't done much more of my crochet as it stays warm all evening now (and all night!) so I just don't want to handle it much.

I have had long video chats with three of our boys this week which is always good.

And I will close with another lovely photo of my youngest great-grandson, that his mum sent me this week. It was taken on his '11 month' anniversary. Isn't he gorgeous? I am so looking forward to meeting him in August.

So now it is over to Annie's blog to link up for tomorrow.