The Sennen Cove Diary

March 10th - Tuesday

I am pleased to report that I had a far less traumatic day today. In fact, it was so devoid of effort or concern that I ended up being concerned that I had not put in enough effort to bring us closer to being ready to open the shop on Saturday week. I should say that I was not entirely idle, it was just that the things that I did failed to match up with my expectations for the day.

 

It had been my intention to head down to the shop to continue my work there but the nearest I got to the shop was to get the can of easing oil I had left by the door. On my walk around the block with the girls in the morning, I met a couple staying in one of the houses in the mews. They asked if I could fix the lock on the bin which has rusted up and seized through lack of use. I attended to it when I came back and saw that someone had knocked the waterproof cover off the lock, which explained why it was in such a parlous state. I will now have to attend to it on a more regular basis. It needs a new lock, really, but if I do that, it will have a different key to the lock on our bin and require me to carry two around.

 

I then became distracted by a number of tasks that I had on my mental list of things to do but kept relegating them to the bottom on my mental pile. They had rested so long in obeyance that they had now become reasonably time critical. During the stock take it had become clear that we were short of some things we would need before the Easter holidays. Since we were expecting a delivery from the relevant supplier next week, it was important to get the items added to the order they already had, so it would all come together. It will be major task landed on our laps in the middle of next week, but I am hoping that everything will be ready by then and we will have time to sort it out without panicking. If everything is ready ahead of the delivery, it will be the first time in 22 years that it is. Normally, we are working into the night the day before opening.

 

The task of preparing the new order took far longer than I anticipated. Adding in arranging the reinstatement of our regular bin collections and notifying our big cash and carry supplier that we would be placing our first order of the new season for delivery on Saturday, simply pushed the time on still further. Before I knew it, time had come around to pick Mother up in the nippy little loan Audi. I think that if we did not have the need to move large amounts of stock about it would do us very nicely, although I think we would miss being higher up and I struggled a bit to get into it. It just seemed such a waste, all that effort on working out how to open the filler cap only to hand it back the next day.

 

The Missus was on hand when I came back to dissuade me from going down to the shop. She said that she would do the grocery aisle tomorrow: stock count, shelf clean and mopping. This left me free to finish off inputting the invoices into the accounts packaged which took a good amount of time. The Missus offered to do this as well on Sunday night. We then diverted to support the quiz at the F&L. I hope there are no similar diversions tomorrow because I have to do the cash and carry order by the end of Thursday or we will not get our delivery on Saturday.

 

It was this that reminded me that I should call the people at the cash and carry to ensure that our account is unlocked. It only happened the once, but because we had not used the system over the winter, they suspended our account. We only discovered at the last knockings and there was a bit of a panic whether we could get it unlocked in time. I had to send a message to the delivery manager and after a while he responded saying that all was well.

 

The other big outstanding task is the greenhouse roof. My oppo who offered to help was not available last week and the weather was against us. Time is rapidly running out, so I am keeping an eye on when the next window of opportunity might be. Looking at the weather forecast yesterday, it showed that Wednesday would be dry all day but a little breezy from the northwest. When I looked again today, the forecast had changed to rain in the morning on Wednesday and a bleddy gale of wind Thursday. All the rest of the days stretching into next week show the obligatory rain every day forever. The weather overview on the news site suggests high pressure will be back next week but this is not reflected in the daily forecasts. It is of no help whatever and the only recourse is to look out of the window in the morning.

 

It was late in the day when the garage called to say that the truck was ready. They told me there was little wrong on the MOT test front, but there was a wiring issue with one of the rear light clusters which I should be able to repair myself with a new wiring loom that I might be able to find on one of the Internet auction sites. The biggest issue is rust that will become increasing worse until it is a big problem. The only way forward is to get rid of the truck sooner rather than later.

 

We had been considering a replacement for a little while now. I am sure I have mentioned before that the truck is a rubbish alternative to a van for carrying loads and a rubbish alternative to a car because it is big and cumbersome. The only thing that it is good for, and it is a big plus, is getting us along the lane to The Farm without knocking the sump out and moving around the field in wet weather when the four wheel drive and low gears are essential.

 

It is a conundrum or a Hobson’s choice, perhaps. The load carrying is perhaps the biggest issue and it is the Missus that is most affected. It is during the summer when carrying stock to and from The Farm becomes a major factor. She has managed for several years with the truck, so I left it to her to decide. After some thought, she came down on the side of having a van again. I have been here before and after a period of rain and mud at The Farm and a few bumpy rides up the lane have changed my mind and come back to the truck again.

 

To help bolster her decision on the van, I decided to ask at the garage when I went to collect the truck. One thing I thought might help with the van is if it could be raised a little to improve the ground clearance; I recall our first ex-AA van had something like that. The boys at the garage sucked through their teeth and shook their heads. Apparently, this is not an easy task at all. They also offered that we should avoid a newer vehicle. I had thought to get as new a vehicle as we could afford as we would expect to have it for some time. They advised against it because newer vehicles have ‘wet’ timing belts, they run through an oil reservoir, and are prone to early deterioration. I was glad I asked!

 

The garage helped immediately with the project of acquiring a new vehicle by charging us very little - well, much less than I expected – for the service and requisite repairs to get through it. Lifts the heart, don’t it.

March 9th - Monday

I went from fast asleep to wide awake very quickly this morning. Usually, it is an orderly process of waking up, collecting thoughts and checking everything is where I Ieft it the night before and eventually getting out of bed when I deem the time to be right. This morning, there were no niceties involved and I was up and at them, whatever ‘them’ is, in one swift manoeuvre. It put me right off my stride, I can tell you.

 

The issue was that I had to get the truck to the garage for its service in a timely manner to give the mechanics an even chance of getting all the work done in a day. I had a sneaking suspicion that it would be more than one day, anyway, because I seem to recall that there was a bit more to do this year; shock absorbers, overhead foxbats, and mainspring flanges greased, that sort of thing. Before I set off, there were a number of things to do, not least finishing off The Diary for the previous day with enough time to publish it and walking the girls. I got around to walking the girls, but The Diary had to wait, apologies.

 

We make an arrangement with the garage that we take a loan vehicle for the duration of the work, which is very good of them. It is not all that good of them as it never has any fuel in it and if we need to go further than to The Cove and back, we must fuel up. I did not bother on this occasion, as I did not think we would be using it much. I had forgotten all about Mother having and appointment in St Just which is the opposite direction of the most convenient petrol stations. I had also forgotten Mother’s blue park anywhere card – another unforgivable misdemeanour.

 

On the bright side, the garage had swopped out their aging courtesy Model T Fords for a spanking new, well, fourteen year old Audi A1 Sport. It was in remarkably good shape for its age and apart from some odd stickers on the paintwork – the faded remnants of go-faster stripes, perhaps – it looked the part as well. I took a few minutes before going to get used to the feeling of being posh and being in a vehicle that was not covered in rust and mud. I then explored where all the buttons and levers were that I would need to press and pull to make it go to where I wanted it to and reasonably safely. I must say, it was very nippy and clung to the road and the corners like a limpet. It handbrake turns very sharply and makes for excellent donuts in the Harbour car park.

