Archive for June, 2007

Patch work

Saturday, June 23rd, 2007

Beetroot plants
Soon for the salads

We finally planted out the vegetable patch today, at the house. It’s surprising how full it is already, with our broccoli, pepper and sprout plants. Languishing in the greenhouse and on the patio since they were tiny seeds, I should imagine that they will breathe a little easier now, not being confined to pots, and having proper drainage.

To compliment this season’s vegetable selection and to make the table a veritable feast of self-sufficiency, we also popped in some carrot and leek seeds, as well as some lettuce, to provide a good companion to the fast-ripening tomatoes.

Not being a keen gardener in years gone by, it was three thoroughly enjoyable, and well spent hours. It wasn’t only enjoyable, but also very fulfilling, too, as we’d grown the plants ourselves, from virtually nothing a few weeks ago.

Something for the weekend, sir?

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Something for the weekend, sir?

Look what’s sitting on my driveway. It’s only just turned up.

Only it’s not just for the weekend. We’re off to the Pennines for a week of scenic exploring, rest, and relaxation. So, our bags are packed, the herbs have new waterers for the next few days, and a very long road trip beckons on Monday.

It will be nice to get away from things, as both of us haven’t had a proper break since the turn of the year.

So, blog updates could well be sporadic, or not even at all.

I’m looking forward to a full nine days of fun and mooching. I’ll report back on the GTI another time.

Herbs go bananas

Wednesday, June 20th, 2007

It’s all go for the indoor herb garden. Three new arrivals from the Chelmsford horticultural happenings have even been welcomed, in the shape of two tomato plants and one baby lavender sprig. I can’t see much change in those since they arrived just over two weeks ago, but for the rest of the herbs, it’s certainly a case of onwards and upwards.

The basil has undoubtedly been the biggest success. Now at least 12 inches tall, the plants still try to escape through the kitchen window, straining to get to the sun. The chives are equally as tall, with their wispy and withery fingers still reaching for the sky. A few of the lower leaves have died, most likely due to lack of water or overcrowding, but otherwise, they are very green and seem to be enjoying life on the window sill.

Even the coriander has perked up, although I should have planted more. There is enough to make a handful of meals, but then the pots will be empty. They will need harvesting soon though, as the edges of the leaves are turning a deep red or brown. I’ve been told that coriander is one of the hardest herbs to keep, so I’ve done quite well. Once it’s been cut, it will be interesting to see if it regrows.

Harvest time will come soon, for the basil and chives, too, and I’ve been looking at ways to store all the crops I have. I’m not going to be able to use all of the cut plants at once, so I need to find ways of keeping them fresh to cook with in the future. They can be dried, which involves hanging the cut stems in pierced paper bags in a dark place for quite a few weeks, while others can be placed in ice cube trays or other trays placed in the freezer, once water has been poured onto them, to encase them in ice.

We’re going away next week, so I’ve got to find another keen grower to water and look after them for me, which could be easier said than done. I hope they’ll be okay - I’ll be keeping my green fingers crossed.

Go-faster Golfs

Sunday, June 17th, 2007

VW Golf TSI racer, GTI International 2007

It’s been a week of cars. Thursday saw me at Canary Wharf for the Motorexpo, while today saw us at Bruntingthorpe Proving Ground for GTI International.

Celebrating its 20th year in 2007, the UK’s longest-running event for performance Volkswagens has become a bit of a yearly club thing for us over the last 11 years or so. Usually praising the virtues of VW’s one-time smallest car at the show, this year we decided not to have a club stand, while some even ducked out of the event altogether.

Which, for many reasons, was what I was going to do, until the invititation arrived from the lovely people in the Volkswagen UK Press Office. The promise of good food, welcoming hospitality, and the chance to blast two hot Golfs down the quarter-mile sprint track proved too much to resist.

Arriving later than in previous years enabled us to set our own pace, and once inside the gates and past the austere retired Cold War aircraft fleet, we were waved through to the control tower. Here, the VW press team had set up camp for the day, to entertain the troops from the tribe journo.

It really was an enjoyable afternoon, and we were treated very well, ferried from the press area to the trackside vistas by luxurious and leather-trimmed Caravelles.

Once again, cars of many colours were the order of the day, the organisers expecting around 10,000 hot VWs (and 20,000 VW fans), to have driven and walked over the now-pitted runways by the time the gates closed at the end of the weekend. Originally an event for Golf GTIs, these days all manner of souped-up Polos and other water-cooled Volkswagens turn up, with handfuls of Audis and SEATS sprinkled in for good measure.

VW had pulled out all the stops to get the new super-Golf concept GTI W12-650 over to these shores, too, especially for the event. Though not looking quite as breathtaking as it does in the official publicity photos, it was still an impressive sight, and could have lifted its petticoats to more than show the other very powerful and homegrown super-Golfs a very clean (and distant) pair of exhaust pipes.

