Beeston, Books and a Butterfly

I fell asleep in the car this morning. Fortunately I was in a car park. Julia. meanwhile, was at a meeting in the building attached to the car park. She was having similar trouble in keeping awake.

While she was being trained (I wish them luck – I’ve not managed to train her despite many years of effort), I went for a walk round Beeston. It’s a pleasant place, even in the rain, with a statue of a bee man, a cheap bookshop, an Oxfam bookshop and quite a few charity shops. The Sue Ryder shop has re-branded itself as a vintage and retro shop. That seems to mean it has a lot of old brown furniture.

I’ve been watching Money for Nothing on TV. The presenter goes round tips grabbing people as they throw things out and commissioning various artist/designers to make things from them. She pays them between £200 and £500 to convert the tat then sells it to specialist shops (usually making £50 – £200 profit). Goodness knows what the shops charge.

Apart from being envious of people who charge that sort of money with a straight face, I’m telling you this because the programme seems to take a lot of unsalable brown furniture, paint it and get big money for it. If you need any of it to start making a fortune try the Sue Ryder shop in Beeston.

Call me cynical if you like, but it all strikes me as a modern version of the Emperor’s New Clothes. Everybody in the trade is happy slapping paint about and charging £500 for a £15 piece of furniture. But just let one small child ask why people don’t just paint their own…

Anyway, enough about con tricks perpetrated on people with more money than sense, let’s talk about butterflies.

When we arrived home Julia had a good look at the plants in the front garden. There, sheltering from the wind, was a Small Copper. They are common and widespread according to the books but I’ve never seen that many of them and this is the first I’ve seen in our garden. It’s also the only one I’ve ever photographed, as the previous one was pictured by Julia as it rested on my hand.

Apparently the three white spots on the lower wings are an aberration, as listed on the website. Proper naturalists are interested in things like that.

As for the books I mentioned earlier, I limited myself to seven. This includes a book of historical craft projects and a cheap book about butterflies. These are both for Julia, so I don’t feel so bad about the others, which will be revealed in due course.

 

 

19 thoughts on “Beeston, Books and a Butterfly

  1. Pingback: A Painted Lady Comes to Call | quercuscommunity

  2. Pingback: Beeston, Books and a Butterfly — quercuscommunity – Community United For Health And Prevention

  3. Helen

    -ing sandwiches instead of making one from bread and a filling of one’s choice. I guess it’s a matter of time amongst other things.

    Reply
    1. quercuscommunity

      Nice bit of dramatic suspense there. 🙂
      It’s easy to get into bad spending habits. I try to control it by multiplying things by 52 and working out how much something costs us a year.

      Reply
  4. derrickjknight

    Excellent Coppers. You may be interested to know that my late wife, Jessica’s, family made their money from the Beeston Boiler Company, set up originally to heat greenhouses to contain their plants (Family name: Pearson)

    Reply
    1. quercuscommunity

      Isn’t life strange? Until yesterday I hadn’t heard of the Beeston Boiler Company, now I have another insight into it. Fascinating how things developed from heating a greenhouse to heating the world.

      Reply

Leave a Reply