Tags
beach, birds, buck's-horn plantain, common scurvygrass, Dingle Marshes, Dunwich beach, gorse, little egret, plants, reeds, sea campion, seashore, sheep's sorrel, shingle, Suffolk, wader
On May Bank Holiday, the first Monday after May Day, Rumburgh village always holds a fair and Rumburgh church always has the cake stall – a money-earner, though not as good as the tea tent. This year, I had made a honey and ginger cake which Richard and I delivered to the stall along with a quantity of our rhubarb, which usually sells well. We didn’t stay long as we had a few chores to do at home and we had planned to go to the seaside in the afternoon.
The day was cool and breezy and rain was forecast for late in the afternoon so Elinor, Richard and I set off as soon as we had had our lunch.
We looked inside her and what did we find?
Inland, behind the shingle bank, is Dingle Marshes Nature Reserve, looked after by the RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) and The Suffolk Wildlife Trust.
A plant of saltmarshes and increasingly, along the sides of roads that have been salted during the winter. (Danish Scurvygrass (Cochlearia danica) however, is seen more regularly than Common Scurvygrass on roadsides). Common Scurveygrass has almost circular fleshy leaves with a few blunt teeth along the edges. The seedpods are spherical and a few can be seen on a flower-cluster close to the centre-right edge of this photo. In that same cluster of flowers and seedpods is a tiny yellow-beige 16 spot ladybird which fees on pollen, fungi and nectar.
In the past, scurvy was a very common disease, often fatal, in those who spent much of their time at sea. Their diet was restricted to salt pork and dried biscuit and they had no fresh fruit or vegetables. Many on land also had restricted diets so it was a happy day when herbalists discovered that scurvygrass, with its high vitamin C content, was one of the foods that prevented the disease. It became the fashion in 17th century England to take a glass of scurvygrass water every morning. The leaves were made into a beer called scurvygrass ale.
Gorse is also known as furze or whin and grows on the acidic soil of heathland and close to the sea. It is an excellent fuel and burns quickly and fiercely in dry weather causing heath fires to spread. It was grown near houses so that washing could be lain out to dry on it and the prickles would prevent the clothes from blowing away.
Sheep’s Sorrel is more sprawling than Common Sorrel and is usually found on very poor sandy soil. The leaves contain the chemical calcium oxalate which tastes acid; the name ‘sorrel’ comes from the old French word for ‘sour’ (‘surele’).
The seeds of this plantain exude a large amount of mucilage when they get wet. This gummy stuff was used in France to stiffen muslins and other woven fabrics.
This is the same bird in both photos but I am unable, through ignorance, to identify it. It may be a sandpiper of some sort. I am sure someone will be able to suggest a name. It moved about very quickly.
Please click on any of my photos to enlarge them.
We soon left for home before the rain arrived and had a warming cup of tea.
Such a wonderful post, Clare. I loved all of your photos. Thelma definitely caught my eye. It would be tempting to climb aboard, wouldn’t it? I’ve always loved the sandpipers. I wish I could move that quickly. 🙂 Wishing you and your family a wonderful weekend! ❤
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Thank you, Jill! I’ve just been reading your latest post. Chin up, girl!
We went to Dunwich beach again on Tuesday and Thelma was still there and we had a look to see if anything new was in her. No, just a puddle of rainwater in the bottom. 😉
Have a lovely relaxing weekend! 🙂 ❤
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Thank you, Clare. ❤ Oh, that's a little sad about Thelma.
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I’m sure she’s loved by someone despite not having a cover to stop the rain getting in. Her paint is still nice and bright 🙂
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She does look bright and shiny, Clare! 🙂
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🙂
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A beautiful post on the marsh and beach, and I loved all the photos. The scurvy grass is very interesting. It was fortunate for many its properties were discovered.
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Thank you, Lavinia. Yes it was really fortunate. The symptoms of scurvy were awful. Interestingly, one of them was a yearning for home and some sufferers on landing ashore would immediately try to eat grass! Everyone thought they had gone mad but of course they hadn’t; their bodies were telling them to find Vitamin C!
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I loved your stories behind all the plants you found, as well as your atmospheric photos. More seaside visits please!
