Stepping up and breaking down…

IMG_0262_2Following three years loyal service to the Valley PTA, our dear chair, Mrs Marcou, otherwise known as “That Loon” or, more affectionately, “The Kent Arm” and “Queen of Support Vests in Small Rooms”, has decided to step down in order to have a life. This I whole heartedly understand, she has put in long hours, often drafting programs and newsletters at 2 am, whilst juggling her family, rental portfolio, three days at work, her other work as an artist and of course also managing to squeeze in running her fabulous Vintage Social events at her home. She is a gem, one in a million.

What I don’t understand is, in what moment of weakness, I managed to volunteer to take on the job. I was definitely sober, so what on earth possessed me to grasp the poisoned chalice and sup deep? If not already certifiable from my bizarre eating habits this should surely be the final tick on my mental health check that brings the men in white coats running in.

I know I have been cursed with an over-developed sense of duty but this really is a step too far even for me. Or is it? I love our school. I have deep respect for its staff, many of whom strive above and beyond the call of duty to deliver our children a quality education. I like the fact that it is socially and economically diverse – I think this makes it a true reflection of the melting pot of modern day society. And, I also believe that the PTA can play a key role in ensuring our kids have the most positive learning experience possible. In my mind the key role of the PTA is not to raise funds, although this too often becomes the key focus, the more important responsibility is to build a community of which our children feel a part.

IMG_0263School is a major part of our children’s life with primary aged children, with their earlier bedtimes, spending a massive part of their waking hours there. I strongly believe that if children feel a sense of belonging to their school and feel that that their parents are also working in partnership with the school they will have a more positive learning experience. Mrs Marcou, with our lovely head Mr Brown has set our school firmly on this path. Maybe it is my mantle to finish what she has started…

Help!

Yoghurt, Berries and Bits…

IMG_1821My kids love breakfast in all its permeations; cereals, porridge, toast on its own, toast with eggs, toasted crumpets, bagels or hot cross buns, they would (almost) kill for a full-english and would definitely bite my arm off for a Mcdonald Sausage and Egg McMuffin.  On our last holiday, on a cruise ship, Rosie got quite partial to fillet steak (served rare) and eggs as a breakfast option! She, and the leading man, would have eaten it every day if mean old mummy hadn’t intervened. Don’t get me wrong, I love a child that eats and my kids, by some lucky break, are excellent, unpicky eaters, but on our new health kick, it is difficult to get the health into kids breakfast whilst ensuring they have eaten enough to survive until lunchtime at school.

The cereals they like are packed with sugar or otherwise require sugar to be added in order for them to consume. Porridge must be served with golden syrup (a rule which I fully concur!). Toast is wholegrain, but butter is a must.  Breakfast is a carb, sugar and fat loaded nightmare!

The Leading Man and I are now gung ho on green protein smoothies (recipes to follow) but whilst the kids love berries and bananas in a blended form anything else blended, especially if chia seeds and pea protein are added, just doesn’t pass muster. However, before we resign ourselves to Coco pops and Nutella on toast, I have found one breakfast option which ticks all the health boxes and the little perishers, oops, darlings love:

Yoghurt With Berries and Bits 

(Serves 2 adults and 2 children)

IMG_1823IMG_1826

  • 250g fresh berries of your choice
  • 400g fat free natural yoghurt
  • Topping bits of your choosing:
  • Chopped nuts
  • Seeds
  • Dried fruit
  • Granola
  • Muesli
  • Cheerios
  • Agave syrup

Give everyone a bowl and let them tuck in!

Mum on a Mission…

P1010786Confession time. My name is Heather and I am irrationally obsessed that I am going to turn into a porker. Underneath this cool, mummy façade is a manic struggle to eat less and do as much exercise as I can pack into the day (whilst still endeavoring to be the best mummy I can possibly be!).

“My god!” you say. “You must be super skinny, verging on anorexic?” Erm, no.

This is because my obsessive want to be slim side is cruelly countered by a “I love a party so pass me the vino, salty snacks and cheese board and don’t dilly dally whilst you are doing it” side. I’m therefore cursed with constantly starving myself, gorging myself or chastising myself for being weak and letting myself down. I’m a joy to live with I can tell you! It drives the leading man bananas as it turns out (unsurprisingly) that men are not so much about the super skinny and are quite happy with you as you are as long as you are not certifiably insane. Which, following several years of the above, he is beginning to question.

