I’ve been on holiday. No really, I have. I left home at
4.30pm on Saturday drove to the Scottish Borders, slept in a tent and was home
again by 2.30pm on Sunday afternoon. This is how people in the countryside go
on holiday using the “Cram-in-as-much-as-you-can-in-one-night-and-rush-home-again”
technique. It saves on pet sitters and it doesn’t leave enough time for the
Other Half to become suicidal because the daughter is feeding tadpoles to the
cat.
The reason that I went to the Scottish Borders and slept in
a tent is because it has become a sort of tradition. It’s also the only chance
I have to meet up with some Scottish friends of mine. I use the term “friends”
only in case they actually end up reading this because I don’t really like them
very much. When I arrived at the tent, I mentioned that I had thought of bringing
a bottle of Prosecco as a gift but I was worried as to how it would behave
after an hour long car journey. My tall friend then produced a bottle of
Prosecco that was so large it took two of us and a sack barrow to transport it
outside into the sun. People even stopped by to admire the enormous bottle with
its glittery hologram of a label, assuming that it was some kind of monument or
visitor attraction. Supper is always a miserable affair as The Tall One assumes
that everyone has been working down the Coalmine all day. When she serves my
supper I am often forced to enquire if the portion is meant to feed all the
inhabitants of the local town as well. No, it isn’t. And often there is pudding
served in one gigantic bowl with 4 spoons, hotly pursued by cheese and
crackers. I swear that The Tall One just throws food at me all evening. Another
thing which I bloody hate about these “friends” is that they can actually eat
everything that The Tall One serves up. Even The Feisty One, who is about the
same size as me can pack it away as though she hasn’t seen food for weeks. As
if this experience isn’t bad enough, once you have consumed as much as The Tall
One deems fit, you become terrified to leave your seat at the table. This is
because upon your return you will find that the empty glass that you left at
your place setting has been refilled. The Tall One doesn’t know what it is to
fall out with the top of the glass and often you will be forced to lower your
mouth to your drink; because any attempt to lift it will result in huge gin and
tonic trauma all over your hoodie. The sleeping arrangements are also somewhat
suspect. Me and The Sensible One sleep in a tent whereas The Tall One and The
Feisty One sleep in a shed on wheels. I’m not all that certain that this is
reasonable but to be fair, for some reason I usually end up removing my contact
lenses and no items of clothing before zipping myself into my sleeping bag.
Something else I can’t fathom is that I always wake up drowsy and have a bit of
a headache. I have checked the tent from top to bottom and can find no faulty
gas fire. Therefore I can only assume that The Feisty One is slipping something
into my drink(s). Perhaps it was lucky for all of concerned that my phone went
flat so I couldn’t take any photographs. They would have been just too boring.
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