All posts by James Collins

Bits and Pieces

Bits and Pieces

I’m starting off the new year blog with some bits and pieces drawn at random from my mind at 4.47 on Sunday morning.

First of all, this news just in: Banyak & Fecks has made it to the next round of the Cover of the Month competition on AllAuthor.com. You can vote for it via this link https://allauthor.com/cover-of-the-month/10695/ I often drop cover into this competition to get my designer, Andjela, some more publicity, so any votes and shares you can manage would be appreciated. Thank you.

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New Year’s Day morning view

Then, there was New Year. We spent the evening at home and missed the dynamite and fireworks because we were asleep by 10pm, but apparently, it was, somehow, quite rowdy. We’d also turned off the doorbell as some malaka thought it funny to ring it several times during the previous night, an old and rather boring trick some local idiot gets a kick from, from time to time. (Note: if you want us to answer the gate, send a message first.)

Village lane after a light shower.
Village lane after a light shower.

Then, on New Year’s Day, there was the weather. Luckily, we’d been up to the family the day before to drop off Christmas presents that had come late in the post, and so we didn’t have to carry them through the rain and runoff on New Years’ Day morning. It poured down just at the time we were preparing to leave to attend the hallowed kitchen for NYD, and we had to wait for a break in the downpour. In fact, the day/year started, for me, at 6 am with a power cut and a thunderstorm, neither of which lasted for very long.

The rain is one thing, the gutters are another.
The rain is one thing, the gutters are another.

The day itself was spent at the kitchen table with the god boys and mum and progressed through sherry to delayed present-giving, games, madness and celebration until it was time to get home before the curfew. The following day was spent on the sofa wading through new films on Netflix and doing very little apart from making self-promises.

I was able to do some more writing during the holiday period, and am getting back to it today with two new stories crowding my head and desperate to get out through my fingertips, so I have plenty of work ahead of me.

After-lunch game aftermath.
After-lunch game aftermath.

Meanwhile, in the slightly wider world, our lockdown has been extended again but is nothing compared to an island-wide lockdown instigated in Kalymnos. Where our non-essential shops have had to close again after the Christmas break, over there, residents are not even allowed out to ‘click and collect’, and from what I’ve heard, to even go to the supermarkets. I need to check the facts of that, but that’s the general chatter on certain Facebook groups and news summaries. Again, Greece is being very tough on restrictions in order to keep things under control, or as much as is possible. We’re into something like day 59 of a nationwide lockdown now, with no messing about.

And so, into the first week of the new year with the weather looking improved, lots of good intentions, lots of creative ideas and plenty of things to do at home. I’ll keep you posted.

Remember, if you can, click and vote! https://allauthor.com/cover-of-the-month/10695/

Happy New Year

Happy New Year

You don’t need me to tell you that today is New Years’ Eve. Rather than do what many blogs to and provide a roundup of the year that was, I thought I’d not say too much about it. It started well enough for us, with a trip to London and Canada, and has ended more or less like any other winter on Symi – quiet. Of course, things for other people have been very different. Rather than dwell, I thought I’d put up some recent photos, wish you a Happy New Year’s Eve and the year ahead, and let you know I will be back next week to carry on carrying on as I do.

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Village Square, 29th December.

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You asked about winter

You asked about winter

From time to time, I get asked what the house is like in winter, does it get cold and other questions about ‘real-life’ on the island. So, now and then over the winter, I thought I’d post some random thoughts about such things, starting today (Tuesday), with my early morning observations the house so far this winter.

As you’ll see from the photos, today is a stay-at-home day, for me at least. Neil has gone out to brave the weather, take a walk, and hopefully call into the post office on the way back to see if anything new came in on the Blue Star boat over the weekend. Me? I’m staying close to the heater that’s close to my desk. I’ve just had a shower and made the two-meter sprint from bathroom to the relative warmth of the bedroom to get dressed, and that’s enough exercise for one day.

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I say ‘warmth’… At this time of year, we open the bedroom window every morning to alleviate the condensation that gathers on the glass overnight. If we don’t, the room soon smells of damp, and the walls gradually change colour, particularly in the corners. The window offers a lovely view up the lane, more so now some of the trees have been pollarded, but it doesn’t let in any sunlight. In fact, we hardly see any of that in the house over the winter. The courtyard shutters are closed to stop the rain and cold coming in, and that wall is about the only one that gets any sun.

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The summer is a different matter of course, when the sun’s higher and the offices roast as they are basically concrete blocks. The house mainly faces north, with the courtyard facing south. The office rooms are on the east side of our place, with windows to the north and the east end buffets the neighbour’s garden wall. The kitchen and bedroom windows face west, so are fine for late afternoon in the summer, but not so good in the winter. It’s mainly the bathroom that suffers between November and March, as does anyone who uses it. It’s a kind of concrete afterthought into the courtyard with a window (north), and opens directly into the kitchen. So, when things are boiling on the stove, and clouds of condensation are billowing, it’s a case of opening the bathroom door and window and letting the clouds roll out. At least our bathroom, unlike many, is inside.

