Wednesday, 30 September 2020

Solar: Two Years On

Two years on we are still generating solar power, and the 'trees planted' are mounting up (although they appear to have changed the method of calculation at some point during the year so the numbers here have leapt up!):


Our best performing day for solar generation was 14th May 2020 when we generated 26.13 Kilowatt Hours (kW-h), with the month of May remaining the highest month for overall solar generation. Below are the Top 10 and Bottom 10 dates for solar generation throughout the year.  May dominates the top 10, and as last year most of the bottom 10 dates are near the shortest day of the year.

DateWatt Hours
DateWatt Hours
14/05/202026,133
12/12/2019263
01/06/202025,268
12/11/2019338
05/05/202025,254
11/01/2020339
11/07/202025,129
18/12/2019357
20/07/202025,125
07/01/2019379
31/05/202024,931
26/12/2019426
25/05/202024,881
28/02/2020473
30/05/202024,835
13/12/2019479
20/05/202024,701
02/01/2020549
29/05/202024,675
14/01/2020 617

This is how the years compare.   In the summer months, the trimming of the Yew Tree may have helped to boost solar generation earlier in the day, but it isn't really possible to make direct comparisons from one year to the next as generation is of course hugely dependent on the weather.

Month

2018/19

Generated kW-h

2019/20

Generated kW-h

October

206.419

179.489

November

87.261

79.224

December

32.87

48.374

January

62.46

62.145

February

175.996

124.181

March

283.345

354.99

April

393.949

491.76

May

489.449

622.559

June

401.437

417.704

July

445.908

426.441

August

404.56

354.619

September

337.506

368.342

Total

3321.16

3529.828


And here is the required graph!



Thursday, 17 September 2020

A Good Day

With our holiday weeks drawing to an end - and after a busy few days cleaning, tidying, gardening, cutting hedges etc. - decided on another trip 'out' - this time a (pre-booked) day trip to Powis Castle.

We've been really lucky with the weather so far, and today did not disappoint, with another day of glorious sunshine, so the gardens were looking their very best (no access to the Castle itself still):





Also took the opportunity to pop in to the nearby Coed-y-Dinas store / garden centre on our way home for a browse round.

Must say I'm not sure why anyone would want a gorilla in their garden, but it was good to see that he was wearing his mask!



Back home again, and as it was still dry, sunny, and relatively calm decided to light the bonfire (which had built up again with garden waste, hedge clippings and various bits of rotten shed panelling / old leylandii).  

We'd scattered the hedge debris around the fire pit to help it all dry out a bit - but it still looked like far too much for one bonfire:



















It did turn into a longer job than we'd planned, but it was a nice evening so we stuck with it - ate our dinner by the fire, had a drink, and watched the stars come out.

By 9pm we were down to the dying embers, and had actually managed to burn the lot - time to shower off the smoke, and pour a glass of wine!

Friday, 11 September 2020

Out and About

September holidays - and with some sense that normal service is resuming, decided we would take a break and actually go 'away'!


Booked ourselves a Travelodge in Portishead on the Bristol Channel, and headed off for three days of sun, sea and sightseeing. 

 
Stopped off at Clifton on the way, walked round Portishead taking in the views (and the graffiti) and fitted in a return trip to Tyntesfield (which had to be pre-booked, and was all very one-way and socially distanced):


Also had a day trip to Clevedon - with its pier, and marine pool (really missing the opportunity to go swimming back home, but unfortunately hadn't brought my bathing gear).


All in all it was a nice few days - we mostly ate / drank in beer gardens (kind of regretted the one trip to a too-busy Wetherspoons) so it all felt safe enough - and the weather was remarkably kind.

At the same time we were glad to be going home again.

Stopped off for a final (pre-booked) visit to Duffryn Gardens - then back to the safety of our little bit of Wales.

Saturday, 5 September 2020

DIY Pizza Oven

As part of the #kitchencourtyardredesign we had been considering options for a barbecue installation - then, somewhere online, we saw a DIY pizza oven that someone had made by piling up old bricks, so decided to combine the two . . .


And here we have it - lots of clay bricks, the grills from a defunct barbecue, and a roof of more bricks sitting on some spare aluminium greenhouse struts, topped off with a couple of spare concrete roof tiles.


All built on top of a 'table' structure made from breeze blocks and a paving slab.  Almost everything was stuff we already had - although did pay a few quid for the (reclaimed) bricks.

So, it was:
a) cheap
b) almost entirely recycled
c) easy to construct, dismantle and move
d) somewhere to use up twiggy bits of wood that are a bit small for the log burner . . .

. . . and it made great pizza!