The Disembarkation

The beauty of our National Book Token service is that these gifts can be exchanged in most bookshops, and are valid indefinitely. This was just as well when I discovered one I had received from Maggie and Mike about 20 years ago. I could add it to the W.H.Smith token Ron and Shelly gave me for Christmas. With that in mind, Jackie drove me to Smiths in Lymington where I bought Jonathan Dimbleby’s history, ‘The Battle of the Atlantic’.

Smith’s is really a stationer’s that also sells books, music, and other similar items. It is situated further up the steeply rising High Street than Quay Street and its environs which I have featured on several occasions.

High Street 1High Street 2

The rooftops of the downward sloping Quay Hill can be seen in the middle distance of these photographs.

The Angel & Blue Pig

Beyond the blue covered scaffolding visible on the left, lies The Angel & Blue Pig, Pub and Rooms, that, like many other buildings, retains its original facade, including the awning covered balcony.

Ashley LaneNew Look and ElliottsNew Look

On the opposite side of the road, the old and the new are sharply juxtaposed at the corner of Ashley Lane, where New Look stands by Elliotts. On the lane side of the New Look building, the signage of a long departed outfitters clings to its red brick ground.

Solent Mews

A little further down the hill, the gated Solent Mews, with its ancient cobbles, looks intriguing enough to invite investigation on some future visit.

Lymington River 1

Before returning home, we drove alongside Lymington River towards the Isle of Wight ferry. Gainly would not have been n adjective applied to my clambering over a wooden stile to take this shot.

Ferry arriving

I was, however, rewarded by the Isle of Wight ferry coming into view.

Ferry docking 1

Ferry docking 2

Using a certain amount of poetic licence, I nipped back over the stile and walked through the car park to what I hoped was the docking area. Again I was rewarded by the sight of the ship coming to a standstill

Cyclists disembarking

and, having lowered the drawbridge, beginning with cyclists, unloading its cargo.

Cars disembarking

Cars, freed by a couple of men in yellow jackets, rapidly followed.

We drove around the back roads a little more, before returning home. This evening, noticing Jackie opening a bottle of Reserve des Tuguets madiran 2012, I mentioned that I thought I still had a glass of the malbec left. ‘You had’, The Cook replied, ‘it’s in the casserole.’ So now you know what I had to drink. The casserole was Jackie’s classic sausages, served with creamy mashed potato and crisp carrots, cauliflower, and broccoli. She, of course, drank Hoegaarden.

Old Post House Garden Album

W. H. Smith’s Selfix Photo Albums have served me well for many years. I have hundreds of them holding prints of various sizes going back to 1942. For the Old Post House Garden display book I found I needed something a bit different.

Old Post House Garden Smiths Album

The problem was that the landscape format 10″ x 8″ prints did not fit into the width of the albums and had to be placed after rotation through 90 degrees. And I can’t stand having to keep tipping up a book to study illustrations.

I therefore engaged in internet research that would impress my sister Elizabeth, and came up with a Walther Premium Extra Large White Traditional Album, which I ordered from Harrison Cameras. It arrived this morning.

I had stopped printing and entering the photos after the Weeping Birch Bed section, so my task today was to transfer those and print and enter the rest.

As the new album is traditional in style, I needed to stick the photographs in individually. This meant a drive to New Milton for some spray mount.

Unfortunately there was a hiccup in the printing process. I mentioned a few days ago, that photos taken directly from my earlier posts could not be enlarged by clicking on them. For the last three or four earlier episodes I have taken them from Photos and worked on them from the desktop. Readers will be aware that my head has been a little muzzy this week. That is probably why, forgetting I had yet to print them, I popped them into the trash to clear space on the desk. Oh, well. Not a problem, I thought. I’ll just take them from the posts and work on those.

Not examining them too closely, I made a batch of about 20 prints. Every one that was larger than 5″ x 7″ was out of focus.

Now, why would that be? Resolution, perhaps? I then resolved to print one of the offending images directly from the photo library. Sure enough, it was nice and sharp. Then it dawned on me. In the process of sending images to WordPress the resolution is reduced. When I get around to it, I will ask them what happens. But for today, repeating the printing was a priority.

Old Post House Garden Album

I didn’t get very far with my chosen task, especially as mounting the prints is quite a sticky business.

Oh, and I did watch two televised World Cup rugby matches. The first was between Wales and South Africa, and the second between New Zealand and France.

Experiment Pie 1Experiment Pie 2

This evening Jackie produced an excellent Experiment Pie, served with boiled potatoes, carrots, and green beans.  I have to announce that there is no recipe for this brilliant meal but the pie, I can say, is layered. The base is sage and onion stuffing, followed by pork medallions, followed by chopped apple and onion, then leftover vegetables fried in a tomato sauce, and topped off with short crust pastry. Superb. And you could substitute other ingredients, such as parsley and thyme with chicken. Jackie calls it a lost chord (a creative masterpiece that cannot be repeated). She drank Hoegaarden and I drank Old Crafty Hen.