About Me

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Bristol , United Kingdom
Poet and poetry facilitator. Letters after my name: BA, MA, AuDHD. 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.

Monday, 2 February 2026

Snowdropping at Painswick Rococo Garden

First jaunt of the year with my friend of longest standing, Liz, who kindly drove me and Cwtch to Painswick Rococo Garden in the Cotswolds, my impinged shoulder still being troublesome. 


It was in a Painswick tea shoppe, on a very rainy day in 2008, that we adopted the idea of 'The Jaunt' from our former French teacher, Janet Foster, who'd died eight years earlier at the age of 50. The inordinately enthusiastic Miss Foster had been an inveterate jaunter, and we decided that was what we'd do too - make time in our busy lives to go to new places. And we've 
both done that, although not often enough with each other. But now Liz has all but retired from teaching, there's a little more scope for getting out and about, and for novelty - something the dopamine-seeker in me craves. 

Rococo is my least liked of all the styles when it comes to interiors and architecture - in fact, I loathe it - but nature improves everything, and the garden is a pleasant place to be. Having been laid out in the 1730s, it was subsequently altered as fashions changed, and by the 1950s, it was covered in conifers. It was restored in the 1970s, using a 1748 painting by local artist, Thomas Robins, as a guide to what the original garden looked like.

First, we went for a wander through the maze, which was a lot less challenging than it would have been in full summer foliage ...



... though of course, the experience we were mostly there for was the snowdrops.



There are, apparently, fifteen different species in the garden, out of a total of twenty known species. 



'The Fairy Tale Castle' carved into an old beech stump



The Gothick alcove




Winter aconite


The Pigeon House


Painswick House, built in 1737


Cwtch and Liz


Friday, 2 January 2026

Winter walks in the dark days



Since I’m still largely confined to the settee with a painful shoulder, I might as well post some photos of local walks we took from late November to just before Christmas, when I suddenly stopped being able to drive to interesting places.

Here are some photos of Blaise Castle taken about six weeks ago, when there was still some colour clinging to the trees ...



... and here’s Badock’s Wood, a couple of miles upstream on the Trym, on a magical morning of mist and lingering leaves at the beginning of December.



Mill Tut



 Meanwhile, the wintry Frome has been running fast with flood water from copious amounts of rainfall. Luckily, Cwtch is deeply suspicious of water and very careful around it.

She doesn’t even like the section of path through Snuff Mills that always floods in winter.



the Frome from Halfpenny Bridge

I haven’t seen the heron that hangs out in Eastville Park lake for at least a couple of months, but there have been kingfishers and cormorants, so I can’t complain.


Purdown, above the Frome valley, is a good place to walk in winter when you haven't time to get muddy, and Cwtch and I have had several shiny-bright walks up there.




I haven't been able to find out what this stone on Sir John’s Lane signifies – a boundary marker, perhaps?





winter oak

Finally, a walk at Three Brooks nature reserve in Bradley Stoke on a day so bright the first wise man must have wrapped it up as a gift.  







Can spring be far behind

Finally, a reminder that even when you can't drive anywhere, the most familiar and mundane of placecan still delight you: here, starlings gate-crashing a colony of sparrows. 




Friday, 26 December 2025

Gold I bring

Once again, I'm confined to the Settee of Suffering with another flare-up of shoulder impingement syndrome. I'm trying to get myself into a mindset where I can advocate, in the New Year, for finding a longer-term solution to this than missing work, not doing any long drives, and stuffing myself full of painkillers.  

In the meantime, since I'm not going anywhere, here are some photos from a recent walk on Lawrence Weston Moor, which I was visiting for the first time.


I tend to think of hills topped with granite outcrops when I hear the word moor, but here we're on the Severn floodplain, where moors are low-lying basins into which the river spills at times of flood - or did, every winter, before the rhines were dug in - probably - the 15th century. (And still do, on occasion, when they are overwhelmed.)

In any event, it's a welly walk in all but the driest months of the year.





Our route took us in a loop around the nature reserve. Although it's right by the M5, it wasn't too hard to blot out the sound of traffic. 


A short stretch of boardwalk takes you over the wettest section of the walk.



Haws


Old Man's Beard


Reedmace






A dewy leaf on dark winter water


Under the mistletoe


The road leading to the footbridge over the motorway


I was so glad to be there when it was bright and the sun was turning the reeds to gold. It made me want to pocket the whole day, to take out and remember on grimmer winter days.