After the highlight trip to Holland,
Scotland and England culminating in Dani’s graduation, July was going to be a
quiet month. We have had a few lots of guests through during the month and we
have a few more lined up for August. We had good friends from Adelaide stay for
5 days. Kari and Kathy first went to Langkawi and enjoyed the Andaman Hotel and
the Ernie Els designed golf course nearby. When they arrived here Helen did her
masterful guiding job and I arranged several friends to take them golfing on
the island and on the mainland. They enjoyed both courses but by all accounts
the island course is pretty unforgiving. As with many visitors we introduced Kathy and
Kari to the pub quiz….the team had a win that night and also had a share of the
bonus prize. The weather has been rather unsettled during July but somehow the
weather Gods provided good weather over the 5 days. It has rained almost
non-stop since.
After giving our guests a good taste of local
food we ended at the Seven Terraces Hotel restaurant, which was a real delight.
In the next pub quiz we finished 3rd despite winning 3 from 5 rounds…consistency
was lacking.
Below John picks up third prize....the first prize the week before has not been published
Nikki is avoiding typhoons at the moment in Okinawa and Dani is in the last days of her summer job. She starts in her Morrisons job
in early September….not in Northampton as per original plan but further south
in Sittingbourne in Kent....but this could also change. In the house we had the Chinese carved bar brought down from the 3rd floor (it took 6 men...2 carrying it and 4 following) to the dining room and now have our graduate zone.
The major plan for the month was to address
some problems around the house. While we were away the hole left by the water
feature removal was grassed over. The wet weather has kept this watered since
then. I have bought a few cheap plants to fill in some gaps. The main plan was
to have colourful plants and nectar-produces so we can see birds feeding from
the lounge/dining room.
A birdbath has also been installed. I put a feeder out
with mealworms for the local Bulbul pair and Bob the little orphan squirrel.
The bulbuls were particularly busy at the feeder and earlier this week placed
two newly-fledged chicks in a nearby tree and took turns feeding them. Coco is
fascinated with Bob.
We still had a leak into our bedroom
ceiling so we extended the third floor roof around the whole of the house. Some plants that were put in before we took
over the house will also have to be removed as they are blocking parts of the
drainage system.
We also had another ceiling leak on the
ground floor. Investigation showed that if our bathroom door was left partly
open when the aircon was on during the night…. condensation formed under the
bath and dripped steadily onto the concrete below it and subsequently through
the ceiling. There was a temperature difference on the topside of the bath and
the space underneath. We are currently drying out under the bath….and when done
that problem will be sorted.
For a number of years at Preston Road we had a bread-making machine. Because good bread is hard to come-by in Penang I decided to go again on that issue. I also thought some of those smells may make guests welcome. I bought a Breville machine and although it has some design faults it has been producing some consistent loaves without much fuss at all.
Photographically July is one of the worst
months as nesting finishes and the inclement weather moves in. Earlier in the
week I went to photograph birds gorging themselves on a fruiting tree at the
north end of our estate. It is practically on the beach and near and old bunker
system the looks across to Mount Jerai in Kedah State.
I spent a few mornings trying to catch the male Scarlet-backed Flowerpecker that comes in occasionally for nectar. This species is smaller than a sparrow and acts like a sunbird on speed. I finally got a decent shot.
The drama of the month was provided during
my morning walk. I start my hours walk
with the hand weights around 6am and it is still mostly dark when I get home
around 7am. I was walking towards home with a NZ woman I sometimes encounter
and we approached the building site on the old playground. I noticed 3 folks
walking towards us when one of them looked like a hidden arm shoved them
violently into the fence by the sea. There followed some Chinese curses. We
rushed forward to assist and I noticed the person must have dropped a large
umbrella……the ‘umbrella’ was the cause of the problem it was a 5 foot plus spitting cobra that the woman victim had
seen late and had taken drastic measures to avoid a nipped butt. She hurt
herself more by trying to sieve herself between the fence rails. Her husband
and son were the other two and the husband went to fetch their car. The cobra….
did not extend its hood…….turned and went
back under the fence. So now I have to
strain my eyes looking for the otters and watching out for abandoned 'umbrellas'. Helen
will stick to daylight walking. BTW These Cobras when in a fighting mood will
spit their venom at you…..the eyes are a popular target.
I was pleased that several of my images won
some awards during the month. My Kingfisher won the Australian Photographic
Society image of the year.
My Coppersmith Barbets won a medal in the
USA and a hummer shot won $75 in an APS competition.
Currently I am planning my October trip to
the APS Tweed Heads convention and Helen is going to see Nikki in Okinawa and
then go with her and Neal to South Korea for a break. The furry watchdog will
therefore not be left alone.
Coco is a character and her evening walks
seem to energize her. She has to have a game of football where she is the
goalie and I have to get a ball past her to the front door. She will play for
an hour, if I last that long, and she even curses when a shot gets past her.
I am however trying to teach her a cultured sport.
But sport can make you tired and seek something warm and familiar.
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