Take time each day to write something about your life's journey. Reflect daily on that which has meaning for you. There is always something but we often let the little miracles go unacknowledged. Capture them, cherish them and claim them as part of the wonderment of your life ~ Mary Francis Winters

Tuesday 14 July 2015

Freewheeling

cycle through the countryside
midnight poem tumblr

The open road calls.  I have a new pair of wheels.  It is a while since I rode a bicycle - my old one is pretty much clapped out.  After years of service it has finally been given the boot.  As I mount my new 'steed' I feel a little tremor of excitement and nervousness that shivers through me.  I wobble a little at first, apprehensive as cars drive past - too close, too fast.  But soon I get into my stride and remember the feeling of freedom and space as I pedal along - the leg muscles recall how it used to be and serve me well.

The test drive went pretty well considering.  I had to dismount once or twice while my beating heart settled into a steady rhythm after the exertion of the hills - but I managed to keep going despite the setbacks - it felt good to be back in the saddle again.

Hopefully I will become a familiar figure once more - pootling along the lanes on my mint-coloured bicycle - what larks!

It is curious that with the advent of the automobile and the airplane, the bicycle is still with us.  Perhaps people like the world they can see from a bike, or the air they breathe when they're out on a bike.  Or they like the bicycle's simplicity and the precision with which it is made.  Or because they like the feeling of being able to hurtle through air one minute, and saunter through a park the next, without leaving behind clouds of choking exhaust, without leaving so much as a footstep. ~ Gurdon S. Leete

Sunday 12 July 2015

Extract from England for all Seasons

 
 
The best kind of rain of course is a cozy rain.  This is the rain that falls on a day when you'd just as soon stay in bed a little longer, write letters or read a good book by the fire, take early tea with hot scones and jam, and look out the streaked window with complacency. ~ Susan Allen Toth

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Quote from Veronique Vienne

The only difference between an extraordinary life and an ordinary one is the extraordinary pleasures you find in ordinary things. ~ Veronique Vienne

Summer in a jar


What could be better on a rather chilly summer afternoon than to boil up a batch of loganberry jam.  The house is suffused with a fruity fragrance - I sit and listen to the hubble and bubble of the preserving pan vigorously 'plopping' as the jam thickens.  Everyday I have been gathering a punnetful of fruit from my small patch of canes; far too much to eat fresh.  So after giving some away for other people to enjoy, I decided jam was the thing, summer in a jar.

Life's little miracles


The kitchen garden is a riot of colour - flowers in glorious profusion - hardly any room the  vegetables.  This is no accident - I plant them along the edges of the beds on purpose.  Companion planting - something I have always done - mixing everything up, and it seems to work.  Although to the vegetable garden purist it may look a chaotic mess.  Today I gathered the first of my crops; finger-sized courgettes and lettuce and a couple of cucumbers - from plot to plate in a couple of shakes.  Even after many years of growing my own food I still get a thrill when I go to the top of the garden to see what I can find - almost like foraging for free food.  And you know what - it all tastes darned good.  You can't beat it. 

The day was very hot so as it cooled a little in the evening we went for a stroll by the lake which was as flat as a mirror, the sky and trees reflecting in the water.  Just us, and a family of swans floating by. Perfect.

Extract from The Still Point by Amy Sackville

Following the trail of it through the dark house, we will find her once more in the garden; how different now in the twilight, no longer scorched by the sun.  Pause now with her on the lawn and breathe in; listen to the insects and the rustle of plants, leaves furling, the fluff and settle of feathers, earth shifting under tiny paws and turned by pallid grubs and worms; the garden easing into the blue darkness.  Night flowers open cautiously, quietly, the warmth of the day transformed into deep sweet perfume.  More vibrant blooms are dimmed without the sun to brighten them, and give up their glory to the pale, fragrant flowers of the dusk.  The night-scented stock, innocuous by daylight, releases its essence.  Honeysuckle, cupping its hands to hold nectar for the moths to sup.  The scent of the garden, the tiny white blossoms like stars fallen on the lawn, and her bare feet white against the grass, and the white sheets; and the moths, intoxicated.

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Holiday Writings

 Briar rose and bramble - enduring memories of a summer hedgerow entwined with honeysuckle - soft fragrance and sea breezes.  The whole week a wild flower safari - prolific and abundant wherever you turn.


