Friday, April 27, 2007

In my garden this week



One of the biggest clumps making an impact is Euphorbia characias ssp wulfeni which looks stately and imposing when viewed from the patio. This particular bush wasn't planted by me in this place, I had an older bush probably 10 years ago which succumbed to the inevitable winter wet and was no more. Suddenly last year up came a seedling in an entirely different place and it grew to it's full 3 feet in less than 12 months. I see now that there is yet another seedling close by. One for the transplant list, to be taken to the new abode later in the summer.



My other bloom this week is the perennially lovely Granny Bonnet or Columbine, properly known as Aquilegia vulgaris, the European Columbine.






My strains mostly came from seed obtained from Joan Loraines's garden, Greencombe at Porlock a good few years ago. the really blue blues seem to having all disappeared due to their promiscuous nature. They most likely interbred with some of the others I had too, so now all I have left is a mish-mash of hybrids. They're early this year too and somehow better because they stand out more because of it.

Hopefully this will be the first of a weekly(ish) series through the summer, like last year. As the house we are moving too has it's own lovely garden they'll be some reports from there later on. I just wish I could show you the beautiful Wisteria sinesis which is already adorning the pergola.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Rocking with the Hayseeds

This time last week I was off to see my fave band Hayseed Dixie at Exeter University. Once again they kept the audience bopping away for a full two hour set, full of gems like their take on Walk this Way, Holiday and Dirty Deeds. I prefer their original material and their best on the night (and on their new album) has got to be She Was Skinny When I Met Her although John Wheeler aka Barley Scotch dug himself into rather a deep hole in the intro given the age and stature of some of the audience (myself included).


I have now found that I can re-live some of their concert material for free on a brilliant site of their archive material and YES! it's free in line with their philosophy of giving good value for money and playing for expenses only. Have a good laugh at gems like Kirby Hill and listen to the speed and skill of Don Wayne Reno's banjo playing and Dale Reno on the mandolin. Barley Scotch isn't bad on the fiddle either.

If you like rock and you like something different you'll love this.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Dr Wonderful

I saw my Lyme doctor yesterday. He is very pleased with my progress and more to the point so am I and so is WH. Daily I can feel the layers peeling away and I am becoming almost human again. Eleven weeks of the antibiotic therapy is beggining to give some lasting benefit. I'm trying for another 12 weeks by which time I should be part way there.

Two things conspire to scupper my progress, the first is inbuilt, I am reacting to the sun big-time. I have to keep out of it and, for a died in the wool sunworshipper and lover of the great outdoors, this is hard. I wear factor 50 all the time but even so, a short drive to our nearest shops (6 miles) gave me a substantial burn on my right hand. Dr Wonderful suggests that on my forthcoming trip to Greece I stop the meds a few days before-hand to get the drug out of my system and don't take it for the duration of the trip. If this works I will be really over the moon.

The second blur on the horizon is the very real possibilty that my GP practice will not now prescribe me any more antibiotics beacuse they are 'off licence' in this treatment. It won't stop me taking them, however, as I shall obtain a private presciption and get the drugs elsewhere. It does beg the question though, which I have posed here before, would the NHS prefer for me to remain ill rather than stump up the cost of the drugs which are making a real improvement to my health for the first time in 15 years?

Sunday, April 22, 2007

All gone south

Thanks to NHS blogdoctor my hits were at an all time high yesterday and the pattern looks like being repeated today. Hello to all of you medics out there, hope you learn something about how not to treat your patients when you read my experiences!

I think however my blog template now has a neurological illness in common with it's owner. For some reason all my side-bar stuff all went south during the day and best of all I didn't even touch it.

I examined all my code and it looks like it should do. I hope this is just one of those routine blogger blips and it will all slide back to it's rightful place.

Somehow I am not convinced. Watch this space.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Aren't our service industries wonderful?


I had a summons yesterday morning because BT said I had not paid mother's last phone bill.

