Life

Anne Hailes: We may be at home for Easter but we can still have old fashioned fun

Anne Hailes

Anne Hailes

Anne is Northern Ireland's first lady of journalism, having worked in the media since she joined Ulster Television when she was 17. Her columns have been entertaining and informing Irish News readers for 25 years.

This year’s Easter eggtivities will have to be in your own garden, or indoors if you’re not lucky enough to have one
This year’s Easter eggtivities will have to be in your own garden, or indoors if you’re not lucky enough to have one

A FEW weeks ago I was writing about tips and hints and I had a lot of people get in touch to say how much they liked them. So here are some more.

This is Easter Monday and a picnic at the seaside isn’t possible so the garden will probably be the plan for some fun rolling boiled eggs. To make them a bit different put a couple of teabags in the water and they will stain the shell a lovely dark brown, then have a competition and a prize for who can draw the funniest face on the egg.

We used to gather whin blossom to put into the boiling water for a vibrant yellow finish but you can also achieve this using onion skins.

What’s the difference between brown and white eggs? There isn’t any. Why are there brown and white eggs? Because different breeds of hen lay different colours – no big mystery.

:: April Fool

I remember one April first I wrote an article about hens' eggs which were being laid with bands of black and white on the shell thanks to a newly developed feed which had to be fed to the chickens 15 minutes apart – one scoop from the white bag and then one from the black bag. This resulted in the unique banding.

Quite a reaction – shops wanted to know where they could obtain them and a farmer asked me where he could get the new feed!

Food colouring added to water in a vase of flowers is an interesting thing for children to try. Red, blue or green... I think it’s a horrible idea and I avoid artificially coloured blooms but it’s a good experiment.

Thank you Joan for this floral tip: “To revive choice blooms that have faded, plunge the stems into hot water and allow them to remain until the water has cooled. By that time the flowers will have revived. The ends of the stems should then be cut off and the blossoms placed in cold water in the usual way.”

I have a great fondness for lavender in any shape or form. A little perfume rubbed on a light bulb (before you turn it on) will fill the room with scent. I also used it in a television studio when interviewing a dog handler. He brought along two Doberman Pinschers and in the excitement and under the bright lights they became very agitated and threatening.

I asked if I could waft a tissue with lavender essence under their noses to calm them. He laughed and said go ahead. Worked like a dream – they lay at my feet, docile and loveable.

:: It works for people too

Provided you don’t have low blood pressure, a few drops of pure lavender essence on your pillow will help you sleep, it will help you stay calm in a tricky situation, a few breaths in before an interview or a tricky social situation, for example, when that time comes again, will work wonders and when you walk in enveloped in a cloud of perfume. It will please everyone.

I also use a drop on a cut or a burn but dilute it in a little water first. I also notice midges don’t favour lavender although bees do circle twice in case you are a tasty flower.

This is a tough time for everyone but for children it must be both frightening and confusing. Everything normal in their little lives has been taken from them and they are left living with confusion.

I came across a website that might help parents keep them occupied during Easter and thereafter. Just type ‘Coronavirus: 10 boredom-busting ideas for kids during Covid-19' into the search engine and you’ll find a lot of imaginative ways of filling time constructively within the family. This comes fro the National adult Literacy Agency.

:: Eat an Alphabet

For instance: "Get your kids to describe how hungry they are – starting with the letter A, take turns. The trick is to remember what everyone said before you. I’m so hungry I could eat an Apple. I’m so hungry I could eat an Apple and a Banana. I’m so hungry I could eat an Apple, Banana and a Cat!"

A treasure hunt round the garden, clues to find the hidden objects. If the weather isn’t great then round the house.

If you have the ingredients, baking is brilliant; scones are easy and children love to get involved. Favourite with my grandchildren are pancakes. They mix the flour, milk and eggs, a little sugar and a knob of butter and then I pour into the frying pan.

Being ultra careful, they are allowed to toss them – and so what if they hit the ceiling or ‘splosh’ on the floor?

:: Back To Eggs

If any of the family cut themselves my granny immediately cracked an egg and teased out the membrane which lines the inside of the shell. She’d lay it over the cut and as it dried it drew the skin together to knit.

I remember being sent for cracked eggs for baking but she would often boil them for sandwiches and to stop the insides popping out she’d add a little vinegar to the water and she always plunged the bread knife into boiling water before quickly cutting the new loaf of bread – no crumbling or tearing and as thin as you like.

Aren’t eggs just the most useful little things? Versatile: you can eat them, play with them, blow the insides out, paint them and string them up as decorations – there’s a challenge for the children.

I know one young man who, at the age of seven, sneaked half a dozen eggs out of the fridge and threw them at the wall of the garage just for fun. The look of naughty delight on his face cracked me up – just had to laugh.

Keep safe, keep at home, keep talking to each other.