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 fly tipping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fly tipping. Show all posts

Monday, 27 March 2023

Here comes the light

We're two and a half weeks further into spring than when we had that late fall of snow, but it still feels like we've yet to topple into it properly.  Part of the reason, I think, is the location of field of the hollowing oak, just below a high-ish ridge of land overlooking the Severn floodplain, where weather's apt to come barrelling off the Atlantic. So while the first blackthorn is tentatively blossoming out on the farm fields ...


... and the abandoned feed trough has planted itself with moss and stingers ... 

... up in the field of the hollowing oak, there's little to show so far for the lengthening light, and most of our colour still comes from the rubbish that gets chucked or dumped in the field and blooms all year round. 

I usually try to avoid featuring other people's detritus in my photos, but it's a bit dishonest, so here's some - not all - of what I spotted on Saturday. 


Out on the fields that are under development, there's a rather grander calibre of crap, which includes a fridge (or freezer), a mattress, a disembowelled PC and an empty bottle of Fairy Liquid. Now I get - just about - why some idiot might weary of carrying their tin of Stella around and throw it down, but why would you take a bottle of washing up liquid to a field and abandon it there?

(Someone on Facebook said they thought foxes might have done it ... in which case, maybe they were washing their soxes.)


Talking of the building of Brabazon, Cwtch and I arrived at Charlton Common a couple of weeks back to find the footpath barricaded with earth ... 



... which we promptly climbed over, being determined to make the most of walking the footpaths over the fields until the diggers turn up. (The inexplicable row of kerb stones we discovered doesn't count.)


Other creatures in the same frame of mind are the skylarks, which have started nesting out on the open ground. I hope they get the chance to raise their young in safety.

This isn't a skylark, its a robin somewhere above my head.


As I mentioned before, the cutting back of trees and scrub has opened up new areas that were previously impenetrable, at least until the building starts. Hard to believe I hadn't really noticed this magnificent goat willow by the bus stop at the junction with Charlton Road and Charlton Common. It's currently in flower ... 


... with tassels that wouldn't disgrace a cushion in a stately home.


I also encountered a grey willow in the hedgerow bounding the field by the embankment, where the access road will shortly be constructed.


I took another walk along and inside the hedge, because there's always more to spot, like this nicely framed view of Fir Tree Cottage and barn that will soon be obstructed by housing ...


and these velvet shanks. (At least, that's what I think they are.)



'Are you sure this isn't actual Dog Vomit?' asked the Northerner, who isn't as interested in slime mould and fungi as I am. 

I also found this hole in the hedge to scramble through ... 


... which has proved useful due to the inaccessibility of the kissing gate ...


... because blimey, it's rained a lot lately. 


The ditches are full ... 


... Fishpool Hill is living up to its name ... 



... and the paths are slippery as soap. 


Cwtch's friend, Ronnie, has been having a great time splashing in pools on the flooded fields ...


... though Cwtch is far more circumspect. 

If you're one for country lore, you might look at the respective progress of the hollowing oak at the top of its field and the ash in the hedgerow at its foot, and conclude it has all been foretold by nature, and we're in for a soak, rather than a splash ... 


... though some of the ashes are still sporting their rather creepy black leaf buds that look like swollen toe nails.

Also a little bit creepy is this blood feather I spotted up the field of the hollowing oak, just six weeks after the magpie tail-blood-feather I found in almost the same spot. Judging by its size, I think it's a jackdaw's secondary flight feather, and I hope Chacky survived the losing of it. 


And yet despite the snow, despite the rain, spring is inching forwards, even here. For a start, the chiffchaffs are back ... 


... and there are, at least, cowslip leaves, along with burgeoning hogweed, red dead nettles, white violets in bloom, celandines, forget-me-nots, dandelions, speedwell, mare's tails and curiously advanced elderflowers, considering the lack of blackthorn blossom. 


There are still some of last year's leaves about, now ghosts of themselves ... 


... and dead shrews, which don't seem to be to the taste of the local foxes ... 


... but we're back on summer time, the sun is setting over Avonmouth, and all the light of the coming season is waiting. 




Monday, 27 June 2022

Midsummer Elsewhere

This is the third midsummer since the pandemic started and I discovered the field and the wood and the common that had eluded me all my life till then. 



The light in the evenings is often extraordinary. And for once, the skies on Midsummer's Eve were clear enough of cloud for us to see exactly how far north the sun sets in its journey to and fro along the Welsh hills to the west of us.


The answer is just to the left of the stanchions of the new Severn Bridge. You can see them alongside most prominent tree in this photo. 

I took a video of the last two minutes of light on the longest day. Sitting in the moment, watching the sunset, is one of my favourite parts of the week. 


Here's a few more of the beautiful sunsets we've seen these last few weeks. I guard them in my memory like Silas Marner guarded his hoard of gold.








There have been some moon risings too ... 



... and some interesting weather. Not an awful lot of rain, though when there's cloud coming off the Atlantic, it's almost always heavier on the Welsh side of the Severn estuary. 



Looking south


Sun dog


Another sun dog

And of course this is the time of year when everything's at its lushest, and every day there are new arrivals up the field and out on what was farmland and is now nearly rainforest.


Hogweed, elderflower, hogweed and sorrel, dog roses, a constellation of white clover, pignut, sorrel, hogweed and bird's-foot trefoil, feverfew, grasses, bramble, cuckoo spit on creeping thistle, vetch, goatsbeard


Cinquefoil, field bindweed, lady's bedstraw, camomile, moon daisies, hedge woundwort, wild carrots


This is my favourite oak from beyond Fishpool Hill, looking so wild and Garden of Eden-y out on the no-longer farm-, soon-to-be-developed land. 

Talking of which, there's been some fly tipping out at Elm Farm - at least a skipful, I'd say ...


... and the pond has shrunk considerably in size, leaving its detritus more prominent than ever.


A little further down, towards the M5, pipes are being laid in one of the first fields to be developed ...


... and back by the golf course, the top of Rooky Wood has been taken out completely to make way for the new pitch and putt. 


Before and after

I emailed the council about the apparent loss of the lovely old whitethorn on the fairway, but no one got back to me.  

On the plus side, nature prevails for as long as it can. The horrible fencing that was put up along the footpath at Charlton Common has completely disappeared beneath vegetation, which feels like a temporary victory ...


... while elsewhere my heart soars with the beauty of it all, even here in the edgelands.



desire path


horseshoe bend

The most exciting mammal spot these last few weeks has been another roe deer, which bounded into the hedge where we picked the damsons last autumn.  No photo - it had become aware of us a moment earlier and disappeared from view by the time I realised what it was. 

Things that didn't move as quickly include the following:


Common Carder bumble bee, marbled white, lesser stag beetle, large skipper, meadow brown, ladybird, five-spot burnet moth, honey bee, spider, unidentified but very high-flying butterfly, buff-tailed bumble bee, tortoiseshell

There have also been bats ... 


... and birds.


Magpie feather, buzzard troubling the rookery (and being seen off by sea gulls), blackbird eggs

And at all times there's a little collie going her own sweet way ... 


... resolutely refusing to get her paws wet. 




Cwtch in clover