Put the cat out

Images from Symi Greece
Some of Neil’s photos today

I’ve not been sleeping brilliantly of late for a couple of reasons, the main one being the nocturnal habits of the old Alarm Cat, Jack. It goes like this:

Off to bed, cat’s asleep on the sofa, all well and good. At some point, a few hours later, I wake to hear this click-two-three-four, click-two-three-four coming along the corridor; one of his claws is longer than the rest, and I’m a very light sleeper so it doesn’t take much. There’s then a little paws (ha ha) and then I feel the weight of a rather large cat landing by my feet. He usually settles down there and all is well.

Images from Symi Greece
Spring flowers

But only for a few hours. During that time I’ve tried to get back to sleep but the hay fever sufferer nearby sounds like a coffee percolator, and the earplugs I have are pretty rubbish really. (Note: must by those decent, yellow Earfit ones – anyone heading this way soon? Will pay you back. Note to note to self: look on eBay you lazy git!)

Images from Symi Greece
And a foal

I’m just back in the happy land of dreaming when I feel this movement creeping up from the foot of the bed; a cat stealthily making his way towards my head. I push him back down again, gently. Dozing off nicely when… here he comes again, this time slower, as if that makes any difference. So I push him down a little more firmly and head back to dreamland. Not the funfair in Margate, that’s ‘Dreamland’ with a capital D, but to sleep, perchance to…

No chance. Cat leaps onto my back to try and catch me out, cat goes flying onto floor.

Images from Symi Greece
Flowers in a heart shaped railing

Pause. Repeat from the part when he jumps on the bed again. This time he stays by the feet and I can just see the light coming in as the dawn starts to break. And by now I’ve got that incessant noise in my ear (not the percolator this time but a clicking sound) and I need the loo. But I fight that all off and try and doze again, which I do quite well until I suddenly wake up, open my eyes, and there’s the cat, on the bedside locker, staring at me out blinking. I close my eyes, turn over, and try and get back to sleep. The coffee is once again percolating by now.

Images from Symi Greece
A staircase in Rhodes Old Town

A few minutes later and there’s the feeling of something heavy landing on the bed beside me. The sound of hopeful purring starts up. A quiet whine makes its way through the earplugs and a paw touches the back of the head. Ignore it. Pause. Cat sits on my head. ‘Oh for *$%!’s sake cat…’ Get up and give the cat his breakfast.

This is anywhere between 4.30 and 6.00 in the morning. However, on Wednesday night he went out, and while he was out and about we shut the gate so he stayed out in the ‘hood all night. Gloriously quiet in our house that night and in the morning. He came back again in the afternoon, had something to eat and settled down. I think this could become the new routine.

A few recent, random photos

A few recent, random photos today…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Sunrise, Wednesday

And, because you can never have enough sunrises…

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Same one, through the trees

The day trip boat, the Nikolaos X came in for the 1st time yesterday with a long blast on its horn. It’s been done up and now looks very new.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
New look day boat

And while I was there I thought I’d try an experiment with the binoculars:

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The Panagia Skiadeni
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
The new jetty – not ready yet
Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Footprints in concrete – one of Neil’s photos

And finally, us all lined up in ’42nd Street’ from the dance show. Thank you to Sevasti for letting me use this photo.

Come and meet, those dancing feet...
Come and meet, those dancing feet…

I’m off to meet Apollo for the muse

The dance troupe
The dance troupe

Before I forget, I should thank Racheal from The Symi Estate Agent for the photo I’ve taken from Facebook, and to Sevasti from the Symi Women’s’ Association for her photos too. The others today are from our ‘family’ after show party which we held at Trata, the Trawler taverna in Yialos.

