Thursday, 26 January 2023
A halo of light?
Tuesday, 24 January 2023
Wild and free
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| Last night’s sunset with a just-past-new moon (new last Saturday) and Venus. |
Thursday, 19 January 2023
Winter walks and smartphones
I’ve long held out against smartphones as the last thing I want is to be contactable at any time. I like going for long walks and getting away from it all. I like doing one thing at a time. I like feeling in charge of my own life. I prefer emailing to texting because I can do it on my full-size keyboard at home and take time to think before answering. Why would I want to pay £20 a month when at the moment I pay about £20 a year? Why use up more of the earth's resources by replacing something that still works?
Recently however I’ve begun to worry that I’m getting so far behind with technology that I’ll never catch up. Everybody else communicates by text and my fingertips are cracked from pounding the numbers on my ancient phone as I answer them. A friend has suggested listening to audio books at night when I can’t sleep and that I could do this on a smartphone.
So, last week I took the plunge and got one. Most of it I hate and find far more difficult than my old phone. For example, it’s ten stages to dial 999 whereas it was two before. Friends assure me that I’ll soon sail through, but my list of questions gets longer and longer. To my surprise, however, I’ve taken to the camera.
I’ve been using it over the last three days on my walks and here are the results – to begin with, in my opinion, a bit iffy but getting better by the third day!
I should probably be doing this on Instagram . . . I'll let you know if and when.
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Friday, 28 October 2022
How wonderful life is
‘How wonderful life is, now he’s in the world.’
And, god willing, we will be together again.
- There was too much going on my head to begin to be able to write something coherent
- I had the Notebook and that was enough
- I was too miserable.)
| The Scots pine that answers to mine. (See earlier post.) |
| A good crop of fat acorns |
| A puffball nearly as big as Ellie |
| The view from the distant Scots pine (and my friend C and her dog) |
Monday, 15 August 2022
August (so far) in pictures
The hills on the far horizon are probably Dartmoor. Usually
I can tell what’s Dartmoor because it’s yellowy-brown, whereas the rest of
Devon is green. Now everything is yellowy-brown except the trees, and they’re
starting to lose their leaves - through drought I think, not through cold and
the waning of the light.
Ellie and Aeryn
Roots
I took this picture last Friday, on the hottest day of the
year so far. I had taken refuge in the shade of this beech tree, having climbed a
steep hill to get there. As I got up to leave, after a good half an hour
cooling off, admiring the view, doing my affirmations, crying and talking to
Frog and God, I became transfixed by the tree’s roots.
There are three beech trees in a row on this hill and you can just see
one of the others in the hot white background. Judging by the roots, the ground
was once higher and I often wonder whether the three trees were part of a
hedgerow.
As usual in my pictures, something is wonky, but as the trees appear to be leaning at different angles I can’t tell what the vertical line is and I’ve left things as they are.














