With the encouragement of my lovely aunt in Norway (thank you, lovely aunt) and with advice from Alan and Cathy who present us with a beautiful handmade calendar each year (thank you, Alan and Cathy), I’ve put together a calendar for next year (2021) using my photographs of Devon countryside.
Because
some of the recipients will be Norwegian, I've also prepared some background information about the pictures - such as more about their locations, and what was happening in Britain at the time (given that this has been a fairly extraordinary year). I was going to mail it out with the calendars but then I thought that this might steal the limelight from my aunt when she donated calendars to her friends as Christmas presents, and I couldn't work out how the heck to please both the British and the Norwegian recipients without either patronising people or boring them. So I decided to put the information here instead (and direct people here from the calendar) so that people can read it only if they want to and British people will understand why I'm including a lot that's obvious to them. I hope you'll be interested even if you don't have a calendar.
Phew.
Some of the pictures have already been published in this blog but others are new. The links refer to posts about the walks where the pictures were taken, and if you follow them you might also come across the pictures that got away (as recounted below).
The stories behind the pictures
Devon is in South-West England. When I arrived here in the 1970s, it was rural and unspoilt and different from the rest of the country, but its population has doubled since then and much has changed. It took the Lockdown in spring and summer to remind me what the area used to be like.
Frog is who I’m married to (and I bear no responsibility for his nickname since he was given it before I met him). Ellie is a ten-year-old Springer Spaniel/Border Collie cross who’s lived with us since she was a puppy. She’s very bossy and very energetic, and barks a lot which drives Frog demented.
Pictures January to October were taken in 2020, December in 2019 and November in 2017 (as I lost two years of pictures after a technology crash).
I don’t tweak my photographs (eg adjust their colour or contrast) as I think that’s cheating, but I have uprighted them where necessary (as I have a tendency to take wonky pictures). I don't crop them either as a rule but in the calendar they are cropped slightly to make them fit the shape of the pages. What you see below are the uncropped versions.
Front cover
Here
you can see Frog and Dog (a speck in the distance) walking the towpath of the
Grand Western Canal, a Local Nature Reserve a few miles from home. It’s May and
the weather is glorious, as it has been ever since the start of Lockdown six
weeks earlier, with the sky clearer, the air sweeter and the silence deeper
than anything I’d experienced for decades, if ever, in the UK.
See ‘Five on Friday’
January
I
was going to include what I thought was a gorgeous picture of a translucent
greeny-grey sea but Frog said it was much too gloomy for the start of the
calendar. I decided that he was probably right so here instead is a picture of
gorse on the same walk.
Even
though it was a bleak day there were still splashes of colour, such as catkins
and toadstools in the woods and this gorse out on the cliffs.
As
the English saying goes, ‘When gorse is out of flower, kissing’s out of fashion’,
which means of course, that gorse is always flowering, even in mid-winter, and
I have pictures of gorse flowers peaking through snow. We didn’t have any snow this
winter however, not even a flurry as far as I can remember.
We’re on the East Devon coast, our nearest seaside and one of our favourite locations for walks (which will become obvious as this calendar progresses).
February
This is the River Culm and I’m sitting on a squelchy island which the dog and I have reached across a spit of gravel. We’re in a popular National Trust park (the NT being a charity that protects countryside and historic buildings) and this was the only place I could find to be alone.
I’m
transfixed by the rushing water and hoping that the spit will still be there
when we want to get back to the mainland. The river is in spate and, if it’s
raining upstream, levels could rise quickly.
(We
did make it back but one of my feet slipped off the spit and my boot filled
with water. Bother.)
March
This
is the lane that runs along the spine of the hill above the house.
All
Devon lanes look the same – hedged, twisty, narrow, muddy, up and down – and if
you lose concentration when driving it’s easy to become disorientated: ‘Where
am I? Where am I going?’ On foot, as I am here, it’s not so bad.
You might also realise as you progress through this calendar that through-routes - roads, footpaths, avenues, canals, rivers – are something of an obsession of mine. (Actually, I didn’t realise it myself until I got to the end.)
