It rained so hard this morning that my jeans were thoroughly soaked from the knee down by the time I got back from having tea with Sandy (my mother-in-law - it'll just be so much easier to call her by name from now on). Within ten minutes of shedding my wet clothes and pulling on pajamas, the clouds parted and there was the blue sky I didn't think we'd see at all today.
So I decided to go for a walk, feed some ducks and take a few pictures. For this outing I packed the following:
- a shopping bag in case I decided to stop at the Oxam bookshop in my way home. I did and picked up Vanity Fair and the first book in the Sookie Stackhouse series. I'm almost embarrassed to admit that I'm already two-thirds through it and am already thinking about hunting down the second.
- a teeny, tiny, bright green moleskine
- my Filofax wallet
- my everyday camera
- my mouse change purse
- my Canon camera. When I turned it on I realized I'd left its SD card in my computer - thank goodness I had my little camera with me.
- bright pink Clarins lip gloss tossed in for some unknown reason
- camera lens
- duck food. Unfortunately, this is really only for feeding ducks whilst they are on dry land (it sinks in water) and most ducks automatically start quacking like crazy and hop in the water when they think you have food. Needless to say, a couple of pigeons were fed by me today but no ducks.
- my iPod. Soundtrack to my walk: Strict Joy by The Swell Season. If I were a little less sane, I might have thought I was really in a movie.
Of course, by the time I got to the park, it started raining again but it was light enough that I stood under a giant willow and stayed dry.
I took a lot of photos but only kept a couple. It's hard to go wrong with the cathedral and blue sky.
Or a cookie cutter cathedral...
I also really like the texture of the wall surrounding the cathedral....
I'm listening to Pillars of the Earth right now and it was really interesting to hear the bits that took place in Salisbury as they were building the "new" cathedral (this one). Even though a few people have recommended it, I've shied away from that book for a long time thinking it would be too slow and heavy like books about that time period sometimes tend to be. I bought it for $5 on Audible a few months ago but I only started listening to it last week after I (finally) finished The Road. I'm only a couple hours in (it's 41 hours long) but it's fantastic and not at all what I expected.
Okay, some french fries (see? I'm still an American!), a warm blanket and the rest of Dead Until Dark are waiting for me downstairs....