Restoration of St. Nicholas Church, Australind and Christmas Cooking

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Last weekend we went to a church service in Australind to celebrate the restoration of St Nicholas, Australia’s smallest church. Built around 1844, the church began life as a two room cottage,  was then used as a school room and for drying possum skins and eventually became derelict.

The barricade along the front is to protect the building from cars crashing into it, which has happened in the past.

Bought by the Church of England in 1914, it was licensed and consecrated on the 22nd December, 1915 and named St Nicholas. Attendances varied over the years. It was our family church and I celebrated my first communion there and four of my nieces were christened there. It is still my Mother’s church and a vibrant part of the Australind community. The congregation has long outgrown the tiny building and meet in a new church built next to the original building.

The restoration of the 103 year old church was funded by the community and a heritage grant. The original jarrah pews and pulpit have been cleaned and polished and the building is now restored and used for some services.

The memorial gardens, entered through an archway of roses, are at the side and back of the old church.

A newspaper article about my parents involvement in the Church community. Celebrating the restoration of St Nicholas’s was a significant occasion for the many people involved in this parish and we were pleased to be part of this service.

We also really enjoyed the traditional Christmas carols and came back to Perth ready to begin our Christmas cooking.

Christmas time means cherries. Delicious.

Time for Christmas cooking. These little shortbread buttons will be sandwiched together to make Melting Moments.

These are rather good.

Two trays of shortbread.

Gingerbread men and stars, nice and spicy.

Dangerous rum balls; dangerous because there’s a lot of rum in them!

I made these treat boxes to give as gifts. There’s rum balls, shortbread, gingerbread and melting moments in the boxes.

Wishing you all a joyful and wonderful Christmas and all the best for the New Year!

 

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December Here and Now Link-Up

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MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR to Sarah and her many blog friends!
It has been so much fun being part of this link up and I look forward to being involved again next year.

LOVING// Bringing in the Christmas cards, ripping the envelopes open and then catching up on the news.
I know electronic cards are very popular, but I still love to sit and read the messages from everyone.

EATING//   Prawns! The season for fat, fresh, fantastic prawns is here and I love them!

DRINKING//      Lots of espressos and lots of water with lemon. I mean to drink more herbal teas but often forget.

FEELING//      Pleased I have finally got the Christmas decorations done. Had intended to sort them but maybe I’ll have time when I put them away.  Is that wishful thinking…..

MAKING//    More shortbread using a very old recipe which is perfect every time.

THINKING//  How lucky we are that lots of our family will be gathered here for lunch  on Boxing Day. I hope I remember to take a photo this year.

DREAMING//  About the lazy days after Christmas, enjoying books, looking at photos and eating leftovers. The pile of gifts suggests lots of books. Relaxing.

Also dreaming about my new laptop, ordered tonight as mine crashed on Monday. Bit of a trauma, but luckily other family members came to the rescue for now.

The thirteenth of December is world ICE CREAM DAY. Proclaimed by President Ronald Reagan in 1984 I think this day is self explanatory, so eat up and enjoy!

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Making, Cooking, Growing and Reading

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MAKING               These little muslin jam making bags hold the peel and pips of oranges, lemons, grapefruit and kumquats for jam making. Citrus fruit is low in pectin and the pips and skin are high, so including the bag of pips and some skin while the fruit  cooks disperses the pectin, which is the setting agent.

These little bags are so easy to make. I cut a rectangle of washed and ironed muslin and sewed a hem along one of the longer edges.

Then I stitched the two open sides together, using zigzag stitch as the weave of the muslin is very loose.

Turned the bag inside out and sewed the two edges again in normal straight stitch. Then stitched cotton ties on the top seam and it’s done.  A perfect pectin bag!

COOKING             Soaked over a kilo of mixed fruit in sherry and brandy for about six weeks in preparation for the Christmas Cakes.

The first part of making the cakes is to line the cake tins with brown paper and then baking parchment paper. I hold it all together with pegs.

Next all the ingredients are mixed in a big bowl.

Each family member stirred the mixture and made a wish, then I poured it into the tins and decorated the top with almonds and cherries. I used to ice the cakes but not anymore. They cooked for nearly five hours and smelt wonderful the whole time.

