Monday, 30 April 2012

To do list update

With our plans starting to come together I thought I should review our "to do" list.  We've made some progress but also added extras.

Buy a cheaper house - done
Sorting and packing up belongings for garage sale - done
Apply for Elly's Finnish passport- done
Sell our house - almost done!
Arrange insurance for stored belongings - hmm... better do this one now
Move to new house - remove from list
Open a UK bank account - in progress
Send remaining chickens to their new home
Cancel private health insurance
Arrange for our mail to be dealt with at home
Arrange for mail in the UK
Book airfares
Ship belongings to UK
Rent out our house - in progress
Arrange for someone to have the pot plants
Pack up remainder of our belongings and store
Sell Elly’s car (Mick's truck to be left at workshop)
Book hire car in UK
Transfer money to UK account
Work out what to do with our mobile phone numbers
Buy a caravan for temporary home
Set up bathroom for temporary home
Correspondence to arrive by email rather than post where possible - in progress

Sunday, 29 April 2012

Pick of the week - Hydeaway


Looking at boats is feeling a bit more real to us now.  We're not quite there yet but by the end of this week we're hoping to have it wrapped up.  If the exchange rate stays close to what it is now, we'd have a budget for our boat of about £55,000.

This one is from Braunston Marina : nb Hydeaway.   It has a very thick base plate!  The rear area where the engine is looks to be a great storage area - we're hoping to have somewhere to store a folding bicycle.  We like the colour scheme too.  We'd need to find somewhere for a washing machine and to turn the bed into a cross bed but other than that it ticks all our boxes.

Price : £59,950
57 ft All Steel Trad-Style Narrowboat
Year : 2004
Hull by Hudson
Fit-out by Hudson

Hull: Original thicknesses 15/6 mm. Typically attractive Hudson hull with thick bottom plate, long swims, false rivets detailing & long foredeck. 3-coat blacking 2009. Glazed cratch with fold-down decorated table/shutter & fitted cover. Stirrup step, pigeon box, brass mushroom vents & equipment rack. Starboard side-doors. Brass portholes (venting aft). Brass tunnel lamp on foredeck mast. 124 gal approx. s/steel water tank. 40 gal fuel tank. Livery: green roof, cream sides, green panels, red lines. Traditionally decorated aft, forward & side doors.

Fit out: Quality fit-out. Headroom c. 6ft 3ins (min). Light oak veneered ply panels with matching or mahogany trim. Solid timber fitted furniture. Brown fitted carpet throughout except for tile-effect vinyl in galley. Beige curtains.

Berths: Four. Fixed double bed in own room aft. Conversion double in dinette.

Engine room & electrics: Beta 43 4-cyl 43HP diesel + PRM150D2 gearbox. Calorifier. 70A & 40A alternators. 1500VA/65A inverter/3-step charger. Advanced alternator regulator. 240V shore connection. Aquafax 8HP electric bowthruster. 

Batteries: 1 starter, 3 domestic, 2 bow-thruster. Mikuni diesel-fired heating unit.

Bedroom: Fixed ‘4-poster’ style double bed, storage under, o/h cupboard & adjustable reading lights. Double wardrobe, cupboard over. Small dressing unit, cupboard under, wall mirror, cupboard over. Radiator shelf. Gangway door.

Toilet: Side cabin. Part tiled in white ceramic + decorative slips. Fully tiled & curtained shower enclosure. Dometic gravity pump-out toilet. Large white ceramic basin on cupboard. 2 airing cupboards. Wall cupboard. Mirror. Radiator.

Galley: ‘U’-shaped. Dark grey granite-effect laminate worktop + small brick-effect slips to splashback. Large white acrylic sink & drainer, double cupboard with cutlery drawer under. Vanette GG7000 fitted gas oven & grill, separate 4-burner hob. 12V fridge. Double wall-cupboard. Suspended double-fronted glazed cupboard. Decorated side doors + acrylic insert, shallow cupboard under.