 

It was about an hour later that the Missus reminded me that she would be driving it to take Mother to her appointment. I told her about the fuel situation but said that there would be enough to get her to Penzance, where she was heading after the appointment, so she could put some petrol in it. I had actually remembered to ask which fuel type it took. Usually, I arrive at the petrol station and have to gamble that there is a label on it somewhere.

 

Not five minutes later, as I was halfway through a very palatable scrambled egg on toast breakfast, the Missus called to tell me that the car would not start. It was at this point that I remembered that I had not turned off the headlights which I turn on regardless of the weather or time of day when driving anywhere. The truck takes care of such carelessness by giving off an audible alarm if I have left the lights on and if I ignore that, it will turn them off for me. The Audi apparently has no such feature and happily allowed me to depart the stationery vehicle with the headlights blazing. 

 

We have one of those small and very effective power packs that I have used on numerous occasions to start visitor cars when they have found themselves in such predicaments. We keep it in the back of the truck in case we ever need it ourselves. This is where it still was, six miles away on the ramp at the garage at Buryas Bridge. Fortunately, the Lifeboat station has one, kept in the Inshore Lifeboat shed – or more accurately had one in the ILB shed. I went up to the crew room to ask where it was, interrupting a meeting of three Lifeboat mechanics who, without being asked, leapt to my assistance. 

 

It seems that the Harbour keeps a power pack and our Coxswain, also a fisherman, went off to get it while the remaining two mechanics assessed the issues, the first being there was no battery under the lid. Apparently, it is in the boot which we could not get to because the keys were not working because the battery was dead. Being experienced mechanics, they quickly worked out that there were terminals under the bonnet but not immediately obvious which were positive and negative. 

 

We were all rather surprised that the battery had run down so completely after what was not a very long time with the lights on. They suspected that the battery was not as efficient as perhaps it might be. Attaching the Harbour power pack initially had little effect, only to light up the dashboard panel with a warning that the security lock had engaged. To release the lock, the car needed to be unlocked with key fob which was not working because there was insufficient power.

 

They eventually got the car started after waiting a while for the power pack to transfer sufficient power. During the stalemate, the Missus had to cancel Mother’s appointment. Since we were still not sure about the state of the battery, I arranged that I would head into town to do the shopping that the Missus intended to do and, on the way, collect our power pack from the garage just in case it was needed. This I did, but again forgot the get out of jail free parking badge.

 

Once in town I also stopped at the petrol station. Another thing that I had forgotten to check was how to open the fuel filler door. Each vehicle seems to be different with either a press of the door itself or a lever or switch inside the car. I remembered that I had forgotten to ask as I pulled alongside the pump, quite fortuitously on the correct side, having forgotten to establish that as well. Just to further define my predicament, I had apparently chosen the busiest time of the day and immediately a car pulled up behind me to wait its turn.

 

Now under pressure, and since I could not immediately see a button or lever, I tried pressing the fuel cap door which resolutely refused to move. Convinced therefore that there must be an internal lever or button, I went about searching all the obvious places and when that offered no positive result, looked in a few not so obvious places, including the passenger side since it was a foreign car. There was either no button or lever, or it was exceedingly well hidden. As I imagined the driver of the car behind me seething with impatience, I decided it was prudent to withdraw, find a less inconvenient spot and recommence my search. 

 

One of my sweeps of the interior included the glove compartment wherein I found the car’s documents and user guide. Remembering the acronym RTFM, that encourages the daft and hard of thinking to make use of such a guide, I thumbed through for instructions that should reveal the whereabouts of the elusive switch. It became clear very quickly that there was no such hidden button and I had merely failed to push the door in the correct spot or hard enough. Sure enough, when I tried again, it sprang open with ease.

 

If I thought that the day had finished with its unrelenting torrent of vicissitudes upon my person and that no further punishment or ignominy could be lavished upon me, I was gravely mistaken. Relieved that I had found a solution to the filler cap issue, I casually drove back to the petrol pumps. Parking at a convenient spot, I got out of the car and pressed the button to seek attention from the attendant. I suppose that I should be grateful that I could not see him at this point because his face would have been a mask of derision, I am sure. I had picked the only pump on the forecourt that had large caps over both the pump handles that I might have selected showing that the were out of use. I had to climb back into the car, manoeuvre around a car that had queued up behind me and move to a working pump. The only comfort that I might derive from any part of my existence in the previous hour or so was that the car started each time after I switched it off.

 

I should have taken note and found greater enjoyment in my drive home because it was the only time I was not standing up doing something until well into the afternoon. No sooner had I arrived home and discovered that we were already into the early part of the afternoon, I went immediately – well, after a cup of tea and a biscuit – remember I had abandoned half my breakfast earlier – down to the shop to continue my work on cleaning shelves and making ready for opening the shop.

 

There is no easy method or shortcut in cleaning the shelves or mopping the floors. It is simply a case of getting on with it. I had thought that I had done half of the middle aisle the day before but discovered that it was rather less than that. I also discovered when I updated our inventory records with data from The Farm that I had omitted to count the t-shirts in the shop. There are not that many of these and we will need to place an order this year, at least for children’s sizes. We might manage for adult ones until next year, which will be helpful.

 

I found that having finished the shelves I had to mop the middle aisle again having already done that area before I moved the furniture back. The shelves are dusty enough that it affects the floor when they are swept. Also doing the gift aisle it only left the grocery aisle which I will do after I or the Missus finishes with the shelves.

 

The next thing to do was to sweep the groceries for out of date stock. Over the years we have become quite efficient at running down the stock levels but sometimes it is inescapable that whole cases of, say, crisps and soft drinks are left over. I went around the aisle with a trolley and deposited the items in it for sorting into donation or throwing away. This is the hardest and most traumatic job of all for a grumpy and tight shopkeeper; it is difficult seeing the best before dates with eyes full of tears. 

 

Most of the out of date stock were indeed crisps and soft drinks – they commonly are. The date refers to the ‘best before’ date and the products themselves are most usually perfectly edible or drinkable. Unfortunately, many of our customers would eschew such purchases fearing that they would be poisoned by mouldy and contaminated produce – we struggle to get rid of bread with two days left on the date, for heaven’s sake. There are occasionally some products that are indeed beyond the pail, and I poured a dozen bottles of orange juice down the drain outside.

 

Given that I was a quivering and weeping vessel after such horrific actions, I decided to retire after delivering the boxes and bags to the Lifeboat station. No one feeds Lifeboat persons at home and any food delivered to the station disappears almost the moment it arrives. It is a well-known fact. That I was not mobbed by ravenous persons in yellow when I dropped it off was itself something of a curiosity.

 

That was it, as far as I was concerned. I had endured more than could be expected of a normal person in the pursuit of simply getting from one end of the day to the other. I had every intention of shutting the door, gluing myself to the sofa for the remainder of the evening and excluding the vagaries of the outside world forever – or at least tomorrow. Then I remembered I had to take the girls out. Later, then.

