Saturday 1 September 2012

Wedding Day after after a Blue Moon




Last night there was a 'Blue Moon'.  It was the second full moon of August 2012 which is how it gets that lovely name, and here it is, just about to be banked over by clouds from the southwest, at dawn this morning.


Today was a Wedding Day - the fourth in two years in the village, they are one ahead of  funerals in the frequency stakes at the moment.  Don't watch this space for updates!





Above to the left, are Derek-and-Becs-from-'The Dunkery'. They'll always be known as that in this village - despite the fact that they've retired and someone else has taken over their hotel - and today their son Tim married Rebecca-from-Leicester in All Saints church.





As ever, many villagers turned out to applaud the arriving bride and then wait, gossiping at the crossroads, until the service was over. A couple of farmers drove up in battered old Land Rovers and they too stopped to catch up with news. (Bruce's new knee is just fine, thank you, and they'll be baling their second-cut hay tomorrow.)

On the reappearance of the celebrants there was further applause - I think the visitors from Leicester were somewhat surprised by our reaction to a wedding party - and then lavender and rose-petal confetti was scattered over Tim and Rebecca as they left for the reception in George-from-the-Garage's old Rover 3500.  The bridesmaids, having arrived in Eddie-from-Lowertown's open-top Morris Minor, left in a posh hired car.

The villagers then nipped up into the church to look at the flowers done by Jane and her capable assistants. There were many niches full of these displays, here are three:










And we also looked at our lovely retired vicar, Stan, who told us that this is the first wedding he himself has taken at this, his local church. Astonishing!  I'll send him this photo as a memento of the occasion.






Thursday 26 July 2012

A Summer at last

The interminable rain has gone for a while and I've come out of hiding.  Since parking The Ashes at a secret location in the Highlands at the end of March - in a glorious week of sunshine, the like of which I've never known in Scotland in springtime - I've been under a stone.  Wet, wetter, wettest three months on record: I nearly send for the Ark Construction kit.

And suddenly the jet stream snaked northwards again, back to where it's meant to be and summer has come to the Moor.

On the first day, the farmers cut the hay. On the second and third, they turned and turned it and yesterday the tractors and balers turned up like manic dinorsaurs to roll up carpets of it into massive, tight, round bales.  Neighbour Mark got the job of spiking them onto the back of his tractor and carting them away to the Ox Court and Easter barns to 'make' for a few months.  Last year this top field yielded over 150 small bales, this year only a dozen or so large rounds. The wet spring held the quantity back and, because the grasses had seeded, also a little of the quality. Never mind, at least we've got something!

I've been riding out at  6am each morning in this heat. Today, up on the Dunster Path on the shoulder of Dunkery, I watched a red deer hind lead her calf out of the birchwoods and onto the open sunlit Moor.  It was an enchanting moment: the hind was completely unfazed by the presence of my horse and me and simply stood watching as we passed.  Minutes later two buzzards appeared over the horizon, gliding and sliding around the far blue yonder, calling to one another, quartering the ground below them for edibles.

The dew was heavy on the spiders' webs, some as wide as eighteen inches across, many of them dipping from heather height to an unseen undergrowth attachment, giving the impression of lace shrouds cast over bushes to dry.  Of the spinners and weavers I saw nothing and, from the size of those webs, am glad I did not.

Down on the shaded ancient, stony track that leads home, I felt a different type of web break against my face as I rode through.  Another kind of spinner had sent out trapeze wire traps for unwary insects, slung five feet across the path and seven feet above.

And finally, when I'd freed Hoss for the day, I went to work and by chance saw a sparrowhawk break cover at speed from a laneside hedge in pursuit of some hapless bird.
We all have to eat: I must earn money and the sparrowhawk must kill. Good job the two don't get muddled up.

Thursday 8 March 2012

HKCs 1-3

For those of you who ever wondered, here are the HKCs (HunterKillerCats)





The small fluffy one is HKC1, Senior Cat, now 16.  I brought her home from a farm with her (now departed) sister when she was just a few weeks old.
The larger tabby is HKC2, now about 13.  I wanted a Maine Coon and couldn't afford one.  However, a friend of a friend in Buckinghamshire owned a siamese queen who had escaped and been Seen To by a vicar's Maine Coon tom ... and HKC2 was one of 6 resultant offspring.  I've always referred to HKC2 as a Tycoon and his mother as a GI Bride. He can take out full-grown squirrels, pheasants, weasels, rabbits, rats and on one hideous occasion also a small snake.  He's steadied down in his mature years, thank goodness.
The ginger job is HKC3 - of indeterminate age.  He walked in one Christmas nearly 6 years ago and we hadn't the heart to turn him out.  He and HKC2 had just one rather bloody-furry fight and thereafter settled down together.  Bit of a boys' club really ...