The bill was dated 4th April, I paid it on 10th April and the summons was dated 16th April. I was so mad and I getting very angry on the phone and I KNOW it wasn't that girl's fault so I just had to put the phone down.

When Mother died I called up and told them. I was told that I would have to transfer it into my name if I wanted to keep the line temporarily, which I did. I didn't get a bill at all, so on 4th April I phoned them and they said one had been issued but I had obviously not received it. It must have been lost in the post. I decided there and then to have it cut off as we were not doing all the trips up there that we anticipated and anyway we had now sold the flat. The girl said she would reissue the old bill then cut off the phone then a new bill would come which would be less than the first so not to pay that, just pay the final one which I did and of course she was right because it was £26 less than the first bill.

Then I get this summons for non-payment of £32. I went ballistic. WH handed me the phone and found my cheque book whilst I was dialling the accounts department. First off they said "Oh it's a new account and because you didn't pay your first bill they summons you immediately. "

What within 12 days? (or actually 6 working days)

When I said about it having been mother's phone I was then told "Oh you shouldn't have changed the name on the account because if it's a deceased account they give you 3 months to pay."

Hey? I did that because BT told me to.

Then they said "Yes but it doesn't alter the fact you had not paid the first bill on the account," so I reminded the BT person that I called up in the first place because I didn't get one.

"Oh well that's due to the Post Office, not BT. You will have to complain to them"

Looking on my calendar there were 6 working days between the date of the final bill and the date of the summons, Easter was in the centre which reduced tham a bit. The bill arrived on Fri 6th because they only send them out second class and I paid on Tues 10th in my bank, the very next working day. Can't see how I could have done it any quicker. That apparently was not acceptable. Yet when I eventually move house I have to give them at least 5 working days to move my phone line.

It then took a further week or 5 working days to go through BT's computer system and did not show up as a payment until 17th the day after the summons. Interesting the summons itself took 4 days to reach me, second class post of course. If BT are so hung up on short time scale maybe they should use a faster delivery service themselves.

I then pointed out that my other (home) BT account is paid by standing order and is £80+ in credit as their monthly payment scheme does not allow me to make a smaller payment and I only actually pay for the line rental and get cheaper calls elsewhere. I was told "Oh we don't check your other accounts even if they are the same address."

So actually BT still owe me money, and I am wondering what on earth this country is coming to and how many other people have fallen foul of ridiculous situations like this.

First the NHS is taking it's last dying gasps now our (once) national telephone service has gone the same way.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Compare and Contrast


I know I know, no post for a week then two on the same day but I am celebrating.

Just compare this post written last November and my other post today. What is the difference?

I'll tell you what.

I have a diagnosis after 15 years. I am not a basket case, I have a bacterial infection. That infection is the causative agent of Lyme disease. Most importantly I am having treatment. After 11 weeks treatment I feel wonderful, I can function more than I have been able for about 10 years. Yes I know I have wasted 15 whole years of my entire life, a whopping 29% of it. But now I have hope, recovery and and best of all some normal life.

The disturbing thing is that none of this improvement is down to our wonderful NHS. I found the cause myself (after I recognised a picture of the Lyme rash as one which I had had). I was advised by the Eurolyme website and I found a private doctor who had the training and the skill and most importantly the interest to want to treat me. In 15 years all the NHS wanted to do was either ignore me, send me to a psychiatrist or give me unproved, dangerous, half-baked quack remedies. No-one wanted to treat me as a whole person with one illness.

Even now I have a treatment I will have to pay for it myself shortly via private prescriptions. My GP practice said that they will no longer be able to provide prescriptions for such a 'controversial' treatment as it is 'off-guideline' and unproven. OK , so they would rather I stay ill then? Even though my private doctor is in full contact with my NHS ones the NHS ones choose to disregard his expertise and go their own way. Even my NHS arthritis consultant has written to my GP (after being informed, out of courtesy, that my medications had changed and that I had a new diagnosis) and stated that I should stop this new treatment immediately. Why? because I am getting better?

