Turnaround Time

So, the last wedding pre summer was Thursday. Our Holly hosted that one so Tracey and Rich got the chance to work at home and Steve and i got to take the kids after school to ice skating and a v naughty food establishment.

They had a great time.
Then came Friday. Oh what a day. Well, really what a week. Just before the wedding season we work really hard at presenting the house for wedding parties, then just before the holiday season we turn everything around and throw all our efforts into how we want it to be for holiday guests. So much of the week was spent getting the games room ready...
(well done to Tracey), sorting out all the toys, buying lots of new games, hanging bunting..
... wondering what to give this year as a welcome gift (we settled on home-made brownies, a bottle of local wine, a milk bottle in the fridge and some flowers from the garden)..
....re-writing our welcome pack...stocking up apartments with good holiday books...checking all the inventorys, washing sofa covers, cushion covers, buying new hoovers, buying new Z beds, buying in all the cream-tea bits (we do a cream tea for all our summer guests mid-week)and generally finishing all painting and maintenance throughout the apartments!
Oh, and we also turned the Snug into its true purpose..a snuggly one bedroom studio apartment with a gorgeous little ensuite wet-room. Tracey or I will post a photo of how it looks now in a coming blog.
One of our previous guests gave us the great idea of having a bin of water to wash the wetsuits in before putting on the line, rather than walking further away to the tap. We thought that was a fab idea.
From 4pm the guests started to roll in. If we are really, really honest we would all say that the holiday guests are our favourite thing about our business side of being at Pickwell. The house seems to come alive and everywhere you go you see people really appreciating the space, the view, being with their kids, their partners and properly relaxing. We all really love meeting the various people who find us in this little corner of Devon.
So, this week we have a guy who brought his girlfriend here to propose (she said yes!), we have a family from Dubai staying for 5 weeks, a family from South Carolina staying for 2 weeks, (gorgeous people seen in photo's. The guy on the skate board is a dad of four kids who were all highly embarrassed about his antics, whereas we were just VERY impressed and made him do it four times so i could get a pic!),
an old friend of all of us Pickwellers (with his family), a couple who got married here one year ago and are back to celebrate their anniversary, and lots of other really lovely people. I think there are 38 guests in total.
Our kids love it because they have other children their age around all the time through the summer so they tend to just all club together and spend hours running around the woods and playing in the games room.

We ended the day on a 'Friday Night Tea'. We try to eat together ( us and the Elliotts) every friday where we dont have a wedding. This was the first friday in a long time. Rich cooked a gorgeous carbonara followed by eton mess. I love Richard's cooking and he doesn't even know how good he is. We drank wine (well deserved after our day we felt)
and did the 'discussion box'. From the beginning of this adventure, three years ago, we started friday night teas. We brought in this idea whereby each person at the tea (including many guests who have come and joined us) has to bring something for the box which after tea gets pulled out. Everyone has to ask questions about why the person put the thing in the box. We have had everything from newspaper clippings about the Israel/Palestine conflict through to questions about what penguins eat (every week for six weeks, thanks Millie-Grace!). At one point a year in, we tried to phase out the discussion box and bring in something different to change the format a bit...but no...the kids were having none of it. Although more recently Zac and Molly brought to a house meeting that they wanted to introduce 'film night' (thank you Hewitts) and 'games night' into Friday's so woohoo, watch this space!
The 'box' is on the left hand side of the pic. Molly was just explaining to us the reason for her pasta inclusion..(she ate out at an Italian with nanny and papa the night before when they were passing through). I think we were just all relieved it didn't involve penguins.

Our weekend away

Last weekend while the Elliotts were finding toads, running a wedding and looking at sand sculptures, us Bakers went away in the new van!! We decided to take it on a test run pre France, so we went all the way to...Ruda campsite in sunny Croyde (about 2 miles away)!
What a brilliant weekend. Apart from the emergency cycle ride to get some bottled water from a mate's house (we didn't realise there was drinking water in a tap 2m from our van) and the slight lack of remembering to open the toilet valve (it was amusing to see Steve foraging around at midnight with a headtorch and kitchen roll) we were fine. It looks here like Steve was just recalling the experience...
We chilled out after a busy couple of weeks, the kids went scooting and climbing, we met up with good friends for lunch (just moved down, our third set of Pickwell fiends to come and share our crazy wonderful life)
Zac had his hair cut, alfresco stylie
we cycled to our friend's for a wonderful BBQ
celebrated Charlie's 11th birthday
and Liza and Zac learnt to ride the 'Indo board' which is meant to help you be a good surfer/skater apparently.
On Sunday we were very grateful to some lovely friends who took the kids off for a walk so we could pack everything up to come all the way home. Can you spot them in the picture?!
Then, parking the van on Baggy Point we went to a lovely newish tea room run by some friends we know through school. With love and care and much hard work they have turned what was really an overgrown and mess of a walled garden into this...
As part of the funding they had to involve 100 local families/residents to be involved in the project by owning an allotment and keeping it going. I know it has been a real blessing to some friends
Although we had the best time and the most amazing weather, we did feel ok about going home. It does mean that at least now we know we can survive France even if we do forget the toilet flap.