GROWING              I picked this pretty pink geranium from a friend’s garden to paint. I liked the colour so much I broke a piece off and planted it.

It’s growing well!

READING                  “Frieda, The Original Lady Chatterley”,  Annabel Abb’s carefully researched but partly fictional account of D.H.Lawrence’s muse and wife was a fascinating snapshot of women’s rights and opportunities during the first half of the 20th century. Frieda, a German baroness by birth, marries an English professor of linguistics and moves to Nottingham, an industrial city with strict behavioural expectations which stifled her. She adores her children but feels suffocated by her  marriage and lack of intellectual and sexual stimulation and sets out to achieve more.

( The book has a different cover overseas.)   Frieda pays a dreadful price for her freedom. She loses contact with her three children until they are adults and lives within a toxic and erratic marriage with Lawrence.  Frieda was a woman who refused to conform and was determined to be wholly her own person. A great read.

Also read Arundhati Roy’s “Ministry of Utmost Happiness”. I bought it because I’d really enjoyed her previous book, “The God of Small Things” but I found her new book so long and so distressing I struggled to stay engaged. Her wide ranging collection of characters and locales plus the constant and graphically described violence, all based on historical events, was finally too much for me.  No utmost happiness for me!

The 7th of December is Pearl Harbour Remembrance Day. On the 7th of December the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour, the Headquarters of the United States Pacific Fleet in the Hawaiian  Island. This attack caused America to enter WW2.

The Japanese also attacked Hong Kong, Malaya, Singapore the Dutch East Indies, the Philipines and the International Settlement in Shanghai at the same time, although the date on the other side of the international dateline was December the eighth.

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Five Easy Ways To Use Less Plastics

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Close-up Photo of Sushi Served on Table

It’s great to recycle plastics but it is better to reduce the amount of plastic products we use in the first place. One of the greatest problems is all the plastics in the seas.

Plastics break down into microscopic particles which fish ingest, making them feel full. Poor nutrition results in reduced reproduction, plus predators end up with these microscopic particles in their systems, which we ingest when we eat the fish.

The microscopic particles act like sponges, soaking up carcinogenic chemicals. I’ve read about the alarming rise of plastics showing up in recent human autopsies and also the research by the Medical University of Vienna which has shown the faecal matter of every participant in their research had plastic in it. Other research suggests plastic bottles and food wrapped in plastic might be the biggest contributors but I think plastic is entering  the food cycle in a number of ways.

So I’ve listed five really easy things I do to use less plastic.

1. Keep a reusable cup in your bag for coffee or tea when you’re out rather than use a plastic lined paper  or polystyrene single use cup. Also try and buy cotton buds with paper stems as the plastic ones are one of the most common pollutants found on beaches in the UK.

Blue Shorts

2. Shop at a green grocer and have your fruit and vegetables put in a paper bag, if they need a bag at all, before putting them in your bag or basket. Avoid polystyrene trays and plastic wrap. The green grocer will also know where the products were grown, unlike many supermarkets.

Variety Of Fruits

3. Try and wean yourself off the very useful and clean plastic dispensers of hand wash and shower gel and go back to using soap. It comes in paper wrappers, although I buy it without any wrapping. If you’re still not convinced read the ingredients on the liquid wash and gel and compare them to what’s in soap. Unfortunately, soap is messy but I’ve found some pretty china soap dishes.

Person Washing His Hand

4. Decant from a big container into a smaller, reusable one to minimize the number of bottles and containers you are using. Buy your olive oil in a 3 or 4 litre tin and decant in to a bottle with a pouring cap. Eventually, the tin can make a pretty plant pot.

Person Pouring Vegetable Oil on Vegetable Salad

5. Use beeswax or silicone covers instead of plastic wrap. I’m still getting this organized but my mother covers bowls with saucers and other small plates before putting them in the fridge. To find out how to make the beeswax covers, look online, watch one of the many YouTubes or buy them on Etsy. There’s also silicone ones available and they’re all reusable.

An estimated 150m tonnes of plastic in our seas means more than 100 000 mammals die each year from eating or becoming entangled in plastic rubbish. Let me know your clever ways of using less plastic!

