Well first of all, my apologies for not visiting anyone last week - not until last night anyway. I managed to comment on the hostesses of the two blogs I link up with, but completely forgot to return to visit everyone else. I will make sure I do better this week.
It has been a very quiet week except for one thing. On Sunday it is our local elections, and they are quite important. We have three or four parties to chose from and candidates are elected from them according to how many votes each party gets. And the leader of the one with the most votes becomes the next mayor. This is the one election that 'foreign' residents can vote in, so we will be going to the polling station early on Sunday morning before I go to church. This is the main plaza, with banners flapping in the breeze, and lovely flowers planted all around the platform area. You can just see two beautiful blue jacaranda trees in flower in the background.
They have a good system here, where no-one is allowed to canvass until three weeks before the election. Then, suddenly there are banners and posters on every lamp-posts, and loud speaker vans drive around the streets broadcasting their main aims. This week we have had visitors from each party at our door. We have been here long enough now to know the candidates, and they mostly brought us their manifesto in English. Yesterday they all had a big push and I could hear the main candidates addressing the crowd on the plaza.
This picture was taken a couple of weeks ago when there was a small parade including the village band, on the streets. The poster on the lamp-post is an interesting one. Maria has been our lady mayor for over twenty years and she stands for the PSOE which is a socialist party. Fran, (pictured on the poster) has worked for her at the Town Hall ever since we came here, but this year he has changed his allegiance to the Ciudadanos party, and is standing against her. Ciudadanos, meaning Citizens, is a relatively new party that started in Catalunya, and leans slightly more to the right of PSOE, so the outcome on Sunday should be quite interesting.
However I am not greatly involved with politics, so I will leave it there, and let you know what happens next week.
Meanwhile here are two nice flower photos to brighten my post. The first is a lovely climbing rose that blooms each year on the corner of a house near us. The flowers are tiny and they bloom in huge numbers all at the same time. Every year I think how pretty it is.
The second is the oleander that grows on the other side of our back railings, just outside my craft room window. It has variegated leaves and a double, double flower that is like a little rose or a camelia. It is covered in flowers already this year.
I had a lovely afternoon on Wednesday. Unfortunately my English friends are spread over a huge area, so we don't have many opportunities to just meet up for a coffee and a chat. So one of our group offered her home for an English tea-party this week. There was quite a gang of us turned up. The sun shone without being hot enough to 'cook' us, so we sat in groups around her garden, enjoying copious pots of tea, cakes and scones, and dainty sandwiches. Just a few were brave enough to go in the pool while the rest of us looked on, but the water is still quite chilly. We had a lovely natter, and moved on to different groups so we got to chat to lots of folk. It was enjoyed by everyone and we are definitely going to organise something similar again. Unfortunately we were too busy talking to take any photos this time.
I was looking at the oleander through my window last night when I noticed two planes leaving vapour trails in the sky. I went out and watched them as they gradually broke up and melted into the clouds. It was so peaceful out there.
The only sound was the little birds making their way to a resting place for the night. Several chose the wires around a telegraph pole across the green zone, and I had to smile at them. They were constantly swapping places with one another, then settling down again, only to fly off somewhere else. Then back they came again.
A few weeks ago I showed you the beginning of my next crochet project - a blanket for our son Jonathan and his wife, Ella. Progress has been slow because my arthritic hand has been particularly painful this spring, but I try to do a couple of rows each night. This is all I am going to show you of it for now. I'll wait for the big reveal when it is finished but the days are getting much warmer, and I am thinking it will have to go away soon and be finished in the autumn.
Of course, Jonathan and Ella saw it when they were here last week and they loved it, so that is a good incentive to keep working on it while I can.
In the meantime here is a little look at another project I am working on as well. I wanted something more simple and more portable to take to my sewing group on Wednesdays, and also something smaller and lighter for me to handle when I can't manage the big blanket, so I started making some squares. The pattern is again for a large blanket but it is made of 53 different squares and rectangles, with two each of 26 designs, and one large one for the centre, and they are all in the same locking filet stitch I am working for the big blanket. I like the technique and it makes an almost double fabric so it is very warm and cosy for a blanket. I have about six bright colours and dark navy for the contrast on them all. Here are the first two finished pieces with one repeat half made.
They are nice little pieces of work , and quite straightforward after all my practice on the other one, so I should be able to keep working on them for a while yet.
And finally here are two photos of a rare stunning sunset that I spotted through the kitchen window one evening. The sky has been too clear most days for photos like this. Once it starts to get dark here, the light goes very quickly. We don't have twilight like we did in UK. It's either light or dark and you have to be quick to catch the little window between the two.
I prepared this post last night but I just had to come back and add one more photo. I spotted this little gecko as I returned from closing the gate on the dogs after their breakfast. He has chosen to rest on the back railings right by a branch of oleander which is really dead, but it escaped my shears when I was tidying up the bush, because it has another praying mantis nest on it. So I just tied it to the fence until the babies emerge and then I will prune it back. I like the geckos. They eat a lot of unwanted bugs, and just look at those wise eyes, and that dear little hand!
So now I will link up with Annie's Friday Smiles and Rocking Your World, and I really will try to visit everyone before the weekend is over.
4 comments:
Ah bless you what a fabulous post, the elections sound a lot more orderly than hear, we do ours by post so our European ones went off weeks ago and then a couple of days ago we get the paraphernalia through the door and I'm thinking - way too late! Thankfully we did some online research, it is the first time said 18 year old has been able to vote.
Your tea party sounds fabulous, I'm sure you had a great time, such synchronicities again Kate as I've mentioned in my post about arranging a catch up with school friends as we've realised it is 30 years since we left school.
I can't wait to see the finish blanket, I'm always in awe of your skill. The squares look fabulous.
The tiny Gecko is so sweet and I can imagine him being a positive addition to your garden given his appetite for bugs.
Love the sky photos Kate as always. I hope you have a grand weekend and week ahead.
Hugs
I like how your elections don't allow the candidates to advertise until 3 days before the election. I wish we had that rule. I get SO tired of the TV ads and the robocalls I get starting about a month before the elections. Some start TV ads six months or more in advance.
I know how hard it is to keep going on a large blanket like that with your hands seizing with arthritis.
Beautiful sunsets and fun gecko photos, too. Have a super weekend and a great next week, Kate.
What an interesting election that may be Kate!!
Loving your crochet - that technique is fascinating!! What is the name of it again please? I have forgotten.
That rose looks spectacular, and your gecko is exquisite
Blessings
Maxine
Hi Kate. Just got back from my craft club, I so love playing with like minded friends. Sounds like you had a good time with your friends too, nothing better! Voting's been going on here too, just wish our government would get themselves sorted. The crochet look lovely and the photos too. Wishing you a happy weekend, Angela xXX
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