Just about bordering on odd, I see things through different eyes.The heading says it all - I live, I love, I craft, I am me...
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

12/02/2023

Recipe for Saturday

 Ingredients:

Take a day with a welcome addition of gentle of sunlight

One over enthusiastic mud attracting dog
One patient husband who will carry said tired dog up an almost vertical stile, 
then back down the other side 
so she does not have to jump down to the very much lower field 
Add generous piles of crunchy leaves strewn through the woodlands
Top up with generous amounts of water - almost any variety will do
Randomly insert drovers tracks, farm lanes, bridle paths and byways
Spice up with a flask of steaming hot curried lentil soup and hunks of bread
Sweeten with a surprise clump of delicate snowdrops in the middle of the moors
Mix well and serve with copious amounts of chilly air, 
long distanced views and empty horizons - simmer for nearly 7 miles.                   
Optional extras:
bring along crochet for a little 'in car entertainment'

Have in generous helpings and repeat as often as you can. 

It does wonders for your soul 💚

24/06/2022

edgelands

A couple of weeks ago, we packed the van and headed north. Our plan was to see what the weather was doing and follow the sunshine. We spent nearly a week wandering the quiet lanes and finding the solitary views. Walking on beaches where we were the only ones watching the waves crash and draw as the tide turned.

We stopped for a few hours at Wigtown Harbour which is a rather grand title for a tidal river with disused quays.  However it is a delightful spot. The oystercatchers nest on the grassy docks between lichen splattered concrete bollards. A secret whorled nest cradling four speckled brown and cream eggs. I watch the female oystercatcher watch me as I take photos.

Across from the harbour beef cows graze in knee deep breeze blown grass undulating and mimicking water. Skylarks and curlews fill the air with their song - one melodic, the other forlorn. Both beautiful. 

Once we'd rested up, we returned to the road promising to return to the harbour - a edgeland space, simple, wild and obviously loved by the locals.



I will share a few precious moments from our holiday over the next few posts - promise I wont swamp you will photos and stories (of which there are many!) until next time 💙💚💙 xxxx

19/04/2022

Where did the weekend go?

Why is it a four day weekend seems to slip by as fast as a two day one? 

No, I don't know either, however I do know that we must have filled every last second with something and you know that old adage ...I'm going to work for a rest?? Well, I think that might be what I've planned for the rest of this week!

Friday evening kicked off with an picnic (of fish and chips) eaten outside alongside one of our favourite picturesque canal banks near Gargrave. With Eldest and his lovely girl we watched an amazing and unexpected display of hot air balloons as they drifted through the sunset. We were surrounded by cowslips, violets and early bluebells. Moss was of course more than happy to throw herself into the canal at a moment's notice and was a little disappointed when it was time to eventually leave however within  a few seconds she was racing up and down following interesting scents and hunting down sticks - happy dog. 

Saturday was rather good too - we set off for a walk in Skipton Castle Woods to find the sculptures. Himself and I have been before and now that there was a new willow sculpture of a stag, we decided that we'd take Eldest and GF to show them too. It was such a lovely day, a bit fresh to start but soon warmed up and despite it being a bank holiday and warm(ish) and sunny(ish) it was surprisingly quiet. The town centre was busy but still quieter than I have seen it in the past. The woods did not disappoint and nor did the new stag. Most enjoyable. 

Eldest's GF has been delighted by all the lambs in the fields but has never had the opportunity to bottle feed or cuddle a lamb, so I messaged a friend who has rare breed sheep and goats and asked it there was a chance for a bit of lamb cuddling action and the answer was yes! So off we went and held and tickled the cutest (and tiniest) Ronaldsay lambs we've ever seen then spent a very happy time scritching and scratching Golden Guernsey goats and goat kids.

Sunday we had my folks over for tea and cake and in the afternoon we went off looking at the lambs in the fields - the fields are liberally sprinkled with lambs around the village, from the tiniest little long legged lambs to the mini sheep sized lambs full of bravado as they charge around the fields in little groups.