In 1990, on the 23rd of November, Roald Dahl died. He was a famous British novelist, poet, screen writer and fighter pilot, and his works were adored by adults and children alike. His books sold more than 250 million copies worldwide. Known as the most popular childrens’ author since Enid Blyton, his “Revolting Rhymes” remains one of my most favourite books to read to children.

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A Week In London

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After a week of wonderful day trips around Ipswich we set off for London. When we had dropped off the car we went to our hotel in Cromwell Road. Our room wasn’t ready as we were early so the staff cloaked our bags and suggested we go to an Italian Restaurant a few blocks away. It became our favourite restaurant.

Good, traditional Italian food in a nice environment and great service.

Bought some tulips for our hotel room and borrowed a vase.

Years ago  I saw an article about the Garden Museum in a de-consecrated church, St Mary-of-Lambeth  near Lambeth Palace  and have wanted to visit ever since. When we were in London two years ago the museum was shut for renovations, so on our first full day in London we went to the Garden Museum.

What a disappointment. I expected gardening implements through the ages, home made and rustic, bee keeping artifacts and general garden equipment such as traditional fly traps or papers, wicker tripods or traditional iron garden frames. What was on show was very limited. There were no special exhibitions and no activities in the studios and only the shop seemed alive and cared for in any way. Bemused, we took stock in the cafe and left.

Remnants of its previous incarnation as a church have been incorporated into an atrium garden, Sackler Garden, designed by Dan Pearson.

Pretty garden but not the amazing  or innovate plantings I expected at all. The front garden was designed by Christopher Bradley-Hole.

The National Gallery was as always, wonderful.  There was an Impressionist Exhibition charting the development from Impressionism to Post Impressionism. We enjoyed the Turners so much we were there again early the next morning and when the gallery opened we went straight to room 41 where they were and had them to ourselves for about ten minutes before anyone else got down that far. Then to the National Portrait Gallery. Also wonderful.

Eventually, the sheer number of amazing artworks became a bit overwhelming and if I was going again I think I’d divide each site into four days and spend an hour or so a day there and then do something else such as a garden, walking around Westminster Bridge or shopping!

Lunch in the Crypt of St Martin in the Fields. Very atmospheric and good to sit down and people watch for a while.

The courtyard at the Victoria and Albert Museum. This is an enormous collection of treasures and I decided to be selective about where I spent the most time.

Really loved the Architecture Exhibition. This is a model of The Tempietto, featuring the balanced proportions and pure volumes of Renaissance architecture.

A model of a courtyard in the Alhambra Palace.
There was so much to see at the Victoria and Albert Museum and I really enjoyed it all but especially the Architecture Exhibition. It was half term in the UK and the museum was packed!

London, near Victoria Station.

Modern Art in the Underground.

Enjoyed visiting Liberty. I bought my first pieces of Emma Bridgewater  crockery here 25 years ago and have collected it ever since. Nostalgic shopping trip.

More treasures at Liberty.

Spent a morning in the Silver Vaults looking for a silver water jug. I’d admired one 25 years ago but didn’t want to spend the money. Still didn’t want to spend the money!

Pretty window boxes near our hotel.

Streets of London.

Traffic, statues, red buses and crowds….very London.

The entrance to the Gloucester Road Underground near our hotel.

Armistice Day services. We also went to a piano performance at this Church one night and really enjoyed it. They have regular performances and almost daily Church services.

How to dine outside when the climate doesn’t really accommodate outdoor dining!

Our first meal in London was at this restaurant and so was our last. Will miss eating there!

Adored by children and adults, the famous  British novelist, poet, screen writer and fighter pilot Roald Dahl died on this day in 1990. His books sold more than 250 million copies worldwide. Labelled the most popular writer of childrens’  books since Enid Blyton, his “Revolting Rhymes” delighted children and adults alike.

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Say! Little Hen Here and Now Linkup

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Enjoying the opportunity to be part of this link-up and especially enjoying reading Sarah’s blog and the other blogs featured.

Brown Leather Crossbody Bag With White Framed Sunglasses

LOVING//  Being home after a month of traveling overseas. Going downstairs or out for every meal or making little picnics in the hotel room, because we had a big lunch, and going on day trips every day is exciting but a bit tiring after a few weeks. Great for a month but I was ready to come home.

