31 Jan 2026

31.01.2026 Feels like -8C.

 ~?~

  Saturday 31st 30F/-1C. Grey, windy from the SE and cold. 61F/16C in the room. Greenhouse at 40F/4.4C. The trees and hedges are moving. It could reach -7C/19F tonight.

 Up at 7.40 after a busy night and clock watching for hours.

 8.40. I had better light the stove. 

 10.10 30F/-1C. Room at 64F/17.8C. Stove going well. Back from a loop along the drives. The wind was like cold knives cutting my face. It was cold and strong enough to blow through my layers. The DMI say 15 m/s gusts. That's over 30mph. Feels like -8C/18F. 

 Thoughts of my usual Saturday ride to the next village have been abandoned. It would have meant riding straight into the wind. Adding further to the wind chill factor.

 18.30 Another day of watching YouTube. It was far too cold to ride anywhere. I have been keeping the stove well fed. Getting though lots of logs. Now it is time to make some dinner.

 Beans on toast. 

 It was supposed to drop to -7C overnight tonight. Instead of which we are offered a balmy -6C/21F instead. 

   

  ~?~

30 Jan 2026

30.01.2026 Save the pros from amateurs!

 ~?~

  Friday 30th 30F/-1C [8.15] Another cold, windy day with snow showers and drifting. 62F/16.7C in the room. 39F/4C in the greenhouse. The stove was fed with two large logs and burned late into the night.

 8.15 Up at 7.30 after a fairly quiet night. I woke earlier and the clock kept jumping forwards. Stove lit.

 9.35 Back from my walk. Unpleasantly cold wind at times. Blackbirds squabbling over territory. Sparrows chattering. A few listless gulls out on the prairie. Still lots of snow lying.

I spent the day on YouTube. Even watching stand up comedians before dinner.

7.30 66F/19C. Dinner was an organic chop, organic mushrooms and Danish baked beans.  

 Three pieces of road news: The Fyn police have fined 1300 motorists in January alone. Mostly for mobile phone use behind the wheel. 

 There are now more electric cars than diesels on Danish roads. 

 Danish, professional racing cyclists are appealing for amateurs. To leave them well alone while they are out training. Many amateurs jump onto the star's back wheels but lack the professional's skills. Resulting in too many crashes and injuries. Which can seriously impact a training session, racing season or even an entire career. 

 What I find sickening is the amateur is often starting fresh. While the pro may already have covered a high mileage that day. Often riding hard on very long climbs in the southern European mountains. Where many racing teams go for the better weather and the challenges of the terrain. 

 Along with the clingy amateurs. Who think that holding a back wheel, for a mere couple of kilometres. Before exhaustion ends the chase. Is a sign of matching fitness with their heroes. Several top cyclists have crashed recently. When complete amateurs have run into them. When the pro braked for obstructions. Or animals dashing across the road.  

 

  ~?~

29 Jan 2026

29.01.2026 Flat tire!

 ~?~

  Thursday 29th 28F/-2C [7.00] Cloudy and windy with risk of light snow showers. Temperature expected to fall to -4C/25F. Before settling at -1C all day. Gusting to 10m/s [22mph] from the NE. Room at 59F/15C. Greenhouse at 40F/4C. 

 7.00 Stove lit. I woke earlier but managed to stay in bed until 6.20. The lighter duvet was more comfortable. Without overheating.

 Cooking class today. I'll drive there. Still pitch black but the cameras show no new snow.

 9.00 I was just going to leave but I have a flat front tire! Which is a first for me. It has never happened before in well over half a century. The nearest tire outlet is 10 miles away. They have a two week waiting list for changing to winter tires. 

 I have a spare wheel in the boot. Which involves moving the trailer at the back of the carport. The car is in the carport and hemmed in with stuff. All the while surrounded in snow in an ice cold wind. I can drive it slowly forward to get enough room for using the jack. 

 Do I have a suitable jack? Not a silly question. I have assorted jacks but the Morris has a strange welded tube. Precisely where one might expect to jack the front end. An online check suggests the original Morris jack should be avoided. I'll start with the scissors jack I stored in the boot.

 Riding to the class on my e-bike is theoretically possible but would involve lots of hilly, minor roads. More like rural lanes. With the temperature below freezing it would not be a comfortable journey. Plus the risk of icy roads. Just to add to the difficulties. Grr! 

 9.30 65F/18.3C in the room. I'll have to change into my work clothes and get cracking. 

10.15 Everything I needed was in the car. Even a tommy bar and the correct socket for the wheel nuts. It didn't seem to take long but left me completely breathless. Now I have to ring around. To see who can mend the puncture. The spare tire is not the same as the rest. 

 12.45 Both petrol stations air pumps weren't working. The first was frozen apparently. Water in the system. Rather than air. The second had a worn out valve seal rubber. So it lost more air than it could push in. The staff came out and out and looked. Of course I was the only one complaining. Nobody else had any problem. 

 I bought some groceries while I was in the village. I'll have lunch and then try a rural tire service outlet. To have the puncture repaired.

 It was quite entertaining. The elderly tire fitter was delighted to have a Morris Minor there. We chatted away for ages while he worked. The tire had an inner tube and this had a tiny hole. He was a club motorcyclist and so we chatted about those too. He fixed the puncture and then I could drive home. With the wheel in the boot.

 19.30 67F/19C. As I had missed the cooking class I had to make dinner. An organic chop, boiled potatoes, peas and Bisto gravy

  

  ~?~

28 Jan 2026

28.01.2026 Chicken butties?

 ~?~

  Wednesday 28th 30F/-1C [5.30] Continuing cloudy, cold and windy. 62F in the room. 41F in the greenhouse.

 Up at 5.30. I was hot and wide awake. I am going back to the lighter duvet. Or will try the third.

 7.00 Stove lit. 

 9.20 Back from a 20 minute walk around the drive loop. About a centimeter  of new snow. Some of which was wind driven. To fill in footprints and tire tracks. The NE wind was unpleasantly strong in exposed places.

 18.00 Another day browsing or on YT. I wanted to go out on the e-bike but the snow, cold and dark skies put me off. I have been feeding the stove all day and it has crept up to 65F/18C in the room. 

 20.00 29F/-2C. 66F/19C. Dinner was fried chicken on rolls. I had to use up the chicken and the rolls too. I gave the chicken 20 minutes at a modest heat. It worked much better than toast.

 

  ~?~

27 Jan 2026

27.01.2026 Not our cameras?

 ~?~

  Tuesday 27th 30F/-1C. Overcast with light snow showers possible. 58F/14C in the room.  41F/5C  in the greenhouse.