Anyway, the point to these ramblings is that I am going to endeavour to get my ying and yang (whatever they are) in check and try to secure some balance in my life with a new focus on “healthy living” and not just for me, I going to share this joy with all the family. I want to give them the tool kit for happiness so they can be confident, and comfortable, with their health and fitness.

So, it’s going to be reduced sugar, healthy eating and non-ipad based activities for all. It’s going to be like that Large Family children’s book, A Piece of Cake (see next book review). It is going to be… hell?

Talking Dog – by the Leading Man

This is a true story (names have been changed for pure comedy value).

photo-8  In a quiet town on the outskirts of London, just near a 12 hole golf course and some lovely playing fields, lived a dashing chap, (tall, slim and strong) with two dark dogs, Nelson and Boots and 4 other beautiful spoonheads who don’t feature in this tale.

Every morning, just before the sun rose, the man would tickle his dogs from their slumber and off they’d skip to the park. Nelson and Boots were generally good dogs but had 1 BIG WEAKNESS —— RUBBISH !!! ESPECIALLY NELSON !

On this particular day the walk had been nothing unusual and they reached the park, a stone’s throw from the house (if you carried a medium sized catapult –it was ¼ of a mile away) having shared nicely 6 biscuits each – none for the dashing fellow as he was watching his sliminity – when from the left nestling beneath a local hedge shone an angrily orange discarded Sainsbury’s bag full of various bits of decaying fodder!!

Nelson sprang and pounced on his prey with no remorse. Boots, pretty but thick, followed eventually and the air was filled with disgusting sounds of two Labradors chomping manky rubbish – until our hero waded in to rescue the bag. With foresight and cunning, he manfully distracted the beasts with biscuits numbers 7 and 8 and, whilst they looked the other way, and in the absence of a waste bin, tossed the bag over a fence deep into a nettle patch to his right.  Pleased, at having successfully out-smarted his hounds, he moved on smugly to complete the walk which continued uneventfully, and indeed the episode was forgotten until the very next day…

The following morn, just to mix it up, the chap walked the park in reverse and so it was towards the end of the stroll when they reached the spot of yesterdays embarrassment.  Since it was nearing the end, he was in the process of gathering the dogs ready for lead time and perhaps, enjoying the lime light offered by talk of biscuits 9 and 10, had dragged the process out a little too long!! Nelson’s glance caught the bush that had housed the orange bag of delights, he looked up at our hero and our hero laughed.  “You’ve no chance” he smugly informed the dogs. “I’m onto to you – I tossed that bag over the fence into the nettles on the right”.

As he heard the last directional clue to the treasure Nelson looked up, twinkled his eyes, turned on his heels and sped to re-find the lost treasure, with Boots in hot pursuit…  Our gallant hero tried to walk on, upselling his haul of biscuits as the finest in the land in order to regain control of his pack. However, all endeavours failed and, fuming, he had to  simply had to watch from a corner of the park until man’s alleged best friends returned to him, having devoured their disgusting feast, still hopeful of the reward of biscuits 9 and 10.

It was at that moment that our hero realised that through the 7.5 years of their acquaintance Nelson had understood every blooming word !!!!

Do You Want To Build A (Sock) Snowman?

Right, as promised (although a little bit tardy), the step-by-step guide to creating your very own Olaf Snowman courtesy of our lovely Charlotte. Can I also mention at this time that Charlotte is also know as That Crafty Mummy, who can (for a very reasonable fee) organize kids crafts parties for you in the Bromley area! Please let me know if you want contact details and I shall share – our kids all had a fab time making Olaf, an owl out of CD’s and possibly another 50 items that Charlotte had up her sleeve if I hadn’t removed them!

On with the Olaf…

You will need:

  • A man’s sports sock – available at a very reasonable rate from pound shops, sport shops, Primark etc.
  • Hollow Fibre Toy Stuffing – available from craft shops, Amazon etc. This is bought by weight and is very light. DO NOT make the mistake I did of buying 4 kilos and leaving the sack in a room with six children. It looked like a snow storm had occurred internally and needed 3 bin bags to put the stuff back in once it had been uncompressed. 500 grams will easily do several Olafs and not create a storage nightmare.
  • 2 black or brown pipe cleaners
  • 2 googly craft eyes
  • 3 buttons
  • Orange pom pom
  • Black marker pen
  • PVA Glue
  • 4 looms bands

You’ve built a snowman!