EATING// My homemade sourdough. I missed it and fed the mother/starter to get it going when we arrived home from the airport, even though it was very late.

FEELING// Pretty pleased with the spring garden. Gorgeous flowers, herbs and masses of spinach and the birds have left me some blueberries, too.

DRINKING// Spring weather and drinks outside. Rose and some tidbits. Very relaxing.

MAKING// The first of the Christmas Lists…To Do, To Buy, To Make… Christmas seems to have come about so fast this year and  I feel really unprepared.

THINKING//  Reflecting on the Centenary of the Armistice. Remembrance day services advertised outside churches and museums in the UK and this clever garden in Colchester.

In France, as well as commemorating the Armistice, it’s the Year of Clemenceau, who was the President at the time. Claude Monet, whose sons fought in WW1,  promised the first two panels of his magnum opus, Les Nympheas ( the Water Lilies cycle) to the French State on the day the Armistice was signed, November 11th, 1918. He was eventually persuaded by his close friend Clemenceau, to bequeath all 22 panels.

Although this lily pond is in a hotel garden in Singapore it reminded me of Monet’s Garden in Giverny.

DREAMING// Spent a morning in the Silver Vaults in London and saw many covetable pieces, but particularly this silver water jug. Lovely shapes and sizes and we really liked everything about this one….except the price. It is still in the vaults and I’m still dreaming about it.

12/11 is Chicken Soup For The Soul Day. The title comes from a book of the same name published in 1993 by two motivational speakers who shared stories they had collected from their audience members.  The stories were uplifting and enlightening and demonstrated that despite being bombarded by bad news there’s good in everyone. The title reflects the traditional Jewish belief in the healing powers of chicken soup, since proven to be true!

 

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A Week based in Ipswich, UK.

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After a really wonderful week in Norwich visiting towns particularly on the coast as well as the Broads, we set off for a week in Ipswich. Again, we stayed at a hotel and did day trips.

One of the beautiful coastal towns we visited was Aldeburgh.

Old buildings are repurposed and maintained all along the beach and town So lovely to walk around, looking.

Orford, an old fishing town.

Saffron Walden had so many historical buildings and was on a very human scale and we could walk around the centre of town easily.

Pedestrian area in Ipswich. The shopping area sprawled over an area linked by passageways and lanes. Some remarkable buildings and an interesting historical house, Christchurch Mansion with a collection of Constables and other art works.


Colchester, the old Roman capital 0f Britain. Many interesting buildings and a lovely park. Hello Mr Squirrel!

Armistice Day garden, Colchester.

Beautiful, tiny but perfect Claire. Able to just wander and enjoy this quiet town, talk to the locals, eat tea cake. A lovely day.

Claire Priory, on the River Stour, was built in 1248 and was the first home of the Augustinian Monks in England. Remnants of the old buildings remain at the site. I could have sat in the garden for hours as it was the most peaceful and serene place.

Apart from Church services, the Priory now offers retreats.

Lavenham is considered to be the best preserved medieval village. Made rich in Tudor times due to the production of blue broadcloth manufactured from wool, it is now remarkable for its interesting buildings, lovely little shops, cafes, pubs and easy to walk streets.

Lavenham, where I had the best fish pie ever! Lovely town to wander and admire the ancient architecture.

Armistice Day on the 11th day of the 11th month commemorates the armistice signed between the Allies and the Germans in 1918 at Compregne, France, marking the end of hostilities on the Western Front. This initial armistice expired after 36 days, followed by a formal peace agreement when the Treaty of Versailles was signed the following year on June 28th.

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Singapore and Norwich

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Three day break in Singapore en route to the UK and it was lovely. We stayed in The Sofitel City Centre near the Tanjong Pagar MTR and I discovered lots of new things. Photographed the renovated very expensive old shop houses against new Singaporean buildings from the lift landing on our floor.

Relaxing reflexology after a day walking around.

Hotel flowers. There was a floral theme in all the art works as well as large and gorgeous flower arrangements.

Hotel garden in Singapore. Although the hotel only opened twelve months ago the garden is lush and well established and very pretty.

Flew to London and stayed the first night in Kingston on Thames. Picked up our hire car and drove to Woughton on the Green, to a lovely converted grand house near Milton Keynes.

