Finally, it’s starting to look more like early summer. Friday was amusing. My forecast said a slight chance of 0.5mm of rain at nine o’clock in the evening. What did we get? A massive thunderstorm at 17.00. Routers and computers unplugged, towels down… At least it washed away some of the Sahara that had settled over the previous weeks, and it didn’t stop me baking bread for a dinner we were having – inside. It seems to have cleared the air a little, too, as today, I’m, looking out on a clear blue sky and a calm sea, and I am wondering which it takes OneDrive so long to put together a few photos read for me to download? I’m sure it only used to take a few seconds, now, it’s more like five minutes.

Before the Friday storm, I was downtown to visit the dentist for a filling which, this time, required anaesthetic. We were, rather optimistically, planning to stay down for lunch afterwards (Neil and I, not me and the dentist), but the anaesthetic wouldn’t allow. You know how it is, sometimes it’s fine and you can function normally, while at other times, you’re drooling, it must depend on where the needle goes in. Well, I couldn’t even speak properly, let alone eat anything, and I was sure people thought I’d met with a nasty accident. Anyway, it wore off a couple of hours later. Actually, it took about as long as OneDrive has taken to finally create and download a zip folder of a few photos, so at least I can now show you a couple of shots from Friday and Sunday.

There will be more of these during the week, no doubt, and it look like it’s going to be a week with very little going on for me. I am waiting for a MS to come back from my proofreader, which is like waiting for your homework to come back from the head mistress. We are going out to eat later in the week, but otherwise, I only have some piano lessons and playing in the diary, and a new story to think up. Maybe I will get to take another walk. Yesterday, it was down the steps, along through Pitini and then back up the road. The new holiday complex in Pitini is coming along, right opposite two other glamorous villas/complexes which looked ready to accept boarders, and on the way back, I passed several other new Airbnb rentals with signs outside of varying quality, none of which were (as yet) occupied, and again, I had to wonder where our godson will find to live if he comes back here after his two years in Rhodes. The other one has secured a basement room in a friend’s house and is no longer having to pay nearly €500 a month for a bedsit (while earning only €900 per month, as he was). But, don’t get me started on all that, not this early in the week. I have a new book to think up, so I shall turn my attention to more cheerful thoughts, like the state of the East End of London in 1893.