 7.45 I have been tidying and cleaning around the stove before the sweep arrives. Who is here on time. Presently standing on the roof and brushing the chimney. It was interesting how the magnetic door closure. Slowly moves the stove backwards. Each cushioned closure of the heavy door adds its own impact. Perhaps I should place something non flammable behind the stove. To stop it's slow crawl.

 8.10 The sweep has just left. No problems and very little soot or ash. All thanks to the modern stove and clean fuel. I have now lit the stove. To warm the place up before leaving to visit my friend. I now have a new reserve of wood flakes to use as kindling. Which saves buying sacks of the stuff at the sheltered workshop.

 I was going to check the traffic cameras for road conditions. It seems the cameras are still working but public access to their website and the cameras has been blocked! These were presumably installed at taxpayer expense. As is the government controlled website. 

 Do we still fund the cameras and their maintenance from our taxpayers' contributions? Their excuse? They can sell the camera video to private businesses? But deny the Danish taxpayer all of the benefits of actually seeing real road conditions at a glance? Does not compute!  

 I drove over to see my friend. Had a pleasant chat over Danish pastries and coffee by his wood stove. Drove home via another charity shop. Looking for thicker curtains but without luck.

 Dinner was a salmon pasty, chips and peas.

 

  ~?~

26 Jan 2026

26.01.2026 No new snow.

 ~?~

  Monday 26th 30F/-1C [8.30] Overcast with snow promised. They are calling it a snowstorm because of the NE wind. Expected to gust to 15m/s. Over 30mph.Which is very likely to cause drifting or driven snow. Up to 20cm is possible in total. Currently no new snow lying. The trees and hedges are moving.

 Just under 58F/14C in the room. So the curtains around the open stairwell had a more limited effect last night. It was 2C colder outside overnight than the previous night. The stove was going well at bedtime at 11pm. I have enough logs for today. I could get some briquettes from the supermarket to last a couple more days.

 The snow is not supposed to arrive here until lunch time. I can fetch a trailer full of logs before the snow arrives. The small amount of snow on the drives shouldn't hinder me too much.

 Up at 7.50 after a fairly quiet night. The sweep will be coming early tomorrow morning. If he can get through the snow! 

 10.00 Back with a trailer full of logs. The roads were fine. Now I just need to get them into the greenhouse. 

 10.40 28F/-2C. 59F/15C in the room. Half of the logs are dumped in the greenhouse. I can stack them neatly after I recover. The remainder in the trailer is safely covered and in the carport. Along with the car. A huge relief to have enough logs again.

 It is horrible out there! My eyes and nose were streaming constantly in the cold wind. The fitted trailer tarpaulin blew away until I had it fixed down. No new snow yet. Though it seems to be limited to a southern strip of the island. Morning coffee and then I'll drive into the village. To stock up with essentials. In case I am snowed in. Nobody clears the drives and I am no longer fit or strong enough to do it myself.

 Back from the shops. I bought some thick wool socks because it said "Wool" on the cardboard sleeve. After I came home I discovered that "Wool" meant only 30%! The rest is micro-plastic waste.  

 14.10 63F/17C. Still no snow. The snowfall area is sliding westwards just south of my location. It is supposed to head slowly northwards later.

 7.45 30F/-1C. 66F/19C in the room. No new snow yet. Just  a dusting on the car inside the carport. The radar shows the snow clouds sliding to the SW but evaporating before they reach me. Dinner was one of my ugly omelettes. The sausage was cut into small pieces and slowly fried.  The mushrooms added after a while. Then the whipped eggs poured over the cooked contents of the frying pan. It was fine. I washed up while it cooked. I suppose that make me a domestic robot. Just better looking.

 

  ~?~

25 Jan 2026

25.01.2026 More thermal pottering.

 ~?~

  Sunday 25th 31F/-1C [5.15] Overcast. About 1cm of overnight snow. Possible snow showers. A snowstorm warning has been released! Up to 20cm over the next 48 hours with strong NE winds. 

 62.6F/17C in the room.  Has the curtain stair enclosure reduced heat loss to the upstairs? It would seem so. The last two mornings were 3F cooler with the same outside temperature. Perhaps the room will cool further by normal breakfast time.

 I got up at 5am after being awake for two hours. I was too hot under the heavier duvet! 🙄

7.15 The room sank to just under 62F/16.7C before I lit the stove. That is still a 3F reduction in heat loss compared to the rather chilly, 59F of the last two mornings. The curtains I used to close off the open stairwell were really quite thin. Multiple thicknesses might reduce heat loss further. Still at very low cost and effort for this first experiment. 

 Appearance is obviously important in the longer term. Not that I get many visitors but for my own visual benefit. I don't want a huge eyesore in the room!

 This new thermal image [top right] is interesting. This is before the stove has warmed the room at all. In fact it has only just been lit. There is almost no stratification on the stair curtains. While the massive chimney is still holding heat from last night. [Just out of view to the left] Though the heat has spread to the adjoining, brick wall.

 The cold glass of the door to the entrance hall, on the right of the image, could usefully be insulated. The entrance door itself is solid pine board. Poorly insulated and draught sealed. It has had white frost on the inside surface in cold winters! I have long planned to replace it. With a properly insulated door faced with grooved plywood. Probably home made. An air lock porch has also been long planned but never progressed. 

 The second image shows the chimney [65cm square]  before the stove has properly warmed up. It is clear that it stores a lot of heat and releases it steadily to the room. Thermal mass at its best. Since it costs nothing. The stove surroundings are ceramic tiles and these also get warm to thanks to the stove. So a very large area radiates heat into the room. Once it has stored the heat coming from the stove. 

 It is not exactly free heat. Because the stove's output is partially stored. Instead of heating the room directly. The benefit is, of course, a much longer heating period for the same input of wood. The same is true for the very expensive soapstone cladding on the stove itself. Intended to prolong the benefits of the stove long after it has gone out. It can often feel warm in the morning. 

 Much is made of mass stoves or mass ovens efficiency. Where a small burn can provide heat for days. The cost is twofold. A literally massive structure in the room. Somebody knowledgeable has to build it. 

 The third image shows the area around the stove is already warming the surrounding walls. With the stove cladding yet to take up the heat.

 The chimney upstairs radiates heat to the attic. Though I was never really aware of it. Even though our bedheads were right beside it for three decades. I only discovered all of this after I invested in the Topdon thermal camera. A plug in attachment for mobile phones. It cost about £200 equivalent. Competitors are now available.

 The advantage of these infra red sensitive cameras is that one can see at a glance where heat is being lost. They can also be used to check for electrical faults and poor building standards. Images are easily captured as they are stored on the phone. So a permanent record exists.

 9.10 I couldn't stay awake. So I had a half hour nap. Very fine snow is falling. This doesn't help my need for more logs! I have more than enough for today. I have brought in all the remaining logs in the greenhouse.