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Thank you, Margaret. We re-visited Dunwich on Tuesday but a near gale was blowing and I couldn’t hold the camera still enough for many photos!
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Another enjoyable read Clare, thanks. I’m pretty sure the mystery bird in your photos is a Redshank!
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Thank you, Clive. I had thought it might be a redshank but then doubted myself!
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Your first instincts were right Clare. Commonly called “the warden of the marshes”, as it is one of the first birds to fly off, calling noisily, at the sight of an intruder.
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Thank you, Clive. I might recognise it again now I know more about it!
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Very enjoyable post – lots of info and super photos. So that’s what scurvy ale was/is! Many thanks 🙂
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My pleasure and thank you very much! 🙂
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Thanks for the tour of the beach plus the pictures and information about scurvy grass, very interesting.
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My pleasure, Susan and thank you.
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What a beautiful, desolate beach. Love your photos and tit-bits of information.
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Thank you very much!
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An interesting blog Clare. It looks a lovely area to explore and photograph. I live in a place called Winshill and it is suggested the name derives from whin or gorse which grew there. A gorse flower is the logo of the local cricket club.
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Thank you, John. So many place names are derived from the plants that grow roundabouts. My mother lives in Fressingfield which is of course, Furze field!
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Lovely Clare, thank you. I’m pretty sure your wading friend is a redshank – even though his legs are hidden, the red-black beak is distinctive. 😀
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Thank you so much Liz. I must try to remember these things! Stupidly, I typed redshank at first and then deleted it as I doubted myself.
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don’t beat yourself up – I’ve had many an ‘is it or isn’t it’ moment on the most basic of birds!!
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Good post. I venture there from the wilds of Norfolk about once every 2 years. Norwich Woodcraft Folk had permission to camp on the Heath years ago with a long walk to fetch water. It’s a beautiful landscape.
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Thank you, Paul. My goodness, that must have been a long walk. I suppose there must have been water in the village or at the coastguards’ cottages.
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Lovely post, Clare. It is certainly a wonderful bit of coast. The bird, I am pretty sure, and as others suggest, is a redshank.
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Thank you, Laurence. Thank you for the ID too. I typed redshank into my post as a possibility but then doubted myself and erased it. Very foolish!
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A lovely day, I really like the beach pictures!
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Thank you very much, Andrew.
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A fine tour, Clare. I’d never heard of Scurvygrass.
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Thank you, Derrick. Once you know it’s there you can’t help but see the white scurvygrass flowers in May at the side of all the roads that have been salted during the winter.
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A moody day, in terms of weather, but it made for great photos–I love a wild sea! Your background info on the plants is fascinating!
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Thank you very much, Kerry! I love a wild sea to look at too. I wouldn’t want to be in it though!
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Thanks for the stories behind the plants-very interesting!
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Thank you very much, Karen.
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A very beautiful place. I, too, enjoyed the story behind the plants. I’m grateful that I am able to eat plenty of fruit and vegetables so that scurvy isn’t a problem. A timely reminder that the good old days had plenty of problems.
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Thank you, Laurie. Scurvy was certainly very unpleasant. I am thankful for all the medical benefits and nutritional knowledge we have these days.
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The marshes are truly a birds’ paradise, one of the refuges we must strive to preserve. Great post!
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Thank you very much, Peter. Yes, these reserves are so important.
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A lovely contrast to your April post Clare – countryside and wild sea 🙂 It looks like a wonderful windy walk. You’ve shared some fascinating facts about the plants you saw along the way too!
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Thank you, Andrea. It certainly was very windy indeed!
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I love the shots of the seashore. One of the first things I’m going to do when I retire is visit ours.
I’d love to explore the marsh as well. You have so many plants I’ve never heard of and even the ones I have heard of have uses I wasn’t aware of, like the gorse. It’s a very pretty plant but I doubt I’d ever think of putting my laundry on it!
My favorite photo is of the Buck’s-horn Plantain. Its repeated leaf patterns are a perfect fit among the randomness of the stones.
I hope you all had plenty of fun!
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Thank you, Allen. Haha! I wouldn’t put my washing on gorse either, though if I had lived a few hundred years ago, wore thick woollen clothes and lived in a very windy place I might have considered it!
I love the buck’s-horn plantain leaves too.
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I wonder if their clothes smelled like coconut!
