Showing posts with label flame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flame. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 August 2016

Seeing red


Oh my goodness.
This is a trial of one's patience.


I have now managed to copy someone else's last, precious, 
but now unsupported, version of iPhoto
onto my computer in a bid to be rid of Photos.
And Hallelujah
it has let me upload from my phone to the computer
and now to upload from the computer to the blog
but not quickly.
Oh no. That would be asking too much.
We must wait and twiddle our thumbs
 long enough for the moon to rise and darkness to fall.



Saturday, 12 December 2015

Cooking on gas


It took two hours
and a hefty fee,


to change a 3 amp fuse -
which I provided.
But I am very grateful to the skinny
and much tattooed young man
who wrestled the beast out of its lair,
disemboweled it,
diagnosed the problem
and reassembled it,
without damaging either tiles or floor.

Let the roasting, baking and grilling re-commence.






Friday, 3 October 2014

Sweetness




Three jars of sweet crab apple jelly.


Five jars of sweet quince jelly.


Four weeks worth of sweetness.



Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Would anyone like these?







I am still up to my pearls in decluttering.
Yesterday, film negatives,
today, very old newspapers.
Would you like to help me?

What do you find hardest to let go of?


Sunday, 24 November 2013

Through leaves 2



This autumn may not have boasted
the finest display of flaming colours
in this neck of the woods,


but there's never been a better year
for soft shoe shuffling through leaves.

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

How I know it's nearly over




The sweet pea


stems


are getting


shorter


and shorter.


The apples are falling,


and I've put in my spring bulb order.

And yet and yet,
today there was a sudden burst of fierce heat
and I had to retreat to the shade.

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Quietly at Great Dixter




 We arrived early


 and although we could distantly hear 


Fergus Garrett the head gardener


mowing the meadow grass


and glimpsed one young man loping away


with garden twine


hanging from both back pockets,


it was a rare chance 


for the flowers


to make the loudest statements







in Christopher Lloyd's exuberant September garden.


Where the usual throng was that day
we never found out.

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Out of doors*


While our son works through the heatwave for his exams,


I remember the many years
that I spent trying to revise in similar weather conditions.
It was futile of course.
I used to sit out on the baking asphalt balcony
with a text book slipping from my grasp


and the red sun pulsating behind my heavy eyelids.


Summer, after all our weary waiting, is here at last...
On one of these days, leaning out of the window after breakfast
and sniffing ecstatically at perfection, you decide that
it would be a crime to sit indoors at a writing table
on a morning like this: you will take your work
out into the garden and do it there.
What could be a pleasanter and a nobler occupation 
than to sit in the sunshine, green grass beneath your feet,
balmy zephyrs playing with your hair, 
the scent of flowers in every breath you take,
and to write immortal poetry - or even,
for that matter, perishable prose.

But then the snags manifest themselves.
The dewy grass soaks your shoes, the balmy zephyrs, 

flutter the corners of the paper you are writing on 
and scatter the lawn with pages you have already finished...

The sun is the greatest possible hindrance to the profession of letters.
Its light, reflected from the white paper, dazzles the eyes;
its warmth lulls the brain and saps resolution. 
Lids tend to close, coherent thoughts to 
relapse into random daydreaming.
It takes a stern effort of will to write as many as
fifty words without a break...

Lastly there is the garden itself:
and this is the most distracting thing of all...

It is dramatic: things are happening all the time,
clamouring for your attention.
Look again after five minutes, and a big hairy poppy bud,
which was recently all green, is slashed with scarlet.
In another quarter of an hour the crumpled silk
will be bursting right out of it.

*from A Pocketful of Pebbles by Jan Struther 

Monday, 12 December 2011

The Candle Factory



Demi-tasse cups, a Denby Greenwheat mustard pot 
and some posh yogurt jars,
wick cotton, sustainers, glue dots to anchor
the sustainer to the bottom of the pot,
pliers to squeeze the sustainer closed over the wick,
something to centre the wick in the pot,
eco soya wax flakes, a bain marie,
essential oils, (sweet orange and clove mostly),
 two pourings of the melted wax to eliminate a dip by the wick -


it's a fiddly business,
but completely addictive.
I can't pass a charity shop now
without eyeing up the china shelf for likely containers
and kind friends bring me things they find on their travels.
Some of the pretty vintage ones
have even gone into a local shop for Christmas
but they won't make my fortune
as I barely cover my costs.
It's just a bit of fun.

Sunday, 11 December 2011

Fire works



Sun set.


Moon rise.




Ceremonial first lighting of wood stove.


I don't think these will last very long.

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Wood roses 2


The wood roses have been gathering dust
in a basket.
Like the shells from summer which lost their lustre
and the conkers that dulled and cracked,
these once vital seasonal gleanings needed
a stern reappraisal.


Luckily there are people out there who know how to repurpose,
and so these have been given a new lease of life
thanks to Pebbledash and Silverpebble.


Now they are scented wax pine cone firelighters.
I admit they don't look very different
but that is because I had not a glimmer of daylight
all day.
They will have their moment of glory when the woodstove
is commissioned.