By Monday it was back to Himself and I so we decided to jump in the van and head off to the Dales for a walk. Himself chose Littondale and we easily found parking above the isolated valley. Once again we were surprised how quiet the roads were and how few folk were about despite again the sunny and reasonably warm weather. We dropped down on to the side of the valley and walked up to the head of it, crossed over and back down on the other side. There was a cutting breeze that seemed to find its way through all clothing however, when the sun shone it was gorgeous. We stopped in a dry limestone riverbed for our lunch and found a sheltered and warm spot. Lunch was piping hot mushroom soup, cheese and pickle sarnies followed by chocolate eggs - what a treat! Moss of course found a pool of water and played 'dipping for sticks' as she stuck her face in and blew bubbles in the rather chilly water. (what a strange dog!)
The last stretch back up to the van was a bit of a pull as it was from the valley bottom (in the far distance in the main photograph) up to the crest of the hill on the left. In all it was over six miles and we hardly saw a soul. 

Now, Tuesday, I am wondering what happened to our extended weekend? I know we stuffed it full and made the most of every minute but it still seemed to vanish in a flash!

How was your long weekend?
Did you manage to make it linger and feel like a holiday?
or did it fly by in a blink of an eye!?!




14/10/2021

Blogtober day 14 - LARGE strawberry and small mushroom

Somehow I am not sure if this particular strawberry plant received the memo... you know the one - summer has ended, please go dormant.... So it seems there is now an urgent race between the ripening strawberry and the autumnal weather - who will cross the line first?!?

On the other end of the scale ... how small is this?? it was not the first mushroom we spotted in the cut-and-come-again flower bed, it was only after I'd taken a photograph or two of the other fungi that my colleague saw this tiny dot of a fruiting body!

And just for comparison (apart from the looming finger) these are the originally spotted fruiting bodies and they are about 2cm tall.... amazing little things (but what I did not notice until I 'enbiggened' the image on the laptop - something even smaller hds been nibbling the edge of the lower mushroom).


What eeeny weeeeeeny teeni-tiny things have you spotted recently?


#blogtober2021

13/10/2021

Blogtober day 13 - Isn't nature amazing!

Just look what we found today at work - isn't just a thing of natural beauty? The twigs were in a bucket destined for the compost and somehow in the clear up on Friday it was missed. So today when we opened the glasshouse we discovered this delicate transient moment of natural magic. By the afternoon, the mushrooms had faded and all but 'melted' away.
In between the light yet persistent showers, I managed to escape into the garden to plant a row of the most gorgeous chunky little broad bean seedlings - they have such strapping roots and vibrant optimism. The soil is still warm and the row of beans are tucked up under several snug cloches. I'll open each one daily until the weather gets a little too fiercesome for these wee things then they will sit out winter until it is warm enough for them to frolic in the spring sunshine🌱🌞
My apprentice decided today was the day to take down the now decaying climbing beans. They towered above us and have given the most glorious spectacle throughout summer. Now as they fade, their last hurrah are their 'magic beans' - are they not soooo pretty? 

 Has anything caught your eye today?

#blogtober2021

16/03/2021

The inner glow of warm soup

Yesterday's weather was a relief from the wild and wet stuff we'd been having recently. A gentle calm day with hints of sunshine between slowly moving clouds. The chilly breeze was still playing up however it was far less mean and as long as we either moved along with it or managed to find shelter, it was not a problem.

Earlier, I'd made a 'what-is-in-the-fridge-goes-in-the-pot' type soup. One of those that has all the vegetables which although fine but not as crisp or as fresh as they should be. With a couple of handfuls of lentils, a tin of mixed beans and a generous pinch of Cajun spices added in for good measure and the whole lot blitzed to a thick and gloriously warm stick-to-your-ribs soup. 

