It was a tropical 10 degrees in our patch the other week. No, I'm not joking. And I didn't write this post in February and schedule it for summer either.
When you live in the north east of Scotland you develop a certain stoicism about the weather. And yet, when the outdoor furniture and skimpy outfits hit the shops, we still rush out and buy them.
If you're lucky enough to live in warmer climes, please admire our efforts to enjoy popular summer activities. (It's like *let's pretend* for adults.)
The event: Impossible to plan in advance, this involves a frantic ring round of relatives on the morning of said barbecue. The sky is blue and the forecast is screaming little yellow suns for the duration of the day. On securing the attendees, a frantic dash to the supermarket ensues. This is incredibly inefficient as everyone you know is in there too, desperately lobbing sausages in their trolleys for their own opportunistic family barbecues. You stagger back laden with food for the five thousand three hours later.
The reality: Remember those little yellow suns? They lied. As your guests arrive, the skies mysteriously darken and little spots, which everyone manfully tries to ignore, start to steadily fall. Ladies clad in flimsy dresses and sandals begin to inch their way indoors. Your relaxed al fresco gathering starts to resemble the family Christmas get-together with extra chairs squeezed into the living room and hyperactive children rampaging round the house.
Top tip: Always, ALWAYS, erect the gazebo. However promising the temperatures or forecast.
The beach picnic
The event: Another last-minute venture, also involving a last-minute supermarket splurge. As it's a *guaranteed scorcher*, you decide to make a day of it and invite some friends to join you for carefree fun and frolics at the coast. Everything from swimsuits, towels and Crocs to beach balls, soft tennis kits and windbreaks is flung in the car. The roof box is likely to be fully loaded too.
The reality: Regardless of how much you spend on food, if you are going with another family, your children will prefer whatever is in their cool box. By the time you reach the coast, that north-east phenomenon known as 'haar' will have descended. You may have to retreat 10 miles inland to feel anything resembling heat. Huddled round a picnic bench in your fleece, you feign enjoyment while the children whine "But why isn't it sunny here?".
Top tip: There is no such thing as a *guaranteed scorcher* when it comes to the Scottish seaside. Take layers. Lots of them.
The camping expedition
The event: Having succumbed to all those Tiso advertisements that make camping look like a healthy, fun and cost-effective family holiday, you feel duty bound to use the tent and all its accoutrements at least once a year. Waiting for a prolonged dry forecast is impossible. You pick your dates and go.
The reality: By the time you've purchased a roof box and bike carrier for your cheap family holiday, you'd have been better off at a five-star hotel. You get drenched during both tent erection and dismantling. And let's not even mention the whole *drying out* saga after. No-one gets any sleep because it's either a) too hot b) too cold or c) too noisy. You return home feeling you've endured the equivalent of Bear Grylls Mission Survive but without the benefits of looking like Vogue Williams. You will also be in desperate need of another - dare I say *real* - holiday.
Top tip: Swallow the pain and sell the tent and accessories on eBay. Use the funds raised to book a hotel mini-break. Pronto.
Disclaimer: To the wonderful people at VisitScotland, I love my country. Really I do. Now if we could just fix the weather...
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Haha, good old uk weather. I am down south, but have experienced all this too ! x
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and commenting Karen. So it isn't just us then?!
DeleteI hate supermarket shopping when good weather has been forecast - there's nothing on the shelves. Top tip if you can ever bring yourself to go camping again - try glamping. There's none of that ridiculous pegging out malarkey - it's all done for you :) #pocolo
ReplyDeleteClaire - glamping sounds like the way forward indeed;-) Thanks for stopping by and commenting.
DeleteThe only time I visited Scotland was two years ago. I went to Loch Lomond and the weather was utterly stunning - I remember all the locals feeling so shocked! I can really understand how you must feel! Thanks for linking to #PoCoLo x
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad that you saw Scotland in sunshine because it is indeed a beautiful place! And yes - we act as though we've won the lottery when the weather does actually behave itself ;-) Thanks for hosting, as ever. C x
DeleteAnother Scottish blogger! Is it a bit sad that I get all excited when I find one of us...?
ReplyDeleteI laughed all the way through this. Laughed because it is true. *sigh* we've got our annual bbq planned for Saturday, so I don't even need to check the Met Office to know it will rain!
I think we have to laugh, otherwise we'd cry! Best of luck for Saturday, I will do a sun dance for you :-) Now, I must go and find your blog too...Thanks so much for visiting and commenting.
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