 16.00 31F/-0.6C. 65F/18.3C in the room. I can't be certain but it felt cooler. When I went upstairs to hang up some laundry. 

I have taken the recycling bin along the drive. The snow made it far easier than usual. To see where I was going in the dark. 

 20.00 32F/0C. 67F/19.4C! This is ridiculous! I am sitting here and sweating in a T-shirt! 

 Dinner was cheese on toast. I was a bit mean with the grated cheese.

 

  ~?~

24 Jan 2026

24.01.2026 Stairwell thermal closure.

 ~?~

  Saturday 24th 29F/-2C. Heavily overcast, cold and windy with a light dusting of overnight snow. More light snow possible. 59F/15C in the room. 41F/5C in the greenhouse. Stove lit. 

 I deliberately stayed in bed until 8am. After a busy night attending the fire bucket.

 I went for a late walk after morning coffee. It was grey, cold and windy. Though I was warm and comfortable. Pile lined, fleece jacket under the down sweater. Double fleece hat pulled down to the safety glasses. The GripGrab, two fingered mitts were fine today. Just as they were yesterday. Something had left miles of blue stains on the road. As they leaked oil, fuel or brake fluid. 

 12.15 Back from the village. Where I bought three long curtains at the charity shop. For closing off the stairwell . There was nothing very heavy. Nor really wide enough. So I went with what there was. Quickly stapling two curtains to the ceiling tiles. To get a feel for appearance, easy access to the stairs and thermal efficiency. There are lots of other charity shops to scour for heavier cloth. 

 We lived and slept upstairs when my wife was still alive. So it was never sensible to close off the stairs. There would have been no warmth up there. Now I have moved my bed downstairs.

 I have a posh, glazed door stored away. With beveled glass panes. Which could be hinged to the wall across the bottom of the stairs. Then a more permanent wall built in place of the pale curtain. The aquarium would be in the way of the door when fully open. So some furnishing adjustments would be necessary. 

 Or, I have some glazed panels from a wooden conservatory stored in the shed. They were supposed to become a porch but that never happened. These could be hinged to fold out of the way at the bottom of the stairs.

 A glazed wall unit could enclose the side of the stairs more smartly.  One might be hovering in a charity shop somewhere. It only needs to be 1.5m wide x 2.15m high. That's well within the range of a room divider, glazed cupboard or wardrobe. And, a little imagination. I don't want a solid wall robbing the stairs of light. An alternative might be roller blinds. Not sue about the large drop though. Venetian blinds? Louvres?

 20.00 32F/0C. I can't be certain the curtains have affected the room temperature. It is still only 64F/18C at the computer. I have taken some infra red [thermal] images of the curtains. See above of the same area as the top [normal] image. 

 There is an obvious stratification effect on the curtains. The hall wall and glazed door are [very] cold spots. My wife kept a curtain over the hall doors. I took them down after she died. To open up the house to the light. It had always been very dark indoors. 

 Dinner was a fry-up. Organic sausage, mushrooms, cherry tomatoes, a slice of wholemeal bread toast and two organic eggs. 

 10.15 32F/0C. It is trying to snow. There is a snow storm warning for Thursday 29th. That's a cooking class day. 65F/18.3C in the room. 

 

 

  ~?~

23 Jan 2026

23.01.2026 A better bit of duvet on my bed.

 ~?~

    Friday 30F/-1C [7.45] Heavy overcast. Hovering around freezing all day with easterly gales. Possible early sunshine but clouding over. Possible snow showers too. 59F/15C in the room. 41F/5C in the greenhouse. Stove lit and already going well.

 Up at 7.10 after a warm night under the heavier, down duvet. I got up three times. The heavier duvet stayed in place much better than the lighter one. I often have to find and rotate the twisted duvet in the dark after getting up. Anything which prolongs or increases a sleep disturbance is really best avoided. I didn't need socks. The heavier duvet draped really well around me. The lighter one needs regular adjustment to avoid cold spots at the edges. It also rotates with me as I change sleeping position. Mostly positive then. I'll continue with the heavier duvet until the weather warms up.  

 Should I go and fetch some more firewood? Even if it means manual loading it myself. The stack in the greenhouse is at critical level. Barely a few days left at current consumption. I have found some fairly dry chestnut logs under the shed roof overhang. So I could hold out until the vendor returns from holiday on Sunday. 

 The smaller trailer required by the Morris has completely altered my needs in obtaining logs. Not helped by the crooks at the other timber yard. Where I ordered and paid for half a cubic meter. Which didn't even cover the bottom of the trailer. It has a volume of one cubic meter to the tops of the sides. So should have been half full! Or more, if the other vendor is being typically generous.

 9.30 Back from my walk. Not much snow left now. The wind was horrible. Not too bad with it behind me but nasty after the turn. The trees were roaring. It didn't bother the two Red kites soaring over the hamlet at low altitude as I left. The traffic was steady. Cars passing at short intervals. A couple of lorries. The set aside fields to the south have been ploughed. 

 11.00 It has just reached 63F/17C in the room. I've brought in more logs. Now I am going shopping in the Morris. 

 11.30 The wind was even stronger and colder at the shops. With several lady's hair blowing around wildly. Meat has come down in price. 

 Another day of self-improvement on YT. While constantly feeding the stove with the remaining logs.

Dinner was fish fingers, baked beans and mashed potato. Very enjoyable. I washed up which it cooked. So I am becoming quite domesticated. I am running the washing machine too.

    

 ~?~ 

22 Jan 2026

22.01.2026 Thermal comfort blanket.

 ~?~

 Thursday 22nd 29F/-2C. Cold, heavily overcast and windy from the NE. Local snow flurries later. Not expected to rise above freezing all day. 58F/14C in the room 41F/5C in the greenhouse. The stove was still going well at midnight. Today's lowest start temperature in the room [so far] is probably due to the wind. It must be finding all the gaps in the structure and existing insulation.

 Up at 8.30 after a busy night. I kept seeing the clock, or visiting the fire bucket, then falling asleep again. 

 9.15 The stove has been lit and I can already feel its heat on the back of my neck. I have attached the Topdon, infra red camera to my phone and checked around. The southerly wall is by far the coldest. Solid brick with three [double glazed] windows. The greenhouse provides some shelter but is still cold. There is also a narrow, cold streak around the junction between the ceiling and all the exterior walls. Not easy to access.

 The balcony room is colder still at the top of the stairs. The single glazed, "French widows" showing only 9C/48F on the camera. Over what is quite a large area. Visitors have complained of a waterfall of cold air at the foot of the stairs. Their advice is to fit a heavy curtain to a curved rail attached to the living room ceiling. To close off the open stairwell. While still allowing access. Though it might be preferable to close off the double balcony doors themselves with a heavy curtain. Possibly both options should be tried. 

