with relish

Taking a trip from Longboat Key up to the unspoilt and unbelievably charming, Anna Marie Island, we fell upon Relish, a boutique selling unusual vintage and artisan treasures.  The owner, Rhona N. Grote, is clearly a guru of all things thrifting so the vintage range of evening bags, cowboys boots, typewriters and ‘80s jean jackets perfectly complement the wacky jewellery and homemade candles and restyled broaches.    Even Rhona’s story is a quirky one, having originally come from Ohio until she fell in love with an islander who insisted she join him in ‘paradise’.

Rhona’s site www.reallyrelish.com has been around much longer than the shop (505   Pine Ave) which only opened in the Spring of this year.  She proudly told me how ultra-green her business is (typical of Anna Maria) as she recycles, repurposes and reclaims the broad range of items on sale and even makes the ribbon for her bags from the hems of rejected garments.  A true upcycling business as it renews and improves the old turning them into eye-catching booty.

So, did I buy? The desperate housewife in me spotted a gem.  A 1950s apron.  Move over Bree Van de Kamp.

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a bayswater bite

just when we cant bear the sight of yet more food…. a review of the new Dim Sum Diner in West London Living http://www.westlondonliving.co.uk/restaurants

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double trouble on christmas eve

It’s going to be Piccadilly Circus in our beach apartment tonight; we are expecting both Father Christmas and the tooth fairy.  Mini-Me lost one of her front teeth, only slightly prematurely, after she collided with the swimming pool steps.  She is, understandably, curious as to whether the deliverers will arrive as a team, salute in the darkness or even frighten each other?

I should imagine the tooth fairy will visit earlier in the evening.  She will have a busy day herself to look forward to tomorrow with little tooth fairies’ stockings to fill and fairy food to prepare for her tooth fairy helpers.  Flightier than the big fat Father C, she can tick her to-dos off before midnight and journey home in a sparkle.

More to the point, after his UK-dose of port and dozens of mince pies, the big man might not even notice the Tinkerbell lookalike.  I’ll leave him a cold Budweiser and a bowl of Cracker Jack popcorn and hope he treats any fluttering pixie with respect.

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the dollar note

Small version of Him has a dollar note.  He is beside himself.  He feels it is quite literally burning a hole in his pocket. The biggest question he faces is should he spend or save it.

The vending machine by the swimming pool is winking at him.  After an hour’s hard core splashing with the pretty girls, he is drooling at the packets of crisps, sweets and chocolate behind the glass.

Earlier in the day we passed a toy shop.  A quirky type of toy shop selling everything a child could dream of, from tattoos to remote control hairy spiders. His head was spinning.  Was there anything in here for sale costing just one dollar?  For the first time, small version of Him was looking at price tags.

While we had a coffee and muffin break, he gazed at the price list on the wall.  Even his peanut butter biscuit cost more than a dollar.  Reality had struck.  One dollar wasn’t enough to buy anything in the world.

He has decided to save the dollar and is in negotiation with Him over a second dollar, based on good behaviour.

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