Thursday, March 5, 2015

The 25 Hour Watch

Despite not dressing up at all on Tuesday, DD did have fun at school where the whole day was one big carnival. When I picked her up at 4 we took the bus into town to buy her a belated birthday present - a new watch. Her first.


Here's the back story, We have a small group of older mother friends with only children. There are five of us and we met at various stages of pregnancy. One of the things we do is celebrate birthdays together. As three of the five children all have birthdays the same week (though three years apart), we try to spread the parties out a bit. What with one thing and another, DD's party was yesterday on her 6 1/4 birthday. The tradition is that each of the others contributes 50 shekels for a really nice big present. In the past we've had Playmobil, Lego, and a scooter.


My favourite old fashioned watch shop in town had children's watches for 59 shekels or a Cassio children's watch for 185. I was aiming for the 59 shekels because it might get lost and need replacing. So as we walked we tried to think of something to buy with the other 140 shekels.


Unfortunately the shop was closed. It's such an old fashioned shop (which is why I love it) that it follows the old tradition of early closing on Tuesdays. So at 5pm on Tuesday evening we went around the corner and bought another, light blue with different coloured numbers, watch for 100 shekels.


Then we got pizza for supper and went to the theatre to see Peter Pan the Musical. It was lovely. We clapped so hard to bring Tinkerbelle back to life she's good for another 100 years at least. Tuesday was a good day.
It may be an Israeli thing to make cakes in dishes but everyone does


Wednesday started off good too. We made a cake in my new oven instead of buying one. I sort of made up the recipe from ingredients I had in the house and was quite surprised when a cake came out. We had our party. I had gift wrapped DD's watch even though she'd been wearing it the evening before, so we could present her with it at the party. The highlight of the afternoon was when my friend R took a second slice of my cake. :~)


Then everyone went home. DD looked at her watch and said, "It's 12 to 6." I told her that meant it was 6 o'clock. After I'd cleared away a bit she came and asked me to take her watch off her wrist and asked if she could play on her tablet. I was sitting with my laptop on my lap and she took the watch with her.

I would have left it plain but it was a birthday cake so we had to ice it.
The red candle is for next year, another Israeli tradition

A bit later: Where's my watch?


Reader we have looked everywhere. We looked in the boxes of all the games that had been out. We looked in the sofa and in my bed (where she had taken her tablet). I even looked through the rubbish bags before taking them out.



So that's what you call a 25 hour watch. I'm hoping it will turn up. Where could it have gone, this is not such a big apartment and there were only the two of us in it?




If it doesn't turn up I have another 50 shekels from one of the other friends (the fourth friend couldn't come to the party) so I'm thinking of the 59 shekel watches in the olde watche shoppe in town.


Or maybe 6 1/4 is just too young to have a watch and we should wait until she's 7?


UPDATE: At 1.30pm on Thursday she found it on one of the dining-room chairs, which is exactly where she had left it. :)


10 comments:

  1. I knew you'd find the watch, but I'm glad you found it so quickly! Over Thanksgiving weekend I lost 3 things: a pair of prescription glasses, an expensive set of car keys, and something else, I forget what. I found the keys after a day or two, but I didn't find the glasses for over a month, by which time I'd replaced them.

    I didn't realize it was an Israeli thing to make cakes in Pyrex dishes. I do it all the time.

    Purim Sameach, it's snowing enough here to cancel public schools, and I'm still planning to work a whole day (but ending early).

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    1. We are well into spring here. Maybe it's not an Israeli thing but I never saw it until I came here. The only time we saw cakes in dishes (or on trays) in England was pudding for school dinners and it was served with custard.

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  2. So glad you found the watch and I hope it's returned to being a 24 hour one now ;) Your cake looks delish in a dish and a good idea I shall copy, thankyou. Am so glad you have such good, longstanding friends in similar postions :)

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    1. Thank you. It's a very special group of friends. We also go camping together in the summer and do the obligatory Independence Day picnic together. The kids have known each other all their lives and are a lovely group together.

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  3. For a moment there I thought the watch had ended up being baked in the cake but then I realised I had my timing all wrong... ;-)

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    1. LOL, or fallen out the window and been blown into the sea (which is about 80km away) where it was eaten by a fish which was caught by a fisherman and we bought it for dinner next Friday. The possibilities are endless.

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  4. From Margie in Toronto - glad that it has turned up safe and sound. I think she's just the right age - I bought my nephew his first watch for his First Communion (age 7) - he was especially thrilled because it was a pocket watch and none of his friends had one like it. :-)

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    1. Ours is not a pocket watch but believe me, it spends just as much time in the pocket as it does on the wrist so it may as well be one. I think it's a lovely idea to give something just a little bit different. It makes it special and he'll never forget it.

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  5. So glad that the watch was found - those kind of losses can be very stressful for all concerned x

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    1. It was stressful funnily enough, even though we knew it had to be here somewhere.

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