The friendly young fellow who came to inspect Swanvale Halt Rectory yesterday noted first the gate by the drive which, I told him, had been broken since long before I arrived. I wasn’t sure fences fell under the diocese’s purview anyway, as I know a nearby colleague got so fed up waiting for anything to be done about his that he roped in a passing troop of Royal Engineers to sort it out. We had a couple of interesting exchanges about the age of the building and its odd concoction out of a Victorian cottage and a 1930s extension, and what a shame it was that chimneys, now a pretty obsolete building element, were being taken down rather than repaired (‘I like a good chimney’). He confirmed that the building is in good order although the roof of a bay window could do with some work, there are a couple of cracks that need watching, and the pillar I thought held up the garage overhanging roof and which was earmarked for attention in the last inspection, doesn’t actually perform any practical function at all. The boiler belongs in a museum of heating technology, but I’ve known that for a long time.
Thankfully the inspectors never seem to spend much time in the far reaches of the garden. This time round I have escaped yet again being told to pull my follies down.
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