Sebaldeburen Windmill, Netherlands

To me windmills were just things that were worked by the wind turning their sails, but it turns out that there are all sorts of different windmills. The windmill that we visited in Sebaldeburen lies between a ditch and a canal, with the ditch at a lower level than the canal, so an Archimedes screw is worked by the mill, to take the water from the lower level up to the higher, you can see the screw turning around.

Archimedes Screw

Being in charge of a windmill is a very skilled job, and also quite hard work because if the wind changes direction the sails have to be twisted around to catch it again. That entails turning a hefty looking handcrank. You can see the handcrank in the photo below, plus the windmill operator and some family.

Sebaldeburen Windmill , Friesland

The surrounding fields are of course flat, but still scenic. Just very different from what we’re used to in Scotland.

Sebaldeburen Canal, Netherlands

Sebaldeburen area, FrieslandDitch + surrounds

Yes that is thatch that you can see on the internal walls, but the massive lump of wood in the centre is the windmill shaft which is constantly turning and the whole thing is very noisy, which somehow I don’t associate with thatch.

Sebaldeburen Windmill shaft

There are so many things in motion, grinding away, hold onto your hair!

Sebaldeburen Windmill wheels

There are lots of steps up, in the Netherlands they are more akin to what we think of as ladders, even in private homes the stairs are VERY steep, it’s often best to go down backwards.

Sebaldeburen Windmill steps

Some disused windmills have been turned into holiday accommodation, presumably for the very fit!

Sebaldeburen windmill, inside windmill

From the ground floor in the windmill you can see all the water flowing underneath it, through a very thick piece of glass, I walked around it!

Water flow beneath Sebaldeburen windmill

I well remember when I was in primary school we were given a lesson in lighthouses, and the life appealed to me, of course my teacher told me that girls couldn’t be lighthouse keepers, I could only be a lighthouse keeper’s wife, that’s what school was like in the 1960s! Being a windmill keeper appeals to me too, especially as the job seems to come with a very nice secluded house and garden. But I’ll blog about that some other time.

 

 

 

De Sebaldebuurster Molenpolder (Sebaldeburen Windmill)

It has been fairly quiet on Pining recently because we were in the north-east of the Netherlands, in Friesland, visiting the Dutch branch of my family, my brother has lived in NL for over 50 years. I had intended blogging while we were away but I never did find the time for it.  In recent years Jack and I have been exploring this rural area, but amazingly we hadn’t ever visited a windmill, we rectified that this time.

Windmill at Subaldeburen, The Netherlands

From a distance they look so peaceful and scenic, but when you get up close they are really quite scarily noisy, and like something designed by Heath Robinson, but more about that in another post.

My garden in Fife

Amazingly it was a blue sky day on Wednesday and we had absolutely no rain at all, but that east wind was still blowing, and a friend told me that she had had to scrape ice off her windscreen in the morning, when I was sensibly still in bed.

Anyway, I went out to take some photos of the back garden. Things are beginning to green up.

my Garden, Scotland

 

my Garden , Scotland

 

my Garden , Scotland

 

my Garden , Scotland

 

my Garden, Scotland

That big shrub to the left of centre in the photo above is going to have to be moved as it blocks my view from the kitchen window of nicer things, such as the pieris, I did not think it was going to grow so large and is not amenable to pruning. Such is life.

My phone tells me that tomorrow it will be four degrees celsius colder than it was today so it’ll be 8 celsius tomorrow, that’s 46.6 F,  colder with the wind no doubt. It’s a very slow start to Spring.

Leens, farm worker’s house, Netherlands

Way back in June last year we visited my brother and his wife in the Netherlands. Their neighbours suggested that we should visit the Burg at nearby Leens, so on a lovely sunny and warm day we did just that. You can see my previous posts on the Burg here and  here.  After visiting the rather grand house we went for a walk around the surrounding farmland and decided to visit the farm worker’s house which we could see in the distance. I’ve been to loads of stately homes in the UK but I don’t ever recall any of them also having a farm worker’s house that you could look inside. I suspect that most of the small estate houses in the UK have been modernised and rented out to holidaymakers.

labourer's cottage , Leens, Netherlands

Leens, labourer's cottage , Netherlands

labourer's cottage , Leens, Netherlands

 

labourer's cottage, Leens, Netherlands

Honestly, I would quite happily have moved in. The rectangular box in front of the chair in the photo below is lined with metal and you put hot coals in it and put your feet on it with your long dress draped over it, too keep your feet and legs toasty!

labourer's cottage , Leens, Netherlands

The wee house is surrounded by farmland, and the formal gardens of the Burg, as you can see below. It’s a beautiful area, despite there being no hills!

Burg, Leens, Topiary, Netherlands

This is a photo of the outside of the worker’s cottage. (Copied from the Burg’s website.)

 

 

Meet Baby Imogen

I’m thrilled to be granny of another wee girl, baby Imogen, a sister for Isobel. This time around we were able to go to Edinburgh to see her in the hospital. Isobel was a pandemic baby so we didn’t get to see her for a month. Isobel is very happy to have a baby sister, just what she wanted.

K.M. Peyton – obituary

I have to admit that I was surprised when I saw the author  K.M. Peyton’s obituary in The Guardian this morning, mainly because I had just assumed that she had died years ago, she was 94 years old.  I loved her Flambards books and the 1979 TV series which was based on them.  I must admit that I hadn’t realised that she wrote a lot more books than those ones over the years. I don’t recall seeing any others on my trawls around second-hand bookshops.