 If the stairwell is closed then the open plan attic will be colder still. Meaning that heat will flow more freely through the entire living room ceiling. Meanwhile, the bathroom and a third of the kitchen ceiling lie under the cold, balcony room. Which adds to their heat loss. The balcony room will inevitably be cooler still. Access is rarely required in winter. Since it is only used for rather chaotic storage. Temperatures soar to well over 100F in summer. Thanks to the fully glazed gable end. 

 The huge area of glass is quite attractive but should probably be removed and a modern window and/or windows, fitted in a properly insulated gable end. To bring the room up to modern living standards. It has 45º ceilings down to the floor and is only a modest 2m deep. Though it could make a small guest bedroom if done properly. A glazed door out to an escape balcony might be preferable. Though escape windows are now readily available. Where the whole glazed frame is hinged. To allow easy access over a larger area. Without requiring large openers or clear glass area. I installed one of these windows at the eastern end of the attic. With cottage style glazing bars to smaller panes. Triple glazed to modern standards.

 9.45 60F/15.6C in the room. Thinking about a walk but it's horribly grey and windy too. I have brought in more logs from the greenhouse. My stock is going down fast! Do I feel strong enough to fetch some more logs? If I have to load the trailer by hand. Or dare I wait until Sunday to have them loaded for me? 

 I am trying a couple of small, horse chestnut logs. Which I brought in from the huge, unprotected heap to dry out a bit. They have readily caught light. We'll see.. It would take quite a bit of work to sort through the loose and haphazard stack outside. To hopefully find some dry logs. The heap was covered once but later additions have made a typical mess. Under my chaotic charge.    

 10.45 Back from a loop around the neighbours' drives. A cold wind. A heron rose from the marshy, back field.

 Back to scrolling through YouTube's endless video suggestions. Typically, it had been reading my blog. So up came numerous thermal improvement suggestions. The simplest and best in test, was simply hanging a blanket over a window. So I found a blanket and stapled it over the balcony door frame. 

 12.15 30F/-1C. 63F/17C in the room. The bare, single glazed windows of the fully glazed, balcony doors were showing 12C. It was only 9C earlier before I lit the stove. The blanket immediately read 17C with the pistol thermometer. 

 I'll go back up in a while to see if the reading has changed. Coming back down the stairs was like walking outside during a heatwave. After having been in an air conditioned supermarket. 

 The advantage of the blanket is that it allows some light through. So it isn't remotely as dark. As using cardboard or other opaque, insulating materials. It also looks quite reasonable or even quite attractive, with the right choice of blanket. Charity shops would be a good source of cloth, curtains and blankets. 

 Covering the entire frame provides an air gap. While simultaneously enclosing all the potential gaps and air leaks around the doors. Though I made no attempt to staple around the edges or bottom of the blanket. A difference of as little as 5C helps to reduce heat loss through these doors. 

 The Topdon thermal camera shows a more useful image of the covered doors. Compared to the local readings of the remote reading thermometer. There is clear stratification of the temperature with height. I photographed the doors straight on from the landing at about 3 meters away. To take in the entire door frame with the blanket in place. 

 This suggests that there are draughts under the bottom of the doors. And/or that the air temperature upstairs is also stratified. I have already laid a loose roll of cloth. To try to reduce the draughts at the bottom of the doors. All very simple and cost free so far. 

 Dinner was Heinz beans on toast. Distinctly underwhelming. I bought a load of cans on special offer. I have tried adding pepper and salt but the taste remains lifeless.

 21.00 31F/-1C. 63f/17C in the room. The greenhouse is at 40F/4.4C. The blanket over the balcony doors is now at 14C but the glass behind it now reads only 7C. I was quite comfortable until I needed more logs. Which meant going out into the greenhouse. So my fleece jacket is back on again. 

 I am wondering if I can improve the cold wall where my bed is. I could hang a blanket, or blankets, from the top of the wall. This would cover the cold brick and reduce heat loss through the windows. I haven't been cold in bed so far. Though I can feel the colder air on my face in the night. Indoor temperatures do seem to be dropping slowly but steadily. I am not stinting on logs for the stove. The larger logs burn for longer and probably produce more heat.  I also have two more warmer options for duvets if I need them. In fact I might try one tonight. I found it too warm last time.    

 

  ~?~

21 Jan 2026

21.01.2026 A bit of a wobbly!

 ~?~

  Wednesday 21st 29F/-2C. Overcast with  hard white frost. Early sunshine was forecast. Wind picking up to easterly gales. Possibility of some snowfall. 59F/15C in the room. 40F/4.4C in the greenhouse.

 Up at 8.20 after a fairly quiet night. 

 Plans for a ride are on hold. Gales, low temperatures and snow aren't conducive to full enjoyment. I have been watching YT videos by professional northerly Swedes and Norwegians on the successful choice of low temperature clothing. While Denmark doesn't usually suffer such extremes the advice is still relevant. 

 Gloves or mitts are the most difficult choice where warmth with fine dexterity is essential on an e-bike. My higher average speeds, compared to my trikes, adds a serious wind chill factor. While I must certainly pedal all the time I am not usually working nearly so hard on climbs. Though I am not a sack of spuds like a scooterist or motorcyclist. If the pedals don't turn then forward progress simply does not happen! My cadence is falling steadily with old age. I could pedal up to 130rpm only a few short years ago. Now I average high 70s low 80s.

 The tiny keypad controls of the Bosch motor system is a serious impediment to power mode selection. While wearing gloves or mitts. One can only presume that they don't have winter in Bosch's Germany. Or the head of design has never ridden a bike of any form. Perhaps thanks to the crudest form of nepotism. Or bullying of the design team from on high. Who knows. They certainly don't deserve their monopoly for their motor controls and computer screens. Which is why I usually stick to Sport mode. Fortunately the MTB style gear and brake levers are fine. 

 My best winter glove choice so far is a pair of Reusch "Powder Spirit" skiing gloves. With Goretex membrane and wrist tethers for safety. Made in China of course. They have been warm under most conditions. Dexterity is acceptable for so much warmth and still having five digits. The don't feel too clumsy for the insulation provided.

 For years I have been using GripGrab  gloves and mitts but they have often disappointed when it is cold. Their fancy, printed grip patterns on the palms and fingers are basically crap. Far too slippery even for driving safely! Hopeless on the bike. 

 I note that GripGrab no longer fills the display walls of Danish bike shops. I one swore by their two finger mitts and have bought several pairs over the years. Never again. The cold creeps in on every ride below 50F/10C. The Reusch have allowed me to ride comfortably and reliably in frost conditions. With wind chill factors equivalent to 30kph/20mph cruising speeds. I usually take a pair of GripGrab mitts in case it warms up. Though I rarely do a swap after warming up in the shops.  

