0502: Ten Things of Thankful

Ten Things of Thankful with a white candle and snowdrops

1. Thankful that I looked up and saw Imbolc’s full  moon looking down at me through February’s bare branches. Taken with my iPhone.

2. Thankful for absolutely fabulous words: Borborology n. filthy talk; ribaldry. Obsolete (what a pity) circa 1645 

3. That my toes weren’t crushed. I managed to slip the drawer, the one under the bed, back on to its rails. Such a stupid system; at least once a month it goes off the rails, and I treat the silly thing as delicately as eggshells. 

4. Spring is springing up through the clammy clay of Sussex. Snowdrops. Primroses. Crocuses. And the rain continues to fall.

5. Thankful for Denise’s Six Sentence Stories and the opportunity to expand my writing beyond serialised storytelling — and it comes with a pre-established readership! Prompt word on Sundays and the InLinkz doohickey goes live on Wednesday night.

6. Teddy my fishmonger. Fridays. It’s a tradition, not religion. Special this week: monkfish fishcakes; hot smoked salmon; halibut (Teddy, are you kidding me; halibut costs how much? £32/kilo) 

7. Thankful to be outdoors again — a forest walk. Beech trees thin and pale in the winter light, and a few leaves still clinging like old paper.

8. Things that shout It’s Spring, like the Sutton’s seed catalogue arriving in the post. Let’s see — I saved seeds from last season’s tomatoes, so we don’t need those. English cucumbers! Yes. I want trugs full of them. Trug? What is a trug, you ask? Read here all about them.

9. That winter doesn’t last forever.

10 … and finally, music that fits me like a glove.

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Welcome to TToT (Ten Things of Thankful) blog hop! Join bloggers from all over the world as we come together to share those things that we are thankful for. Ten is in the name, but no one is counting; feel free to link up no matter how many (or few) you can list. Make sure to go read and comment on the posts, too. The TToT has always been big on making this a friendly community, and getting to know each other through posts and comments is a huge part of that. We’re thankful for you!

Imagery and poems/prose ©Misky 2006-2026.


18 responses to “0502: Ten Things of Thankful”

  1. halibut is lovely, though

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It is. A lovely firm white fleshy fish that costs an arm and a leg. 😂

      Liked by 2 people

      1. I love being on the French coast, where they still seem to have small ports which will catch fish from the channel. In Britain most of the ports seem to have gone and we seem to rely on cod and haddock from the east coast. I don’t mind them but I loved the variety. We have a small fishmonger in the middle of Salisbury, just the one. But everything is so expensive.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. I agree about France, and loved the photo you posted recently.

          Cod is completely over-priced now (which might help fish stocks) but haddock is still reasonable. Oddly, salmon (if farmed) gives the best value lately. Hastings still has a good fleet, not like a few decades ago, but it’s still alive and floating. I know that farmed salmon isn’t the best, but it does protect the natural stock from depletion.

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          1. I’m gonna sound like a sentimental old fool but I was so happy to get back there when I went over eighteen months ago. I had to work out the buses from Saint-Malo and back, had to walk down (and back up) that bloody great hill, but I did it. It was so good to get back. Previously I’d driven and cycled there and thought nothing of it. Plenty of oyster beds there at low tide, just a bit further along the coast.

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            1. Completely understandable, Pete.

              Liked by 1 person

      2. sorry to (‘thread-jump’*) …err as I was saying, I read your Reply to Mister Bump (my own comment coalescing in my mind drawing on my days fishing) and saw the phrase ‘fish that costs and arm and a leg‘ and totally flashed on Moby Dick (H. Melville)

        two words: aiiyeee enough coffee this morning

        sorry guys didn’t mean to interrupt, as you were as such… lol

        *a term we used back when this bloghop was new. picture being at a social occasion, overhearing one person say something to another and inserting yourself in the conversation. was not viewed as rude, more a reflection of as close to ‘real’ world social interaction as possible

        Liked by 1 person

        1. To my mind, thread jumping is never rude. Ever. I remember that we used to say “Pardon my jumping in…” (we were so polite back then; trolls being something under a bridge that goats avoided). Now the real trick is to keep this thread ticking along on your Wakefield Doctrine. (ha!)

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  2. Beautiful photos! Inflation bites us all. I see recreational fishermen and “fisherboys” at many waterways.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Same here in SE England. The creek near my house has crayfish, and the county encourages people to catch them for food because they’re not a native specifies, and they kill off the new hatchlings.

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  3. The seasons will change and it’s a joy to watch. Crayfish wouldn’t be native there, we have them here. Boil them up with Zatarain’s crab boil and some corn on the cob and small potatoes and you have a dish fit for a Cajun.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Zatarain’s Crab Boil: Amazon UK has it, too! Those guys have everything. Wishing you a lovely, relaxed week, Mimi.

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  4. I love it when ‘life imitates art’*

    Full Disclosure: the confluence of….err vibes was not in mind when I wrote my TToT yesterday. As is my habit, I avoid reading other’s ‘oT’s before writing my own. (Standard ‘creativity insecurity’ lol)

    But this morning as I sat down to Read-and-Comment, I started with the first of my music choices of the week (on the Doctrine TToT) and, as luck/fate/emotional-synchronicity would have it… the Beatles ‘Blackbird’ played.

    cool

    (as the old proverb reminds us: ‘Magic does not hide, it is sufficient that most of us abdicate our imagination in favor of reason’.)

    Have a good week

    *my favorite quote-source who for some reason usually evades my recall when I start to look-up the source

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Oscar Wilde. That’s the name you’re trying to recall. Happy to help.

    I was never a Beatles fan particularly, but Blackbird and Norwegian Wood are still favourite songs of mine.

    Heading for yours now.

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  6. Oh yes! Borborology – bring it on Marilyn! As for Grat#3 – if the problem is that the drawer comed too far forward/out, then you could add a stop at either extremity of the drawer front – screw a piece of wood like a latch to the inside of the drawer front – close the drawer a little with the latch down – reach inside and swivel the latch up and tighten the screw to keep the latch in the up position…

    Fish and chip shops in the North of England sell only Cod or Haddock (a near relative of cod anyway) – no Sole, Rock-Salmon (Dogfish) – its very disappointing…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Now I have an appetite for fish and chips !

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  7. Lovely post, Misky. I liked how you stated the things you were thankful for and added pictures to go with it. It’s good that you didn’t hurt your toes with the drawer.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you so much!

      Liked by 1 person

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