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The Swiss make nice saddles along with the watches.
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We were living in Felixstowe, England when Amanda was born. It wasn't a little village, but a fair sized town on the chilly North Sea that was still small enough to walk everywhere. I loved it there. Every morning I walked out for daily food shopping, and pushed my baby in a perambulator like all the other moms. People are always surprised when I tell them it was common to leave your sleeping baby outside on the sidewalk in the pram while you went in the stores. Of course, most shops were small (baker, butcher, etc.) and there wasn't room inside for a big pram anyway. So you ducked in and did your business while keeping an ear out for your kid. Imagine leaving a baby outside a grocery store now!
The English baby nurses we saw for routine care at the Felixstowe "Surgery" were kindly but no-nonsense types. When I told them Amanda would sometimes cry inexplicably (as all infants do) they advised me to "put her pram outside in the garden air for a bit, go in have a quick cup of tea." So maybe this is how the famous British "stiff upper lip" comes about! I'm sure Prince Charles' old nanny did it to him. Hummm...
But not bad advice actually-- a tea break is good for mom's nerves, and both parties are happier when they get back together. And I tell Amanda it's OK to put Nova down sometimes when she cries. Like all new mothers, I worried about many things when Amanda was a baby, but leaving her outside alone for a few minutes in her pram wasn't one of them. Everyone did it. But these are just memories of a very different time and place.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/03/science/03angi.html?_r=1
Chaucer wasn't thinking about crochet when he wrote that line, but doesn't it apply to everything we try to master? I can't take credit for making the doilies in this picture-- I bought them for a few dollars at thrift stores. Doilies are useless, but still pretty. I get them out now and then and wonder about all the ladies who did this exquisite work, only to have it thrown in the Goodwill bin. Our grandma's homes used to be full of lacy doilies.
I like to crochet, but I'm not very good at it. I don't especially like following exact directions, so this makes things like crocheting and baking harder and more frustrating than it needs to be. I make loopy Afghans that aren't quite square, thick scarves, pillow covers and baby hats. Crocheting is the perfect activity for a droning TV football game. I can keep John company, and when something happens (which isn't too often) I can glance up and watch the replay.
When I was getting started, I wasted money on crochet pattern books and later found some of the best instruction was free on the Internet. For example, there are hundreds of "how-to" videos on U-Tube. And I especially liked the free crochet and knitting stuff on Bevscountrycottage.com where I found a truly easy pattern for Nova's orange baby hat.