-A place of meaning
-Somewhere I have a future (even female and at the age of nearly 70)
-Nature (not humans)
-Eternity
-Somewhere I belong and matter and have a place.
Since Frog died just over a year ago, my life has been non-stop. A few days ago, however, I decided that I just had to step off the treadmill. I was exhausted. I’d had back and leg pain since November which stopped me sleeping. I couldn’t go on any longer. I would take March off.
On Saturday, I awoke after a good night’s sleep and decided that the dog and I would go out for the day, even though I had no one to go out with. Like rest, being on my own was part of the process, part of my experiment.
We arrived early. It was cloudy and still. There was hardly anyone else about.
Our first encounter was this cat, who taunted Ellie from the other side of the canal. She knew Ellie couldn’t get at her, and Ellie knew that too, but it didn’t stop barking at it for a good five minutes – as if that would encourage the cat to cross the canal and let Ellie attack it. (She does that with squirrels too, standing at the bottom of trees, and with rabbits, sticking her nose down the entrances to their warrens.)
Then we saw this duck. I think it’s a Muscovy, perhaps a
young one as the pictures on Google showed black and white feathers not the grey
and white ones here. The red cheek is very distinctive however, as are the flat
flappy feet, the colour and texture of autumn leaves.
I felt sorry for it. It wasn’t frightened of me when I took
a photograph and it seemed to be looking for company.
We passed this sign and I wondered if I should have one in my garden. It’s such a good excuse.
I walked on and because my mind was empty, because I’d
‘taken March off’, because this was a day out, not only did I notice things but ideas – mainly about
writing – flooded in.
That’s the lovely thing about a canal. It’s hypnotic and soothing. You don’t have to negotiate ups and downs. You don’t have to worry about where you’re going. The path stretches out in front of you, unmistakable, as does the water.
After an hour so, we turned back and, with sun and wind now behind us, everything was different. A lovely view confronted me, a medley of soft greens, blues and pinks. For a moment, I thought I was in the Mediterranean.
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| Spot the dog |
This mallard pair, almost invisible on the opposite bank, stood
motionless above their reflections as Ellie and I walked by. I’ve seen them
there before, on their log.
We came across the duck again, further up the canal, trying
to make friends with another mallard pair. It looked so sad. I really hoped for the
best for it. Maybe next time I visited the canal it would have found others of
its kind.
Unsurprisingly,* I’ve been thinking a lot recently about Life and Death.
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Armour Lane, with C,
Darcy/Bert (the small black dog in the distance) and Ellie (the fluffy
black-and-white dog |
(The distortion on the left of the picture is I think caused
by me putting my finger over part of the lens by mistake. Oh dear.)
On the way up we passed Armour Wood, also named after its connection with the Civil War.
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| Armour Wood |
Near the top we paused to look at Parliament Cottage, so named because the Parliamentarians used it as a base - but for how long or how many times, C didn't know.
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| Parliament Cottage |
At the top, there were views all the way to the coast.
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| The views from the top of Armour Lane |
C showed me this sign designating the track a County Road
(And, yes, my picture is the right way up. The sign is pointing back down the path.)
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| County Road sign |
What a County Road is, I have yet to find out (Google not
being any help) but C says Armour Lane was once a major route, and W G Hoskins
(in his classic book The Making of the
English Landscape) says that many long-distance paths date back to
prehistoric times.
Nor did Google help me with any of my other questions about the area and its past.
It always amazes – and pleases me – that there is still so much to discover about our history and countryside.
*given that Frog, my husband of 44 years, died suddenly of a heart attack last year, aged only 69
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| My Secret Wood |
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| The first bluebell leaves on the floor of My Secret Wood |
Here is what I noticed on my walk this afternoon.
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| The entrance to a gnome house? |
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| Another little house, which lives in . . . |
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| . . . this self-sufficiency village |
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| What a poet friend once called a 'selvedge' of light on the horizon |
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One of the many celandines that have started popping up in
the last week. Welcome to you all, oh harbingers of spring! |
I also noticed a hawthorn tree covered in leaf shoots and my favourite acid yellow lichen, but it was right at the beginning of the walk and I didn't think it was important to photograph them because I didn't yet have the idea for this post. It turned out that I should have. Let that be a lesson to me to listen to my instincts.