Sunday 30 April 2017

The Celtic Festival of Beltane



                                           
 
Around this time of year our variegated weigela puts on a magnificent show. I take some time out from gardening to pose beside this pretty pink, floral fountain with doggie.
  









Beltane is, above all, related to things agricultural: here neighbor Ioannis negotiates some pretty impressive slalom manoeuvres   with the tractor   to avoid our stacks of garden garbage and the trees in our olive grove.
Z and I are busy planting our vegetables: tomatoes, peppers, cucumber, aubergines, melons and watermelons – we’re being adventurous this year. Leondaris is getting a bit bored with being tied up as the workers proceed. 
                      
 









Being the Celtic pastoral festival, associated with fertility, we are sure that planting on the Eve of Beltane should provide us with a good harvest – as will the fortuitous rain showers we’ve had since the planting.We won’t be building bonfires, but tomorrow we will light the charcoal for a get-together grill with friends and neighbours. 

 Have a happy May Day and a real belter of a Beltane !          

Thursday 27 April 2017

Greek Easter Indulgence and Glorious Glasgow for the IATEFL Convention



Easter celebrations were marvellous this year thanks to the weather which held off the chills and winds till a little later, to Ioannis for his impeccably dressed and roasted lamb and to Anna for inviting us to their family table. Here are the lads handling the tricky business of decanting the meat from the spit.
                                            

We even have space for cherry cheese-cake and strawberry pavlova - my home-made contributions.
                       










I did say previously that we were heading for Glasgow and it was to be Angeliki’s first trip to Scotland. We began our trip by taking a stroll along the banks of the wonderful River Clyde, basking in the mellow, evening sunlight. And Glasgow welcomed Angeliki not only with a smile but with a skirl of the pipes and, of course, a be-kilted piper! We’d risen early that day so we were delighted to secure an early table at the Two Fat Ladies at the Buttery. No comments, thank you!
         







 

It really was a treat: with its olde worlde charm, vintage crockery display, silver fighting cocks on each table (no, me neither!) young table-attendants, mostly European university students, resplendent in tartan, offering impeccable service. I had succulent scallops, while Angeliki enjoyed king prawns – you can just see her delight!        
 On Monday we began the conference and attended some very interesting talks. In the evening we had the official reception - meeting appropriately in the Argyll Suite of the Crowne Plaza Hotel – just could not miss out on a photo op!  Here you see the Tartan Epsilon – in formal clobber – meeting Bailie Cameron of Glasgow City Council, wearing her chain of office as she officially opened our conference with a very entertaining speech. I remarked to her that we Macphails are a sept of the Clan Cameron and we were both able to validate our clan membership by each demonstrating her crooked nose: cam-shron in Gaelic, where the clan name comes from! I’m happy to say we helped arrange for her to meet our Patron, Professor David Crystal and show him round the impressive Glasgow City Chambers.
                          










Then it was time for our much-looked-forward-to ceilidh, with music from the talented Stravaig Ceilidh Band. Here are Carol, fellow Scot-Thessalonian, and I leading an Italian lady through a Dashing White Sergeant – lotsafun! The band was brilliant and … should not be judged on the quality of dance their music generated but our global audience executed the moves admirably!
                     








But all that jigging was drouthy work and so off we went, accompanied by Roy Cross and British Council colleagues from Italy and Tunisia, to the award-winning restaurant, Ubiquitous Chip.  Here we are impatiently waiting for our dishes to arrive.
                            
                            
 









I had eaten here years ago and can still remember the delicious venison I had. So, no guesses what I was going to order this time around – and I was not disappointed in any way and have recorded its succulence below, nesting in roast beetroot, mushroom and potato, with the most amazing sauce.  Roy’s starter cannot go without mention either: swathed in its whisky sauce, the haggis looked for all the world like a wee Christmas pudding served with mashed tattie that was shaped like a raw one, topped with a carrot … thingy….. that for me resembled a Yemeni jambiya.
                                         








Certainly if you’re on a diet or an economy drive, this is not for you – but as a rare treat it is highly recommended.    And Glasgow was to hold many more treats for us but they have to go on hold for now. My suitcase is being aired: I’m off for an assessment in the Middle East – can you guess where?