Christmas? Woof! Woof!

20140822_103540 PUT ME IN! I say for any holiday that provides so many opportunities for a little black woofer to indulge her love of all things munchable in life.

Now, lets get one thing clear I’m not Welly, and although, when times are hard, of course I will happily get involved with a spot of bin bag rifling (what self-respecting Labrador wouldn’t?) I would far rather sample the finer things in life. But who knew, that all this time, there were tasty morsels waiting to be woofed up everywhere?

Of course I knew about the minty sticks often left for my delectation on the coffee table in the lounge (how thoughtful!). But why oh why hadn’t anybody given me the heads up that a woofer could silence the call of her stomach at anytime she pleases? All the eating opportunities missed, the sheer desolate wasteland of lost chomping chances could make a little woofer most distressed if one was to dwell on it to long. Hang on! Do I smell cheese? Yes, definitely cheese. Cheddar I think and maybe Camembert? Excuse me for a moment….  That’s better – a dog can’t blog on an empty stomach. Now where were we? Oh, yes missed opportunities. Well fear not good canine chums, I made up for those missed munchies over the last couple of weeks!

First spot:

  • Half a loaf of bread and a tub of Anchor Spreadable on the kitchen worktop. Secured, woofed in the garden. Happy days.

Second spot:

  • New tub of Anchor Spreadable left on kitchen table whilst Nana delivering cup of tea in bed to Grandpa. Mine all mine. I was now really getting into the swing of things!

(May I mention at this point that, following the fest of saturated fats, I was a) not sick (the marvels of a Labradors constitution!) and b) had a coat as glossy as a particularly glossy thing on a good glossy day).

Third spot:

  • Homemade quiche brought round by Heather’s friend, Sarah and laid out on kitchen table as part of a party buffet. Head sideways on table and boom! Two slices snaffled whilst party in full flow.

photo-6 Now, admittedly, I was told off fairly thoroughly after this incident and things tightened up on the availability front… until the lovely Triona and her open larder took Welly and I in over New Year which led to:

  •  Half a box a cheese crackers
  • An apple turnover
  • Half a bowl of pasta
  • Candy cane (wrapper and all)
  • Box of cereal

20141231_201727Only slight downside was that I got my head stuck in the cereal box whilst tidying up the last few pieces. Styled it out with confidence though and don’t think Triona suspected I had been up to anything other than a polite investigation into the preferred cereal brands of their household.

What a fabulous time of year! More parties, with more food and a few more martinis for the furless ones, leading to a little less observance of what a peckish little lab is up to…

11 months to go and counting!

The Girl With The Glass Feet – Book Review

 

photo-2This is the first book to really grab me in a quite a while! Totally un-put-downable, I was skulking off to bed early to get some extra pages in before the leading man choked off the lights and if I was being entirely honest, may have left the kids in the bath till the water went cold whilst reading on the stairs. Before you call child protection, I am pretty confident no child has died from a dip in a slightly chilly bath in recent times and my daughters are 5 and 7 and perfectly capable of getting themselves out if they so desired!

That said, The Girl With The Glass Feet is set in a strange world where people could well die in a lukewarm bath. The first book from Ali Shaw, it is a modern day fairytale, with hidden cottages, magical creatures, a damsel in distress and a mysterious transformation.

The story is pretty much as the title suggests, Ida MacLaird, has feet that are, quite literally, turning to glass. In search of a cure she returns to the remote islands she once visited where she believes her transformation began. Whilst she searches for the mysterious, Henry Fuwa, the man she hopes can save her, she meets Midas Crook, a man shattered emotionally by his personal history. One physically fragile, one emotionally, they fall in love. As the glass creeps up Ida legs, and he battles to save her, another transformation begins in Midas.

photo-1In the tradition of all good fairytales, Shaw’s tale is much more than a simple love story. It is a tale about the reality of the human condition. Human life is temporary, fleeting. However hard we try we are all transforming and in life change is inevitable, both good and bad. There is no fairytale ending because life does not have fairytale endings. But there is hope, there is redemption, and most of all, there is always love. It’s quite simply, beautiful.

The Best Christmas Ever!

Well it was! Other than those magical ones when I was a child, waiting for Father Christmas, listening for sleigh bells and praying for snow, this year was pretty much Christmas perfection. Why you ask? What made this year so especially special? Well I will tell you!

