Al made his fruit baskets today. Four at £15 and three at £10. They are popular as presents for the Person Who Has Everything And Hasn't Space For Anything More, as they have the virtue of being used up and just leaving you a nice basket to play with at the end. Each of them takes about half an hour to do (time not included in the price) and so he needed a shop assistant so that he could get on with the job and be finished by noon.
I like being a shop assistant so much. His customers are lovely. One chap came in with two presents, one for the shop and one for the shop down the road which makes no concession to the season but shuts on Wednesday regardless. They were from Freda, who can't get out much but rings all the local shops to put in her orders for delivery on a Friday. Val at the pet shop mentioned that she delivers to Freda - Al said, he goes every Friday, he'd be happy to take her order too. That's all right, said Val, Freda likes a selection of cat toys taken round so that she and the cat can choose a new one. It's not a delivery that can be delegated.
Chestnuts are particularly good this year. The English crop was good, but now the French ones are being sold. Walnuts are also really delicious. Al rather fell out with one of his wholesalers - once the local suppliers were sold out, he bought a bag (these are not cheap, over £50 wholesale) but thought they were a bit lacking in flavour. Upon enquiry, it transpired that they were last year's stock. Crossly, he sent them back, knocked them off the bill and bought fresh ones from his other wholesaler. Very naughty, and the way to lose customers. And if Al loses a customer over one detail, he may be gone forever.
Until the last couple of days, it has been very mild, so there have been plenty of local cauliflowers and calabrese, which may be frosted by now. There has been freezing fog; a still, cold day today. Going into town, we drove through a patch of fog, and straight out again. It was like going through the smoke of a bonfire, it was so patchy. The land is very low-lying around us, it's on the flood plain of the River Waveney, used for grazing cattle most of the year and left to become waterlogged in the winter. The Sage remembers, as a boy, ice-skating on the frozen waterways, but they don't freeze hard enough for that now.
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5 comments:
Fruit baskets sound lovely - I'd love one. Even more than that - I'd swoon over a cheese basket. I just love foodie gifts...an assortment of cheese, pate, wine, chocolate...
*exits salivating*
One of my favourite places is Redgrave Fen, source of the River Waveney which, until a few years ago had dried up and was endangering our little chum the fen raft spider. Now it is under the auspices of Suffolk Wildlife Trust, the farmers have stopped mass water extraction and the place is alive again.
Wendz, I remember one year when friends gave my mother her birthday and Christmas presents together, in time for her birthday in November. When she opened the Christmas present six weeks later, it was a once-beautiful box of cheeses. The friends were surprised that the gift was a stinking mess. They had assumed that all presents were opened as soon as received, they hadn't realised she'd wait until Christmas.
Murph, a few years ago it was all about drainage and irrigation. Wouldn't it be good if we could work with nature from the start until waiting for a disaster before trying to repair the damage.
I grew up hearing about my dad going ice skating on the local lake, it never did that when I was young and I was most upset.
No doubt, sooner or later, I will write about The Winter Of 1963, which was the last really long hard winter we had.
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