After the bread round, I came out of the
bake house, having done the evening prep to three boys in an open shed
surrounded by cars and car parts, one shouting across the yard to the other”
you can’t race, you can’t afford fire proof underwear”. Really?
It’s good to know he can’t race – because
he’s only 14 – but weird all the same
that all three are car fanatics, driving up and down our lane for years until
such time as they can get their liscence to drive the road. The oldest, finally
heading for the dream and studying motorsports technology in Oxford, is just
planning to buy a rally cross car. Apparently this is the best way to get the
finance for Oxford together and give him the much needed experience to built an
engine. Other people, I say, just work and put the money in the credit union.
Not so, in this house as I keep my
fingers crossed that some other fanatic will actually buy that car off him when
he is finished. For the purpose of building this rally cross car, the ancient
mini ( that the other chap bought 2 years ago) is pulled out of the shed and
put under tarpaulin outside. That too, by the way, was “an investment” and was
going to be sold off at a profit when done up and driving. It has been done up
to a point but is still far from driving and everyone is ignoring the fact that
you cannot insure a classic until you’re 25 ( a long way off for all of them!)
In the process of convincing me that I
wanted another dead car in the yard, the promise was that “we’ll dismantle the
helmet and the mini can have that space”. A helmet in any other house, is a
thing you put on your head – preferably when you are cycling. In this house it
is a soap box – in the shape of a helmet – that was built last summer and
pushed down St Patrick’s hill in Cork when the boys, together with some equally
mad friends joined the Red Bull Soap box race. The Headcases was their team
name and headcases they are. Needless to say, the helmet remains undismantled
as the mini joined it in the yard and the only open roofed space that we have –
which, while the kids were small and reasonable, housed my outdoor washing line
– is now being got ready for the new member of this car family – with the 14
year old saving for fire proof underwear……
While the jury is still out whether being
such a push over is good parenting, I head off for my run to the tree. Made it
all the way there and back in reasonably fast pace and thinking I might be able
to at least run half those 10km in June. While running, I think and make plans
( I cannot abide loud music on my ears) and dream again of the next plan of
having a mobile van on the road, a beautiful old bread van, branded as
“Speltbakers on the go” and serving all the villages and countryside long left
without a bakery. The sun is shining and the plan is good. The boys always say
they can design or refurbish something for me. The Mini-man, who is studying
for the leaving, is even talking about joining the business for his gap year
but really – a betting woman would put money on that Logo going around on a
rally car with some son in fire proof underwear or there was a plan of a
“Speltbakers mini pizza”. You figure that one out and watch this space.