The kinda cowboy number
The kinda cowboy number

Yum, food…No! Winter is over, the exercise is back on in the mornings, I am not going to eat another pizza until the next time I eat a pizza, and we’re having a run on brown rice and vegetables in our house. Actually, you often have to try hard not to eat well around here. It’s always tempting to head to a taverna for lunch or dinner, especially now we don’t have the ties of the shop, but it’s also rather costly both in terms of coins and calories. But shopping is the way to go and then making things up from fresh ingredients – when the boats are running smoothly. Yesterday, for example, we had fresh free-range eggs from Sotiris’ farm for breakfast, plus some kind of greenery our landlord gave us from his patch of ground in front of the house. There were also fresh (ish) veg from the shop and a tin of tuna – the only tin used in anger that day, with a salad for dinner. None of this boil in the bag, or pop a ready-made pie out of the freezer and into the micro-diddle, though it is nice to get hold of things like that occasionally, as a treat. Fray Bentos pies, where the pastry never puffs up properly…. Yum!

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
High jinx at the dinner table

Anyway, that wasn’t the news I was going to tell you. What I wanted to share with you today is the rather extravagant and conceited sentence: “At the end of the month I am off to Tilos to work on the book.” (Facebook fiends might already know this.) There will no doubt be eating involved when there, but I have booked myself a large self-catering apartment with all mod cons so I can be as ‘at home’ as possible. I chose this place because of the table, I like to have the space to sit and write comfortably, I am used to a desk, and if I have to cramp up on an outside café table or narrow dressing table (as I have done in the past) I won’t get half as much done.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
God dude Harry

I’m booked into the Apollo Studios, Tilos, for the last weekend of May, first week of June – Neil, poor old thing, is staying here as he has to work at the bar. But then, he’s been to Austria, Bratislava, Scotland, the south of France and India on his own, and where have I been solo in the last 18 years? Sainsbury’s.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
God dude Sam

Only kidding (Gran Canaria actually, and Deal). But I am heading off to do some work on ‘Straight Swap’, the strange body-swap comedy set in a place not unlike my home town on the Kent coast. The apartment looks good, and it’s got good reviews On Trip Advisor, if you use that site, I have it for a decent price and it’s got views, though it’s not right on the sea, so I shan’t be too distracted. The plan is to work in the mornings, as per, and then go and do some wandering and walking in the afternoon, with perhaps more work in the evening. The journey is not at the most convenient time but as long as the boat is on time it’s not too bad; leaving on a Friday night at around 8.30, getting there around 10.30 and then catching the next Friday boat back at six in the morning.

So, that’s my news. You can check out the Apollo Studios website here: http://www.apollostudios.gr/

An online Symi shop, and other matters

Starting off a rather blurred Tuesday morning after a very pleasant Sunday and Monday. Today might be the first day for wearing shorts as someone’s put the heating up all of a sudden.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Dressing room selfie

Sunday went off brilliantly and we had a great audience, as you will see from one of the photos on today’s post. The children were excellent and the adults got a big round of applause and a cheer after each of our routines too. It was a packed house – and a hot one – with parents, visitors, locals all enjoying the show. After five months of lessons and rehearsals it now feels like winter is over and done with and we can get on with summer.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Pre-show warm up

We got a congratulatory handshake from the Mayor during the interval and I am sure he suggested we do the routine again, on the main stage in the summer, with him in it too. I’m up for that if he is. I haven’t yet seen any phots of us in the show, but will have a scout around online today – if anyone has any they’d like me to share, please send them over – not just us I mean, of the other dances too.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Oh the backstage glamour

And summer, for us this year, means the delights of being able to take some time to enjoy things a bit more, I mean with less hours to put in at the shop. So, needing to check the bank and see the accountant, we popped down to Yialos yesterday for half an hour at around 11.30. We made it back to the village just in time for Neil to start his shift at the bar at 3.00 having called in at the accountant (tax forms not due until the middle of May), the bank, the post office, the pharmacy and To Spitiko for a bite to eat – salad and mushroom risotto in my case.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Meanwhile, out front…

A quick aside: hi Joshua and Daniella – great to meet you! And Ian & Marylyn, the restaurants in Rhodes were, Boukia Boukia (in the Old Town around the back of Socrates Square, actually quite near the public loo but don’t let that put you off!), and Koukos cafe in the new town pedestrian way, and Nikos Fish Taverna nearby. Hope you find somewhere.