Some graveyards are beautiful places - mainly left alone, inhabited by wildlife; rabbits and foxes - even in the middle of a town.  Shafts of sunlight through the ancient trees; flowers, wild and rampant; cherry trees full of ripening fruit.  Lopsided grave markers of people long dead; untended; the lettering wearing away after hundreds of years of rain and hard weather; ivy, moss and lichen, returning to the soil.  The church stands sentinel, its stained glass windows watching over the graves, no longer visited; long forgotten.

--ooOoo--
 
Thunder rumbled through the sky; electric blue flashes of lightning illuminating the horizon - slowly fading away as it moved along the coast.
 
--ooOoo--
 
Weekend trippers wearing garish clothes and unsuitable footwear.  Strolling up and down  looking into shop windows buying trash that they don't really need.  Bewildered dogs with lolling tongues straining on their leads, breeds of every kind, sniffing each other warily.  Children carrying crabbing buckets, dangling their lines over the harbour wall, catching the same crab over and over again.

 
--ooOoo--
 
A walk  along the coastline with views so vast your eyes can't take it all in.  The incoming tide filling the creeks; sea birds hovering in the wind effortlessly.  Walkers pass two by two, shorts and backpacks, sturdy walking boots; serious and determined to get to their destination.  Old people strolling with sticks and swollen ankles.  The wind is strong out in the open, but the air is warm.  Clouds are white and billowing, sailing along; everchanging.  The path is edged with mustard plants, shoulder high - a river of yellow as far as the eye can see.
 
It is the longest day of the year and the motorbikers arrive noisily and in force on immaculate machines in full leather gear, looking hot and overdressed.  Toddlers lick ice creams and babies in pushchairs squint their eyes in the glare of the bright sun.  So many people of all shapes, sizes and ages, sitting on the sea wall eating their fish and chip lunches out of polystyrene cartons; gulls crying out overhead waiting for dropped food and trying to beat the starlings and ducks to their awaited prize of vinegar doused chips.
 
An afternoon snooze as holidaymakers drift by, their conversation rising up and into my daytime dreams accompanied by the chattering of the jackdaws sitting on the chimney pots.
 
--ooOoo--
 
Going away for a break is an essay on simple living.  You can only take enough with you for a week - so you pare down.  What to leave and what to take - decisions have to be made.  Holidaying in England is rife with problems.  Account has to be made of all types of weather - all packed into a small suitcase.  In one week there was rain, strong winds, hot sun, grey skies, thunderstorms and soft breezes - sometimes muggy and sometimes cold.  Clothes need to be short-sleeved, long-sleeved, thick and thin, waterproof and light, jeans and shorts, skirts and tops - to cover all eventualities.
 
Before packing all the clothes I like were laid out on the bed, and one by one, put back in the wardrobe - till just the essentials were left - each item able to match with the other.  The thought struck me that this selection would actually see me through the whole summer - and that the clothes left behind in the drawers and wardrobe were actually surplus to requirements.  Food for thought.  Dare I ditch it all!  No more stressing over what to wear each morning - no more sifting through piles of garments  - I mean how many white T-shirts do you actually need!
 
 
--ooOoo--
 
A storm was brewing.  Black clouds gathered and the wind gained speed.  The trees trembled and shook and crows and jackdaws scattered, shaken from their roosting places.  They wheeled and circled, dipped and dived - the wind blowing them according to its whim.  The sky blackened, dark as pitch, angry and hostile and the flock of birds seemed to panic not knowing where to go - swerving and re-forming as if by some invisible thread holding them all together.  They tried to get back into the trees but the wind had other ideas and shook them free again.  Gradually the wind lessened, the storm passed and the birds returned calling to each other that it was okay.  For a while though the storm caused a spectacle not to be missed.

 
 
--ooOoo--
 
Winding paths through trees and wildflower meadows down to the swift-flowing water.  A secret sort of place where characters from Wind in the Willows would be quite happy to sit in their row boat meandering downstream.  No formal gardens here just a natural kind of disorder. 
 
--ooOoo--
 
Hot sun and cooling breeze.  The beach - long, white and beautiful - stretching as far as the edge of the world.  Surf rolling in - hissing and swooshing over the pebbles.  The tide line a mass of razor shells crunching beneath your feet.  The sounds are soporific and rhythmic as the water ebbs and flows - holding your gaze as it mesmerises - the sun glinting off the water dancing sunbeams like water sprites -  luring you in with false promises.
 
Back inland a little we come across wildflower meadows alive with bees and butterflies and many species of flower.  The insects ignore us as they collect pollen, oblivious to our presence - intent on their purpose they go about their business.
 