 The name Hestra keeps cropping up in the YT videos about sledding at -40C. Pricing is eye watering. I'll try to find a Danish stockist within reach. To see if I can try their products on in the shop. Provided they have them in XXXXL of course! The one detail I am not keen on is the elastication at the wrist. Not the cuff. Taking gloves on and off should never be a struggle. Soft lining can be very sticky when ones hands are damp from handling shopping outside the supermarket. I [usually] have no need to keep the snow out.

 9.15 Stove lit. I must go for a walk! 

 10.00 The stove is finally going well and I can stop waffling. 

 10.35 30F/-1C. 61F/16C in the room. Back from my walk around the fields on the spray tracks. Overcast but the wind wasn't too bad. Though a passing lorry left its memory as a cold headwind for almost half a minute. The ground was frozen hard. Making me feel as if my legs were too stiff at first. The horses were curious and came out from their stalls to see me. My hands were too cold in the GripGrab mitts. Five minutes after coming home my fingers are still cold when I make a fist. I brought the recycling, wheelie bin back with me. They came late yesterday.

 Another day improving myself on YouTube. 

 I stated feeling dizzy while washing up and making dinner. I ate the chop but couldn't manage the chips. I can always warm them up later if I am feeling better.

 8.30 31F/-1C. Had a nap in the chair. Feeling much better. It is still only 63F in the room. Despite the stove having been going all day. I am plenty warm enough in a fleece jacket over my usual indoor clothes. Including a thick jumper.

 11.30 64F in the room. Time for bed. I heated up the chips thoroughly in the oven and they went down fine. That was an hour ago. 

 

 

  ~?~

20 Jan 2026

20.01.2026 E-bike fettling.

 ~?~

  Tuesday 20th 26F/-3C [8.15] Clear and sunny when the sun finally rises. Peaking at just over freezing. I missed the aurora last night. No sign of anything this morning. Even though it was still dark when I got up. It dropped to -5C overnight.

 Up at 7.20 after a rather disturbed night. It is a cold 59F/15C in the room. The stove is already lit.

 I shall be visiting my English friend I'll be going in the Morris. I foolishly left it out in the open overnight. Thinking I was going to collect more logs yesterday afternoon. So the car is now white with frost. The carport would have protected it to some degree.

 12.40 Back from visiting my friend. A surprising amount of snow left in places. Mosty shady banks, verges and where the snow ploughs piled it up. The various lakes, ponds and puddles were all still frozen.

 16.10 Back again. After lunch I had to take the e-bike into town for a service. While that was happening I visited assorted shops and supermarkets. Just to kill the time. I took the Moustache [e-bike] on the carrier. So I could motor all over town more quickly than walking. All the shops are scattered over quite a large area. I found a nice jumper in a charity shop. In my favourite dark green. To go with my hunting style clothing. And no, I don't go hunting. Nor would I.

 Eventually I received an SMS to say I could pick up the e-bike. Nothing needed replacing. So it was mostly detail lubrication and checking. So labour charges with a software update to finish off. Returning at the speed limit on the main road wasn't enough for the commuters. Who were happily going past me. As if I was standing still. 

 18.30 Still only 61F/16C in the room. The stove hadn't been re-lit. Time to make some dinner. Mackerel in tomato sauce on toast. With halved cherry tomatoes. Followed by a whole tin of Heinz tomato soup.

  

  ~?~

19 Jan 2026

19.01.2026 Keep to the right! Or the left?

 ~?~

  Monday 19th 30F/-1 [9.30] A hard white frost. Lots of sunshine today but hovering around freezing. Light SE winds. The room has dropped to 60F/15.6C overnight. 38F/3.3C in the greenhouse. I have lit the stove.

 Up at 8.50 after a busy night followed by dreams. I was seriously thinking about getting up at 6am but fell asleep again. Then I was dreaming about cycling on the outskirts of a strange, hilly city.  Now I realise that I don't ever dream about cycling. Which seems odd.

 I hope to fetch more logs today. I'll ring the vendor to make sure he will be there.

10.50 Back from a walk in bright sunshine. The recycling lorry hasn't been yet. It was chilly but with little wind to spoil the proceedings. Three swans were decorating the prairie. A very unusual sight. Though they were within a stone's throw of the lake just beyond. 

 Where do DFDS get their drivers? A vast container lorry came arond a blind corner on completely the wrong side of the road. Supposedly protected by double white lines. [Which run for miles/kilometers!] Then he drove up to the brow of the following blind hump. With all wheels on the wrong side of the double white lines. He couldn't blame it on me. I was standing right at the back of the verge. To allow him a free shot at the bend. He could not have seen me behind the hedge. His only excuse was excessive speed and poor driving skills.  

 The firewood vendor is on holiday again until the weekend. He has told me I can always collect some logs there to keep me going. I can pay with my phone as usual. Though the labour involved is a deterrent.

 14.45 35F/1.7C. Back from a 16km ride to the village and back. Via the long route through the forest. Returning by the direct route. It was freezing! A large bird of prey left the drive and moved to a tree. Perhaps suggesting it might safely return once I had gone. 

 Dinner was an organic chop, mushrooms, cherry tomatoes and boiled organic potatoes. With dollops of organic butter. It was absolutely perfect. I washed up while it cooked.

 

  ~?~

18 Jan 2026

18.01.2026 Flying mink?

 ~?~

  Sunday 18th 35F/2Cish. [9.00] Dark overcast and just above freezing all day. 10m/s SE breeze reducing slowly. 63F/17.8C in the room. 44F/6.7C in the greenhouse.

 Up at 7.15 after a busy night.  I had better light the stove. 

 9.50 time for a walk. It took a while for the logs to catch well alight.

 10.15 Back again. Cool and light drizzle. There was a fresh mink skin on the drive. It was still red inside. As if freshly skinned. 

 I checked the cameras and it arrived yesterday around lunchtime. I even cycled past without noticing it. No sign of any other animal or person being involved in its arrival. It certainly didn't trigger any videos. Which seems highly unlikely. Could it have dropped from the sky? Do birds of prey skin their prey with such obvious skill? Very odd!

 The rest of the day was spent on YouTube. Education and entertainment in equal measure. The lunacy of politics, science, UAPs, AI, travel, history, et al. Spoilt by the insertion of endless turds masquerading as adverts. They pull power from the world's entire grid. To be pumped down the sewers of Big Tech. The ads are the sand on which the whole toppling edifice wobbles so uncertainly. If only a billion of their empty dollars could pay for lessons in morals.

 If only adverts weren't always and exclusively aimed at infants and the subnormal. Or whatever woke term is acceptable this week. For the retards of this hideously inbred species. Which we laughingly call the human race. The pinnacle of dumb and dumber. Amongst the unfortunates who frequent this amazing planet. One day advertisers will be viewed with the same disdain as child rapists, property developers, dictators and estate agents. In no particular order. 

