Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Nature's entertainment

I was back at work at the normal time of 8:00am this morning and managed to park opposite our office. Sara was back from her break, so it was great to catch up with her before I started work. Already, the office felt hot, and we had turned on all the fans and drawn the blinds again. Nicola called Sara and asked what the temperature was like, and when Sara said it was warm, she asked her to go and get some big fans that we use in the main sports hall. 

Unfortunately, all they did was move hot air around the office, and they were noisy, so not an ideal solution! With six of us in the office, it became hot and stuffy! I felt for Nicola as her old office was air-conditioned, and she was clearly suffering in the heat, as was Sara, who looked a little red in the face. One of the senior managers came in and made us laugh with his tales of shaving his chest and having his shoulders and back waxed in the summer to feel cooler, so that provided a little light relief! He was on the lookout for sweets or chocolate, but they would have melted in our office at the moment!

Unfortunately, I received a call from the care home at about 11:00am to say that Mum had fallen again and was complaining of pain in her hip. The staff had called for an ambulance, but it would be about ten hours... ten hours? I asked them to let me know the outcome and tried not to worry about my Mum going into hospital again. She had broken her hip last July, and I really didn't want her to go into the hospital again, especially at the moment. I spent my short lunch period researching private rehabilitation homes where she could go if she had to have an operation, but there weren't any, just nursing homes, similar to where she is now.

It was lovely to escape at 4:00pm and turn on the air-conditioning in the car! I returned home, where I stripped off all my clothes and took a long, cool shower. What bliss! It has been hotter today, and the temperature hovered around 35 °C on the way home. We were forecast to have thunderstorms in the evening, and we were hoping they would materialise. However, although the clouds built up and we heard the odd rumble of thunder, we didn't see any rain at all.

I called the care home, and they said that my Mum had managed to get herself up from her fall and had been walking around, so that seemed like cautious good news. The ambulance hadn't arrived yet, but they would let me know the outcome.

Sophie and I watched Masterchef again, and she was delighted to see one of her heroes attend a fabulous dinner. The contestants had to cook at the old Whitehall building for people connected to the Secret Service, and Gordon Corera was one of the guests. We are going to see him live in London in September when he appears with another of Sophie's heroes, David McCloskey! Gordon Corera was the BBC security correspondent, and it was great to see him indulge in the fantastic dinner cooked by the contestants. We particularly liked the Vesper-inspired dessert!

When the show was finished, we prepared our own dinner. Keith and I were having prawn salad while Sophie made do with fish finger sandwiches. When we sat down to eat, she took a bite and said that the fish fingers smelled and tasted strange... she persevered, but in the end, left them. She said they tasted weird. She pointed out the baking tray she'd cooked them on, and I realised that last night, I'd sprayed it with the Fairy no-soak cleaner and left it overnight. Nobody had washed it, and Sophie had put the fish fingers directly onto the pan... I was horrified! Sophie started to panic, so we had a good look at the bottle, but there were no dire warnings about ingesting it, only to avoid getting it into the eyes. She said she felt fine, and she could only have ingested a small amount of cleaner, but it worried me all night. Not really what we needed at the moment, with the worry about my Mum!

Keith and I half-heartedly watched Spring Watch after dinner, but I was more interested in the sky outside! Huge thunder clouds had built up, and with the setting sun were all different colours. They looked beautiful.

Sophie and I went outside to watch and noticed both sheet lightning and fork lightning sparking off amidst the clouds. It was a fantastic spectacle, and I could have watched for hours! It was noticeably cooler with a brisk wind.





The colour of the clouds ranged from pink and peach to light blue, light grey, a bluey grey and white. The sky was ever-changing, and the lightning was brilliant. A lovely end to a somewhat trying day!

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