The Ryall family Christmas news 2018
This has been an interesting year for us, no major tragedies and no lottery wins to report, but it has definitely been a year of significant progress along life’s winding path. A major change for us has been that Josie and her partner Georgia moved out into a bijoux rented house in Rickmansworth, with a riverside garden, new kitchen and enormous free telly. This has clearly been a divorced dad’s house previously, as the decor involves a lot of grey, black and chrome, but for all that it is a real find. And I gather that Josie has now taken to listening to R4 on her commute to St Albans, which is her most concrete indication of adulthood to date, even more than taking out her own phone contract or buying her own car. The Economist and the Guardian prize crossword beckon alluringly. Josie is teaching at STAGS, who offered her a job on the spot when she went there as a student teacher at the end of last year. She is loving the teaching, although she is finding some of the office politics a bit wearing. Not to mention the paperwork.
Anna has just gained a place with a scholarship at the Royal College of Music to study flute – she had previously been at the Academy but just could not get on with their approach. So it looks likely that Ali and Anna will be back with us from the summer – Ali is thinking he may go on to do a PGCE (probably at Brunel), but we will see what transpires. Ali has also been doing great work as quizmaster for the weekly Brum Guild quiz night, and has recently upped his orchestral playing.
Since the summer Kirsty has been working hard on a variety of jobs – doing some useful stuff for us in the office, tutoring music and maths, and also working at our local The Stag. We consider it an important life skill to be able to serve in a pub/restaurant – and it’s entirely likely that’s all the work that will be left in a few years in post-Brexit Britain. Better brush up my servility face.
As a result of Josie moving out, we have had a shift round of bedrooms, which means that both Jonny and Xav have their own rooms now – this took Xav a little while to get used to, but I am sure he appreciates the privacy now.
While in Berlin we did all the touristy things (that we could afford) including the Victory Tower, Reichstag, Musical Instrument Museum, Charlottenburg, Hamburger Bahnhof (enormous modern art space), the zoo, the WWII bunker, Alexanderplatz, etc.
We travelled everywhere by public transport and Shanks’s pony, which was just sooo much cheaper than London. And we ate in a variety of unpromising ossi areas, where thanks to TripAdvisor we managed to find some excellent restaurants – a particular favourite being Burgermeister, which is in a converted public loo under an elevated railway. However, the reviews were right, there was a queue a hundred yards long waiting to eat. This was clearly the eaterie de rigeur for all of Berlin’s night people – most of the queue appeared to be gearing up for a hard night’s techno dancing, glue sniffing, pimping, sex work, etc. However everyone was very friendly to us, and there is strength in numbers after all.
We also ate at a very bijoux creperie – when we turned up to eat one evening a very harassed stand-in chef said there were just too many of us and he couldn’t do it. So we moved on, slightly miffed. But the owner then phoned and texted me so much the next day pleading with me to come back, I gave in, and we ended up with a great meal, with free beer thrown in as well.
We had driven to Berlin in our trusty old Vito, which had to have several girders welded on to the bottom in order to pass its MOT. Although it did make it there in one piece, I suspect that is the last road trip it will make. And just the other day coming back from the CYO concert at Haileybury it suddenly lost compression and only just limped home. I don’t know what that is yet, but I have a strong feeling it may be terminal. But back to Germany – on our way home from Berlin we called in at Josie’s former employers the Vogelsangs who live in a small town near Koln – as always Gerald had slaughtered several animals for us to feast on, and we rolled out of the door afterwards. Josie and Georgia stayed on for a couple of days, to spend time with the Vogelsang children, who have very fond memories of Josie from her time as an au pair there.
Early on this year we realised that our 15-year-old conservatory was falling apart – the roof was leaking, all the glass panels were blown, and the hinges on several doors were bent to the point where there was a half-inch gap left when the door was closed. When we explored replacement costs, it became clear that building a proper sunroom would not cost much more. So we have done that – financed by remortgaging on a 5 year fix, which we wanted to do anyway given the poor economic prospects for the short to medium term.
If you have been here recently, you may have also heard Kirsty playing on a different piano – this is a baby grand which came out of Mid-Herts Music Centre ten years ago – when they were about to skip it – but was rescued then by Nick, one of Nicola’s colleagues at the Friends of Herts County Youth Music Groups charity. Nick has now decided he needs his living room back, but wanted to ensure the piano went to a good home – and we have been pleased to provide it! It’s now been tuned, and sounds lovely, but still has to be played from a cane chair as the new piano stool is stuck in Germany (frictionless trade, anyone?).
Apologies to anyone I have missed out, and I wish you all the best for 2019.