 Dinner was poached eggs on toast. There is hardly room for another picture. Which is a shame because the eggs were perfect. So I have wittered on for a stretch. Just to make enough space.

 

  ~?~

17 Jan 2026

17.01.2026 25km at below 3C.

 ~?~

  Saturday 17th 39F/4C [7.50]  Another grey and breezy day. 63F/17C in the room. 46F/8C in the greenhouse.

  Up at 7.15 after clock watching and dozing for hours. My cold is still hanging on. Congestion in nose and chest.

  I hope to fit in a ride this morning.

 9.40 Back from my walk. The stove has warmed the room to 65F/18C. It was cold on my hands despite the GripGrab gloves. Two male pheasants were in the drive. Both took off in opposite directions. Complaining bitterly at their disturbance. A Red kite left a roadside tree for pastures new. Again complaining at being disturbed. Two young female deer galloped across the prairie after gunfire to the NE. They were less afraid of me than the dangers behind them. I moved to the back of the verge and hid in the hedge to reduce their anxiety. Thanks goodness there was no traffic as they hesitantly crossed the road on the blind corner. 

 12.45 37F/2.8C. Back from a 25m ride. Partially sunny becoming overcast. Cold enough to feel like a knife on exposed extremities. Headwind going. Crosswind coming back. The wind chill effect at 30kph was below 12F/-10C. The printed 3D saddle was fine without padded cycling shorts. I wore my Endura cycling raincoat over a pile-lined, fleece jacket. It was fine as long as I kept both zipped right up to my neck. Fleece trousers on my legs. Thick wool socks in Sorel boots. 

 17.00 I have been cleaning the e-bike at dusk. With the battery removed. Using car shampoo and a soft brush from a dustpan. The long bristles were useful in reaching every nook and cranny. I thoroughly rinsed the bike off afterwards with copious rainwater. It was rapidly getting dark as I worked.

 20.00 69F/21C in the room. Dinner was a chicken and mushroom fry-up. With tweggs on toast. 

  

  ~?~

16 Jan 2026

16.01.2026 All our yesterdays.

 ~?~

  Friday 16th 40F/4.4C [8.30] Rather cloudy and windy but mostly dry. Though clear here, there are still large patches of snow lying out on the fields.

 Up at 7.30 after a busy night and weird dreams. I woke up shivering early on. So I had to put on a jumper and thick socks. No obvious reason for it. The room was at 66F/19C at bedtime. The stove was still going. No change in my bedding. I always shake my down duvet. Not particularly cold outside.

 I need to go to Assens. I have a small mechanical problem with my hearing aids. The monofilament, ear retention guides are disintegrating. Possibly UV degradation? I'd like to make a ride of it but there will be a 10m/s [20+mph] headwind on the way. Increasing to 25mph as I near the coast. 

 I keep having flashbacks to former cycle rides. With a strange sense of nostalgia. Almost with sadness and longing. I covered so many thousands of miles per year on my trike.  It was obviously highly addictive. Though often painful. I would return from a longer ride in a state of near exhaustion. I never took food or even water. Saddle soreness was my constant companion. Despite padded short, or bibs and a Brooks B17 saddle.

 Even in my late 60s I was extremely competitive. If I saw cyclists up ahead. I would chase them down and overtake them if I could. Even though I was dragging three wheels and heavy baggage with me. They were often young and riding a bare few kilos of carbon fibre on racing tires. Carrying nothing but a credit card and GPS or mobile phone. 

 A difference of 30-40lbs against the trike. While I was riding on Schwalbe Duran Plus tires. They cured the puncture problem but were heavy and must have had higher drag. I used to have a huge box of inner tubes in the shed. From my endless punctures on ordinary HP tires. I'd wear out several sets of "road" tires per year. They could have cured the puncture problem decades ago. All it would have taken would be a ban on swapping punctured wheels on big races. End of problem if money and prestige mattered.

 9.00 Time for a walk. 

 It was dark, raw and windy. I was shown a brief sunrise as I walked down the drive. Only to watch it become clouded over. I was facing the wind on the return journey. So I have decided to drive into town. It will be quicker. A Red kite was circling over the house as I looked across from the new drive.

 12.15  Back from town. I'm glad I went in the car. The hearing aid centre was closed. So I went shopping. I bought some different screws to see if I can get more into the carport roof. Preferably before it blows away. I bought some demister spray for the Morris windows. The rear window steams up under most conditions. Apparently Morris is not taking returns under guarantee any more. 

 Oh, and I bought some plastic cutting boards for the kitchen. We use them all the time at cooking class. I had bought a small one from a supermarket offer but it is already showing cuts. So it has to go on hygiene grounds. I bought some normal sized boards in a pack of three. They didn't sell singles at the expensive kitchen shop. 

 I also made an appointment for a service for the e-bike on Tuesday afternoon. The Nyon head keeps saying service required. So now I am following orders from a Bosch bicycle computer. Where will it all end?

 My next task is to wheelbarrow the reserve logs in from the car trailer. There are none left indoors and it is only 61F/16C. 

 15.00 42F/5.6C. All is safely gathered in. Stacked near the house door in the greenhouse. The flakes stuffed into baskets for kindling. The trailer returned to the carport. 60F//15.6C in the room. The stove finally lit. 

 Dinner was chicken curry. No mushrooms. Basmati organic white rice. I made a modest amount instead of the usual mountain.

 

 ~?~ 

15 Jan 2026

15.01.2026 Back to the kitchens.

 ~?~

  Thursday 15th 35F/1.7C. A rather wet and windy day is offered. All helping to clear the snow. The car looked frost covered earlier. So it must have been colder overnight.

 Up at 6.30 to the phone alarm after a fairly quiet night. It is the first cooking class this year. I shall drive there.

  The BBC was offering a diagnostic test for Covid, flu or a cold. All based on the likelihood of certain symptoms occurring. I passed. 😊

 09.00 I left for cooking class into mist.

 14.00 Back from cooking class. I made a heart cabbage and apple salad. Only 60F/15.6C in the room. I have lit the stove. 

 20.00 41F/5C. Because I had eaten well at lunch time there was no need for dinner. I had a cup of milky coffee and a digestive biscuit.


 

  ~?~

14 Jan 2026

14.01.2026 A bit of a ride.

 ~?~

  Wednesday 14th 40F/4.4C. Rain dying out. Possible sunshine this afternoon. 64F/18C in the room. Greenhouse at 46F/8C. 

 Up at 6.20 after a quiet night.  

 I need to go shopping but beyond the nearest village. The rain and warmer temperatures have melted most of the snow. The security cameras can see even in pitch dark. A few thin patches still lying on the parking area. 

