Yes, Friends, those "Scandis", what will they do next !!!!!
Just look at these 'doozies', just from the day's early editions!!!
And today, we put the finishing touches to our so-called "guest bedrooms", 'hoovering' and installing folding beds and putting sheets on them, the way people like to have them - but you know very well the kind of ''malarkey' that all that entails, I'm sure!
Yes, awwwww!!!!!!
But reading these stories here in semi-welcoming Liphook, Hampshire this morning certainly brings a wan smile to the lips of me and my wife Lois - no doubt about that!!!!
And there's a special reason for our 'wan-like' excitement today, and one which is a total coincidence, as it happens!
Rushed off our feet as always, even though we've actually been retired for over 20 years, would you believe (!), as well as getting our house ready for the imminent arrival of our little Australian family - daughter Sarah, husband Francis, and their 12-year-old twins Lily and Jessica - we've somehow today got to find time to study a bit of Danish, which is totally mad!!!!
me and Lois practising our Danish today, as if we've got
nothing else to do - what madness, isn't it !!!!!!
And the reason for this mayhem is all because the fortnightly online meeting of the local U3A "Intermediate Danish for Old Codgers" group, which Lois and I run jointly, "for our sins" (!), is coming up really fast, with another meeting looming on Thursday afternoon, would you believe!!!!
Little did we realise, when we retired, what seems like a lifetime ago, way back in March 2006, that our feet would literally never touch the ground again, and that's the way it's been ever since!!!!
flashback to March 2006 - my 60th birthday, and also the day
Lois and I both retired: little did we know, then, what was in store for us!!!!
Learning Intermediate Danish is, however, a bit of a distraction today from our main task, which is getting our house ready for the imminent arrival of our daughter Sarah and family, who'll be flying into London's Heathrow Airport in a few days' time, to spend 3 weeks with us, which is mad too!
me showcasing the some of the work we do today in an effort to "sleep" 4 extra bodies
in our little house in semi-attractive Liphook, Hampshire - it's total madness!!!!!
We also brush a sentimental tear out of our eyes, as we also spend some time today assembling our twin granddaughters' favourite stuffed toys in the room the twins are going to sleep in, which is nice!
the twins' favourite old stuffed toys, including 'Black-and-white Cat' and
the more mobile Rover the Dog and Buckles the Unicorn (left), getting excited already,
at the prospect of seeing the twins again in a few days time - awwwww!!!
Also, Lois and I are starting to train ourselves how we'll have to behave when we've got our 4 Australian guests in the house, which isn't as straightforward as you might suppose. Normally it's just the two of us here, rattling around this house like peas in a drum, and 'in each other's pockets' 24/7, with all the informality of dress that that allows for (!).
From next week Lois says we've got to be wearing our dressing-gowns when we visit the bathroom several times a night, as we do, as fully-paid-up old codgers (!), and also wear them when we get up early in the morning at the crack of dawn, at an hour when saner, and younger, people are still snoring away fast asleep!!!! Luckily, however, Lois got me a shiny-new lightweight dressing-gown for one of my Father's Day presents yesterday, so that's all good!!!!
Happy days!!!!!
In the series, a wealthy family - a couple Johnny and Moira with two grown-up children David and Alexis - are forced to leave their billionaire mansion, after being cheated of all their money by some crooked accountant or other.
Oops! Time for 'Take 4', but maybe let Moira go back to her motel for a bit of a lie-down, and maybe try again tomorrow, do you think?
(left) me today modelling my shiny-new dressing gown, and (right)
flashback to yesterday, when a delighted Yours Truly first discovers, and
showcases, his welcome Father's Day 'treasure trove' of gifts (!)
What madness isn't it!!!
But it was certainly a special day for me on yesterday's Father's Day, being pampered and cosseted all day by Lois, and, by coincidence, today is a special day for our daughter Sarah herself, 9000 miles away in the northern suburbs of Perth, Australia, because it's her 49th birthday, which is mad!
You really know you're old when your children hit middle-age, as Lois and I always say!!!
[Give it a rest, Colin! - Ed]
our daughter Sarah sends us these pictures today, of (left) herself with
one of her twin daughters, Lily, and (right) her array of birthday cards
Memories, memories! I still remember, as if it were yesterday, the day back in 1977, when I brought Lois and little baby Sarah back from the St Pauls Maternity Hospital in Cheltenham, in our old Morris Minor, and later, when we took these photos, in our tiny back yard, of Sarah, and also of her 20-month-old big sister Alison, and also of Lois's dear late mum Ruth, who had come to help us out, bless her!!!
flashback to 1977: after I brought Lois and our new-born 2nd daughter Sarah
home from hospital, and we took our first pictures of her in our tiny back yard,
with big sister Alison and Lois's mum Ruth, who had come to help us out - awww!!!!
And just look at Sarah's little face in that second picture above, doing a confused 'stare-to-camera' like a real pro!!!
20:00 After another exhausting day, with nothing on 'the box' except football and repeats of documentaries which we've already watched, Lois and I decide to relax with some more bingeing on the BBC3 re-run of Canadian sitcom "Schitt's Creek", which is a welcome 'oasis' from all the 'tat' (!!!!).
[For heaven's sake, Colin! - Ed]
Luckily the father, Johnny, had bought a small rural town some years ago, 'as a joke' present for his son, David, so the family, now down on their luck, can at least seek low-cost refuge in the town that they own anyway (!), and they manage to book two poky rooms on a long-term rental, at the local sleazy, run-down motel, in run-down, backwoods town, Schitt's Creek.
Oh dear, Moira has said "glacé", when she meant to say 'glass', which is sad, considering what an old 'pro' she used to be, before she became 'washed-up', to put it mildly!
In this key scene tonight, Moira the mother, a former daytime TV soap-star, tries to earn the family some desperately needed cash by taking a part in the shooting of a TV ad for fruit wine from a local winery.
As an old pro, Moira's performance is still sparkling, although marred, at times, by the obvious stress she is going through, which is a bit sad. Oh dear!!!!
But there's worse to come, would you believe!
Did YOU spot Moira's mistake in that sequence?
Yes, you're right of course, Moira said 'flute line' when the script called for 'fruit wine' - it's an easy mistake to make, maybe, but still a bit sad when you know Moira's illustrious, star-studded back-story!
Take 3!
Poor Moira !!!!!!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzz!!!!!!!


















































