Monday, December 30, 2013

A lighthearted morning

I devoted the morning to pure pleasure!

A lovely sleep-in (until 7.45)...

A lingering visit with my daughter over morning coffee....

A search through the DVDs I gathered together the last day the library was open before Christmas holidays, to get me through the long evenings, and the splendid discovery that I had included 'My Family and Other Animals' in the treasure trove....

 
At one time, when Gerald Durrell was writing his wonderful books, a number of them found places on my shelves and delighted me.  Through the years when we have moved and downsized and made the library shelves available to family, these great books have moved house also to other family homes and I had quite forgotten how hilarious and human they are.

I gathered my knitting together (more about that later) and sat down to watch, and soon lost myself in that pure pleasure I was talking about.   Christmas has not been particularly easy, and it was so wonderful to feel my spirits lighten.  When the show ended I found I had let my needles drop, and my knitting lay untended on my lap.  I sighed a happy sigh and got up to make yet one more turkey sandwich and think about Gerald Durrell and his life , and his amazing curiousity and devotion to the  bugs and the beetles and the birds and small animals.  I took my lunch to the computer room and googled the Durrells , and discovered that Gerald Durrell was born just three days after I was, on the 5th of January, 1925.  He was not as fortunate in the length of his life, but I read on reminding myself of the unique  and humane view he had of Zoos and the study of wildlife.  In comparing his writing career with that of his brother, Lawrence, he pointed out that Lawrence wrote for the love of writing, while Gerald wrote to raise money from the sale of his books to establish animal shelters and maintain them with the loving care he seemed to give to all creatures.

I remembered that at one time Lawrence Durrell's Alexandria Quartet had been in my library and that it has been a long time since I read it, so I ordered it from the library along with those Gerald Durrell books that they still have and that should make the winter pass more pleasantly....

About the knitting, - I am making mittens lined with wool fleece for the birthday of one of my sons who lives on the Chilcotin Plateau where the skies are blue in the winter and the sun shines brightly for a while, but where sometimes the temperature drops to wicked lows and unless, as he says, fingers are in bed with each other, keeping each other warm in woolen mittens, they get mighty cold. 

These should do the trick.  They are fiddly to knit, having to insert little puffs of fleece every three or four stitches on alternate rows,  but how delicious to bury one's hand amidst all that  soft, cosy  down!  I understand that after a while the fleece felts and they provide great protection from the cold.


 
I will finish the second mitten tomorrow and then see the Old Year out....
 
Hope we all slide through the New Year happily, and if
perchance we should run into bumps and ruts that
we have lots of spare resilience to see us through.....
 
God Bless.....



6 comments:

John "By Stargoose And Hanglands" said...

Gerald Durrell! I used to see that book on everyone's shelves but now it seems to have been largely forgotten. I really must dig out my copy if it's still there. There you are - my first resolution for the new year! All the best for 2014.

Dimple said...

Hi Hildred,
May you have a happy New Year, and a happy birthday!

I hope you post about the mittens again: I haven't tried this technique myself and am interested in how they work out.

Blessings!

Barb said...

Those mittens look and sound fabulous, Hildred. I must wear mittens to ski on very cold days - my fingers freeze in gloves. Bob & I will ring in 2014 at home, hopefully staying awake long enough to watch the fireworks on the mountain from our great room. Sending you hugs and birthday wishes for 2014!

Penny said...

I havent seen the dvd but I too have all of Gerald Durrells books, I re read them every so often. The mittens sounf wonderful.

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

Most of his books were on our shelves and are now on whichever one of our kids took them. I did not know it had been a series or movie....I will look for it.

it's me said...

My older son read the Gerald Durell books as a pre teen. They made a big impression on him, and he later studied for a degree in biology.
I never knew there was a movie.