March 8th - Sunday

The wind had gone around to the southwest yesterday. It took 24 hours to bring its moisture laden air to us and fill The Cove – and probably much of the Far West – with mist. There had been drizzle with it, mizzle, earlier in the morning but when we went out, late for once, it was merely soggy air and mild with it. So mild, in fact, that it had attracted half a dozen ladies wot swim to the Harbour, splashing about and making an awful racket with shrieks and laughter. All that enjoying yourself on a Sunday morning is, I am sure, against nature.

 

The sea was in turmoil again. It was a bit rough in the Harbour at the time the ladies were there and as we tarried at the end of the Harbour car park, we watched the waves lop over the Harbour wall. It was dancing and boiling in a white watery mess over Cowloe and the Tribbens were a chaos of waves unsure of the direction they were heading. It was marvellous to stand and watch while the girls sniffed around the patch of grass behind where the wartime latrines had been. It took me some time before I realised that they had been built with the door on the seaward side, presumably to allow more discreet access. How coy we were back then.

 

There was not much point in starting anything as I would have to stop soon after commencement. Mother needed to be picked up, and I was heading for the range soon after. It did give me sufficient time to panic when I realised that I had done nothing about the VAT quarter end that finished at the end of February. The invoices need to be placed in order and keyed into the Making Tax Difficult system. On the upside, during this quarter there are not too many of them. Conversely, there are more of the little slips of receipts that are tediously small, difficult to annotate and easy to lose. I shall do some on Monday, I told myself.

 

I then remembered that I was going to order some replacement shelves. The bottom shelf of the stand where the buckets sit is terribly rusty. Its adjoining partners are going that way too. I suppose it is the thought of the salt water that would at some stage causing the problem. I can assure any casual bucket and spade buyer that it is not that the buckets have previously been used – honest guv. Anyway, I had forgotten to measure them when I had the chance yesterday and had to go down on purpose to do it this morning.

 

I had expected to look and compare several suppliers. The last time I made a small purchase for similar shelving items because I had forgotten them on the bulk order, they wanted to charge an exorbitant amount for carriage. So, I was pleasantly surprised that the first supplier I chose were to charge just five pounds for the service.

 

That done I found that I still had at least an hour before I needed to leave for the range. Rather than twiddle my thumbs in an idle sort of way, I dived in with the invoices. It did not take long to put them in date order as there were only about sixty in total and some of those were statements that do not need processing. There was still time after that to start the inputting and I managed to complete about half of them. 

 

I would have done more, but the software company that rents me access to the software at a premium rate – there is nothing cheap about Making Tax Difficult – had changed the interface completely. Where once the button to bring up the input screen was on the first screen, it was now completely absent. It took me an age to discover that it had been placed, along with a number of dissimilar functions under a tiny icon buried in a lengthy menu, called ‘Create’. Really obvious when you think of it - or had exhausted all the other possible alternatives.

 

It was therefore a blessed relief when I could pack my pistol and head for the hills where I could shoot small holes in paper targets – very meaningfully. I have found that a half day in the pursuit of this entertainment quite enough in my present condition. I had never stopped to realise just how much physical effort we expend running out after each shooter to patch and reset targets or, indeed, how much tea I consume in the process. It was also immensely pleasing that it was mild enough to dispense with a jacket, and we were not rained on for the duration of the session.

 

We were, however, in a constant cloud of varying thickness that kept a bit of a chill running through the mild air. While it did not rain, there was enough moisture in the air to keep everything damp. When I had left The Cove earlier, the overnight mist had started to clear. It was as I climbed to the top of Cove Hill it got a little thicker and when I made the final ascent to Carn Grean, we were back to full head in a cloud conditions.

 

As evening came on, the fog got thicker. The F&L had put on another quiz in aid of the Crew Fund that we collect for in the shop. Since its modest and somewhat clandestine beginnings, it has become more commonly known and appreciated and even has a more official counterpart at the station. The organiser of the quiz very kindly added the Crew Fund to the list of charities the quizzes collect for. As such, we were happy to go along and show some support, although we were late after taking Mother home. 

 

Taking Mother home was an adventure by itself. The fog had closed in to be the worst we had seen it for a while. We have forward fog lights on the truck, but we would have found a white stick or a chap walking ahead waving a flag more help. I would guess that visibility was down below 20 metres in places and we advanced at a crawl to avoid dropping into a ditch. We are, fortunately, familiar with the road else it would have been an even more tricky drive.

 

We joined the Lifeboat team halfway through the quiz and participated only on the fringes after we arrived. It would be easy to claim that our influence was key but in the end we only contributed to one answer, and the team won the quiz. Even the fog celebrated by lifting a little as we made our way home. It was a pleasant interlude to our normal run of things if I could only blank out the trauma brought on by the price of a pint.

March 7th - Saturday

I hauled myself out of bed in a better frame of mind to carry on with the shop today. I still did not get downstairs until eleven o’clock but given that I have two weeks holiday left, I did not feel too badly about it. 

 

Not knowing quite what to expect, I togged up warmly against an expected chilly morning and was not all that disappointed. It was indeed quite sharp out but the wind that had gone last night was still gone this morning. We had also accumulated a bit of cloud cover at some point during the night, but it was reasonably high up and let in a lot of the brightness of the day. It did its best to spoil that by the end of the afternoon but for most of the day, it was quite acceptable in a pleasant sort of way.

 

After the morning administration and a bit of breakfast, I returned to the conundrum of producing an image for our door mat. Our logo is blue on a white background but for the mat, we needed it white on a charcoal grey background. I was clearly of fresher mind in the morning as I managed to produce the background fairly easily and at the right scaled dimensions for the mat. Getting the colour right was another problem and in the end I had to add a text note to the application explaining the shade that I was trying to achieve electronically.

 

Extracting the design from the white background also happened quite straightforwardly, although if you asked me to do it again, I doubt that I would remember which buttons and options I pressed. It being all the same colour made it easier, as I could select it by colour. It was then just a matter of overlaying it on the background and adjusting the size so it fitted. A piece of cake, if you will, but probably akin to making a Japanese cotton cheesecake with lark’s tongue topping and alba white truffle flakes carved into gnus for decoration. After all the effort, and a blessing from the Missus, it was a relief to discover that it would only cost an arm rather than the usual two limb combo.

 

I really did waste no time after that to head downstairs with a bucket of soapy water. I had left the mop ready for use leaned up against the windbreaks. Before I could start, however, I had to move all the things from the bottom half of the shop to their usual place in the top half of the shop. This also included getting shot of the cardboard boxes that we had used for several years to display the body boards and replace them with the new stands.

 

It did not take more than a minute to establish that the space that two cardboard boxes occupied one in front of the other, was insufficient for two new stands to do the same. This might have spelled disaster had I not reasoned that I could probably dispense with the skim board frame that was barely adequate, put two of the new stands side by side and mix the smaller bodyboards and the skimboards on the same stand. The remaining two new stands just about could be arranged one in front of the other. I will still have a problem when the new jewellery stand arrives, but I will build that bridge after I have fallen in the river.