 The drive is much worse. It lies in deep shade and is sheltered from the rain by trees and hedges. So will take more time to clear. Hopefully the snow is wet and soft and will flatten under the car tires.

  9.15 Back from a walk along the road. The drive was wet and icy in parts. The road mostly clear. The section where the prairie blows snow onto the road had the only banks from the snow ploughs. Mostly higher than waist height. I did not walk the drives loop today. It was too icy and steep to risk it. A long armed excavator was busy out of the fields. He kept shaking the bucket. Which is why I noticed it from such a distance. 

 12.50 Back from the shops. Going to villages to the south and north of home. Three carrier bags full just from restocking. It was difficult driving into blinding sunshine reflected off the wet roads. Despite my holding to the speed limit I was overtaken by three drivers in three different villages. 

 As I was coming out of a suparmarket a kid on an e-motorcycle went past. He decided to accelerate and instantly pulled a wheelie as his speed shot up from about 25mph to what looked like 50. He was quickly out of sight. So I couldn't  follow his progress. Or his survival.

 14.50 Back from a 11km e-bike ride to the village and back. I had forgotten to buy more honey. The sun was out and the wind was light. So it seemed a waste not to have a ride. Rather a lot of traffic. The bicycle lanes were all full of snow and slush. Where it had been pushed by the snow ploughs and homeowners clearing the pavements. The drive still had icy strips in places. So I deliberately rode along it. Just to see if it was slippery. It wasn't. 

 Dinner was organic sausage on wholemeal bread rolls. 

 

  ~?~

13 Jan 2026

13.01.2026 The thaw.

 ~?~

  Tuesday 13th 35F/1.7C [9.00] Overcast and rather misty. 100m invisibility. Snow still here. Risk of light rain. Possibly icy surfaces with a slow thaw.  I am still bunged up. Coughing and snotting but steadily improving.

 Up at 8.20 after a busy night. I managed to keep the stove going until I ran out of logs at 3am. Then dozed and clock watched until after 8am. 62F/17C in the room. 42C/5.6C in the greenhouse. I'll bring in more logs and get the stove going again. There is some glowing in the fire bed. The greenhouse has been dripping on the last few logs. 

 No Tuesday visit to or from my English friend this week. First cooking class on Thursday. Hopefully the snow will be washed away by the rain by then.  

10.30 36F/2.2C. Back from a short walk looping around the neighbours' drives. The roads were wet so I was having to retreat from tire spray.  It would have been too easy to stay in and have morning coffee. So I forced myself to get out. 

 Lethal wet ice in lots of places. So I stayed on the snow for better grip.  I cleared the snow from the parking area nearest the house. Hopefully leading to a more rapid thaw. The snow is wet, sticky and heavy now. Tiring and made me breathless. 65F/18C in the room. 

 18.00 38F/3.3C. Thick mist! It is supposed to start raining and continue for over 12 hours. The area I cleared this morning is already down to the bare gravel.

 Dinner was organic sausage, organic brown mushrooms and organic mashed potatoes. I should have added Bisto gravy. I missed a trick there.

 The thick mist proved to be all four security cameras have steamed up in the thaw. I can clearly see my distant neighbours' lights through the window. It has reached 67F/19C in the room. All thanks to rising temperatures reducing heat loss.

 I trimmed my beard heavily. Going from Father Christmas to international businessman at a stroke. Well, in a few minutes. I have rather let myself go during the holiday season. With the cooking classes starting again I feel the need for rather more decorum. The beard literally makes me look old. The whiter it gets the more obviously it stands out in the security cameras. Beards may be trendy but the "homeless" look is not for everybody.  

  

 

  ~?~

12 Jan 2026

12.01.2026 Keep on spinning!

 ~?~

  Monday 12th 30F/-1C [8.30] Overcast and windy. With bands of snow crossing slowly from the west. 60F/15.6C in the room. 37F/3C in the greenhouse.

 8.30 Up at 7.30 after a fairly quiet night. 62F/16.7C in the room already. I was able to keep the stove going with short, but large diameter logs each time I got up. Though I had to relight it this morning the stove was still hot. Far too hot to touch the soapstone cladding. Now I need to bring in more logs. I don't like to disturb the fish in their pond in the dark. It is light enough to see now. Without using the greenhouse lights. The fish are just dozing at these low temperatures.

 I have a problem today. There is a widespread black ice warning. Which may make the roads treacherous even before any new snow falls. Or afterwards if it goes over to rain. There is also a warning for snow drifting. An unhappy combination when I need to go shopping. 

 I have only two, perhaps three days worth of logs left in the greenhouse. The trailer has another three to four days worth of dry logs. So I am hoping to be able to reach my supplier on safe roads very soon. The Morris is limited to a smaller trailer. Compared to my previous, family car and builder's trailer. So I need to think in those terms from now on. I must keep a larger reserve in case of a run of bad weather. Simply because I cannot obtain lots more logs in a single journey.  

 I keep looking at the possibility of a heat pump. However they are still ruinously uneconomical in a poorly insulated home. I fitted underfloor heating hoses in the bathroom and kitchen years ago. An air to air system would do nothing for this option. 

While an air to wet system costs as much as a decent secondhand car. Because it uses a huge and expensive water tank and miles of visible plumbing. So neither type sells itself. Taking forever just to cover the cost of installation of a wet system. Adding hugely to the electricity bills in the case of a dry system and probably both. There is a house beside the road on the way to the village. It has SIX heat pumps installed. You can see the fan units dotted around the lower walls. With conduits for the heating fluid pipes going up the walls. Yet it is not much larger than my place. 

 9.30 The stove is going well. Going for a walk. Just to see what the road conditions are looking like. I'll wear my Scarpa walking boots. It is too uncomfortable to go far in the short wellies.

 9.50 Back again. The roads are 95% fine. The Morris started instantly after I checked the oil and water. I'll change into more suitable footwear for driving and go shopping. 

 11.00 64F/18C in the room. Back from the shops. Just as the first snowfall begins. The DMI shows a band of snow just reaching us now. I had to burn my way up the gentle slope of the drive in third gear. Then got stuck right on the far end of the drive. 

 My front wheels were on the road but the Morris is rear wheel drive. I had to rock the car in reverse and 3rd to finally pull away. The exit is right on a tight, blind bend. So one can't just roll out and hope for survival. 

 I came back with two carrier bags stuffed to the gills. The price of all meat goes on rising. I have run out of instant Arabic, organic coffee. Neither supermarket in the village stocks it. Or anything like it. I needed more tablets from the chemist too. 

 I spent the rest of the day browsing. The snow never amounted to much visually. Though it still coated the car quite thickly.  

 Dinner has to involve chicken. It is three days beyond its Best By" date. The last egg was a whole week past. So I cooked it well and turned it over. Just to make sure. 


