I wonder what other people did on their 70th birthday. Some I know will have chosen to celebrate in grand style while others will have let the day quietly slip by, preferring to keep quiet, horrified at what old age has brought upon them. I never been the sort to celebrate any event including Christmas, New Year, anniversaries or birthdays since they all seem to carry with them an element of sorrow. I had made absolutely no plans for my 70th. In the depths of last winter I had wondered even if I’d make it that far, so simply to wake up to an unexpectedly sunny September morning was enough for me.
First off was to light the Rayburn, for without that there would be no birthday cake. Secondly was to get the washing on and profit from a fine drying day. Then breakfast and my usual generous bowl of porridge. My brother would be horrified, you’re never going to eat all of that. Over the past week I’ve been making Neolithic inspired pots using local clay gather from the beach south of Tolsta Head, and after I finished a larger pot with scratch decoration now ready for drying. I will leave them over winter and hope to fire them next spring, outside in a primitive dug out peat fired kiln.
I then drove to the other end of the village to get mobile
phone coverage and phoned my brother There is no mobile phone reception at the
house, but strangely there is out on the moor. On my return I stopped at the
village shop for butter and milk plus a WhatsApp video call from Western
Australia. I dropped in at Donald’s to pick up some crackle varnish that he had
ordered for me on line and I hoped I would find time later to try it out on a
primitive pig painting on panel. The Rayburn was up to baking point on my
return so I got on with making my birthday cake, an inverted orange cake. It
turned out a total success and I sang happy birthday to myself as I tried the
first still warm delicious slice.
After lunch, (90% home grown) I turned to a spot of gardening, trimming and edging, then bagged up three more bags of peat from the stack. I found half a dozen eggs on the hall table from a neighbour and the post which brought only good news. Well the interruption of electricity was not till next month. One birthday card with some photos of me with friends making me look like the shrivelled little old man I have become. Another with a form to fill in to claim my £300 voucher from the local community wind turbine.
I stitched a little more of the Old English Bantam tea cosy before returning to the garden and sunshine. Bringing in the already dry washing I noticed Alistair and Ewan sorting the sheep so took them round a slab of orange cake. My evening constitutional walk was a solitary one, Donald being away on the mainland and his dog Laddie refusing to come out from under the kitchen table. I took the slightly longer loop around by my peat banks and back along the beach. It was dust by the time I made the final plod uphill dazzled by the useless street lamp.
It’s been a good day, no celebration, just doing what I love, and I will remember it. Tomorrow is Sunday and I’m out for lunch, but I’ve another pot to finish and some raw umber paint to rub into the cracks on that primitive pig. I think it was Noel Coward who said “working is more fun than fun”.
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