 

Rather than mop the floor, I started on the shelves. These accumulate black dust at a rather alarming rate. They only get cleaned once a year which is wholly inadequate but perhaps better than not doing it at all. I have not concluded whether the dust gets blown in from outside or falls from the ceiling, dislodged by footfall from above. I recall once when the conditions aligned, we were inundated for days with airborne dust from the fields up in the village. The dust on our shelves generally is similar to that but on a much reduced scale, so perhaps it arrives from outside. Wherever it comes from, it is a constant nuisance on the white shelves that are most obvious, such as between the bottles on the beer shelf. It is particularly a problem with lower shelves which adds credence to the idea that it blows in from outside.

 

The process is excruciatingly tedious as everything needs to be removed from the shelves, the shelf washed and the items put back again. It is the sort of task that the Missus is good at and relishes and falls into the same category as jigsaw puzzles. In fact, she normally does it and, indeed, offered but was busy doing something else and I was keen to get it done. I am ever mindful that the amount of other work is mounting up and we are running out of time.

 

It took me a couple of hours to finish half the shop. The remaining half of the middle aisle and the grocery aisle will be done on Monday. I cannot get up to The Farm on Monday because the truck is going in for its service and MOT test.

 

Somehow, I also managed to get a stank to the beach in with the girls. I took them down after I had rearranged the shop furniture and before I had started the cleaning work in earnest. It was not quite the glorious day we had yesterday, but it was decent enough for a scant across the beach and mild too. I dispensed with a jacket and little boy trousers were more than adequate. Unlike yesterday, too, the beach was crowded – there were at least twenty people milling about including a surf school session down on the tideline.

 

We had plenty of beach to avoid everyone and still BB elected to stray as close to people as she could. She just cannot help herself. On the outward journey we stayed close to the sea where there were fewer people. From sea level, the waves that looked tame from higher up, were at least head height. The surf school had picked a spot where the waves were reasonably sedate but as we walked north, the waves increased in force, size, frequency and ferocity. There was good surfing closer to North Rocks where a photographer was capturing a particularly showy piece of tube riding by some exponent of the waves. Looking out towards Gwenver, the waves were huge and just plain vicious, breaking in tumbling chaos all the way out at Aire Point and across the breadth of the beach.

 

At North Rocks, we tarried while the girls had a proper swim in a sizeable rockpool there. They do like to cool off, even on cold days, and sometimes even before they have got warm. I think it is any excuse to dive into a bit of water and get wet. From there we ambled back in front of the dunes and the rocks there where there is a bit more interest for them to sniff and ferret. 

 

I had not quite made up my mind yesterday, but it was cleared today that the sand on the south of the beach from the chip shop on, has been eroded away. I always find it difficult to tell, or maybe remember, just how far the sand is along that stretch; was there more or less rock than last time I looked? There is definitely less, I decided and definitely fewer rockpool on the bit that is exposed, which is about half of what there was a few weeks ago.

 

It was an excellent bit of diversion before I had to return to my cleaning duties. ABH on the other hand was captured not long after she got back and the Missus proceeded to give her a hearty shave and manicure. It took as long as I did cleaning the shelves, poor mite. She is half the size now and ready for the warmer weather. It remains to be seen if she is as keen to dive into cold rockpools for a while

March 6th - Friday

The wind was still howling in the eaves when I awoke this morning. It had been forecast to begger off during the night but had clearly decided to hang about, only very slowly decreasing during the day. It was just as well that my oppo whom I had asked to help with the greenhouse roof could not make it today as I had planned. The various bits of panelling would have been halfway down the field.

 

I was determined not to be idle today just because the plans had changed. There was plenty to do in the shop instead. So, putting my maximum effort into it and pulling out all the stops, I was utterly idle until near the middle of the day when I had to get off my backside to collect Mother. Just as I did so, the girls started circling, so I had to divert and take them out first onto the Harbour beach. It was as I was heading down that I noticed how resplendent the big beach looked under the clear blue skies and bright sunshine – not to mention the blustery northerly. Irresistible.

 

I let the girls run riot on the Harbour beach for fifteen minutes. It was clear then that they could do with a longer run, so I promised them I would take them on a stank down the big beach when I got back. I am sure somewhere deep in my head there is a gamester at play, giving me ample excuse to put off doing any work for as long as possible.

 

It also played into my subconscious self that I have to drive the long way around to collect Mother as the short route is temporarily closed making it even longer before I started work. I had a geek as I drove by and they have a trench dug along one side of the road going away from the junction. At a guess, it is Wildanet, the fibre broadband company that had its funding pulled recently. I presume someone still has money to allow them to continue with their immediate commitments, but I am not sure what will happen to their longer term arrangements. 

 

Out of direct influence of the breeze in St Buryan, it was decidedly warmer than it was in The Cove. That is not to say that it was warm, just the windchill had less of a hand in it. I suspect that in the direct sunlight and in some shelter, it probably was quite warm, but I never had the chance to find out. 

 

True to my word, I kitted up to take the girls on a longer stank than they had earlier. I took some time to decide whether it would be big boy trousers and leggings against the stiff breeze or to risk it with little boy trousers. I decided on the latter and did not regret it. Once we had a pace on us – it is relative as the girls stop every couple of yards for a sniff – I hardly felt the chill at all. There were some places on the Coast Path as we headed to the Valley that were positively balmy. It was in fact an exceedingly pleasant afternoon. 

 

We met one walker on the Coast Path and when we looked down on the beach, there were very few people about. As we descended onto the beach just the other side of The Valley, there were just two couples on the whole expanse of sand before us. This was most comforting, especially the absence of other dogs. Just before I left the Missus announced that BB had just come into season. She would be a little walking pot pourri of pheromones, inviting the unwanted attentions of boy dogs from miles about. I am not sure it would concern me greatly, but the Missus has always wondered how dog breeder can give away the little mites that they produce. What would concern me more is a houseful of a dozen pups that she would not relinquish. I was therefore on my mettle for breaches of our exclusion zone.

 

Our vigilant walk across the beach was, nevertheless, entirely pleasant, stopping for a chat with some people we knew and watching the girls chase and immerse themselves in ice cold rockpools along the way. There is still much sand deposited at the southern end of the beach and the big ramp all along at the back is now flat with no big field of rocks until well back against the dunes. If we have no further changes before the season starts, the beach is in good shape to welcome our proliferation of visitors.

 

Having idled for most of the day, I wasted no time in getting my behind downstairs to start work. Alright, I did have a cup of tea and a biscuit – so, sue me. I had no real master plan, knowing only that the floor would need to be mopped ahead of moving all the displays back to their normal places. Ahead of that, there were some Christmas decorations that had eluded my initial sweep, which are now in the back of the truck along with other items destined to be stored at The Farm.

 

I had quite forgotten that we had intended to replace one of the two commercial mats we have. The plan being to move the one currently inside the first electric sliding door in The Cove to behind the counter and the one behind the counter to the tip, sorry, Household Waste Recycling Centre, where it will be tipped. After I had got as far as clearing away the detritus and mopping the floor and any surfaces that needed it at the top end of the shop, I repaired upstairs to research rugs. 