To another subject  –  last week.

I suppose it had to happen, but after managing to dodge COVID for four years it caught up with us last week, after what had been the quietest week we had had for about a month. We only went to the library and the supermarket, both of which were really quite empty. Anyway, we survived and after three really horrible days of constant headache, coughing and exhaustion the symptoms eased off and we’re just about back to normal now.

The variant that we got obviously managed to dodge the vaccination as Jack had only got his booster last month, I wasn’t eligible, but he was just as ill as I was. I’ve been told that it is people who had managed to stay COVID free who are getting it now, apparently it was inevitable. It wasn’t a great start to the new year but I suppose it could have been worse! In one way it’s really good as with the imminent arrival of our second grandchild at least it menas that we don’t have to worry about passing it on to the new baby when it arrives as we should be immune for a while now.

 

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year to you all. I must say that I’ll be glad to see the back of 2023 as it’s been a sad one for us because people close to us have died unexpectedly. I suppose that’s life as you get older – or don’t!

Blog wise I must admit that I had lost some of my enthusiasm for blogging this year, I’ll see how it goes this year. I haven’t been blogging about places we’ve been visiting and it has all got very bookish, partly laziness I think as those posts are quick and easy to write. But one of the reasons I started ‘Pining’ was so that I could look back and be reminded of the places we had visited in the past.

Bookwise this year has been succesful although I have been reading quite a lot of YA books, trying to catch up on books I didn’t read when I was a youngster, a lot have been by Scottish authors, a lot have been recommended by other bloggers. Constance of Staircase Wit has pointed me in the direction of a lot of good children’s authors, some of which I may have read in the past, but although I read a lot as a child I can’t remember most of them.

Earlier this year I dropped out of Goodreads, I don’t like the Amazon links so I’m being a bit po-faced about it all.  I used to be in Library Thing years ago, I might take that up again, unless anyone can persuade me that I should avoid that too!

Anyway, it looks like I’ve read 125 books this year, not bad going I suppose, although with our weather being so bad (wet) throughout most of the year I haven’t been getting much gardening done so I thought I might have read more, mind you we have been doing some travelling and I didn’t read much then – too tired after all the daytime galivanting! It seems to me that I’ve read more historical fiction than usual, less vintage crime (for lack of books) but more books by Scottish authors. In 2024 I’d like to read more vintage crime, if I can get my hands on any.

I hope that your 2023 has been a good one and that 2024 will be even better!

A Belated Merry Christmas!

I hope that you had a lovely time at Christmas, wherever you are.

I’ve been absent from Pining because we’ve been busy celebrating Jack’s BIG birthday, over in the west of Scotland and also back here in the east. It all went very well, at least it didn’t snow and so the football match wasn’t postponed, even the football match virgins among us enjoyed it, but that might have been mainly because of the banter. Let’s just say that I’m glad that our three year old granddaughter wasn’t there. She  would definitely have expanded her vocabulary, and not in a good way!

Anyway, one of our Christmas gifts was – a jigsaw puzzle – one of those 500 piece chunky wooden ones.  With nothing worth watching on TV when we got home from all the celebrations we broke out the puzzle, and of course it hijacked our life until it was finished. It took me ages to even get the first two pieces together, but it felt so satisfying to complete it, after a frantic search with a torch to find the missing last piece!

Anyway, here it is in progress.

Klimt Jigsaw: The Kiss, in Pieces

The Kiss Jigsaw, Part Completed

As you can see it’s of Klimt’s The Kiss. I really like his work and I have a print of one of his landscapes in our sun room.

The Kiss Jigsaw, Completed

This was the first jigsaw of the winter for us, somehow we’ve been busy doing other stuff, but as we have a queue of four or five others to get through, some that we bought in the summer when we were in the Netherlands – it won’t be the last.

 

 

 

One of my favourite Laurel and Hardy films is Me and My Pall from 1933. Oliver is getting married, but a jigsaw puzzle gets in the way!

Sheepwash Bridge, Ashford in the Water, Peak District, England

Asford on the Water,Peak District, Sheepwash Bridge

 

On the way back from our recent-ish trip down as far as the south west of England we visited Derbyshire/the Peak District. I think this is one of the most scenic areas of England. The old stone humpbacked bridge above is called Sheepwash Bridge and has been named as one of the best bridges for  people to play poohsticks from. It’s in the quaint village of Ashford in the Water. This village is mentioned in the Domesday Book and it used to be owned by the Cavendish family of Chatsworth fame, but they had to sell it at some point to pay death duties.

The bridge spans the River Wye, it’s a very pretty area as you can see.

River Wye , Ashford in the Water, Derbyshire

There was a constant stream of people going over the bridge and I took the first photo of it with people on it as I had given up hope of it ever being empty, but then Jack managed to snap the one below with his camera –  before anyone else went on the bridge –  but by then I was in the way!

Sheepwash Bridge, River Wye, Derbyshire

It’s a lovely wee village and river, but I bet the locals get fed up with the tourists!

Lest we forget – Remembrance Day

This is Wieltje Farm Cemetery in Belgium – literally the corner of a foreign field – which we visited in 2017. It is close to Ypres.

Wieltje Farm Cemetery From Access Path

As you can see from the tractor marks it is in the middle of a working farm but a grass pathway round the side of a house leads to it, so you don’t get your feet muddy.

Wieltje Farm Cemetery, Flanders, Belgium

The view from the opposite end of the cemetery is below.

Wieltje Farm Cemetery, Graves