Images from Symi Greece by Neil Gosling and James Collins
Neil is, as we know, a luxury item

Talking of shops, which I wasn’t, there’s a new online Symi shop for you to check out. You can bring some of that Symi sunshine straight to your door, direct from the island. This is a new venture, currently selling men’s clothing, but with other accessories and art coming soon. Check the site: www.symishop.gr and bookmark it so you can check it out again. It looks like you can order and pay online with cards and with PayPal and there’s free worldwide shipping.

Here’s the link again so you can go and have a look now. www.symishop.gr

Dándiprat – malaka – Sooo last year

Images from Symi Greece
Inside Ag Triada, Horio

It’s Sunday morning and frankly, Cat, I could have done with a few more hours’ sleep, thank you very much. Not everyone wants breakfast at 5.00 a.m. and not everyone wants to revisit your bowl at 6.15 a.m.

But still, I’m up now and at least I can get ahead of myself. I am aiming for 2,500 words per day minimum on the new book, and am managing that so far. It might not sound like a lot (and it isn’t) but after two months that will be 150,000 words, which is plenty for a first draft. I can then revise and rewrite and away we go. I am up to around 40,000 words already. But whether any of them are any good or not… well, that remains to be read.

Images from Symi Greece
Inside Ag Rafael

Before I forget, if you are reading this on Symi, or on your way to Symi today, then there’s a musical treat for you at ‘The Secret Garden’ later this evening, around 21.00: Marcus, George and Terri will be playing guitars and Clare will be singing. Everyone’s welcome.

Back to the story about the story and back to the previous story, Lonely House. My editing meeting was fun last Friday. I’ve not done this ‘show screen’ on Skype before and I expect those who have will roll their eyes and say, ‘Oh, that is sooo last year,’ but it was new to me. Editor and I chatted as if on the phone while looking at the InDesign layout for the book that Editor had prepared. We’d find a widow or an orphan and I’d point to the screen and say, ‘Lose that word there,’ and Editor would say, ‘I can’t see what you’re pointing at malaka,’ and I’d say, ‘There! Where my finger is.’ And he’d say, ‘No, I really can’t see you!’ And I’d remember that he can’t see me so I’d have to say, ‘Third line down…’ and so on.

Images from Symi Greece
Symi sunrise

But we got through six chapters which would have taken us days to do via email. As you slaughter one widow another may be created further along in the chapter, you see. We have booked another session for Tuesday and will aim to get ten chapters done then. Then we will be about half way through the book.

Images from Symi Greece
Well, you all know what this is

As it’s Sunday today I can’t tell you how the dance show went because that is happening tonight, but I reckon we’ll all be fine. We did some home rehearsal last night to keep the steps in mind and now Neil has a problem with his back. But the show must go on. And it will and I expect there will be photos all over Facebook and some on the blog, if people will let me borrow them, as I won’t be able to take photos of myself in action. That will be the next thing: Selfie-sticks for dancers.

Images from Symi Greece
In a meeting with the Editor

So, on with Sunday: emails to do, shopping to buy, costume to iron, 2,500 words to write, sleep to catch up on, two tap dances to do, perhaps (yet) another dinner at a taverna afterwards, and then to sleep, perchance to be allowed to dream by the cat.

I just wanted to leave you, for no apparent reason, with the old French word equivalent to the current Greek word for various European politicians and money lenders (as used above by the Editor). The word is, ‘Dándiprat’ and Samuel Johnson defines it thus: “[dandin, French] A little fellow; an urchin: a word used sometimes in fondness, sometimes in contempt.” I guess that’s where we get Dandini from (panto, Cinderella).

Have a good day (May the fourth be with you) and here’s wishing you a good week ahead.

Writing on a Greek island

Symi Dream
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