About Me

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Bristol , United Kingdom
Poet and poetry facilitator. Co-founder of the Leaping Word Poetry Consultancy, which provides advice for poets on writing, editing and publishing, as well as qualified counselling support for those exploring personal issues in their work - https://theleapingword.com. My sixth poetry collection, Love the Albatross, is now available from Indigo Dreams or directly from me.
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts

Friday, 11 March 2016

Salvaging an A.W.38 Whitley


It’s 1941. My father, Lionel Harvey, is 19, RAF ground crew and stationed in Scotland. One day a pilot on a training flight gets into trouble over the Dornoch Firth and manages, just, to land his Whitley on the highest part of a sandbank.  The tide comes in but doesn’t quite reach the plane. The race is on to salvage it.

The authorities set about finding billets for the men, including my father, who are charged with carrying out the operation.  None of the locals will agree to take them, so when they try again, they are accompanied by a police officer and my father finds himself assigned to Summerton Farm, near Tain, then in the ownership of Jock and Annie Moore. He is accompanied by two other airmen, one from Newcastle, the other from Ayrshire. The polite demeanour of the airmen soon dispels suspicion and a rapport is established – although when, at one point, the young Scot describes himself as a highlander, Annie Moore draws my father, a Bristolian, to one side and hisses ‘He’s nae a Hielander!’

It is my father’s job to get the two engines out of the Whitley, and this is done using pulleys.  The whole of the plane is then dismantled, and a raft is built out of about sixty strong, iron-bound barrels to transport the pieces of plane over the water to dry land.  It's arduous work, as the sand is deep and unstable, and it’s tiring just reaching the plane. (My father is yet to become an expert at playing football in the Sahara.)  Rowing the raft is no easier, not least because the oars they have been given are of unequal length – one about six foot, the other closer to ten.  It’s really hard to row the raft and negotiate the currents and get it going in the right direction.

The heaviest part of the plane is the fuselage, and to help shift this, about fifty Highlanders who are stationed nearby are drafted in to help.  In the space of three weeks they manage to get all of the plane back onto the shore without getting a single piece wet.

Footnote 1: RAF ground crew were instructed to stop wearing their wellington boots in their habitual style, with the tops turned down, as the local lads were doing the same and their mothers had complained to the authorities that they were breaking their boots and causing unnecessary expense. This instruction was not heeded.

Footnote 2: My father kept in touch with the Moores for many years, until they died. He went back to see them with my mother after they married in the early 50s, and my sister and her husband also tried to visit in 1981, but didn't manage to rouse a then very elderly Jock, who had fallen asleep in his armchair and didn’t hear them knocking on the door. 




Thursday, 18 September 2014

A Poem For Scotland



The old stories are often the best and by the best I mean the scariest. One of the most terrifying creatures of Celtic folklore is the Kelpie or Water Horse.  It comes trotting up to you, all My Little Pony, tossing its long mane and floppy forelock – however! Should you be so foolish as to mount it, its eyes flame, you find you are stuck to its back with no escape, and it leaps into the nearest stretch of water where it will eat you.

This is a true story told to me by a friend who lived for a time on Skye. 


Cailpeach

The horse is white, not grey. Not
a runaway from a field. Nobody here or hereabouts
owns a white horse.

What’s more, your dog, the Kerry Blue,
is doing what dogs do when they chance
on the uncanny,

standing motionless and staring
at the shore where Saint Columba
made his landing.

This horse is whiter than any dove,
so bright it stings your eyes
like salt,

sears itself into your mind,
drags your hesitant feet
towards the brooding Sound,

as it surges over shingle, rocky skerries,
vanishing behind sheer cliffs,
reappearing.

When you reach the tideline
the beast will be gone.
You’ll see no hoof prints in the sand

and you’ll question the memory of a horse,
dreamt from spindrift,
beating its ancient bounds,

even as your dog 
explores and sniffs, barks for you
to throw her sticks.


© Deborah Harvey 2014 


This poem is from my new collection, Map Reading for Beginners, which is published tomorrow by Indigo Dreams and available from them, Amazon if you must, and all good independent bookshops ... or from me personally at the launch in Bristol on 26th September. It would be good to see you there!