After The Rain
Wednesday, July 15th, 20091, Stealth
2. Sea King
3. Merlin
I was very pleased to get to bed without Son 1 aged 4y 9m padding upstairs behind my heels, and glad also to get through the night without being wakened by a little pale visitor clambering into the Big Bed. I woke to the usual siren sound of “Mummeee, Mummeee” from downstairs. And was eyeball to eyeball with a little pale visitor. No idea when he turned up. He obviously didn’t wake me when he got in, and I didn’t wake him when I got up.
The Rockpool Beach was just a strip of sand with great rolling waves reaching well up it. “It’s going out,” said the Wednesday Mums. They weren’t staying, they each had other things to do. I decided we’d hang around and see how we got on. I put Son 2 in his sunsuit and plastered him in Factor 50. How British. Yesterday it rained on me so hard I could barely breathe… this afternoon I was gazing out to sea wondering how could I could go for a dip with two children on land. Son 1 went in the sea up to his hips in his trousers. i yelled at him and got him in his sunsuit. The tide pelts in on that beach, and it raced out. The three of us played at the water’s edge. We had some lunch. Son 1 wanted to go home - he’d got cold but wouldn’t let me change him. I span it out. We took him to the loo and on the way back looked in rockpools for cowries. We found two. Three children came up to us to show us the crab they’d caught. They wanted ice cream; the cafe was shut. Son 2 understood the drift of the conversation, and went nuts “Ice Deam! Ice Deam!” Embarrassed, I told their mother :”His brother was organic and sugar-free till he was two, but his favourite words are sweets, choc-choc, ice deam, bik bik and cake.” “Wait for the third,” said the mother. ”She was three at the weekend, and we gave her a DS. ”
Son 1 clambered in the Big Pram, fidgeted around to get comfortable and tipped it over sideways onto some rocks. The Big Pram is as sturdy as a small tank. Maybe I should admit he really is too big for it. We cleared up and went up the cliff to the car. The Navy flew by, very low, in a helicopter. We waved. They waved back. Very exciting. I have for years told Son 1 that we have to wave at helicopters because they are waving at us, and now I have been proved right. Back home we got a space outside the house. I put the children in, unloaded the car, put Finding Nemo on upstairs “Fish! Fish!” and Nanna came round. I made tortilla for tea. Son 2 demolished his in minutes, Son 1 sucked the butter from his hot baguette and said he’d finished.

