Tuesday, December 31, 2013

At the year's turning

Hardly light; grey all around;  sky meets land, moistly. Another swathe of rain rolls in and the dark conifers of Badnage wood are obscured by mist again. How very weary this old year is looking.

I sit at my desk and think of new beginnings - it is New Year's Eve after all - a day for reflection before moving on. I don't experience synesthesia - seeing numbers and days as colours and shapes - except at this time of the year. These end days of December, Christmas baubles aside, are dank dark shapes, cobwebbed and drear, which, come the stroke of midnight become January, sparkling and luminescent. Today is a spent match but tomorrow a fresh white sheet. However, I can't console myself with the thought that in a few hours time the small mountain kingdom will be sun-washed, green and lush. No, we have a few more months of mud and slush to come yet methinks. Sigh.

It's not that that this has been a bad year by any means. Same old, same old, perhaps - and none the worse for that. It's been busy, and quiet in equal part. A few pictures follow - only one of which could really be described as a highlight.















Snow in April, unforgivably late but breathtakingly beautiful.

The landscape is reduced to simple grey shapes. This piece of hillside - unspectacular otherwise has graceful zen-like beauty under its blanket of snow.








But then things do come good - after an unpromising start the sun shone and shone - here on a bank of daisies outside our garden room.


Wilderness in miniature and certainly somewhere for the hunting dog Chester to consider elusive voles











Our garden was fruitful - we like to think this was the best crop of figs in Trelystan.



The sun shone and the grass grew - as did our thistles. Happiness is a man on a tractor. The Glam. Ass. spent a morning 'topping'.  The b*ggers grew back, but that's thistles for you.


October saw a wedding - or rather The Wedding. Our son Harry married Sam and we gained the loveliest daughter-in-law. We wish them every happiness.








My ageing flock of poultry was culled and my daily excuse to stand on the field and look around me open-mouthed at the wonder of it all was no more. I had just got my head round having 2 birds at the bottom of the garden (sooo easy!) when an offer too good to refuse was made. Would I like some more? Point of lay? You bet. Thus another 15 birds are installed in the hen-house on wheels up on the field.

My daily round begins again - I stand and watch the sky and listen to the sough of the wind through Badnage wood. I hear the roar of the stream in the dingle on its way down to the Rea Valley, to the Severn, and onwards to the sea. My water going to the waves. I speculate that this same water will return as rain, brewed by the ocean's currents. Such is the circle of life.

Those twinkly lights are home; warm and welcoming. Old year, new year, this is indeed a good place to be.

My very best wishes to any passing reader. May 2014 bring peace, health and happiness.


7 comments:

Chris Stovell said...

I very much enjoyed your lovely photos. Life in your small mountain kingdom looks good. Thank you for all your support again in 2013. I wish you a happy, healthy and peaceful New Year.

Kirsty.A said...

Happy new year to you and yours

SmitoniusAndSonata said...

A warm and wonderful new year to both you and the Glam. Ass. !!
The snow's yet to come this winter here , too ... I find I'm looking forward to its brightness . The greyness is rather lowering , after a while .

Frances said...

Well Mountaineer, this passing reader is very glad to have had the opportunity to have a bit of a catch up with you.

I hope to see many more posts from you in this still young New Year, and hope that you'll also stop by my place every so often.

Right now, I am typing on my laptop, as I finish tonight's pasta supper (with some good luck black-eyed peas in the sauce) snow's been falling for a few hours.

How glad I am that on Jan 3, I will be able to wake and see the depth of the snow, and know that ... I will have Jan 3 as an already scheduled day off.

Happy 2014! xo

Cro Magnon said...

Quite pleasant here, with overnight rain and dry sunny days (when will it end?). I fear I may have to cull my two hens too; they refuse to lay, and I'm just feeding them for nothing. Unfortunately they think of me as a friend, and the dirty deed would be difficult. Happy new year, Cro.

rachel said...

Yay, you've come back! Although as Wordpress doesn't indicate in the way that Blogger did, that a new post has arrived, I didn't find out till today. I have enjoyed catching up. Hope to see you here regularly again!

Carah Boden said...

Thank you Mountaineer. May yours be a good year too. Beautiful photographs. So peaceful.