I asked when I cam downstairs.
Not surprisingly, Jools said that sounded fine.
So, instead of having less than an hour to get to the gym, we had 90 minutes before the train at either quarter past eight if you believe Southeastern, or 08:27 if you believe Network Rail.
We leave at just before eight, drive down the hill and pay for parking. Buy our tickets and go to the other platform via the subway, where we found that Network Rail was the closest, but the train was delayed to 08:29, not 08:14!
I did wonder how many people would be going to Sandwich for the market, would the train be full?
No, it wasn't. We had most of the front carriage to ourselves, and few others got on at Walmer or Deal.
It's a five minute walk from the station into town, so I did some light botanising beside the sluice that stops the town from flooding.One of the sluices.
Anyway, we came to the centre, and saw that The Fleur de Lis did breakfasts and was open.
So we go in and take a table. I drank an almost full pot of tea, and still the breakfast hadn't arrived. They were short-staffed, and anyway, we were not in a hurry.
When it did come, it was quality, Cumberland sausages, crispy smoked bacon, toast, mushrooms, hash browns. And filled the hole.
There were stalls in front of the Town Hall, where we bought some stinky cheese and next door, some crusty bread. Twenty for the cheese, and thirty for the selection of breads.
We wandered round some more, but nothing really caught our fancy, and my expected beer stall wasn't there. But there was one for cider. But was expensive, my cider expert told me.
Our train home was at twenty past the hour, so to pass the time I have a coffee and sat in the street to drink it. The street was closed to traffic.
And it was there that John, our friend who arranged the tiger tour to India last year saw me, and joined me for a coffee and a chat.
And it was there that Jools found us, drinking coffee, sitting in the sunshine.But we had ran out of time, so we bid John farewell, and we walked back through town, over the old town walls to the station, getting to the platform through a small modern housing estate.
Lots of seats on the train, so we picked seats at a table and watched through the windows as we headed south two stops to Martin Mill, where our car was still parked.
Up the hill, over the Deal road and home.Time for a brew!
The rest of the day was something of a relaxing one. Listening to Huey on the internet radio, drinking tea, eating biscuits.
Outside it was warm, sinny of breezy. And in a shock, prompted by Bev doing her lawn, I got the mower out to cut paths at the side of the meadow and to give access to two of the flower beds.
After I took two beers round to share with Steve, so it was I got introduced to their new (8 month old) puppy, Murphy.
He's still lively and bouncy, but calming down, though having me in the house meant much bouncing and licking.
We talked football, retirement and our health. Steve still works full time, but the pressure is getting worse, though he doesn't want to retire.
We also have a glass of draught Leffe blonde, which did the trick, and caused my head to spin some.Back home for cheese, crackers and wine. The cheese and crackers bought from the market that morning, and even if the cheeses had partly melted in the rucksack, they were still tasty indeed. We dined well.
And finally more World Cup action. Switzerland v Qatar, which the Swiss should have won by a landslide, but scored just the one via a soft penalty, I was tired and didn't see Qatar scoring, so went to bed with 20 minutes to go, so missing their 94th minute eqialiser.Three more games over night, I slept through most of them.






