Our room was in the coach house. It had the most comfortable bed! Gorgeous hotel in a really pretty setting so lots of long walks. We really enjoyed this hotel with its stylish interiors, delicious food and great staff.

Two days later we set off for Norwich for a week and from there we did day trips.

St Peters, Hoverton,  a red brick and thatch church built in 1624. A tiny but perfect light filled church with a bellcote and stepped gables. Every day we’d set off from our hotel in Norwich and were usually within sight of a church, many of them huge and within towns and hamlets, but also many just out in the middle of nowhere!

The pier in Cromer. Such a pretty town. Ate a Cromer crab salad, enjoyed the coast and old buildings.

Holt. Small, easy to walk around and well maintained. Interesting laneways.

Gorgeous Georgian buildings in Holt and some great art galleries, too, as well as other temptations. I resisted but have been online since we got home, just looking….for now.

Wells Next The Sea was a sea port on the Norfolk coast but silting means the quay is now about a mile inland and separated from the sea by salt marsh.

Once a major industry, this gantry, built in 1904, is a remnant of malting. The building now houses apartments. By lunchtime there were hundreds of people eating fish and chips in the water front restaurants and cafes. on the quay and in cars.

This striking sculpture of a horse commemorates the five pairs of horses kept to pull the 33 foot lifeboats to launch them and also used to pull the heavy railway trucks to load and unload cargo from ships at the quayside.

Interesting specialty shops and a combined gallery, tourist information  and coffee shop with the worst coffee ever.

Modern beach huts, all uniform and neat sitting along a beach of pebbles, sand then pebbles. Although it was very windy, it was also the hottest October day for some years and there were lots of people on the beach enjoying the sunshine.

A day in Kings Lynne, full of beautiful buildings and a central pedestrian mall, plus great restaurants along the river.

Kings Lynne.

This seafood sculpture in Kings Lynne was outside the restaurant where we had morning tea, followed by an enormous walk around the interesting and beautiful town then back there for a late lunch. The food was good but really I wanted more of the coffee! We found it really hard to get good coffee in England. Luckily, one hotel provided a machine and capsules in our room and another  had a coffee machine and capsules in the bar to use when we wanted to, along with a tray of croissants.

The pier at Southwold on a wild and windy day. In fact they closed the shops on the pier about an hour later as the wind was so strong. Very pretty, small town with some great shops.

Southwold beach huts. No-one in these huts this day and I don’t think it was because everyone was at home watching Princess Eugenie’s wedding, either. Very, very windy on the coast.

The very old, original parts of Norwich, with laneways, pedestrian malls and many specialty shops was lovely. The day we were there, there were musicians and artists and a really fun vibe.

Today is Sandwich Day. The invention of the sandwich is attributed to the 4th Earl of Sandwich, John Montagu and the town he came from, Sandwich, in the shire of Kent in England.

So, if you’re busy playing cards, as the Earl was, make yourself a sandwich and play on!

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Frugal Successes and a Fail

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Tomatoes, Carrots And Radish On The Top Of The Table

FRUGAL SUCCESSES

I grew up on a farm some distance from the nearest town and the family shopping was done once a week. My mother tended a large vegetable garden and there were so many fruit trees. We had apricots, peaches, nectarines, plums, figs, mulberries, oranges, pears, grapes and also almonds.

Surplus fruit was preserved and used later in the year and surplus tomatoes were cooked and frozen as ready made sauces. Huge pots of marmalade, jams and jellies were bottled. Nothing was wasted.

I’m trying to be more frugal and use up everything, too, motivated by the amazing hints shared online. I’d like to use less and spend less. I try to avoid single use plastics; look for loose rather than packaged fruit and vegetables and recycle/upcycle as much as possible. I draw the line at compost as I only create evil smelling, horrible muck but do feed the worm farm fruit and veg scraps.

Free stock photo of food, healthy, agriculture, fruits

My frugal successes are mostly about food and the garden. I admire all the clever people who download coloured and decorated meal plans, fill them in and shop based on their plan and use almost everything.

I’ve tried different systems and none have worked for more than a few weeks at best. So, I use up all the leftovers I can in frittatas, soups and pastry or potato topped pies. Sometimes I add homemade curry paste or chickpeas or even baked beans. I try hard to not throw away food.