This is a tiny patch of ancient woodland a twenty-minute climb through fields from home. I call it my sanctuary as only a couple of other people (friends and neighbours) visit it and they tend to stick to its other end. So it’s just me here and wild nature, something that’s very hard to find anywhere in the UK.
At
bluebell time, like now, the wood is completely magical. Ellie however is
immune to magic. She hurtles to and fro chasing squirrels (and getting into my
pictures).
May
Branscombe beach, East Devon.
During
the Lockdown we were allowed out once a day for exercise but it wasn’t at all
clear whether or not we were allowed to drive somewhere for that exercise. Frog
and I had heard on the local television news that so long as your walk was longer than your
drive it was OK, so we took that as our mantra, and made the 45-minute drive
here on this beautiful day as a birthday celebration, stopping off to do some food
shopping as an additional excuse and walking for two hours on the cliffs.
Once more Frog rejected my first picture choice (watermeadows, ruins) as too gloomy but as the weather had now broken it was hard to find a June picture that wasn’t gloomy. This picture of abandoned lime kilns on the Grand Western Canal, on the same walk as that of the rejected picture, makes up for its gloominess with atmosphere (in my opinion – but I haven’t shown it to Frog yet).
We took a new route on this walk and passed a dramatic quarry and dramatic quarry buildings which looked like a Spanish fortress. I would have liked to include in the calendar one of the pictures I took of these but decided they weren't representative of the British countryside - but perhaps they are. Perhaps I should show it as it really is, not just the pretty bits.
Nor are there any blue skies in my July pictures, so you’ll have to make do with this one, taken from the top of some East Devon cliffs.
It
was a long steep climb to get here and when I arrived the sky seemed to be
exploding towards me.
The landowner here farms for wildlife, not just 'organically' (without chemicals), and on this walk I saw birds, wildflowers and butterflies I've never seen before.
See ‘Living and learning on the Jurassic Coast’
The sun has come out again, it’s hot and I’m sitting on the hill behind the house. Everything glows with colour and light, and I have the sense that this is the summer at its peak.
See ‘An anniversary day out’
See ‘Autumn feasts’
I’m at the National Trust park again, in a newish avenue (newish in that I remember it being created) which inspires the photographer in me at all seasons.
The view south from under a beech tree on the hill behind the house, and Ellie looking wistful.
Behind the line of hills in the distance is the sea. The dip in the line straight ahead is Branscombe, which features in May. To the right (if you could see it) is Dartmoor National Park, and behind is Exmoor National Park (neither of which has found its way into this calendar – another year perhaps).
We’re very lucky to live here. It’s still beautiful.
Lovely post (and idea), used to live in South Devon and seeing your photos of the red earth, sunken hedgelined lanes and patchwork hillsides brought back precious memories x
ReplyDelete(If this comment appears twice - please delete one of them - I suspect the first one evaporated thanks to the new blogger platform...)
Lovely to hear from you Kate, and so pleased you found the pictures evocative.
ReplyDeleteAs I've been getting a lot of rubbish/spam comments, I've taken a leaf out of your book and arranged to check comments before publishing them. I think I've only received yours once.
The new Blogger platform/format. Grr. It's enough to make me want to stop blogging.
x
Dear B what a great idea and lovely pictures - especially lovely for me as I recognise and love so many of the beautiful places you describe. And so interesting to write for the eyes of someone who may not have visited Devon or know who you are - so refreshing. Thank you. And I love the gorse saying. Xx PS this is the second time I've tried to post a reply - the first one disappeared but I've done this through my blog instead of through Google so hope it works!
ReplyDeleteLovely to hear from you Trish. Comments don't appear until I've checked them. I wonder if that was what was happening with yours. xx
ReplyDeleteI love this calendar! It's so evocative, even to a local.
ReplyDeleteAs your neighbour, I share most of the views and walks, but am puzzled by the bluebell wood and intrigued by the 'Spanish fortress'. Do tell more....
And I love the old graveyard you mention - a friend's grandfather is buried there; he used to be stationmaster at Ellerhayes.
I am delighted at your confession about wonky photos as I seem to be ever-plagued by a sloping horizon. I thought perhaps I was always listing to the right!!
x