Thursday, December 7, 2023

Christmas music #1

A balmy 2 degrees and calm. Ten Wigeon ducks in the rock pool and a Mistle Thrush feasting on the bread crumbs on the lawn . Mistle thrushes are high on the endangered list so seeing one is definitely an early Christmas present.


The young gulls are still in their juvenile plumage. There must be a thousand  lining the shore. They greet the sun rise with a wall of sound.


Lindt Teddys in the window of the chocolate shop. A sure sign the year is rushing on. There was a time when being a box of a Lindt Teddys would have been cause enough for a toddler to be happy.  These days the packaging promises that  24 augmented reality adventures come with their purchase. 


The wine shop is open early. Angus has ordered a dozen bottles of a New Zealand wine as Christmas quaffing for the villagers. The owner is keen to open a bottle but Angus isn't at all keen. Drinking red wine at this time in the morning is the sort of thing best left to younger metabolisms.  


On our way back to the house we pass an exam room being set up for the mornings student  influx. I'd have to say the chairs look rather more comfortable than the metal framed  versions with stretched canvas seats that were standard in our day. 



At home the first of the decorations has been brought out of the garage. A small glass tree bought in Perugia in 2004. Can it be that it's nearly twenty years since we sold up and moved off abroad ? The 'real' tree will be delivered next week. This gives ample time to dig out the other Christmas decorations from the garage and slowly gear up for the holidays.


Time for the 1st link to Christmas music . An old favourite sung by some Norwegian youngsters with annoyingly good English pronounciation  :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VGQZwIlWiU


17 comments:

Liz Hamblyn said...

I have to say the wine is very generous gift, as a quaffing wine for the local villagers. I just looked up the price for a bottle in NZ. Having said that we have discovered that NZ wine exported can be purchased overseas at a lot less than we can purchase on the domestic market. I will have to agree that drinking red wine in the morning is an activity left to those with a younger constitution.

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari Om
This is one of the now regular carols to be expected in the Angus-vent and a very fine version it is. Enjoyed afresh. YAM xx

WFT Nobby said...

I'm so pleased that the Christmas music is back. One of my favourite features of this blog. (There are in fact too many favourite features to list here.) A proper feast of Norwegian-ness this morning! I turned it up loud to drown out Suella Braverman on the radio...
Cheers, Gail.

Angus said...

WFT - Although I thought Nick Robinson was brilliant interviewing her .

jabblog said...

That was a lovely version of the song - thank you.

Coppa's girl said...

I love the Christmas table decoration and am looking forward to seeing the rest of your festive decorations as they appear. Big question - will the Nativity be complete with the lady in the blue frock?
Nothing adventurous or glamourous here, but i have found my Ikea Advent candles and plugged them in!
Remember seeing your first Christmas choice some years ago, it never fails to delight.

Travel said...

A short flashback to exam season, the Holiday season is much more fun.

Lisa in France said...

I was just thinking yesterday that I hoped the Christmas music would begin soon. And now I imagine many of us are waiting for the Nativity, although I will miss the flashing tree from France. I can't recall whether it stayed with the village along with the Font's wreaths, but I will choose to think so.

Stephanie said...

An excellent beginning to this year's Christmas music, glorious sunrise pictures, and the glass tree is a beauty. Thank you for such an elegant beginning of my day.

Angus said...

Lisa in France - The flashing tree together with a variety of Christmas baubles stayed in France and will be illuminating this years vin d'honneur in the Salle de fetes.

kippy said...

The glass tree is lovely and I am so happy the Christmas music is back! My Norwegian grandfather had a very proper English accent his entire life. He was always correcting his American raised grandchildren on grammar and pronunciation.

rottrover said...

That second photo of the storm clouds and gulls is a beauty. As is the glass tree. I don't remember seeing it before.

Diaday said...

Looking forward to your Czechoslovakian Nativity scene. Thank you for the Christmas music.

The Life of Riley said...

Feel free to delete this comment if you wish, but as I always love your annual Christmas music selections, this year I wanted to send you a song in return which is the “it is not Christmas until you hear this played” song for my friends and extended family, in case you or your readers have not heard it before.

“Snoopy’s Christmas” by The Royal Guardsmen (an American rock band), is perhaps the most requested Christmas song on the radio, in shops, and in people’s homes in New Zealand since it was released in 1967. I have listened to this song every year since 1967! While it starts with gunfire, the lyrics are about true Christmas spirit based on events at the Western Front in 1914.

Watch YouTube first https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToEolESPGQg and then if you would like to know more read https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/morningreport/audio/2018918502/snoopy-s-christmas-proves-to-be-an-enduring-hit-in-nz

Wishing you and the Font peace at Christmas.

Jake of Florida said...

What a delightful start to the Christmas music tradition! And Angus, so many other traditions your ardent blog readers always anticipate...including the inevitable sporran search!

The Bougalou Bear said...

The glass tree is lovely. Would it be too much to hope for a picture of the flashing Christmas tree in the Salle des FĂȘtes for this year's vin d'honneur?
I too eagerly await the (re)apparition of the Nativity.

To you and yours, and all readers of this blog: Happy Everything!

Virginia said...

Let the Christmas hunts ... plural... begin! We always do a "I wonder where that ... is?" This year our grandchildren are putting the decorations up, and the result is "somewhat random". We may need to check the security now they've headed home for the evening.

I noticed the Mozart Kugeln chocolates. We first "discovered" them when on our first European trip in 1979, and ever since we have bought one for each place at the Christmas table.

Along with Liz Hamblyn, I do hope you got that Martinborough wine for considerably less than we would pay over here!! The New Zealand price is huge! I hope it is appreciated.