Just to prove they like one another:





Humour me, just one more Cat Photo and then I'll let you off the hook.

This is HKC1 sunning herself:



OK, that's it, thank you for looking.  Now you know who I'm going on about when HKCs 1-3 come into conversation.

I'm saving Hoss for another day!

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Sunshine Award

Now there's a pretty thing!
Thank you, Tosh (OK, Patsy) for this.
Apparently I'm sposed to tell you some random things
about myself and then hand the Sunshine Award on to
somebody else.  Tosh wrote about FeelGood factors and, as most of me is fairly random anyway, I'll just write you a short rhyme about small things that make me feel good:

A sneeze in the morning
An owl in the night
A rainbow by moonshine
A merlin in flight.
Laughter and silliness,
Talking with friends,
Well-written novels with
tidied-up ends.
Views of the wild Moor,
stags in the gorse,
Rides up the Beacon
on Dear Hoss - of course!

Actually, on a good day, just about anything makes me feel good - and even on a bad day, a smile from a stranger or a robin landing on the gatepost or even just the sight of dew on a spider's web can make the day better.

The trick seems to be: you have to want to feel good. 


Look for the good in everything and somewhere you'll find it. Sometimes putting on your glasses can help, however.

And now for The Clever Bit - can I follow Tosh's instructions on how to pass this Award on to three amigos of mine - ShirleyBaggy and Gail.  Shirley's the Proper Poet among my friends, Baggy is the Article Writer (and Daily Blogger) and Gail is Doing A Degree and doesn't get much time to blog at all these days. She once passed an Award on to me but I didn't think I deserved it so I didn't take it ... and anyway I didn't know how to make it appear AND it was on my original - now obsolete BlogThoughtsFromAbroad. Its demise is a long story ... to do with hacking and losing accounts and other IT sadnesses which Did Not Make Me Feel Good.

But being positive - now I've got THIS blog instead.  Must use it more (Moor) often or it'll be going rusty.



Onward March!


There goes another month, and although Winter has not completely been put to bed and indeed there was a frost this morning, the worst of the cold should be over.  That said, I never dump my thermals until the end of April.

The ground has dried up much sooner than usual and I think I've missed the 'roller window' for the fields - that's the time between the very wet ground being too cloggy for the rollers and then, sometimes only days later, it being too dry for the rolling to do any good.

The snowdrops are going over, the primroses have started sprouting in the hedgerow banks and the daffodils - those that didn't flower in December! - are out and blowing around in the high winds.  I even found a cluster of daffydowndillies up in a remote south-facing hillside on Grabbist and have been wondering since how they got there.

Greenfire has started along the Exmoor lanes.  Just a tiny wavelet of grass below the hedges will soon be followed by strands of nettle and wildflower growth and in a month or so, a mass verdant climb-away will light the hawthorn buds.  When they open fully, come May, the whole world will be properly alive again.

Lambing is over for one of my friends and only just beginning for another.  Farmer Joanna wanted hers out of the way early - she's gone to Australia for a wedding now - and Farmer Caroline's season kicked off at the weekend. No signs in either flock of the awful viral disease that has struck this year - Schmallenberg - but 121 farms in the south of England have now had cases confirmed and there's nothing anyone can do except hope.  The virus, believed to be midge-borne, causes deformities in lambs, which can only be detected at lambing time.  It also affects cattle but so far the reports have been mostly in the sheep community.

No Exmoor pony foals yet - it's a bit early, although they have been known to appear at this time.   A notable one, later called 'Bat-and-Ball' was born on the village cricket pitch about ten years ago. His mother has a habit of finding great spots to drop her excess baggage!

That's your lot for now.

Oh no, not quite: Patsy has nominated me for something called a 'Sunshine Award' and although I'm not sure I deserve such a thing - let's face it I'm hardly a regular Blogger - I would quite like to accept it. But before I do I'd better find out:
a) how I cart it over here and
b) what exactly I'm meant to do afterwards.

Something about putting Things About Myself on the web for any passing T,D or H to read and something about Passing On the Sunshine.  We'll see!  This little backwater blog of mine doesn't get many passers-by and I'm quite happy with that. It is, after all, just a Memory-Jog- Blog for the various Celiae Personae (don't ask, but I am Not Alone and neither are you!) rather than anything more serious or useful.

