Yesterday, P and I thought we'd have a rare day out and go and visit Leigh on Sea. We've never been there and I'd heard good reports of the town, and especially of its charity shops. Things, however, did not entirely go to plan. It was a much hotter day than either of us had expected, the traffic was terrible (I seriously had no idea there'd be THAT many cars on the road on a Friday morning,) and to top it all, when we eventually got to Leigh on Sea we couldn't find any of the car parks listed on the road map. At this point I was having serious trouble reading the A-Z but when I could see Southend pier hoving rapidly into view, I knew we'd gone just a bit too far. Eventually we gave up the idea of Leigh on Sea and visited Westcliff-on-Sea instead.
Luckily, there you could park quite easily along the esplanade but we didn't hang around to look at the sea, we headed up the hill to the town centre. After a rather tasty pub lunch and a long, cool drink I carried on in my search of the charity shops. Two of those listed on the Charity Shop Locator website had closed down but I managed to find another that wasn't listed as yet.
I had a couple of good finds including this Knitting Patterns for Dummies book which gives lots of basic patterns for all sorts of items with ideas of how to size them up or down or make changes to customise the patterns - my ideal sort of knitting instructions, ie not too detailed.
In the same charity shop - Sue Ryder - I also got the chunkiest pair of knitting needles I've ever seen, 20mm thick and 40cm long. I'm pretty sure they'll come in useful one day. I also found a couple of Ann Harvey tops for £1.00 each on the reduced rail in another charity shop, which made the day out a lot more worthwhile for me. They're both in the wash at the moment but one of them should be lovely in the autumn.
Thankfully, the journey home was a lot less uneventful as we headed directly for A127 and just followed that back to Nevendon - which was just as well as both of us by this time were hot, bothered and ready to leave the ferocious amount of traffic well behind us.