Unknown's avatar

About SilverTiger

I live in North London with my partner Tigger. This blog is about our outings and travels and anything else that occurs to me to talk about.

Tigger unwell

Tigger woke up feeling unwell this morning – no, it’s not Covid-19, happily – and preferred not to go shopping, as we usually do on Sunday.

By mid-morning, Tigger did feel well enough to enjoy a cup off coffee, so off I went to buy some.

It’s another sunny day, likely to reach 32°C later, which would probably have dissuaded us from major expeditions, anyway.

Pentonville Road
Pentonville Road

I crossed a moderately busy Pentonville Road on my way to a coffee shop.

Saint Espresso
Saint Espresso

I was heading for this coffee place in Pentonville Road run by Saint Espresso. There was a couple sitting outside and a food delivery messenger hovering by the door but no other customers. I was served quickly by friendly staff.

Sainsbury’s Chop Chop
Sainsbury’s Chop Chop

As we were not going to the shops but did need a few things, we fired up the Sainsbury’s Chop Chop app. We ordered our permitted 20 items and received a delivery “window” of 1 to 2 pm.

Opening the app
Opening the app

Because I pay with Apple Pay on my phone, our address is entered automatically.

Track your order
Track your order

The app has a section called “Track order” where you can follow the progress of your order (pull down and release the screen to update). It’s only when it reaches “Out for delivery” that you have to stand by to receive your goods.

There is a charge of £4.99 for this service but in circumstances such these (or if, for example, you have to self-isolate) it is worth the cost.

At this point, Tigger told me she was feeling a lot better though she thought it better to stay at home today. That’s fine by me just as long as she becomes well again.

Caption
Delivered!

The goods arrived at 1:30, well within the predicted window. There were a couple of hiccups: one item unavailable and one substitution. This can happen, and even if we had gone to the shop ourselves, the missing item would still have been unavailable there.

In the meantime, we have had our lunch and will entertain ourselves indoors for the rest of today. We can leave tomorrow to look after itself.

In the gardens with pigeons

Depending on how well you can bear the heat, today is either pleasantly warm or horrendously hot. As neither of us respond very well to hot weather, we decided to take things easy.

Sunshine in Myddelton Square
Sunshine in Myddelton Square

We made our way to the deli but took a turn around a sunlit Myddelton Square.

Outside the deli
Outside the deli

We found a table outside the deli and drank our coffee there.

Amwell Street, the lower end
Amwell Street, the lower end

When we had finished, we walked back to Myddelton Square but first I took a photo of the lower end of Amwell Street, the part that I photograph less often.

Sunlight and shade in the gardens
Sunlight and shade in the gardens

It was pleasantly cool in Myddelton Square Gardens. We looked for a bench in the shade.

A view from the bench
A view from the bench

We found a shady bench in the centre of the park. Perhaps because of the heat, the resident pigeons seemed very lethargic and took no notice of us. I put out some seed but there were no takers.

A scramble for food Photo by Tigger
A scramble for food
Photo by Tigger

At last, a single pigeon noticed the seed and flew down to claim it. That was the signal for a general rush of all the others. I looked for “my friend”, the one-footed pigeon. I offered seed and this provoked a scramble.

Feeding on the ground
Feeding on the ground

I tried to attract “my friend” but he seemed reluctant to fly onto my knee, so at first I offered food in the ground.

Feeding from my hand
Feeding from my hand

Eventually, he remembered – or recovered his nerve – and flew onto my knee. I’m sure he remembered me.

An interloper
An interloper

Previously, the other pigeons had been less keen to land in my knee but today many more were ready to try. They have gained confidence from the one-footed pigeon’s example.

“My friend” tucking in
“My friend” tucking in

Having only one foot to grip with, my friend finds it difficult to perch and tends to slide of off my knee. He has now learned to move onto the top of my knee where it’s easier to stand.

Party crasher
Party crasher

It was noticeable that today more pigeons were prepared to crash the party.

Pigeons on both knees
Pigeons on both knees

Repelling an interloper
Repelling an interloper

A last look at “my friend”
A last look at “my friend”

We were now ready to leave. There’s no way to tell the pigeons this, of course. They remain continually hopeful.