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There’s a thought! How pleasant!
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I thought so!
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Very atmospheric pictures of the beach and a grand tour of the nature reserve. Thank you very much.
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My pleasure and thank you very much, Tom.
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Desolate and atmospheric are words used above to describe the beach that day – I agree. Lonely-looking! A honey and ginger cake sounds delightful, though – I would have snapped it up right away. 🙂 Love that gorse!!
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Thank you so much, Lisa. Gorse is so bright and cheerful and flowers all year round! It’s not so good if you fall in it, though!
It was only the second time I had baked the honey and ginger cake. The first time it turned out looking just like the photo in the recipe book; not a cake that rose well because of the stem ginger and honey, so I expected it to do the same this time. I put it in my top oven which isn’t large and I often get good results from cakes in it. However, this time the cake rose and rose and hit the light at the top of the oven. I took the cake out as soon as I realised this and it looked ruined because the top was broken. However, I evened off the top and made some butter icing with a teaspoon of ground ginger mixed in it. It turned out looking good and I got to eat all the bits I cut off!
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Excellent that you were so quick-thinking, Clare. Funny about the rising. I’ve noticed many recipes from your part of the world use self-rising flour, so it can’t be that you accidentally put in too much baking powder.
Still, you got to sample some, so it was a good sort of surprise.
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Thanks Lisa. The first time I baked the cake was in my old oven and I think the new oven has better door seals which might have made a difference. I’m hoping I didn’t put the wrong amount of anything in but I usually double check everything before mixing a cake, but who knows!? I’ll have to make it again and see what happens. Here’s the recipe in case you’d like to try it.
8 oz plain flour
1 teaspoon ground ginger
4 oz butter/margarine
2 oz caster sugar (very fine granulated
sugar)
4 oz stem ginger, chopped (I buy a jar of preserved ginger in syrup and drain the syrup off)
1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1/4 pint of milk
2 oz clear honey
1 egg, beaten
Line the base of a 6″ cake tin.
Preheat oven at 170 C/325 F/Gas Mark 3
Sift flour and ground ginger into a mixing bowl.
Cut the fat into the flour and rub in to a breadcrumb consistency.
Mix in the sugar and stem ginger.
Dissolve the bicarb. of soda in half the milk and stir into the honey.
Make a well in the dry ingredients and stir in the milk mixture and beaten egg.
Mix to a soft dropping consistency adding more milk as required.
Turn mixture into the prepared tin and bake in the centre of the preheated moderate oven for about 1 hour, until set and golden.
Allow to shrink slightly, remove from the tin and cool on a wire tray.
Let me know how you get on! 🙂
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There is something wonderful about a windswept beach and the weather that is poised to turn rainy. It’s an atmosphere of anticipation. I love that such places always hide their beauty in the small details.
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Oh, Ste J! What a wonderful comment! I would read a novel that began just like that!
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Duly noted!
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I enjoyed your post as always Claire, I was interested to read about the Scurvygrass, as I have read Captain James Cook tried out eucalyptus tree oil in Australia in an attempt to help prevent scurvy for his crew.. it must have been a dreadful time for sailors..
The image of washing hanging out to dry in grouse bushes makes me think of my Scottish grandmother …(sadly she died before I was born) I only have one photo of her standing on the side of a mountain holding some a small bunch of heather her hand…somehow I can imagine her hanging her washing out on grouse… needs must..
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Thank you very much, Gerrie. Captain Cook really tried hard to help his crew by handing out oranges and lemons but when the fruit ran out the symptoms returned.
It’s sad that you never knew your grandmother but how lucky you have that one photograph. As for using gorse to hang your washing out on well, as you say – needs must…
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I really like your photos🙂💕
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Thank you very much, Anita!
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Thank you for sharing your walk Clare. Those photos of the sea off your fine Suffolk coast on a windy day are great.
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Thank you very much, Richard.
