Sunday, March 04, 2007

Nearly there. And Aibhe hits 1.

5 weeks on and we now wait for a wee bit of plumbing to be done so the water from the toilets/ taps etc, goes where its actually meant to go as opposed to spilling out under the house. Wouldn't be too popular with the neighbours I'd imagine. We're good to go back home once thats all done and dusted. Yayyy. Spent just over 2 hours cleaning the place this morning - given the big hole cut in the hall floor and the new stairs we now have, there was just a little bit of dust here and there. Hard to describe the state its in at the moment so I'll just have to let the pictures do the talking. At its "worst", just over a week ago, the place look like this (above). Difficult to envisage that it would be possible to turn it into something that we could actually live in within about 8 days.

First the floor supports......
then, the floors and wall structure....
And now we have a stairs to get in. That little piece of genius, coming from our unpaid architect (Geoff) who dreamt up the eureka notion of having our front door downstairs. How traditional I hear you say. A long way to go yet, but once we can move back in with functioning electricity, plumbing, phones and aircon, we're laughin.

And "little" Aibhe has turned 1. Had a party for her at 10am in a nearby park last weekend. By 12 I was shattered. She appeared to enjoy herself, mind you she barely needs all the other child company at times as she's quite content to bog off on her own to do her thing, whatever it may be. 1 year ago eh? Tell ye what though. All that shite about the first 6 months being rough and then it all gets easier? Steaming poo. I reckon Aibhe breezed the first 6 months and once she decided to start really participating in life and all that was going on, THATS when it started becoming "interesting" for us.

Sicknesses, messed up sleeping patterns, frustration at lack of mobility (short lived) ya-di-ya-di-ya. But, right now, it has to be said, she's on fire. Spends most of the day laughing, or looking for an excuse to laugh, pegging round the place just begging to be chased and eats for Ireland. She's also very partial to dancing like a freak to practically any kids DVD we choose to put on. She starts on the guitar next week, I figure some basic scales won't hurt at this point. Maybe I could even get her going on some low whistle. Which takes us on a natural segway into Friday just gone. And the Lunasa gig here in Brisvegas.

As usual, they were bloody brilliant live and Kevin, the flute man and speaker in between tunes was flying, had those in the audience that could pick up his knife like Clare accent in stitches laughing. From the first strum of the guiter, the hairs on the back of my neck stood up and I felt like I was home, just for a while. The Aussies I brought along were gobsmacked at the speed the lads play at. As we said before, Lunasa are trad on speed. I went to say hello to Kevin afterwards and it was nice to see that he remembered myself and Alissa very well from when he played at our wedding in Killaloe. I guess nobody who was there can ever forget.

Next up, Grada in April. We'll have another posse lined up for that one.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi guys, good to hear things are starting to get to normal for you. At least you will have a lovely blog reminder if you ever choose to put yourselves through renovation hell again. Looking good though, cant wait to see it (at some stage!) Huge big hugs to all, Rxx

Enda and Alissa said...

Thanks R. Getting there nicely now and in a couple of months we'll look back and wonder what all the fuss was about. Should be a cracker of a place by then. Coming home yet? xx