Himself and I, warmed and full, stepped into wellies, shrugged on a fleece and let a rather excited dilly dog drag us up on to the moors. We jokingly (well only half jokingly) said that we were being weighed down by our lunch, it felt like the gravitational pull of our soup-filled tums was greatly impeding our progress! 

The lower fields are beginning to fill with lambs - making my heart sing.

It was lovely being out, sitting on the edge of a grassy knoll as we watched a male kestrel balance as he looked for his dinner and listened to the curlews and lapwings.  A welcome sound as they return from their wintering grounds. We are lucky that we can just step out of our house and be on the hills in a few minutes. We have appreciated that more than ever over the last 12 months or so. 

Our view was in 'layers', the closest layer being moorland tussocks, stone walls and farms, then the village in the valley, the middle distant hills in shades of dusty blue, then the far hills brilliant white under a thick coating of snow. Despite the sun, still a spring-weak glow, we had to move before we got too cold. 

Still fuelled and still warm from our soup, we continued along the drover's track as it trailed up and over the undulating landscape. We stopped at our furthest point - an untidy and squat pile of enormous boulders which loom over the neighbouring valley. Sitting here feels airy and exposed but today we managed to find a sheltered corner for a break with tea, chocolate and biscuits.

Turning for home, we chose a short and winding path through a predominantly silver birch woodland. It is always quiet and still in these trees. A safe space for the wild folk who live in this valley ...



We felt so privileged to see the roe deer, although I managed to photograph the buck as the doe was slightly lower down in the woodland and difficult to snap. My camera tried to focus on the trees around her, however the buck stood still and watched us curiously. He was still in his winter coat and his antlers still had their velvet covering.  We stood - us and Moss and the deer for what felt quite an age before the spell was broken and the doe quietly stepped away and Moss picked up a stick. Time to go home.

We finally returned home, via the river to swill down a muddy mutt (who thinks this part of the walk is the bestest!). It is one of our favourite local walks and today's gave that little bit extra and we loved it 😊 



22/12/2020

Winter Solstice 2020

A quiet nod to the turning of the seasons, 
the anticipated move towards the light and hopefully a kinder 2021.
Walking to connect, to escape. 
Walking to clear heads and steel hearts.
Breathing in the damp air, the decaying leaves and the wet earth.
A sublime and gentle light - giving a feeling of hope. 
2020 has been different - by anyone's standard. 
A year of fear and hope, a year of unity and division. 
One of confusion and sadness and a year of amazing courage and strength. 
Solstice blessings to you all, stay safe, here's to 2021 - may she be kinder than 2020.


xxxxxxxxxxxxxx




16/10/2020

Life in colour

The colours of autumn are so different to any other season - the light casts a benign glow while foliage softens, sweetens and changes.

The heady blues of summer mellow to gentle clear sapphires and pinks. Clouds wrap horizons shawl-like and the air has a taste of distant memories of toffees and salt.



A grey sky to me is like wearing a lead weight, yet other greys abound with such delight - the muted camouflaging greys of a silent river sentry, 


the swirling eddies of deep grey water as it moves with meaning and purpose through a narrow gorge, 
The unnoticed 'invisible' grey supporting flashes of brilliant colour..... a wonderfully stumpy and broad slab of rainbow luminance...
The unobtrusive grey of a boardwalk covered in a confetti of leaves.

Then, there is the more expected colours of autumn,
The punchy reds and pinks....
Oranges and yellows,
Russets, browns and darkening greens,
Rusts, terracottas, ambers, creams and golds....
Tawny, sandy, sunset shades with flashes of caustic whites and sinister alabaster shades.
Talking of sunsets - they too have been sharing their shades of autumn, from fiery and volatile ...
To a more gentle slide into dusk then darkness.

There is so much more to autumn than the decline into decay and a loss of light - I am having to re-think my feeling of loss when the summer goes and learn to see the beauty in the faded charm and cooling weather.

It will take a lot of practice... have yourselves a lovely weekend filled with colour and sunsets in the most glorious shades of autumn xxxxxx