My blasts down the drag strip were exciting, but over in a flash, and certainly got the adrenaline flowing. A pair of Golfs - GTI Edition 30 and R32 - had been chosen to set 0 to 60mph times in, and they were both very different.

The more powerful R32 fed in the acceleration instantly, turning the lines of spectators (and everything else) into a coloured blur, while the Edition 30 seemed to suffer from turbo lag, feeding in the power suddenly with an almighty surge. The effect was the same, though, but I’m sure my fluffing of the clever DSG flappy-paddle gearbox did my time no favours.

But, as a spot of Sunday mid-afternoon excitement, it was hard to beat.

And despite lots of shiny new cars, even as we joined the queue for the two-hour trip home, my old Polo didn’t feel so bad. Yes, it might not be the rudest of health at the moment (that’s a whole other blog post), but it did the job admirably enough and ferried us home safe and sound.

Meanwhile, yesterday was spent mooching and movie watching. And, even the Bond film of choice began with an M. Moonraker blasted us into space for two hours of nonsense, and continued my education of all things British secret agent.

Mr Bond wouldn’t have looked out of place hiding from villains among the aircraft at Bruntingthorpe, and could probably have even rustled up a gadget to find us more time to go and look at the Harriers, Jaguars, and Vulcans.

Mooching, movies, and motion: a weekend of Ms. And, if you include the line of cars leaving the show, one of queues, too.

Tyre test, GTI International 2007

Multicoloured Motorexpo

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

Audi S3, Motorexpo, London, 14 June 2007
Audi S3, Motorexpo, London

Traditional motor shows are usually vast halls of shiny new cars, all jostling for your attention. Manufacturers pull all sorts of tricks to divert your gaze away from their competitors’ concepts and unveilings, in order to get you to feast your eyes on their latest models.

Not at London’s Motorexpo, they don’t.

First held 11 years ago, ‘the world’s best free-to-visit motor show’ has grown from 29 cars on show by six local dealers in 1996, to over 250 models shown by over 40 manufacturers for 2007.

And, all the cars on display aren’t in huge, square, characterless buildings.

That’s the Motorexpo difference: not only is all the shiny new metal outside, but it has stunning architecture as a backdrop. The shiny green-tinted glass of Canary Wharf provides the perfect foil for the colourful and shiny cars, and enables the public to get a close look at the objects of their dreams and desires, in a perfectly complemented space.

Renaultsport Clio R27, Motorexpo, London
Renaultsport Clio 197 F1 Team R27, Motorexpo, London

The Canary Wharf estate in Docklands is transformed - quite literally - into a giant showroom for the latest models, where hot hatchbacks rub shoulders with supercars, and where prestigious marques park proudly in the base of the One Canada Square tower itself.

Most of the best motor shows are confusing, expensive, and tiring. But, as Motorexpo is well laid out, free, and not overcrowded, it’s always enjoyable. Provided it’s not raining of course.

So, armed with the Canon, I took the DLR to Docklands after work tonight, for a free fix of the latest offerings from makes such as Audi, Renault, Maserati, and Volvo.

Surprisingly, a myriad of colours awaited me.

BMW 1 Series, Motorexpo, London, 14 June 2007
BMW 1 Series, Motorexpo, London

Yellow Renaults assaulted the senses almost as much as the bright orange and blue Audis, while red-hued Mazdas and Vauxhalls joined sides to fight against bronze Land Rovers. It was almost too much colour.

BMWs and Jaguars kept the sombre-suited flags flying, though, playing to their upmarket strengths.

Among the cars I had wanted to see was the Audi R8 supercar, one of many cars having its UK debut at the event. But, the super hot Renaultsport Clio 197 F1 Team R27 proved an equally exciting prospect, as did the newly-hatched Volvo C30.

Mazda 3 MPS, Motorexpo, London, 14 June 2007
Mazda 3 MPS, Motorexpo, London

If the photos look a little unusual, it’s because I set myself a project of taking the shots of the cars juxtapositioned against the buildings around which they were displayed. Shiny, shiny glass meet shiny, shiny metal, if you like.

It was an enjoyable two hours or so, and with Canary Wharf host to over 200 bars, restaurants, and shops, Motorexpo has the catering and nightlife thing sorted, too.

The organisers are hoping for even bigger things next year, and on the strength of this year’s event, I think they’ve every right to succeed. This was the third such event I had attended, and if all the ingredients stay the same, I’ll definitely be back for another taste.

Land Rover Freelander 2, Motorexpo, London, 14 June 2007
Land Rover Freelander 2, Motorexpo, London