Monday 20 February 2012

Dark of the Moon

From down in the Hamlet Hollow there was a fabulous view of the midnight sky last night - I even saw a shooting star and made a wish on it.  The Dark of the Moon is quite the best time for observing the night heavens and being so far from towns and light pollution, the Moor offers a perfect viewing environment: hence it has been nominated a 'Dark Park'. No doubt there will be Star Tourists soon ...

The owls, unimpressed by such magnificence, were shrieking their heads off and twitting to one another in the surrounding woodlands.  They have no sense of awe.  One of them had the audacity to do a fly-past so close I felt its swoop and saw its shape - but heard nothing.  Owl wings are rounded on the leading edges, to give them near-silent flight. Good trick if you're hunting I suppose.

I really haven't got anything useful to say, but Tosh had a go at me for my lack of posting, so here's the (probably only) February Offering.

Enjoy.

Monday 9 January 2012

Mooncast Rainbows

A high bright moon, just over full (they call this phase waning gibbous) lit my route along the lane to the horses at 6am this morning.  The air was fresh but very moist and high overhead in the sky in front of me arched a mooncast rainbow.  I've not seen one of these for many years and it was absolutely beautiful, its arc-bands in different tones of a kind of purple rather than in definitely different colours.

Look up, if ever you're out walking in the dark of a winter's night and there's rain in the offing but the moon's full and bright behind you.  Look up, enjoy yet another of nature's free lightshows and be glad to be alive.

Wednesday 4 January 2012

Something Fishy



I've just been going through some old photos and found this little gem.  He's a Lalique angel fish belonging to a friend. Isn't he just lovely?  He has a curious 'opalescence' if that's the right word and appears to change colour in different lights but I couldn't capture it on my camera.
Photographs are great inspiration for short stories ... so I'd better get on with a Fishy Tale

When I'm rich and famous I'm going to collect pretty things like this!

Monday 2 January 2012

A Room with a View



This is the view today from my kitchen window.  I love it.

Three weeks ago all I could see was a tree-hedge the height of the remains of the offending article to the back right of the photo.

For many years, the owner of that hedge refused to have it cut down, despite my neighbour and me offering to help pay for the work. Poor Mrs A had bought her cottage for this view but and within a few years had lost it, completely in summer and partially in winter - until the Americans solved the problem. They'd bought another cottage just out of sight to the left and the 30ft wild and unruly 'hedge' was blocking their view entirely.

They set to doing The Obvious Thing: they bought the field as well.  They got a local chap and his boys to cut and lay the hedge and burn off the rubbish.  It looks a little stark now, in the dark January light but come spring, all will be well again.

Now we've all got our lovely view of the hills back!  I can see the 800 year old oak tree (it's dead, but one of its daughters is growing in its bowl) and the buzzards that land on it. I can see the deer as they pass through, the foxes going about their lives, and I can see the moon set right down into the rim of the world.

God bless America(ns)

Sunday 1 January 2012

Finding North


Finding North can be a tricky number.  To make things easier, I bought myself a compass last year - it looks like a tiny hunter watch, complete with a lid and a spring-loaded opening button and a clip-on hook.  But with a little effort, I can make north be anywhere from north-north-east to west-north-west. It's all very well having such control over the earth, but if I want to know true north ...

I go outside, away from any magnetic influences in the cottage.

It's night. From where I live the Milky Way is pretty clear and at the right time I can pick out lots of constellations, my favourite being Orion because he's so easy to spot.  Ursa Major - the Plough, the Big Dipper, the Drinking Gourd, whatever you want to call it - is opposite Orion and supposedly points north.  But is that a bit north or very north? And which part of it is the final reference point?

Out with the compass.  The little needle trembles in my hand, unsure of its reception or its future if it cocks my orienteering up yet again.  It says east is north. Frowning, I tilt it a little and the red part of the needle suddenly ungums itself and swings round several degrees.  It settles.

You sure?  That's North?  You don't want to ask the audience or anything?

No, the needle stays pointing towards Easter Farm.  To test it, I turn around and face the other way and the needle sways, wobbles and points back the way I've come.

Fine. I've found North.  I chalk a white line on the flat topstone of the wall.

In the morning, I'll get out the ladder and fix the weathervane.

Until then, navigators wanting to know which way the wind is blowing will have to lick a finger, hold it to the wind and check their own bloomin' compass ...