 

It should have been a simple case of selecting a supplier of which there is a plethora, selecting a rug of the correct size and colour and ordering it. Unfortunately, I came across an offer that we could have a rug with our logo on it for what looked like a reasonable sum. To establish the full amount, we would need to submit a image of our logo. We have a number of different renderings of our logo none of which have a charcoal grey coloured background and a light enough logo to go on top of it. I would need to modify one of the existing images first and then upload that.

 

We have recently acquired some software that the Missus can use to design her posters and I can use to manipulate photographic images. This was a necessity because the previous software packages had become unsupported. We are both unfamiliar with the new software to the extent that I did not have a clue how I would modify one of the logos to fit our requirements and I found myself disappearing down a rabbit hole of advice and tutorials, none of which quite seemed to do what I wanted. The simple act of creating a charcoal grey background, for example appeared to be a task of unsurmountable complexity. It was probably as well that teatime intervened otherwise I would even now still be sitting at the screen wondering which button to try next. I resolved to try again tomorrow for a limited time and if I could make no headway then, would simply purchase a plain rug.

 

So deep was I in my battle of man against machine that I had forgotten entirely about running the girls out for their late afternoon walk. I took them after tea instead when the dusk was fast become night and a thin remnant of a spectacular sunset still lay at the western horizon. There was a sharp pinpoint of light due west in the sky that I took to be Jupiter – I meant to check but forgot. 

 

It was a fitting end to a turbulent day when the last of the bluster from the north was eventually fading away. When we went out later for our last run, the wind had gone completely but the sea, as ever, was a couple of scats behind and still thrashing around in the darkness. It had at least stopped lumping over the Harbour wall by that time. It was soon to be my turn to be thrashing around in the darkness as I considered the last bit of stock taking: all our groceries and the necessary disposal of out of date goods.

Beach excursion and high sea at high tide.

March 5th - Thursday

Gool Peran Lowen – Happy St Patrick’s Day.

 

Alright, do not get frosty with me, I know that it is St Piran – I could hardly miss it with Radio Pasty pulling out all the stops on the pasty and flag front. It is likely that the man’s name was actually Kiran. In the Cornish language of the time, they did not do a hard ‘K’ sound, so Piran was easier on the tongue even if it was not easy on the brain to believe he surfed in on a Millstone.

 

I had arranged an appointment in town for eleven o’clock. That may sound like plenty of time to get things done before hand, but it evaporated pretty quickly after the morning administration, having some breakfast and rounding off the bus times enquiry. 

 

A very pleasant lady sent me a message yesterday telling me that I had become confused with the temporary and original bus times. If we had a telephone conversation, we would have sorted out in a couple of minutes. As it was, we played ping pong with messages as we each tried to grapple with the other’s perspective. It took until last night to work out that she was on a different page to me – quite literally – as she was talking about the downloadable PDF version and I was talking about the online screen version. When I explained and sent her a screenshot, we immediately found our common ground. I would be able to fix the Sunday timetable I was working on and she – very quickly as it happened – fixed the online screen version that was very wrong and very confusing.

 

I made it into town with a little time to spare and for the second time in two days had a meeting that seemed hardly worth the time of travel, except this one really did need to be face to face. The brevity of the meeting meant that I could move on to the other task I had decided to do while I was in town and that was wash down the truck.

 

The truck goes in for a service on Monday, and I think it is probably fair that the underside at least is clean while the boys work on it. The fact that I am very likely to have to take it up to The Farm tomorrow or Saturday is really neither here nor there. It is likely to be cleaner than it was regardless. Since it will not go through a car wash because of the roof bars, I need to use one of those power washer stations. I prefer them anyway as you have more control and I am able to give more attention to the areas that need it. 

 

Once upon a time they had one of these washing machines in St Buryan. I could turn up at any time during the weekdays and be first in the queue. At the Tesmorburys store in Penzance, it is far busier and I had to wait for two cars in front of me to finish first. Given that it is a year since I last washed the truck, it did not take as much washing down as you might imagine. However, once a wash would have left the motor looking quite spruce and shiny. When I finished this time, although the mud had gone there was no lustre at all, just a dull surface where every minute scratch could be seen.

 

The weather forecast for tomorrow was looking worthy of a bit of greenhouse roof fixing. It crossed my mind that I should drop by The Farm in the way home to check how many fixings I had and gather the relevant items together so I was not wasting time looking for things when we started work. I agonised over this for a minute or two before deciding that I would not bother. By going home when I did, I would be back in time to take the girls to the beach and also oversee Lifeboat launching operations. I had already established that there were enough crew operationally but needed to ensure the right training system boxes were ticked for the right people.

 

By the time I got home and unloaded the truck – I also stopped off at Tesmorburys for the Missus’ coffee whitener – she had already departed with the girls. This was most helpful as it would enable me to attend the station ahead of the launch. I did not need to be there for the briefing, so I stopped by for a cup of tea first and was there as the crews headed up to the Inshore boathouse. I had a look down on the Harbour beach while they were there. The timing of the launch had been very cleverly arranged for a little after the turn of the tide. Half an hour earlier and there would have been insufficient water in the Harbour to get the boat out. I tarried to watch the boat launch and retired to the crew room to sort the paperwork out.

 

Part of the administration is to record the sea state, moderate, and the wind speed and direction, southerly and Force 2-3. Less than three hours later, the wind had gone northerly, increased to Force 7-8 and the sea state had become rough to very rough. A messed-up weather front had passed over us, cold to the north and south and warm overhead. It brought with it a sudden stream of Arctic air and took our temperature from reasonable to bleddy freezing in the space of an hour. It was quite a shock to the system and although we were aware of the change coming – the big Lifeboat launch for later was cancelled – the extremity of it was certainly unexpected.

 

The big lump of rain that we had seen coming and scheduled to arrive with the weather front, went north of us and we did not see a drop of it. Later, a weak band of rain followed on with showers in varying degrees of heaviness. While the rain was not that intense, it was thrown at us with some ferocity by the strong northwesterly and made it seem much worse.

 

We seemed to have to wait an interminable time for the results of our new helmsperson’s passing out. It was not until gone four o’clock that the message come through that we now have the station’s first lady helm. How about that, then.

March 4th - Wednesday

If we were to fill every unforgiving minute with sixty seconds’ worth of distance run, we certainly gave it our best shot today. It was pretty relentless and at the end of it had very little to show for it. In fact, our footprint on the day was barely visible to the naked eye – of even a fully clothed one for that matter.

 

I was out of the blocks so early, sparrows had not even given thought to their first gastric expansion of the day. Even the girls were a little alarmed by my urgency, although they will soon need to be used to it. I had done much preparation the day before and had reaffirmed the schedule in my head at some point in the middle of the night. We even managed to escape the gravitation full of The Cove eroding only twenty minutes of the forty-five minutes buffer time I had built into the journey.

 

Our destination was Plymouth and the hospital that had very successfully undickied my dickie knee. After leaving The Cove, we still needed to stop at a neighbour’s house just outside the village to collect he crutches that he no longer needed. Mine were already in the back of the truck. The next stop after that was Mother’s in St Buryan, heading around the long way because the normal lane is closed for a week for some sort of work or other.