A final scramble
A final scramble

I emptied the remaining seed from the jar into the ground, provoking a final scramble.

Nuts for the squirrels
Nuts for the squirrels

Tigger had brought nuts for the squirrels but the squirrels had not appeared. So she thought to leave some nuts wedged in the bark of trees. The squirrels will find them there.

Walking through the gardens
Walking through the gardens

We walked through the gardens that were bright with sunshine.

Flower bed
Flower bed

A corner of the church
A corner of the church

An old favourite, the Curvaceous Tree
An old favourite, the Curvaceous Tree

We passed through Myddelton Square on our way home and so I photographed my old favourite, the Curvaceous Tree, silhouetted against the sunlit houses.

Out for supper

As my last two posts were text-only, I thought you might like a few photos even though they are of scenes I’ve already shown you.

As has become a habit on Fridays, we met at the bus stop in St John Street, when Tigger returned from work, in order to go to the Banana Tree for supper.

No 1 High Steet
No 1 High Steet

On my way there I photographed this famous and handsome building from a slightly unfamiliar angle. Notice the green plant that has taken root on the dome, showing how tenacious life can be even in unpromising environments.

Two in hand
Two in hand

This cyclist was riding one bicycle while towing another. It doesn’t look a very safe way to go on.

The Banana Tree
The Banana Tree

The Banana Tree restaurant was in the shade and as it is painted in dark colours does not show up very well. We have been here so often now and always have the same food so that they know what we want without us having to ask!

Inside the Banana Tree
Inside the Banana Tree

As it was still quite early, there were very few customers in the restaurant, which was fine by me.

The Angel crossroads
The Angel crossroads

I took this last photo as we passed through the Angel crossroads on the way home. Five roads meet here, all of them major thoroughfares, and so the junction is always busy.

The gasman cometh – again

Troubles, according to the proverb, never come singly, and today illustrates the point. As she left for work this morning, Tigger casually mentioned that the hot water wasn’t working – again. This is the third time it has happened. Out of the blue, the hot water refuses to work and then, just as suddenly, starts working again. On the other two occasions, it happened on Sunday and came back on just before I could call the Council’s repairs team on Monday morning. This time, I can call the Council while it’s still not working.

I had to wait until the scaffolders arrived (so that I could let them in) before involving myself in a phone call to the Council. Happily, the scaffolders arrived at about 8:15 and I was able to call the Council when the repairs office opened at 8:30. Here, I had another stroke of luck: they can send me a gas engineer this very afternoon!

This morning, then, not having hot water on tap, I had to boil water in a kettle to wash myself and then wash the dishes. Though annoying, this is not a major inconvenience. It carried me back, in memory, to my childhood. In those far-off days, hot water on tap was a luxury that only the wealthy could afford and we were definitely not wealthy. All of our hot water, with one exception, was heated in kettles and saucepans. This included washing oneself, washing the dishes and indeed anything else requiring a modicum of hot water.

The exception was water for taking a bath. Our house contained a small bathroom, created, long after the house had been built without such a facility, by stealing space from existing rooms and the upper landing. My earliest recollections include an ancient gas geyser perched over the bath. To use this, you turned on the water, to obtain gas pressure, and lit the gas burner underneath. (There was no pilot light or, if there was, it never functioned.) The heat from the burning gas heated the thin stream of water emanating from the geyser.

When this aged apparatus eventually gave up the ghost, the local plumber cum odd-jobs man replaced it with a contraption of his own devising. He built a shelf over the bath and placed upon it a large urn with a tap. Above this, he placed a tap connected to the water main and, underneath it, a gas ring. To take a bath, you filled the urn from the tap and lit the gas ring. You then went away to do something else while the water was slowly heating up.

This system worked perfectly well, of course, but in retrospect I think we were lucky that the whole caboodle never collapsed on someone in the bath.