Dinette: Raised ‘Pullman’ upholstered 4-seater dinette, storage under, veneered timber table, converting to double bed.

Saloon: Morso solid-fuel stove in tiled surround + brass scuttle & tools. Fitted corner TV cupboard + radio/CD & fitted speakers, power & aerial sockets. Glazed book case. Low-level open shelves. Overhead corner cupboard. Adjustable wall spotlights. Iron log-basket. 2 cream leather revolving armchairs. Solid bulkheads & decorated doors to covered well-deck with side lockers & fold-down decorated table.

Other equipment: Diesel-fired central heating to 3 radiators. 2 x 13kg gas bottles. Deck & mooring equipment. 3 fire extinguishers & blanket. Water hose. 













Saturday, 28 April 2012

Chestnut soup


I found a recipe on the internet for chestnut soup and made a small batch tonight - my own adaption.  It's really good!  The reason I only cooked a small amount was because peeling them was such a nuisance.  Even with the help of a neighbour, my fingers were sore.  I wonder if there is an easier way?  Mind you, I didn't see the bit in the recipe that said to pour 1/4 cup of water on the tray before baking the chestnuts so I just roasted them dry like I usually do.  I wonder if it makes the peeling easier.  I might have to try that.  I also didn't have anything to put the cloves/bay leaf in so I just added them to the pot and picked them out before blending the soup.


So here is my version.


Ingredients
  • 1 litre chicken stock
  • 1 cereal bowl of roasted, peeled chestnuts
  • ½ a chopped onion
  • 2 sprigs fresh parsley
  • 2 whole cloves
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1/4 cup light cream
  • salt and pepper to taste
Directions
  1. To Cook Chestnuts: With a sharp knife, slice an 'X' across each chestnut. Place chestnuts in a single layer on a  tray. Pour 1/4 cup water into the pan. Bake in a preheated 450 degrees F (230 degrees C) oven for 10 minutes. When cool enough to handle, shell and peel.
  2. In a saucepan combine the chicken stock, shelled chestnuts and onion. Place the parsley, cloves and bay leaf in a spice bag and add to the saucepan. Simmer over low heat for 45 minutes.
  3. Discard the spice bag and puree the chestnut mixture in a food processor or blender. Add the cream, and salt and pepper to taste. Return mixture to saucepan and gently heat through.  

Friday, 27 April 2012

So close we can almost taste it...

We've spent the week negotiating with a potential buyer for our house and today... finally... they've agreed to our bottom line.  No contract signed yet but it's agreed in principle.  I think we're a bit shell shocked!

Thursday, 26 April 2012

General update - April 2012

1. We're still waiting

2. Up the street - the shower screen being measured up today, carpet going in tomorrow.  The curtains and blinds will go up on the weekend.  We even have a potential tenant.

3. Quilts - I've made fantastic progress on my Hexagon Star and look forward to our sewing group today to show them my hard work.  I also got a a rev up from Rachel in our sewing group (when she came to measure up the for the carpet up the street).  I have a smaller hexagon quilt that I've stitching with hexagons I made in 1999/2000 when I wasn't well.  They were the first hand sewing I'd done and it was almost finished when I made a start on the Hexagon Star.  Big mistake.  I haven't done anything on it for 2 years and Rachel gave me a bit of a challenge to finish the quilt top by our next sewing group.  It's done! 

4. Our garden is a bit confused.  The weather has been quite warm for this time of year - until a couple of days ago, anyway.  A couple of plants that are spring flowering have had a few flowers on!  One of the plum trees outside our fence had some blossoms on it and the other day at a friend's place she had some flowers on a Banksia Rose.  The vegie garden's doing well though.

5. We're still waiting

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Anzac Day - Lest we Forget

A day to remember the Anzacs landing at Gallipoli, this year being the 97th anniversary. There are dawn services held all over the country - from crowds of 40,000 in the cities to 100 people at our local service.  It got us wondering whether there was somewhere in the UK where Aussies and Kiwis could attend a service. 

