Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 November 2019

To the Lighthouse and other places



A quick injection of colour to kick start 
a long overdue entry
on this blackest of November days 
with the clocks well and truly back.
At the end of October,
we climbed the Old Lighthouse at Dungeness
and saw the beautiful mirrored light at the top.



I'm very keen on this fool's Fair Isle wool 
and have embarked on a third hooded jumper for a grandchild,
in a size large enough to show off the colour variations 
to better advantage.






By way of complete contrast I came upon
this very old cemetery while out on a mundane errand
and was swallowed up by a wholly unexpected wilderness
only yards from a busy and nondescript street in south London.


(not our dog)



A graveyard of a different kind,


for Citroen 2 CVs inexplicably abandoned


and left to decay



on the banks of the River Rother.


Pictures from a trip to Spitalfields' Fournier Street,


could so easily have been scenes of decay


but houses worth £4000 in the 60s fetch millions now.






 That is the spiral staircase inside the aforementioned lighthouse.
Quite a climb but the view was worth it.


(only part way up)



The Royal Academy is exhibiting Antony Gormley's work.
The final piece Host was this room flooded with sea water.
As with all the pieces, my greatest interest was in fathoming
how they got everything installed.


It has been windy today


but not as windy as Tokyo.
Our son arrived in time for one typhoon
and was an old hand four weeks later
for Typhoon Hagibis.


The sun shone brightly the next morning
and we slept a little more easily that night. 


Thursday, 21 February 2019

Fly past


Suddenly it's springy.
The crocuses have swiftly succeeded the snowdrops.


The daffodil cyclamineus, 
with its swept back petals in the background
emerging from last year's leaf litter.


Scotney Castle reflected in the still-watered moat
on one of those perfect windless days.


A robin auditioning for The Robin Who Showed the Way
in the Secret Garden.

The robin flew from his swinging spray of ivy on to the top of the wall
and he opened his beak and sang a loud, lovely trill,
merely to show off.
Nothing in the world is quite as adorable as a robin when
he shows off - and they are nearly always doing it.


The robin kept singing and twittering away and
tilting his head on one side,
as if he was as excited as she was.


The sun setting at nearly half past five.
The luxury of extended daylight
easing me out of hibernation.
And this weekend -
summer apparently!


Perhaps this sign spotted last weekend
was not so incongruous after all.

Wednesday, 23 January 2019

Shall we go for a walk?





Beach



Marsh











Kew botanical gardens.



Coastal heathland.




Estuary nature reserve.


And a memorial bench
with a plaque that simply read,
'Wish you were here.'