 

When we got to Penzance, we were still not done with stops as we needed fuel for the journey and the Missus insisted on a cup of coffee from the Costalot facility close by. It was only then that we were on our way and judging from the amount of buffer we had eroded by this point in the journey, I somehow needed to make up some time along the route. Clearly, this needed to be done with skill and strategy because it is illegal to drive faster than the 70 miles per hour limit on the A30 dual-carriageway section.

 

I must have been exceedingly skilful as we arrived at the hospital with ten minutes to spare. I booked in for my appointment and almost immediately had to return to the truck because I had forgotten my spectacles. When I returned and as I headed for a seat in the waiting area, the consultant called me as I passed his door. After a two and a half hour journey, I had a very succinct two and a half minute consultation at the conclusion of which both parties seemed to be satisfied with each other’s respective performances. I even established conclusively that I would technically be able to kneel on the affected knee but that it might be so uncomfortable for me to not wish to do it.

 

Rather than waste a five hour round trip, the appointment rather fortuitously coincided with a trade fair at the Royal Cornwall showground in Wadebridge. I had not appreciated, because I had not look, how close Wadebridge was to Plymouth making it even more convenient. This trade show was predominantly for the hospitality trade and most of the stalls were food or drink orientated. If you arrived hungry and thirsty, you would leave sated beyond expectation as the proliferation of samples of both are legion. Should you be so inclined, you could arrive early doors and leave in the middle of the afternoon very much in your cups – bladdered, slaughtered, mullered, banjaxed, blotted, k-lined, kaned, pished, plastered, pie-eye or wasted all for free. We both demurred on this occasion – the Missus because she does not imbibe, and although no longer likely, if I felt like drinking the Missus would take great delight in declining to stop on the return journey for any sort of comfort break.

 

Instead, we met a great number of sales representatives keen that we should avail ourselves of their business propositions of one sort or another. We may well during the course of the coming season and one in particular, Cornish pasta, is more likely than most. We took a good hour to peruse all the stalls of interest and came away with samples of this and that. One of which was pizza bases that we exploited for our tea later on.

 

I was aware that there was Lifeboat activity planned for latter part of the afternoon. I had signalled my absence and the unlikelihood that I would be back in time. As it was, we arrive back in The Cove just minutes after the arranged first meeting time – there were two planned launches. After we had unpacked and released the girls from their motoring confinement, I headed across the road to see the state of play.

 

Clearly, I had not paid much attention to the order of events planned at the station because I thought that the Inshore boat was launching twice in quick succession. It was in fact the big boat, an arrangement organised for a visiting television film crew, that was first to launch, just shortly after I arrived. Having recovered from the surprise, I joined the very excellent Shore Crew who had attended in my absence. The plan had been a launch and a pause while the appropriate slipway was prepared and a recovery immediately after. If the film crew had been dissatisfied with their footage, they would have asked us to do it all again. Fortunately, they were happy with what they had so the process was concluded after what was clearly a textbook recovery up the short slip. You will have to take my word for the fact that it was, indeed, a textbook recovery because the film crew packed up and went home after recording the launch. We are, after all, a very under-appreciated, very excellent Shore Crew.

 

Not five minutes after the boat was tucked away for the next service, the same crew gathered for an Inshore boat exercise launch. This launch was a practise run for a soon to be signed off new Helmsperson, from which nomenclature you may determine that it is a lady helmsperson, the first for this station, I believe. Everything in done by the book for the training including a detailed briefing for all members of the respective crews.

 

We launched the Inshore boat near high water into a slightly kinder tide that the last effort at high water. The boat would be gone for the next hour or so and we retired to the crew room for tea and biscuits. Since the Coxswain was there too, it provided the opportunity to iron out some of the training system issues we had discovered around the Tooktrak drivers and Inshore head launchers not being recorded properly. Where once we were under the impression that all the Tooktrak drivers were automatically ‘head launchers’ it seems the system though different. We are now woefully undermanned in both Tooktrak and head launcher roles because of the administrative mess-up. We discussed how we might resolve it.

 

It was a thorny issue and took some time to reach agreement by which time the Inshore boat had returned. We decamped and efficiently recovered the boat onto the trailer in a moderate swell near high water. Half an hour later, we were done and I was headed back for my tea. We are, after all, a very hungry, very excellent Shore Crew.

March 3rd - Tuesday

BB decided that she had quite enough of being in bed at quite an early hour this morning. Clearly, she thought that I had too. It did not really matter as I was awake already, my head spinning with departure and arrival times and how to go about fault finding on the tractor and whether the weather would be helpful or not today – not that it mattered much either in the end. 

 

The last question was answered first. It was still grey and uninspiring and quite possibly raining some still from the previous day and overnight. I think that the rain was just clearing out because it was not raining when I stepped out a few minutes later. ABH very quickly appeared on the scene, and I took the initiative to get them both out of the door before either could head back to bed again. 

 

There was limited amount of beach to cavort upon, the sea having not long vacated it. For the first time in a while there was not even the slightest dribbling of waves over the Harbour wall in a clear sign that high pressure was indeed starting to influence the ocean, so I thought. We were soon bored by wandering over the limited sandy resource and headed around the block to finish off our morning stroll.

 

The weather showed no signs of improvement after we got back and rain started to show an interest again, just before the middle of the day. It was getting late enough that I should really head over to St Buryan to collect Mother and because BB is at the door the second anyone thinks about going out, I took her with me. This suited very nicely because when we got back it was time again to take both girls out. 

 

The weather changed completely between leaving and coming back. I was in full metal jacket waterproofs heading off because it was tipping down. Half an hour later, I found myself down on the beach, still in my waterproofs under a blazing – a relative description – sun and milky blue skies. It had turned suddenly warm and I felt exceedingly overdressed. It continued the theme of frustration that I had immersed myself in for most of the morning.

 

I had agonised – mainly in the darkness, staring at where the ceiling was in the wee hours of the morning, it is in the same place usually during the day, too – about how best to display the seeming random times set out by the bus company on their new timetable. I confirmed yesterday that the current timetable is only in place until the roadworks at Chywoone hill have been completed. These effectively block the back road into Penzance and send the buses down the A30 instead. 

 

The temporary nature of it is just as well because it is a complex beast and I suspect that even the Artificial Intelligence that must have been used to create it must have used Artificial Intelligence I of its own to design it. Having taken two days to reverse engineer it, I was left with the assertion that if I were designing it, I would not have started from there.

 

Let us take the first bus that leaves The Cove on a weekday morning. It departs at 06:20 and makes for Porthcurno and on to St Buryan where you arrive near 07:00. If you missed anything at St Buryan as you passed through, do not worry, you will be coming back again ‘ere long. Next, you are off to Newlyn, the top of the town in the middle of the housing estate there. You are just three miles from Penzance bus station or around fifteen minutes by road. 