  1.  We got sickness bug during the final week of term.

 Hello, your thinking – that doesn’t sound so especially special! However, early contagion meant that everyone was better by Christmas itself and for once no Christmassy bits of loveliness had to be cancelled! There was a worrying moment, when it looked as if I was going down too but general consensus is that a careless nibble on a bit of pork pie which had sat in Rosie’s sweaty lunchbox all day led to my downfall – the shame of it!

 2.  The Pre-Christmas Christmassy bits of loveliness…

 Whilst I do love Christmas Day and the wonder of seeing the little girls faces when they see that Santa has been, I have to admit for me the bit before, the build up throughout December, is my favorite part. The Christmas music on the radio, picking the presents, planning the menus, the school plays and church events leave me with a warm glow of festive cheer from fingers to toes. And this year a couple of bits really stood out:

  •  Lily’s school nativity play: – always a winner and this year a heartwarming rendition of the nativity tale entitled “Are We Nearly There Yet”. Anything which includes a song with the lines “Don’t know when the journey will end. I’m needing the toilet again!” gets my vote.
  • Rosie’s school carol concert at St Peter’s and St Paul’s church in Bromley which, with a theme of hope and peace, had me in tears. Nice work Mr J.
  • Christmas Carol Sing-along at The Royal Albert Hall. Christmas in a bowl – literally! I defy anyone to leave an event with 5,000 people, bedecked with Christmas hats and lights, singing their hearts out without feeling the Christmas magic. Book your tickets now!
  • The Nutcracker at the Coliseum. Some questioned whether my little girls were too small. But seeing my 5 year old daughter on the edge of her seat, transfixed, was simply amazing. Will be booking again next year.
  • Church Knitivity, A knitted (see what they’ve done there) version of the key players in the nativity that moves from house to house during Advent. We had room at our Inn as you can see below!

P1010746 P1010744

  • Church Crib service. Can there be a better to remember the true meaning of Christmas than to be in Church on Christmas Eve and see all the children from Sunday school act out the nativity story and sing carols?

Indeed, the only thing which could have possibly made this Christmas even better, would have been a light dusting of snow as we had wound our way home from Church on Christmas Eve. Never mind, there’s always next year – only 11 months to go!

Arghhhhhhhhhh…

PTA Christmas Fair – Part 2!

Well it turns out sticking Christmassy stickers and gems and a couple of porcelain pens is exactly what kids want to do with 500 baubles and are prepared to pay £1 a bauble for the privilege. I strongly recommend that PTA’s across the UK buy up baubles (shatterproof!) in the January sales and give it a go next year. Whilst this did not fully deplete our entire bauble mountain, it made a jolly fine dent and on the plus side we have a Christmas craft activity in the bag for the next few years!

In addition to this, feeding off the current Frozen mania, our HO craft, Charlotte, came up with a fab idea for sock Olaf Snowmen, which were a sell out success. Utilising mens’s sport socks, loom bands, an orange pom pom, pipe cleaners and a black felt tip these were simple for the kids to do, appealed to girls and boys and low cost – genius!  Below is an image of the little fellow and next week I shall provide, courtesy of the lovely Charlotte, a step by step guide to how you make them!

FullSizeRender

Indeed, despite my previous grinch like rant, the fair was a great success (most money raised to date at over £4,500!) and gave me a jolly good Christmas cuddle to kick off the festive season!  Hats off to “HO Everything”, our Chair, Mrs Marcou, the rest of the committee, the lovely happy to help crew (who were just that) and all the staff who did not have clashing events (which turned out to be quite a few!) who made it the success it was!

Next on the agenda is the now legendary PTA quiz night! Anyone out there got any good question rounds we could utilise to save me 12 hours of googling?! If so, please email me at heather.leveton@live.co.uk – all help gratefully received!

Le Coeur des Anges Rose 2013

A good friend of mine bequeathed me a bottle of this when I last hosted wine, oops, I mean book club. I am not usually much of a rose drinker but valiantly soldiered on and gave this one a go (never one to shy away from a challenge – ahem!). To my surprise it was delicious; crisp, dry, with a lovely flinty minerality you would usually expect from a Sancerre or Pouilly Fume, overlaid with delicate spicy berried fruit tones. It is currently out of stock at Laithwaites, but if it comes back in give it a go – it makes a smashing aperitif anytime of the year or would perfectly accompany fish and light meats. Enjoy!