Today had a “school day” feeling as I woke
early and felt I ought to get up. This
is rather counter to the ideology of a Sunday, but I went with the urge and
made myself a cup of tea.
The weather is still cloudy but with
increasingly bright intervals. Daunting
enough weather to discourage anyone other than myself from using the pool. Fir the whole of my swim I had the pool to
myself.
There is something deeply pleasurable in
breaking the mirror surface of a swimming pool and then churning the water up. A pleasurable, yet worrying experience. Surely a swimming pool in a seaside resort
should be bustling with swimmers on a reasonable Sunday morning in the summer? I want to have a lane to myself but I don’t
want the place to go bankrupt. Perhaps I
ought to enjoy the place while I have the opportunity!
The newspaper reading via the Kindle after
a swim while accompanied by a cut of tea is going well and I have to remind
myself that there is life outside the swimming pool and café as it is tempting
to while away the time reading and listening to the clack of dominos being
snapped down or the cries of the petanque players decrying or applauding a
shot. The average age was well above
that of statutory education and I should imagine that in the next few months I
am going to be more in the company of the jubilados when the kids are finally
forced back to where they belong – off the streets and in the schools!
The lunchtime drink with Frank was good
and, as he paid it did mean that a further meeting is demanded so that I can
return the favour. We talked for a
couple of hours and I only wish that there was something real that I could do
to make his situation better – but I fear it will take an upturn in the Spanish
economy before that happens.
And from my reading of what is going on in
the country at the moment that “upturn” look very unlikely. It would appear that our politicians are
playing around with nomenclature so that the desperate situation of Spanish
banks does not look Greek-like. But it
is, and I think that we are not far off a full-scale bale out.
The Euro drifts (on a good day) steadily
downwards and is now trading at 77p, getting nearer and nearer to what it was
when I first came to the country. As I
will, in future be dependant on my UK pension this is goodish news for the time
being as I will be able to buy more for my money than I could. What is more worrying is what might happen to
the money that I have in Spain if the situation gets so bad that the government
decides the time has come to revert to the peseta.
God help.
Monday saw the rest of my Retirement Lucky
Bag (eventually) arrive. The camera (for
who is so devoid of finer feeling that they do not need another camera) demands
a considerable amount of time to get to know.
I have used the new printer to produce a version of the entire
manual. It not only explains how to use
the camera, it also gives an idiots’ guide to basic camera work. No harm in starting from the beginning! As this is supposedly a “smart” camera there
is far more set up work to be done than is normal with a camera and I have only
scratched at the surface of that work – and of course, failed miserably to get
the bloody thing to do anything more than take pictures.
Which is not enough for a camera nowadays!
I have to admit that the limited use that I
have made of the camera does encourage me to believe that this machine comes
ever nearer to what I am looking for in a camera. But this is only day one. If nothing more comes of the “smart” elements
then I may well become a little more disillusioned!
The other elements in the Lucky Bag are not
as complex or demanding as the camera and will be enjoyed in the coming days.
And you never know, I might actually start
of some of my remaining tasks for the summer.