 

Great, you put away that book you were reading in keen anticipation of your arrival, but wait, what is this. You turned left at the road to Penzance and not right down the hill. Oh, there are roadworks, so there must be a diversion. There is. Your next stop on the diversion is, looks a bit familiar, oh, we are back in St Buryan about half an hour after you were here last. At least it is full speed ahead to Penzance bus station now, where you will arrive at around eight o’clock, one hour and forty minutes since you left The Cove.

 

Still, it could be worse, you might have arranged to take the 08:16 service. This will have you at Land’s End eleven minutes later where you will sit and admire the view for the next 23 minutes until you are ready to head off. Again, you will have the pleasure of two visits to St Buryan before arriving at the bus station two and a quarter hours after you left The Cove. At least you did not take the 09:52 which takes five minutes longer than that. Luckily, the remaining buses during the day are all around an hour and a half to Penzance.

 

There is another interesting anomaly later in the afternoon. I suspect the AI went for a cup of tea and a human, intervened for five minutes. A bus leaving Penzance at half past three o’clock arrives in The Cove at around five o’clock. It then heads off to Land’s End where, seven minutes later, it comes back to The Cove again before heading off to St Buryan. Why? I mean, just why?

 

Of course, not everyone wants to go to Penzance. There are many walkers for example who like to take a bus out to Porthcurno and walk back. They also like to take the bus up to Pendeen and walk back from there too, but that opportunity has long gone. The Porthcurno service is hanging on by its boot laces, just about. If you arrive during the tenure of our temporary bus service, you can get out to Porthcurno on the 08:16 or the 09:52 then not again until near six o’clock. Coming back, if perhaps you have walked there, you are much better off with services at eleven, one and three o’clock and again at just past six o’clock.

 

I could go on but I will leave after just one last comment. If you were thinking that your Diarist had gone completely off the rails and made up these almost unbelievable arrangements for a public bus service, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Wait until I explain Sunday’s timetable.

 

On the face of it the Sunday buses looked as plentiful as any city centre service. I sniffed a particularly aromatic rodent and looked a bit closer. According to the published timetable two buses with the same service number leave Penzance bus station at precisely the same time to exactly the same destination. The difference between them is that they follow different routes arriving at the same main stops at different times and the same destination about twenty minutes apart. I have tried to contact the bus company for clarification but have met with unanswered calls and messages. I suspect that the roadworks will be finished sooner than me getting a response. The Sunday timetable may just have to be left a mystery.

 

The epic dissembling of the bus timetable left me quite exhausted when I should have been keen to go and do something constructive. The weather had started to clear near the middle of the day and by the middle of the afternoon it was looking remarkably like one of those fine days we used to get. I did my best to ignore it and spent an inordinate amount of time doing begger all during the rest of the afternoon. Ah, well.

 

Did I say that today was the first day that the sea had not been throwing its weight around. It must have heard me because when I took the girls around late in the afternoon, the swell had increased to wave watcher worthy proportions. It was fair lumping over the near side of the Harbour wall and in the Harbour itself, it was boiling away nicely. Head height waves were rolling across the bay and breaking close in with their tops pulled back by the easterly breeze. The breaking waves over Cowloe were making a show of themselves for the several watchers in the Harbour car park, escorted by big waves rolling down Tribbens.

 

I noted that the temperature had dropped as we walked around the block but when I checked the Land’s End weather station, the ambient temperature was actually up on yesterday. I concluded that the sharp easterly wind had introduced quite a hefty windchill to the day. Still, it looked pretty.

 

I wrapped up my day by taking Mother home. The Missus had her very important meeting across the road, which took her away for a couple of hours. With a journey away deep tomorrow, I slipped away for an early night when she got back, hoping that the timetable ghouls would leave me alone.

Big swell under a blue sky and the watchful gaze of wave watchers.

March 2nd - Monday

For what it was worth, I took a look at the weather for the coming week last night. Mindful that I had to collect the roofing sheets, I was looking for a weather window for picking them up and another for installing them. The obvious day for installing them was Wednesday, which stood out among the other days of the week due to not having rain symbols, the first for two months or more. Not only that, it had a big sunshine symbol instead. The boys at the forecaster’s office probably spent a couple of hours finding it in the first place then another hour or so buffing the rust off it. Not that it means it will be sunny that day, of course.

 

Newbie forecaster.: “Hey, Tom, what’s this symbol here for, then?”

Old Boy Forecaster.: “That, my lad is the symbol for something we used to call ‘sunshine’. Used to use it all the time before global warming set in.”

Newbie Forecaster.: “How about we give it run, see if it still works.”

Old Boy Forecaster.: “Sure, why not stick it on Wednesday. The Wednesday rainy symbol if a bit frayed around the edges anyway.”

Newbie Forecaster.: “Great. Will it be sunny on Wednesday, then.”

Old Boy Forecaster.: “Not a clue.”

Newbie Forecaster.: “Aren’t we supposed to put up the symbols to match what we have calculated the weather will be for that day.”

Old Boy Forecaster.: “Stupid boy. We’re not bleddy fortune tellers.”

 

Unfortunately, I have an appointment and a trade show to visit on Wednesday, so it will almost certainly be a perfect day for fixing roof sheets into place. There were other days that looked good and it was a reasonable assumption that the forecast was improving – actual high pressure is on the way. With this in mind, it seemed sensible to pick up the roofing sheets sooner rather than later and today was as sooner as it got.

 

It was a grey and bleak day but most notably the wind was not likely to get above 10 miles per hour. Grey and bleak were fine for moving two large sheets strapped to the top of the truck, a gale of wind, not so much. The forecast for the day contained rain all through it but on the basis that every other day for the last six weeks had rain in them, apparently, whether they did or not, I decided to ignore it.

 

I had asked the Missus if she wanted to come along too and loaded the question to receive an affirmative answer by suggesting that we visited MacSalvors on the way. The MacSalvors store in Pool is irresistible, containing every conceivable tool, item of hardware and household appliances that you could possibly imagine and quite a few you could not. I am glad that we do not live closer because, frankly, we could not afford it. There were a few items we needed, cable ties and grass mats for The Farm and I spotted some cord for the new bodyboard stands. The Missus, with no list at all, made up her own list of necessities on the fly.

 

It had started to rain a little bit when we stopped at Penzance for some groceries. By the time we were halfway to Pool, the rain was coming in properly. It was worthy of waterproofs while we visited MacSalvors – you have to move between buildings in the open air – and by the time we reached the roofing company, a bit south of Redruth, it was tipping down. This inevitably meant loading the roofing sheets on the top of the truck and strapping them down in the lashing rain.

 

We had some trouble finding the place; the company had moved since I last used them. Although they were on Lanner Hill, the access was down a side road that I had turned down by chance to get off the main road while we got our bearings. I was intrigued to find we had parked in front of ‘Railway Cottages’, or some other rail reference. When I looked either side of the building, there were clear signs of a long disused rail track that would have run in front of the building and across the road.

 

I looked it up later on when we got home. It was the Tresavean branch of the Hayle railway that left the main line at Redruth junction headed up Lanner Hill. It operated by a static steam engine initially to haul ore wagons up the hill by cable. It ran from 1838 to 1936 with the track removed a couple of years later. It is now a walking trail.