--ooOoo--
 
By the water, by the sea, in woodland, open spaces, big skies, soft clouds.  Walking the headland through rivers of mustard plants - blurring into the distance.  Surrounded by green fields and hedgerows; grazing pigeons and rabbits.  No internet connection - no distractions - just being in the moment, recording my thoughts in the evening - taking pen to paper recalling and remembering.

 
--ooOoo--
 
We parked the car up on the heath above a pretty village.  The gorse is no longer in bloom; below us a patchwork of fields, some cut for hay, others planted with crops.  Further away the lagoons and saltmarsh of the reserve, sparkling water and soft mossy greens of grasses and plants.  Beyond is the thin blue line of the sea on the horizon.  The only sounds in the heat of the day a whitethroat singing its single note with repetitive monotony.  I feel the need to record it all, everything I see.  The feeling that time is running out - how many more summers will I see - how to spend my time to make it more meaningful, how to record it all when there is so much to see and feel.  What should my priorities be to prolong it as long as possible.

 
 
--ooOoo--
 
The woods were full of colonies of foxgloves - a beautiful sight of deep rose, pale pink and white spires standing tall amongst the trunks of the pines.  Later that evening a last stroll down to the quayside - our last before returning home.  Dusk was falling - everywhere quiet, the streets empty but for a few other strollers.  A few sea birds were still cruising the harbour skies but most were beginning to settle for the night.  The tide now ebbing and the moored boats tilting as the sea disappeared leaving bird footprints in the soft mud.

 
 
--ooOoo--
 
Returning home after a hot and sticky journey, retracing the road we had taken only a week ago.  The nearer we get to home the more familiar everything becomes.  Walking into the garden was like an explosion of colour - during our absence nature had taken care of it all - everything just carries on whether you are there or not.  


Wednesday 8 July 2015

Blogger Burnout

I read quite a few blogs during a normal week; some I comment on; some I don't.  But, the good thing about blog-hopping is that you come across some crackers.  Of all the gazillion blogs out there - only
a handful, to my taste anyway, are beautifully presented, exquisitely written and worth returning to.

On the other hand; there are some that fascinate me with their awfulness.  Terrible layout; bad photographs; obscure topics and generally a rather bad attitude. But I keep returning to them and so do other people if the number of comments is anything to go by.

So what is it that attracts us to some blogs and not others.

Most are pretty boring, the same as many others, with nothing to distinguish them - run-of-the-mill.  But some people have the knack - writing seems to come easy to them; they are always interesting no matter how few words they use.  They are the sort of blogs that make me want to give up blogging altogether because my blog posts could never compare.

We are told by the blogging 'professionals' that we should always use our own voice, blog about something we are passionate about blah-blah - but it isn't always that easy.  How do you put your own twist on a subject that has been covered millions of times before?

Sometimes I look back at my old blog posts and find that I have repeated myself without realising it, so narrow is the niche into which I have cornered myself.  One blog that I used to write had plenty of original posts that I always felt a little excitement about as I wrote them.  Nobody was doing the same thing - they were quirky and totally me.  But I gave the blog up because I kind of ran out of steam - but really I should have kept that one going and discarded the rest, because it really was written in my voice about what I enjoyed - but there is no going back - things have moved on - I have moved on.

So, where does that leave me in the blogging world - that I have yet to find out.  I have become bored with myself - struggling to find originality and the right words.  I am probably thinking too hard about this and should just go with the flow and I guess it has become a challenge now to keep coming up with the goods.  But the thrill of knowing I have written a good post has gone, where is the excitement that I used to get when I pressed Publish - for the time being that has gone too.



extract from The Story of My Heart written by Richard Jefferies

It is enough to lie in the shadow of green boughs, to listen to the songs of summer, to drink in the sunlight, the air, the flowers, the sky, the beauty of it all.  Or upon the hilltops to watch the white clouds rising over the curved hill-lines, their shadows descending the slopes.  Or on the beach to listen to the sweet sigh as the smooth sea runs up and recedes.  It is lying beside the immortals, in-drawing the life of the ocean, the earth, and the sun.

I want always to be in company with these, with earth, and sun, and sea, and stars by night.  The pettiness of house-life - chairs and tables - and the pettiness of observances, the petty necessity of useless labour, useless because productive of nothing, chafe me the year through. I want to be always in comany with the sun, and sea, and earth.  These, and the stars by night, are my natural companions.