Green Leaf Plant

Growing herbs just outside the back door means I have easy access to a wide range of flavours to add more depth to whatever I’m making. Most frequently used are chives, spring onions, mint, rosemary and parsley which just keep growing . Seasonal herbs, in Western Australia, are basil and coriander. I have blueberries which I share with the birds, likewise the apricot tree. They seem to get more than us. I also grow chilies and lemon grass for particular things we make but the most important is probably tomatoes, which I grow in pots. They taste so much better than bought tomatoes and it’s so easy to pick some when I need them. Another constant is silverbeet which I grow in three pots. I pick enough for the three of us, rotating which pot I use and within about ten days the leaves are back to picking size again. Small, fresh leaves are delicious.

White, Red, Orange, and Brown Flowers

Flowers in the house have always been important to me so I mostly grow my own. They are so pretty but I rarely buy them. I usually have roses and for several months of the year, alstroemerias. Now I have sweet peas and soon I’ll have an orchid which will flower indoors for a few weeks. I love fresh flowers but not the cost. Also, the cut flowers at my local supermarket all seem to be imported.

FRUGAL FAIL

I had a frugal fail recently, too. A well known coupon site was advertising oven cleaning at a very tempting price. Effective oven cleaning products give me a headache, so I clicked “buy”, imaging my oven beings fresh and clean.

Booked the date and time online and had a response confirming the appointment, rang the day before they were due just to be sure and that’s when my great plan fell apart. Mr Unbelievably Rude had obviously over booked and had no intention of cleaning my oven. Although I was refunded the cost immediately by the coupon company, the whole experience was very off-putting. I will look more closely at the reviews next time.

So, I’m interested in your frugal things. What do you do to use less and save more?

Yesterday was INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS DAY. The records of the world began with illustrations on cave walls and our joy in art continues. Get yourself to an exhibition or do something artistic yourself.

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How To Make A Rustic Ivy Wreath

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abstract, dew, fresh

Time to pull the ivy out of the street tree and cut it off to the ground. Can’t totally remove it as it makes good ground cover on the verge. It is tough and green and survives with irregular watering.

The ivy, planted as ground cover, has spread up the verge tree and needs cutting and pulling out of the tree. Dusty work and frequent showers of bark when we pulled out the long, cut off  pieces of ivy.

I made a pile of the thinnest most pliable lengths of ivy to use to make the wreath. The pieces need to be “strappy” so they can be formed into a circle.

Stripped the leaves from the long pieces of ivy.

Make a circle with a long piece, joining and twisting any extra length into the circle. Hold the end in place with a peg. Take another piece, tuck the end between the two pieces and then weave it in and out around the circle, tucking the end between the original pieces and holding it with a peg. It becomes stronger and more secure as more pieces are added and the pegs can be removed.

The wreath becomes a more regular shape as more pieces are woven into place. The wreath can be as thick or thin as desired but about eight long pieces are needed to make a sturdy base.

When the wreath is strong, add pieces of ivy without stripping the leaves. Start by holding the piece in the middle and weave it one way up to the end, tuck it between base pieces then twist the other half going the other way, tucking that end in, too. Just keep adding pieces until you are happy with the look of your wreath.

Keep adding lengths until the wreath looks finished.

At this stage you can hang it or add more elements to the leaves, such as baubles or bows if you want a Christmas theme. The leaves will droop and die in five days in Western Australia’s heat. Then the leaves can be pulled off or the pieces with leaves can be unraveled back to the bare wreath to add other decorations.

Leave some pieces unwoven and hanging for a really rustic looking wreath.

The hanger which I add at the end is a bent piece of craft wire. I hook it over several pieces of the wreath then squeeze the ends in to make the hanger secure.

This creates a secure way to hang the wreath. Usually it is covered by the ivy leaves.

After I’d removed the leafy ivy strands I twisted fairy lights around the wreath. They look very pretty.

The bare wreath can be stored for using later and added to if you want a sturdier circle. Just lay it flat until you need it again.

Today is EVALUATE YOUR LIFE DAY. Is it time to step back and look at your life? Are you happy, healthy and achieving your goals? Today is the day to evaluate your progress and make new plans.

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