Baby rabbits, clearing out, another super wedding and sandcastles

Our action packed weekend started with me and the girls trauling the internet to work out when we can cuddle the new baby rabbits without causing the mummy rabbit to reject them. A clear plan came to light: washing hands, cuddling the mummy rabbit, handling the bedding and then then after all of that you can cuddle the babies (to stop us from transfering our scent). So the girls embarked upon their first baby bunny cuddle and this scent reducing regime has now become 'the law', Molly in particular loves there to be some rules and then makes everyone adhere to them with great diligence.

How cute!

Their eyes haven't quite opened yet.

Early saturday morning we then set about clearing our back roof area to make way for a secluded seating area outside our lounge french doors. As we moved the huge wood and rubble pile left over from house renovations 3 toads and a clutch of very ransid eggs were revealed.

This is our new found toad family. Just out of the picture is a clutch of 8 eggs. The chickens often sneak about and lay their eggs in all sorts of weird places, I haven't been able to bring myself to move them yet incase they explode on contact, grim!

This weekend has also been Laura and Carl's wedding. It has been a really magical wedding weekend full of beautiful flowers, fun, relaxation, walks, surfing, lots of croquet,friendship, family and super food. Highlights have been a cream tea on the terrace after the ceremony (in Lee and Kris's beautiful mismatched vintage tea set, I so wish I had taken a photo), Carl's beautiful and emotional speech and the fun of the Kalea in the evening. I forgot to take very many photographs but this is the rose arbour all set up for the otside ceremony as it was glorious sunshine all weekend. Happy days!

Today after I had waved good bye to Laura and Carl and their cling film wrapped and shaving foamed car, Rich me and the girls headed down in beautiful sunshine to Woolacombe to meet with Paul, Emma, Gracie and Theo to....

check out the National sand castle competition in aid of North Devon Hospice (where I work 2 days a week as a specialist nurse). Here are some of our favourites.

Mrs Bretherton is a cake making genius!

Friday was the school fete and as with all school fetes there is an expectation for us mums to make a 'wonderful' cake (that you usually then promptly have to buy back). Although I love baking and my cakes are ok they have been lacking in a little bit of lift and lightness. That is until our lovely friend Caroline came to stay in May for Steve's Birthday. Caroline has been writing a book on cake baking and so had been making and trying out hundreds of cakes in the process of putting the book together (how she has kept her amazing figure we will never know!). She gave me some invaluable tips and you can see the fruit of my labours below. This was my first coffee cake that wasn't akin to a coffee pancake, I felt quite proud.

Thank you sooooooo much mrs Bretherton!

And here is her lovely book if anyone else needs some tips or delicious ideas.

And here is Mrs Baker cutting up her 'lemon tray bake', It really was delicious.

The school fete was really gorgeous, the children did a performance of their much practiced Brazilian song, I now know every word off by heart.

This is our lovely friend Bobby and her girls sporting face paint and clutching cakes, sweets and tat....the signs of a great fete.

Keith had to keep the baby in the sling for the whole fete to stop him from partaking in Tony's extremly popular but highly E numbered ice frosties. Good move Keith.

The wonderful teachers having a much earned rest after a brilliant week that included the year 1 and 2 walk to the beach, the year 2 sleep over and the year 3 treasure hunt around baggy point to name but a few fabulous activities. Thank you Amazing teachers for all your hard work!

Happy Campers

We have our campervan!!!! Now... when i said in an earlier blog post that we were getting a camper..i think i may have led you accidently down a road of picturing this...
When in reality we have actually got this....................................
............................................................................................................
Ha ha! Our cool cover is blown. But we don't care, we love our beige swirley seat covered 'motor home' complete with awning and bike rack. We bumped into a friend on our way back with it who commented that he thought he'd just celebrated Steve's 40th, not his 60th
The kids love it and have been playing shops out of the window since they got back from school. The leg sticking out is Zac's who did not want his face to appear in the picture, but is happy about the leg.
France... here we come...(well in about 6 weeks)

The Aonb marathon

So Steve ran the 26 miles in very hot conditions and did amazingly.I took the kids to Lee Bay which is a gorgeous little coastal village. It is called the 'Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty' marathon for a reason!
It was at this point that Steve said he was going to need the most encouragement as it is 18 miles in and is the worst point, with still 8 miles to go. Just after we arrived we saw an ambulance pull up telling us that a man had collapsed at the top of the hill. It was an anxious 5 minutes before we found out that the guy was American (and therefore not Steve)and then... there he was, coming down the hill! (You can hardly make him out here but he is a white dot to the left of the people!)
He had been suffering with cramps in his legs and groin for much of the way round, but a bit of lying down and resting had enabled him to carry on. He said this one made the london marathon feel like a walk in the park, due to the steep hills and valleys that made up most of the terrain. I couldn't believe he was laughing and joking after 18 miles as he sat with us in the shade for a couple of minutes.
At each refreshment station they had groups of people cheering them on with drinks, bananas, jelly babies and buckets of water and sponges to take with you and squeeze over your head.
There were 750 runners in all and the whole thing was really well organised.
The kids were great so i bought them an ice cream to get us to the next leg.
The finishing line was at Woolacombe. I thought i'd show the beach as an indication of just how hot it was that day.
Steve did this run, yes for his fitness and a good personal challenge, but also to raise money for our friend's charity working with street kids in South Africa www.umthombo.org Tom is an inspiration to us with the work he does there. Pickwell are supporters of Umthombo and so this wont be the last you hear about it!
Well done Steve! You did it! Apparently, he is now taking up sea swimming...