Not an Indian summer apparently, because a) it is still September, so too early, and b) we haven't had a frost yet. So that clears that up, but what to do when it is unseasonally hot? You could do a bit of motherly multitasking - the usual round of washing, ironing, putting clothes away; cooking; washing up; lamentable lack of dog walking (pact with Four-legged-friend - who strangely enough is better now that there are no apples left on the tree - to walk him tomorrow; and curtain hanging (the pair of the one nibbled by mice - see Bl**dy mice! blog); grass cutting; sorting packing boxes; tidying absent son's room; and attending village harvest supper.
Alternatively, you could read a book in the sun; pick brambles and make jam; remember Littlest's piano practice; stop procrastinating and submit, submit, submit!; make ice cream; give Four-legged-friend a bath; and even walk the dog. I didn't do any of those things; might I do some of them tomorrow? Probably not.
But I also didn't spend the day planning my trip to Nepal to attend the opening of an orphanage for disabled children that I have helped to build - awesome and truly humbling discovery about friends' philanthropy, over supper this evening.
Alternatively, you could read a book in the sun; pick brambles and make jam; remember Littlest's piano practice; stop procrastinating and submit, submit, submit!; make ice cream; give Four-legged-friend a bath; and even walk the dog. I didn't do any of those things; might I do some of them tomorrow? Probably not.
But I also didn't spend the day planning my trip to Nepal to attend the opening of an orphanage for disabled children that I have helped to build - awesome and truly humbling discovery about friends' philanthropy, over supper this evening.
Okay, so it is October now, but still no overnight frost, so technically still not an Indian summer.
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