I am now in total dispair at the state of the NHS. It seems the powers that be would rather follow regulations than provide what actually works and they also seem to want to keep people sick for long periods rather than in the first instance test them for their condition and secondly treat them when they do get the results.

I find I am in increasing agreement with John Crippen, the NHS Blogdoctor. I was never politically minded as a youngster, I was always too busy on other things. This life of mine has taught me otherwise, after all, I have had 15 years to think about it.

The whole situation in this country with regards to ME and Lyme disease is a shambles. It appears that there are dark forces at work keeping patients with these illnesses in thrall to the pyschiatrists. Far be it from me to speculate further here, but a quick of review of some of my sidelinks will give you food for thought enough to keep you reading for a twelve-month.

Just ponder this, how much money would have been saved if I had not been on benefits for 15 years and instead had a full range of tests and consulations followed by a course of treatment for up to 2 years. Now of course my condition is chronic, harder to treat, has given me other associated disorders and I might not recover completely.

Now multiply that figure by the estimated 240,000 ME suffers in this country, let alone those with undisclosed Lyme. You can draw your own conclusions.

What I've been doing this last week

A whole week's gone by and it has flown. I'm knackered. Anyway here's a brief resume of my activities:

1. Dug a whole huge patch of my back garden and removed oodles of Three Cornered Leek which had taken over. It was only AFTER I planted it I read a quote from Alan Titchmarsh which said it was a 'pernicious weed' and never to plant it in a small garden.

2. I have redone the stone border around 90% of my back garden. It's so unusual to be able to garden so early in the year, the weather was fabulous last week and the ground so dry it was almost a pleasure.

3. Spent 3 hours shopping at Cribbs Causeway on Sunday, bought a few gems and joy of joys Anne Harvey has reopened her shop so that was cause for more expense. ( Yes I know it's part of Alexon and NOT an exclusive designer shop but I like their stuff and it FITS)

4. Got sunburned, in April!

5. Emptied the whole of Mother's flat, disposed of the rubbish and cleaned it all out. That feels so good.

6. Saw middle step- daughter and bump last night, not long to go now. She was working, so we just called in briefly on our way past.

7. I have been playing Hayseed Dixie's fab new album. As usual I prefer the original material but they just bring a smile to my face and a bop to my step.

8. Reorganised my entire garage contents ahead of our imminent move; if we're keeping it, it's in a plastic storage box, colour coded and labelled in order of importance. Following this activity I had a trip to our local tip with a whole car load. Spring is for cleaning. Right?

Do you notice anything different reading all this??

I am feeling a lot better and I have the energy (and a little weight loss) to prove it. A trip to Dr Wonderful on Monday will hopefully confirm we are on the right track. It has only taken 15 years.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Spring

Reminds me of a silly poem my Dad taught me as a child:

The Spring is sprung
The Grass is riz
I wonder where the birdies is?

The bird is on the wing
Don't be absurd
The wings is on the bird.

(Attributed to Spike Milligan)

Singing in the trees at the bottom of my garden, that's where they all are!

It's warm, it's sunny and the birds are singing, what more could you want? I love this time of year.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Kalo Pascha (Happy Easter)

It's the biggest travel weekend of the year and our baby is off to New York today for the start of a trip round the US for three months. She's coming round to say good bye any minute. WH is feeling very apprehensive, he's going to be on tenterhooks for the next three months.

Later we are taking her car up to No 2 daughter to use until her baby is born in early June. The rest of the weekend we'll be spending with the other tribe; with a birthday to celebrate, Easter Egg hunts to go to and a whole long weekend of good weather to fill we'll probably be exhausted by Tuesday.

Seeing as the weather yesterday with a brilliant blue sky, reminded us of our beloved Greece, I'll wish you Happy Easter in Greek.

Sunday, April 01, 2007

My Visual DNA



Cool or what? Found this and I just HAD to do one. I love it.