danieldwilliam: (machievelli)
danieldwilliam ([personal profile] danieldwilliam) wrote2016-04-04 12:00 pm

On Holidays at Easter

Here follows a short and fluffy update on my holiday.

Family Visits

My sister and brother in law were in town for Easter. My youngest brother popped in for the weekend on his way to working offshore. He dropped off his dog for dad and the Captain to look after. Bluebird visisted for her last Easter holiday before the access arrangements expire. Dad had returned from Australia.

So I cooked lunch. Dad cooked lunch. Then I cooked lunch again. Lunch was eaten. One of the lunch was a pre-birthday tea for BB, who turns 18 soon.

Then BB went on a three day Introduction to Cookery course at the New Town Cookery School. It seemed to do the job of introducing her to foundational techniques so she can cook with confidence when at uni. Money well spent if it helps her manage her budget and eat properly, healthily and enjoyably. Judging by the quality of the food that came back she's learnt a lot.

Friends

Caught up with some old uni friends and their four children on Sunday. A pleasant lunch and a short walk followed by an ice cream. Four children are ruinously expensive.

Andy nearly joined us for one of the lunches after setting fire to his kitchen.

Drinking

Enjoyed some wine from Naked Wine and had a Grasshoper now that I've tracked down some white Creme de Cacao. Delicous stuff. Had a delicious bottle of Moet et Chandon 1998 to celebrate BB's birthday. Very delicious.

Modelling

Took delivery of my new painting station from Hobby Zone of Poland. The painting station itself is superb. Took about an hour to assemble with a little help from MLW. Holds all my paint. It should allow me to do painting in shorter bursts and the tidy up quickly so that I can do more in the evening without MLW feeling like she's living a Warhammer shop.

However, it doesn't fit in the box that I thought it would by about 5mm. I'd clearly measured the internal dimensions of the box incorrectly. This is a bit of a blow but good will triumph over evil. I've found an online bespoke cardboard box shop so I can have a box that fits perfectly in to the space I want to put it, which will contain the painting station and some other things and be out of the way and tiday.

Gardening

My Lovely Wife and I spent a few days in the garden. Mostly this was tidying up after the winter. The flat is on a corner over looking a park so lots of leaves get blown into it. Excellent mulch but there is a need to clear them away. A bit of pruning. Well quite a lot of pruning. MLW had stern words with the Naughty Clematis and I tackled the Excellent Good Rose. I'm redirecting its energies along the wall. I did manage to get myself entangled in it with a nasty combination of thorns under my arm and in my wrist.

Other pruning and staking and re-shaping happened. Generally the garden looks like someone cares for it now.

We got the trellis for the Corner Clematis up on the wall. This has been a job in the offing for several years. I hope the Corner Clematis now thrives in a it's blowsy purple way. Along side the Corner Clematis went a bird house. Bets are invited on how long this survives being stolen.

We also planted some plants. We have a new flowering cherry with interesting gnarly branches to replace the dead Yellow Broome. A nice white early flowering upright shrub and a striking evergreen perential with bright green and white leaves. Some new wallflowers and some bedding plants for the planters.

Board Games

With my sister and brother in law up there were board games.

I played the following

Power Grid for the first time. Long game but interesting. Put aside three hours or more to play it. We broke our session with dinner.

Blueprint - second time. A game based on architecture. Short game (30 minutes or so). Nice mechanic. Not deep. I feel it's going to be a pleasant warm up game, or one The Captain can join in with.

Camel Up - a short funny betting game based on a camel race. The Captain did really well with the betting and the counting. Particularly when the game is for 8 year olds and older.

Ticket to Ride Europe with the 1912 expansion pack. We tried one of the new sets of card. It worked well and Bluebird through a combination of luck and judgement managed the family highest ever score with a series of about a dozen new route draws towards the end of the game. For a few minutes I thought she was going to top 200 points.

Tsuro came out for some Captain gaming.

Machi Koro with the Harbour and the (new to me) Millionaire's Row Expansion Packs. The game works very well with the Harbour expansion. I consider that the base game. Millionaire's Row changes the ethos of the game. The base game doesn't have many opportunities to agrressively interfere with other players. Millionaire's Row gives you the opportunity to disrupt them in several ways. It makes the game more interactive but sneakier. I liked it, the rest of the family less so.

I return to work having had a good week off.
andrewducker: (Illuminati)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2016-04-04 11:47 am (UTC)(link)
Power Grid is a fun one. I haven't played it in ages, but I used to bug people regularly when we were choosing games.

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 12:51 pm (UTC)(link)
A drama pal of mine spotted it in the background of the photo of the painting station and expressed an interest - so I might see if I can arrange a Power Grid session in the near future.

[identity profile] momentsmusicaux.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Tolstoy is always happy to play PG. Remind us next time you're over for gaming.
andrewducker: (Illuminati)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2016-04-04 11:48 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, and I love that there is such a thing as an online bespoke cardboard box shop.

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
It's what the internet is for I think.

Lots of people will want boxes of different sizes. So the functionality must exist if you are a wholesale consumer of boxes.

But selling that functionality retail is difficult outside of very large cities.

But the internet makes everywhere part of a large city when combined with some webforms that make processessing the order cheap.

And, suddenly, I can have a box that is 72cm long, 44.5cm wide and 19.5cm tall to put my stuff in.

[identity profile] widgetfox.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 12:29 pm (UTC)(link)
You're going to need a bigger box.

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 12:58 pm (UTC)(link)
That's not a box.

THAT's a box.

[identity profile] widgetfox.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 01:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Is it a box? I hadn't noticed.

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Is that a box in your box or are you just pleased to see me?

[identity profile] momentsmusicaux.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 02:15 pm (UTC)(link)
We rather like Power Grid. And also Machi Koro. We have the harbour expansion too, which I agree improves the game, but I do miss the dairy farm - cheese factory combo.

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Machi Koro is probably the current family favourite but I can see Carcasonne making a come back now that MLW has reminded herself that it exists.

My daughter very deliberately plays Machi Koro in the least aggressive way possible - her ethically sourced game play is fascinating to watch - and then she glares at me when I start being disruptive.

[identity profile] alitheapipkin.livejournal.com 2016-04-04 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds like a pleasing week :)

I may have to investigate one of those painting stations for the Boy. He's picked up his model painting again while job hunting and I keep coming home to my dining table covered in bottles and models. Mind you, he would still need somewhere to put it...

[identity profile] danieldwilliam.livejournal.com 2016-04-05 09:24 am (UTC)(link)
They come in three sizes. I've bought the large one which is 60cm by 40 cm by about 10-15cm tall.

My plan is to put it in a box which is a little bigger (importantly a bit taller) so I can keep the fully stocked painting station, work in progress, and some other stuff in the box and store the box "out of the way."

There is just enough room in the innards of the station for a few narrow, shallow and long boxes / trays to keep the brushes etc when not in use.

Hobby Zone in Poland and the Internet. Cost about £30 plus £12 postage and packing.

[identity profile] alitheapipkin.livejournal.com 2016-04-05 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Excellent thank you, I shall investigate :)