My friends, Lesley and Roy, arrived with me on Sunday for supper, bed and breakfast. It was a flying visit, packed in amongst other visits, so far too short, but lovely to see them. The weather was glorious for this time of year and we went for a walk by the mill in St Nicolas du Pélem.
I returned to the car after about 20 minutes to read my next book club project, Stone’s Fall, and parked again so that I could open the door and be in the sunshine as I read. They continued their walk and returned a little later. The path was really busy, with lots of familes out - it was Grandmothers' Day in France yesterday and most of the familes were of three generations, walking, cycling, with dogs and pushchairs - it was lovely to see so many people enjoying the fine weather.
The bullrushes in the mill stream were bursting with seeds, the catkins were turning brown and the celandines were like little drops of gold in the grass.
After they left on Sunday morning, I went down to the field with some of my seeds to plant up in the polytunnel.
I put in broad beans and butternut squash to start and later transplant. The butternut squash were very successful last year - I love them in soup and all the family love them roasted.
I still can’t do much at a time, so after planting those seeds, I sat in the hen/duck run and took photos of some of the cockerels. The colours of their plumage were brilliant in the sunshine of another beautiful day.
And here are some of the hens in my kitchen - you can just see them on top of the cupboards. The yellow box on the left is the incubator where I am hopefully hatching some chicks.
Tomorrow I have my hyperparathyroid tests at Yves Le Foll Hospital in St Brieuc. I have an ultrasound booked for 10.00am and then at 11.00am I go to the Nuclear Medicine Department for the scintigraph. It's a three hour wait after that before I am allowed to drive back home, so I shall have the chance to get through quite a bit of my book.
Lastly, another photo of Daisy.
As I was finishing this post, a great tit flew into my windowpane and stunned himself.
I brought him in and held him gently for about ten minutes while he recovered and then released him back into the world outside again.