 

Sorry, I digress. Now, where was I. Ah yes, strapping down roof sheets on the truck. I had preplanned how I would do the strapping down which involved two of the ratchet straps being passed through the truck inside and running above our heads in the front and back thus using the roof as an anchor. The third strap looped around the roof bars that run lengthways down the back box and therefore did not have to pass through the vehicle. The strapping process took a while and necessitated the straps lying in puddles on the ground while I arranged them in place on the roof. When it came time to tighten them, the action stretched the webbing inside the truck which had the effect of wringing it out.

 

When I stuck my head inside the truck to make a minor adjustment, the Missus took the opportunity to rebuke me for dripping on her head and Mother’s head in the back. I had by this time been standing outside for fifteen minutes in the rain and was doing more than a fair bit of dripping myself. I tried very hard to convey in one cold stare the dichotomy in our respective conditions, the few drips on the Missus’ head and the rain coursing down my jacket and off every part of me below where it stopped. 

 

When the last strap was in place and tightened up, the ensemble tested with a few robust thrusts and pulls and found to be stable, I climbed back into the truck. Inadvertently, I had clearly installed the sheets on the level because when I moved the truck forward and braked, a tsunami of collected rainwater cascaded over the windscreen and momentarily swamped the effect of the windscreen wipers. 

 

I had intended to avoid the dual carriage was and take the old A30 back to Hayle but, being unfamiliar with the route, I found myself following the way back to the dual carriageway anyway. I was reasonably confident of my strapping down – which was unusual – and that the sheets were not so long that the airflow could peel them back at the front, so went with it. Provided I kept it under fifty miles per hour, I reasoned it was unlikely that we would have an issue.

 

It appears that I was correct in my assessment and after dropping Mother off in St Buryan, the roof sheets were as robustly seated on the roof as they were when we left. It had mainly stopped raining by the time we got back but it took far less time to undo the straps that it had to deploy them earlier in the tipping rain – naturally. We put them in the green house out of harms way and I laid out the webbing straps along the raised bed so that they could dry out.

 

We let the girls run riot across the field. They had been strapped into their seats for three hours as we went about our business. We were only up there for twenty minutes but both were soaked through when we got them back in the truck.

 

I had intended to wrap up my work on the bus timetable but by the time we got back home, I could not summon the mental capacity to deal with it. I had established that it was a temporary timetable while the roadworks that effectively blocked the normal bus route and necessitated the changes completed. This was some relief because the detail of it is truly horrific. I shall save this soupçon for tomorrow, dear reader, so that you have something to look forward to as you cling to the edge of your seats in fretful anticipation. We have not had a cliffhanger in The Diary for some time. I do hope that your constitutions are up to it. 

March 1st - Sunday

Just three weeks left on the ‘holiday’ clock and with a couple of month’s work left to do. Was it ever thus. I think that there are just two things left to do at The Farm, the greenhouse roof and the tractor. The roof is in hand, but the tractor is a massive unknown. Then, of course, there is getting the shop ready and tying up the orders we have agreed to place.

 

So, with the clock ticking, my back against the wall and the chips down it was time to pull out all the stops, place my nose against the grindstone and my shoulder to the wheel, mix as many metaphors that I could think of and head to the range to knock over a few metal plates and falling men. Yes, I know I should have dropped the range in favour of something work-like, but all work and no play make Jack a grumpier sod than he normally is. 

 

With no notion of how the weather was supposed to look today, I took it at face value – grey, damp and slightly cold. There was a little rain in the air but nothing too uncomfortable as we headed for the Harbour beach to have a little run around first (well, late enough to be a second or third) thing. The girls had a bit of a shouting match with Twiglet and Crumble who had come out on the elevated patio so they could have a look-see at the girls on the beach. It was not malicious shouting but purely a necessity given the distance between them. Unfortunately, there was to be no meeting up on this occasion and we headed for home under the other dogs’ watchful gaze.

 

We were not back long before we were all piling into the truck so that the Missus could drop me at the range and go on to pick up Mother.

 

The first Sunday in the month is always shotgun day, the morning using pump action or semi-automatic shotguns and the afternoon, clay pigeon shooting. Since I am only doing half days, I had to pick one and elected ‘practical shotgun’ in the morning session as it is a lot more fun. It is also very popular and with interest and membership of the club on the rise, it was also very well attended. There were close to 30 shooters in attendance. The first three course could be run simultaneously but even then it took nearly two hours to see everyone through all of them. The last stage, the combat stage, is run sequentially, on shooter at a time over the whole range and that took a further hour and a half. 

 

Between each shooter, everyone mucks in to rush out and reset the targets. While keeping a person active and warmer than we would be sitting around doing nothing, it is also quite wearing over a long period. It is the reason why I am only doing half days at present because I am frustratingly running out of puff much sooner than I used to. I am hoping – and am reasonably confident – that this is all to do with the dickie knee operation and the lack of muscle development in certain places. I am seeing a consultant on Wednesday for my follow-up meeting, so must try and remember to ask, purely for my peace of mind.

 

The cold and damp, which turned a bit rainy at one point, would not have helped and a quite vicious blow struck up towards the end of the morning. I was therefore quick tuckered out when I called in medivac and the Missus responded by driving up to collect me and bring me home. Before I settled, I took the girls around the block for a quick run, thus leaving me the rest of the afternoon – after cleaning my gun – to recuperate.

 

I was quite surprised to see two youngsters in smart RNLI Sunday best over at the Lifeboat station, just in front of the viewing gallery. They had set up a table with information fliers and give away badges and the like. Since the Missus is events organiser and on the Management Committee, I asked what was on. Apparently some bright spark further up the line thought it a capital idea to have a ‘face to face team’ out at Lifeboat stations when the weather is poor.

 

Someone must have told the bright spark that people like to come and look at the sea when it is big and angry. Sending a couple of youngsters down to shake a tin in front of the hundreds of wave watchers, would no doubt earn him employee of the month points. Sadly, with backdrop of a rough sea so mediocre that a group of young adults from up the hill decided to come and have a splash around in the thick of it, skies grey and bleak and an unkind windchill, the wave watching hordes stayed away in their hundreds and settled for a pint in front of an open fire at some nearby hostelry and watch the action from there.

 

One thing is for certain, the wave watching hordes would not have attempted to get here by bus. I spent an agonising couple of hours trying to make sense of the latest bus timetable. It is an unmitigated mess, the worst I have ever seen it, which currently involves a gruelling two hour journey to Penzance that visits St Buryan twice on the route. I will spare you the detail just now, dear reader, because I want to check whether this timetable is just temporary while the work at Chywoon that forces the bus on a circuitous route, is to blame. I do hope that it is. 

 

Regardless of the temporary or permanent status of the timetable, the investigation that took away precious hours of my short existence, was much like a spiritual purge, much like a vigorous self-flagellation or lengthy wearing of a hair shirt might be. My, I felt pure of heart afterwards and if I could have thought of some heinous sin to commit, could have done so with impunity in the knowledge that I had already paid for it several times over.

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