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Clare, thanks for the recipe! I haven’t been baking during these hot weeks; we’ve been having ice cream for desserts, but I will gladly make this when the weather turns. (I see I was wrong about the self-rising)
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Another lovely visit with you Clare, thank you. ❤ I love the 'pip' of the sandpipers. ❤ Hugs for you all. ❤ xx ❤
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Thank you very much, Jane ❤ I love the different calls of waders but I'm hopeless at identifying them! Hugs from us to you, my friend xxXXxx
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Lovely photos! (And what a sweet boat. I hope someone claims it.) I know about scurvy but had never heard of scurvy grass. I thought that when scurvy was discovered sailors on landing were fed limes (hence ‘limey’).
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Yes, oranges, lemons, limes and eventually scurvygrass, once botanists had discovered its properties. Thanks very much, Val.
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Clare, I loved your stories behind all the plants as well as your wonderful and atmospheric photos.
Greetings from the bautiful Rhine-Highlands / Germany
Rosie
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You are so kind, Rosie; thank you very much.
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🙂
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So much to see on a trip like this. Even though it’s far away from where I live in the U.S., there’s a universal feeling of peace being by the water!
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Thank you very much, Barbara. We often visit at times of stress and it works wonders!
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I’m sure it does 🙂
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🙂
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Thank you for sharing this! I’ve never been to Suffolk, so it’s a joy to see the beaches and surrounding area.
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Thank you very much for visiting and taking the time to comment.
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Clare, a delightful post of a place I’ve yet to visit! The marshes and beach are both so very different landscapes yet the drama of the sky contains them both! An interesting and invigorating day out for you all – I hope you had baked an extra cake for your return. The honey and ginger cake sounds delicious! 😀
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Thank you, Annika! Sadly I didn’t bake an extra cake. I find any kind of cooking very stressful so the less I do the better I feel.
Both Richard and I have been abstaining from cake and other comfort foods for 18 months now. He has successfully lost about 3 stone in weight and I have lost 6 lbs! Totally unfair!
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What interesting facts about so many of the plants you found. We stand to lose so much natural knowledge so thanks for sharing.
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My pleasure and thank you.
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Great photos, and a really interesting post. Any post that includes the word mucilage isa winner in my eyes. Talking of eyes, that ladybird took some spotting. Just realised I may have made a pun there – Derrick is rubbing off on me.
Next year I will be saying things like “Of course, the salt does encourage scurveygrass…”
🙂
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Thank you, Simon. I like the pun, unintentional or otherwise. I will have to look out for the Derrick effect in your future posts and comments. I didn’t see the ladybird until I enlarged the photo to ID the scurvygrass.
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It took me a while even though I knew it was there.
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🙂
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Love all the photos!
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Thank you very much!
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You’re welcome 😇
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🙂
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Such beautiful words and pictures, Clare. The boat made me want to jump in!
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Thank you very much, Donna. It’s still there and is very inviting!
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lovely pics. The honey and ginger cake sounds great. 😀
I couldn’t begin to name the plants when I visit places. I need to build my knowledge base in this area.
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Thank you very much, Kevin. Noticing and appreciating the wealth of different plants in areas like this is what is really important.
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Such lovely photos and wow such a beautiful and quiet area. I can’t believe there was just a tail of a dogfish in that boat! I had no idea about all the different plants and their past uses, especially the scurvygrass, but it’s amazing how much of the nature around us can be medicinal. it seems we’ve lost a lot of knowlendge of this over more recent years.
I hope you won’t mind if I save/steal the recipe to your cake to try at a later date? I’m always looking for different cake recipes, cake is probably my favourite treat to have 🙂 🙂
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Thank you so much, Cat! Do let me know about the cake 🙂 🙂
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Beautiful photographs, lovely Clare, especially the photo of the red boat. It reminds me of holidays and vacations. Thank you. ❤ ❤
Greetings from the beautiful Rhine-Highlands / Germany…
Rosie
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Thank you so much for your kind comment, Rosie. ❤ ❤
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🙂
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You live in a lovely area Clare. I hope the weather stays mild for you.
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Thank you, Charlotte. I love it here and it is still quite mild, fortunately. We have had a lot of rain recently and today driving was very difficult in the floods. I hope you are well.
Best wishes, Clare xo
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Ok dear floods, I hate driving in flooding because I’ve a very small car 🚗. I’ve done quite a lot of mileage this year, I’m well thanks Clare.
Best wishes Charlotte
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🙂
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Thanks for sharing dear, beautiful.
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Thank you very much, Laleh!
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My pleasure.❤️
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