In my student days we had a great tradition of holding parties where we would stock the cellar with real ale (we started with one firkin but by the time we held our last party we were up to three firkins - 27 gallons - to ensure everyone was well watered) and invite everyone we knew.
I'm glad to say that tradition is alive and well. OK, it was our dining room we stocked with ale since we don't have a cellar and we didn't invite *everyone* we know, but by the time the party was in full swing we had 55 revellers in the house and we were BUMPING. Almost all the neighbours turned up, some from Nikki's workplace, some from mine, two-thirds of my mates from Nottingham, more than a dozen Chorlton Players and an identical number from Chorlton Chapters.
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I started serving my famous chilli at around 9.30pm with baked potatoes. Once people had the idea that it was available I left them to it and when I returned to the pot -
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By that time about half the guests had left anyway, and the rest continued to leave in dribs and drabs until about 4am when we were left with a tight kernel of revellers who just wanted "one last pint" before calling their taxi or, in the case of Andy and Lara, remounting their tandem and attempting to cycle home.
It's always a worry having such a large party, especially when you know there are some inveterate piss-heads on the invite list, but we got off remarkably light in terms of damage. The hot tap in the bathroom, which turns the wrong way for "on," was by the end of the evening so loose that you had to hold it to turn it on at all. I knew I was fighting a losing battle putting up a sign saying "turn anti-clockwise for on, if the tap is stiff you're turning it the wrong way" but I felt I had to try. I guess you don't read notices when you're drunk. I retightened it this morning and it doesn't seem to have suffered any permanent damage.
One of the guy-ropes on the gazebo looked to have snapped when one of the girls from the book club fell through it into our pond, but on closer examination it had simply slipped its knot and was perfectly fine, so the only damage there was to her pride. And maybe a bruise here and there. And the fact she had to go home stinking of stagnant water. I think we'll have more lights in the garden next time. Our security light chose a particularly inopportune moment to blow its bulb.
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We kicked the final guest out at 4.15am this morning and I spent another hour clearing up before finally hitting my pit at 5.25 - exhausted but very pleased with how it all went, very happy, and feeling very blessed to have such fantastic friends and neighbours.
1 comment:
Glad to hear/read it went well.
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