I found this website : Anzac day london

And a list of services all over the UK and Ireland : Commonwealth Forces WW2

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Chestnuts

Up the road we have three huge chestnut trees.  I couldn't believe it when I went up there the other day - the ground beneath them is a carpet of prickly chestnut cases.  I spent an hour sifting through them collecting the decent sized nuts and came home with a bag weighing nearly 6 kilos!

I've been sharing them round to neighbours and friends and toasting a handful in our Rayburn stove each night.  One of the girls at sewing last night said her aunt used to make chestnut soup when she was young so I'm on a mission to find a good recipe and give it a try.  Suggestions for other chestnut recipes are most welcome!


Monday, 23 April 2012

A bank account in the UK

After reading of Paul's problems with trying to open a bank account (click here), I made it my mission today to find a way for us to open an account before we go.

I spent an awful long time on the phone but finally have a resolution.  HSBC will open an account for us now.  We'll have an account in Australia with HSBC and an account in the UK with HSBC.  There is an initial fee of $200 for them to process the application but no ongoing account keeping fees.

The UK account comes with a Visa debit card and a cheque book if you want, but there is a minimum monthly deposit requirement of £500.  If you don't maintain the minimum deposits the account could be downgraded to a basic account which it seems doesn't have the cheque book facility and the card provided is a basic ATM card. 

We will wait until our house is sold before we open the account, but at least we know it will work out.

Sunday, 22 April 2012

The agony of waiting

We can't think of much else at the moment except whether we'll have a buyer soon. We have had two very interested parties in the house over the last two weeks but no offer.  The waiting is wearing us down!

Meanwhile we have other positive things happening.  We borrowed the money necessary to finish the other house so it can be rented out.  The carpet goes in on Friday and the other remaining jobs are in progress.  We had a knock on the door by our neighbour the other day - she thinks she may have found us a tenant!  That would be a real bonus.  She said she'd send the people up to see us so we can show them the house.  They've just sold theirs and want to rent for a couple of years.  Once their 3 day cooling off period expires they'll start looking for somewhere to live.  That means this week.

Another bonus is that the neighbour over the road with the barking dogs moved out on the weekend.  We're so glad.


Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Pick of the week - Quality Time

This one! This one!  We really like this boat.  We'd look no further.  It would be at the very extreme top of our budget, if we could knock the price down a little.  We've really started to think we'd prefer a second cabin like this boat has.  We'd convert it into an office but still keep it as somewhere for a guest too.

From ABNB Brokerage is nb Quality Time.  (not sure we really like the name).


Price: £62,000
Length: 57ft 0in
Builder: Piper Boats
Fitter-out: Piper Boats
Style: Trad
Year registered: 2008
Certification: BSS to 2016
Engine: Beta Marine B-43KC diesel
Bow thruster: Vetus 12V 55kgf 4hp
Plating: 10/6/4
Last out of water: October 2010
Water tank: 100 gallons built-in
Headroom: 6ft 6in
Fit-out materials: Maple panels with ash trim
Insulation: Spray foam
Berths: 3
Berth sizes: 6ft 6in x 4ft 2in perm double, 6ft 5in x 2ft 0in perm single
Fridge: Shoreline 12V 4cu ft
Washer/dryer: Candy Aquamatic washing machine
WC: Tecma electric flush wc to remote tank
Shower: in cubicle with door
Cooker: Spinflo Caprice free-standing gas cooker
Water heating: C/heating + engine + 230V immersion heater > calorifier
Cabin heating: Webasto diesel c/heating > rads, diesel stove
Mains 230V: Landline + 2500W inverter
Other: Corian worktops, breakfast bar. Forward cratch and cover. Rear taff seats for steerer.
Location: Trent & Mersey Canal, Staffs