The second week of the Severn Tunnel being closed was a good ten degrees cooler than the preceding one, so rather than do two round trips on the days I was due to take the Northerner to work, I decided to stay out all day with the dog and give her some really good walks. The first day we visited Margam Country Park, on the outskirts of Port Talbot.
Margam promised so many of my favourite things ... but didn't always deliver. For instance, I love old ruins, and Margam Abbey - which before the Reformation was the richest monastic house in Wales - has mightily impressive ones, only sadly they were fenced off. And yes, I know it's important to keep visitors safe, but I only really get a sense of a place when I can touch it.
Deborah Harvey : The Red Dress of Poetry ...
... or Woman Who Wanders About A Bit With The Dog
About Me
- Deborah Harvey Poetry
- Bristol , United Kingdom
- Poet and poetry facilitator. Neurodishevelled. 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.
Wednesday, 10 June 2026
A visit to Margam Country Park
Saturday, 30 May 2026
Return to Ogmore
The Severn tunnel being shut for its annual maintenance - and with the replacement bus service leaving Bristol too late in the morning and returning too early in the afternoon to accommodate anyone who works for a living - I've girded my lions for two weeks (Wednesday to Friday) of to-ing and fro-ing to Cardiff to drop the Northerner off and pick him up. The plan - as every year - was to stay there during the day and walk Cwtch somewhere interesting, but on Wednesday and Thursday this last week the temperature reached over 30°C, which is way too hot to be out all day with a dog.
Thursday, 21 May 2026
Other flowers are available
At the end of April, I thought I'd had all the bluebells I was going to get, at least in Bristol, but there were a few late surprises in some more sheltered pockets, like this lane at Winterbourne in South Gloucestershire ...
The squeeze-belly stile leading down to Wickham Glen was also beautifully dressed with cow parsley and alkanet ...
Where there are lots of flowers, there are insects, but most of them far too flighty for me to take a photo of.
Good times for hoggin finding, though: last year's leaf litter is gone, mud is no longer an issue, other people are out walking and displacing soil, and spring showers make the ground soft enough to dig bits out:
Nearby in the wood, there was another fallen tree - a beech - blocking the path ...















































