  ~?~

11 Jan 2026

11.01.2026 -13C.

 ~?~

  Sunday 11th 8F/-13C! [8.15] Anther cold but sunny day. The frost record set last night was only over five years. Not the 25 year low they feared. 23F/-5C in the greenhouse. 36F/2.2C in the pond. The glass is all heavily frosted and iced over again. 

 The sun will take some time to clear the neighbour's trees. Plus the 10m high larch hedge of course. Which ironically my wife and I planted for the elderly couple who lived there then. That was before it became a scruffy, rental property. Only to become uninhabited for many years.

 Up at 8.15 after a rather busy night. Every time I visited the fire bucket I added another log to the stove. The previous one having burnt down to a red glow in the fire bed by then. This was roughly every couple of hours. More mental activity and sleep disturbance than I would have liked. It is now 59F/15C in the room. Which is still cooling despite my best efforts with the stove. I have just used the last log from yesterday's two baskets full.

 10.15 I have just brought in more logs. Again leaving me completely breathless. I am still coughing up thick phlegm and constantly blowing my nose. So the Man Cold hasn't given up yet. Still in no mood for a walk. The cylinder lock in the postbox is frozen solid.

 Dinner was fried chicken on bread rolls. Both items were out of date. So had to be used up.

 8.00 18F/-8C. It is getting warmer. Colder in the room. Hovering between 60F and 61F. 15-16C.

 I have been going around with the Topdon infra red camera attached to my phone. Looking for cold spots. Closing off the open stairwell would probably help to keep the warmth down in the room. Something like a curved curtain rail and a full length curtain.


  ~?~

10 Jan 2026

10.01.2026 Keep on stoking!

 ~?~

 Saturday 10th 29F/-2C. It should be a sunny day with the wind falling steadily.  The snow is still there. 57F/14C in the room. 40F/4.4C in the greenhouse. I lit the stove straight away. 

 Woke at 5am and then dozed until 7.15. A quiet night for a change. I got up only once at 3am.

 11.10 Full sunshine. 61F/16C in the room. No walk so far. I have been outside to collect a basket full of beech kindling from the container. 

 Then I scraped the snow and some ice from the greenhouse roof. Snow had blown down from the house roof and refrozen onto the glass. The sun has finally come around now and may be able to melt some of it. I'd like to get the maximum solar gain. Despite the sun grazing the horizon.

 The snow drifting on the ground isn't dramatic but is a nuisance for getting around. There are lots of frozen molehills completely hidden under the snow. It would be very easy to twist an ankle. 

 I brought in two more baskets of logs from the greenhouse. Which has made me completely breathless. 

 It reached 58F/14C in the greenhouse thanks to the sunshine. Most of the remaining ice and snow on its glass roof has cleared. 

 15.30 63F/17C in the room. I had a half hour nap and the fire in the stove has burnt down. I am struggling to get to relight from the hot ashes. It's going now. 

 The rest of the afternoon was spent on tending the stove and browsing. The room temperature peaked at 64F/18C and stayed there. The forecast is for -7C/20F overnight. With much lower temperatures elsewhere. 

 Dinner was cauliflower with a salmon pasty. It made a pleasant change.

 8.30 It is already down to 15F/-9.5C. The DMI is saying -5C. The coldest temperature is supposed to be between 6 and 8am tomorrow. No doubt it will be even colder by then. Jylland [Jutland] is supposed to set a 25 year record frost tonight. Below -20C.

10.30 Bedtime. 11F/-12C. 65F/18C in the room. 30F/-1C in the greenhouse. 

 

  ~?~

9 Jan 2026

9.01.2026 Drifting.

  ~?~

  Friday 9th 29F/-2C. Heavily overcast and gales. Drifting expected.  Police warning against poor road conditions. 59F/15C in the room.

 Up at 7.45 after dozing for ages. 

 8.45. I have just been across the yard to dump the ashes from the stove. There were snowdrifts everywhere. Probaby up to 20cm or 8" deep in places. I keep a short pair of wellies inside the back door to manage such eventualities. Eye wateringly cold in the wind. I have now lit the stove with the last of the beech kindling. I shall have to collect more from the container. 

 9.00 Stove going well. I can now add bigger logs and bring in some more. Their moisture content is highly variable. I will definitely go for a walk today. 

 9.45 Back from my walk. More of an amble really. A sickly yellow sun struggled to penetrate the clouds. I couldn't walk off my aching lower back. Fieldfares, Redwings and sparrows were noisy in the overhead trees. The roads were almost clear. Largely thanks to a lorry fitted with a snow plough blade. It went both ways while I was out there. 

 One spot which may cause problems is where the farmer has removed the hedge. The open prairie was smoking wind blown snow. This was on a steep hill leading to a sharp, blind bend. The snow was deepest where vehicles have to brake for the corner. More extended where they have to climb from a low cornering speed. Many drivers overshoot on this corner regardless of road conditions. I was taking to the back of the deep snow on the verges with each passing vehicle. Better they can maintain their course on the cleared traffic lanes without going around me. 

 Another day on the computer. Occasional clouds of snow were being blown off the roof. Though I was largely unaware of the gales. It has been a struggle to get the house warm today. Always the problem with wind and cold. The wind drops overnight. There may even be some sunshine tomorrow.

 Dinner was using up the eggs again. Two poached eggs on toast. 

  

 

  ~?~

8 Jan 2026

8.01.2026 Feed that stove!

 ~?~

  Thursday 8th 30F/-1C. Cloudy but dry. Remaining just below freezing. The wind very slowly increasing to 20m/s tomorrow. Possibly leading to drifting. Judging from the outside camera's view there is about 10cm of snow lying on the ground now. 

 I deliberately got up at 6.30 to light the stove. It felt cold on my face as I lay in bed. 57F/14C in the room and kitchen. Separated by two doors. There is an oil-filled, electric radiator in the kitchen. Only the modern wood stove in the room. 

 The Termatech stove is enhanced with heavy, soapstone cladding. Which builds up heat and retains it. To slowly release it overnight. It also uses convection channels to heat the air. Rather than warming by direct radiation. Though the ceramic glass door provides a lot of direct warmth. Which I can feel on the back of my neck from over two meters away. 

 I covered the corner where the stove stands with vintage ceramic tiles decades ago. These too warm up from the stove's heat. To slowly release it when the stove is not lit. The master sweep, who installed the stove, recommended the top outlet flue pipe. To provide extra warmth before it disappears up the chimney. Also to allow easy cleaning. There is an invisible access plate in the corner of the flue pipe. 

 7.30 The room has risen to 59F/15C in an hour. I brought in two more baskets of logs.

 Another day spent on YT. Feeding the stove. I never went outside.

 Dinner was fish fingers and chips. The room temperature has reached 66F/19C this evening.


  ~?~