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Later in the winter, it’s a case of wiping the black growth from the bathroom ceiling, airing the kitchen cupboards as the backs are now falling prey to the damp and don’t always smell very nice, keeping the bedroom aired in the mornings, trying to warm it in the evenings, and hardly seeing daylight at all as there are curtains, duvets and towels at the windows to keep the heat in and the rain out. The only room with a wall-to-wall carpet is my office, and even then there’s a six-inch gap all the way around, and the room is above the sterna, a currently empty water chamber willed with cold air.

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Still, I’m not complaining, as I love the winter and the challenges it brings; typing in fingerless gloves, worrying about the electricity bill, the celebrations after a rainstorm when the bathroom ceiling hasn’t leaked and hanging the washing to dry indoors for three days at a time. It’s fun. It’s like camping out in the yUK in summer, and this morning, it was 14 degrees at seven o’clock, so it’s not even winter-cold yet.

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Monday morning

Monday morning

Monday morning and I woke up to the sound of rain hammering the roof and δripping from the porch (which needs recovering). For the first time in ages, I slept for a full eight hours, doing a rare (for me) nine to five, and getting up just in time to see the Blue Star leaving in the blustery early morning. I was going to take a walk up the hill, but that will have to wait until it’s dry. I don’t mind walking when it’s cold, but apart from anything else, when it rains here, the lanes can become like rapids, and it’s safer not to venture out.

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So, instead, today I’m going to potter around the house finding places for Christmas gifts, and then potter around the web finding paints for my new model, and maybe even tracing the progress of some not yet arrived presents for other people. Over the last couple of weeks we’ve been through every film we want to see on Netflix and several we didn’t, having done the standard Christmas Day films like Indian Jones and Home Alone one and two, and are steadily running out of ideas of what to watch of an evening. We don’t have yUK TV anymore, I did have Film On for a year, but when that ran out, they wanted nearly £200.00 to renew it, and as we’d only watched it occasionally for the novelty, I didn’t think it was worth it. Instead, I treated myself to Curiosity Stream, a collection of documentary channels for £10.00 a year, which is far more reasonable.

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So, as you can see, there’s a lot of doing nothing much at this time of year, especially when the weather is wet, but that doesn’t mean I’m doing absolutely nothing. I have a target of 3,000 words a day on… well, on something. At the moment, that’s another Clearwater Mystery which is taking me into the world of early photography, or photography from 1889 at any rate. A little research while listening to the rain, a little writing and then, with any luck, another fabulous lunch cooked by my very own MasterChef. He now not only as one of the cookbooks, but also an apron with his name on, and another one from the godsons that, when translated from Greek, reads: ‘Νονέ, you are the godfather of our hearts.” Bless. (Νονέ, btw, is Godfather in the vocative.)

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Welcome back

Welcome back

I thought I’d fill in this week between Christmas and New Year with a couple of short posts and some random photos, just to get my mind back in the blog game. I left you on the 22nd, and now it’s the 28th, and over the last six days, I’ve done… well, not a lot.

On Christmas Eve, we went down to Yialos for those last-minute bits and pieces and a check of the post and various couriers, picking up a couple of things but not the star Christmas present for godson #1, which is still delayed by the overloaded post. Not to worry, it will get here at some point. The weather, as you can see, was calm, clear and not too cold, in fact, it was very warm on the north side of the harbour when I went to raid the bank. The municipality speakers were playing carols, and there was a festive air.

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Here in Greece, we were allowed two days of mingling of up to nine people from only two households which meant we were able to spend Christmas day in more or less usual fashion with the good boys and their mum. There were many highlights, but for me, a concert by godson #2 was up there as the top moment.

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I’d been teaching him (by video), and he wanted to specific play a carol for his mum, and once the keyboard was set up in the kitchen, that piece was duly played as a surprise and played very well. But then there was a surprise for me as he’d also taught himself four more carols which I knew nothing about. Apart from anything else, this reinforced to me his interest in and ability to read music and perform it, so I was very chuffed, and more than a little proud. After that, it was a day of fun and feasting before we had to leave and be home before the curfew.

Now, we’re back to the usual lockdown, into our 50th day, or 51st by now, of what in the uk they call a tier four. Except here, we have to have permission to go to the shop, bank, doctor, for a walk and so on, as there’s a track and trace system in place as there has been when necessary since late March or Early April.

Christmas Day
Christmas Day

All that aside, it’s now time to get back to the usual routine. It’s Sunday as I prepare this note, and I’m about to head back into another novel while resisting the temptation to continue my way through the box of Celebrations and other chocolates and the homemade selection box Neil made for me. I must get back online and order some more modelling paints as there’s a new Phantom waiting to be constructed and I need more colours (mainly black), which I can only get from Germany. At least, I’ve not found an outlet for Revel paint in Greece as yet, though there may well be one. That search could be a New Year project along with walking off the chocolate overload and writing more stories. Let’s see how the week goes.

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