When I first came here to live with Tigger, we had a gas fire for heating – in one room only – and an electric immersion heater for hot water. When our flat was refurbished in 2008, these two were replaced (with some regret on our part, especially concerning the gas fire which we liked) by a gas boiler providing both hot water and central heating, bringing us into the modern world, so to speak. Modern, yes, but also often faulty. We have had to have many repairs to the boiler, something that never occurred with the immersion heater and gas fire.

The gas engineer, with a female assistant, arrived at 3 pm. The same pair had already visited us on July 5th to do the annual gas check (see Pancakes and coffee). I described the problem and left them to it.

After about 40 minutes, they declared the problem – a blocked water sensor – solved and went on their merry way. If only all of life’s problems admitted of such simple remedies!

By the way, with reference to my previous post, it seems that my “mental” neighbour has been pacified and that the scaffolders will return on Monday to complete their interrupted job.

Scaffolding interruptus

We live in a house divided into four flats, of which ours is nicely situated on the ground floor. From time to time the Council needs access to the house for repairs and inspections and for this they need the co-operation of an inhabitant.

Somehow, without me quite knowing how, I seem to have become the unofficial concierge of the building, at least, as far as the Council is concerned. So, whenever there’s work to be done, my phone rings and I am asked whether I can be there to receive the people concerned.

This happened early last week when the Council rang to inform me that they needed to install scaffolding at the rear of the building and to ask whether I could provide access for the scaffolders. They proposed Friday, July 9th, and as Tigger was working on that day I was happy to agree. The scaffolders would arrive at some time between 8 am and 12 pm.

Friday duly arrived and Tigger went off to work, leaving me to complete all the usual morning chores before 8 am. I did so and settled down to await the expected ring on the doorbell. For good measure, I hooked back the curtain of the living room window, so that I could keep watch on the road for the arrival of the lorry.

The expected ring on the doorbell never came and no scaffolding lorry ever appeared in the street. I was left waiting, like a jilted bride at the altar.

This was not only annoying but also embarrassing. Taking my concierge’s role seriously, I had drafted a notice and affixed it to the inside of the front door to be seen by our neighbours, informing them of the expected visit by the scaffolders. When this didn’t happen, it made me look silly and I felt duly embarrassed.

Had I perhaps misunderstood the date? I was sure that I had not made a mistake and this was confirmed on Tuesday morning when my phone rang. It was the nice lady from the Council who had called me the week before. The scaffolders, she said, had reported that they had been unable to gain access to the property and had therefore not been able to do the job. I leave you to imagine my reaction to this! I had waited in all day, I said, and kept watch on the street. If they couldn’t gain access it was because they hadn’t come here!

The nice lady asked would I be able to provide access for a return visit and would Friday the 16th be a good day? As Tigger is again working on Friday, it would be a very good day.

Today, then, I went through the familiar routine, finishing off the chores and making myself ready by the time the hands of the clock were creeping towards 8 am. Then I settled down to watch and wait.

At about 8:15, I saw the scaffolders’ lorry draw up outside. They have kept the appointment this time. I went out to meet them and showed them to the back garden which is their field of activity today.

As I write this, I can hear the scaffolders at work in the back garden. Together with the clank of metal stays and the thud of wooden planks, there is the characteristic whirr of electric spanners. Putting up scaffolding that is fit for its purpose and safe for those who stand on it must be an art as well as a science. I have read of accidents where scaffolding has collapsed leading to loss of life.

Later…

All went well until about 10 am when the scaffolders knocked on our door. They were angry and frustrated because they were unable to finish the job. They then gathered up their kit and departed. What had gone wrong?

All had been well, they told me, until they reached the balcony of the top flat which they needed to access to continue the work. At that point, the lady who lives there appeared and, in their words, “went mental, threatening to throw herself off the balcony”. She claimed that no one had informed her, much less asked her permission, to access the balcony and that she would not allow it on pain of self-harm. In the circumstances, the scaffolders could only stop the work.

I phoned the Council and spoke to the nice lady who had arranged the appointments, passing on what the scaffolders had told me. I left the matter in her no doubt capable hands and wait to be contacted about yet another appointment for the scaffolding work to be completed.

It seems that a concierge’s work is never done… 🙂