Weather
By purplehaze
- 674 reads
Living in the countryside, you become a weather watcher. Especially by the coast. Not just for planning journeys or what coat to wear, but because the weather is fascinating and large. People don’t use brollies in the countryside. Proper weather, proper clothing. The kind of clothes that dream of getting windblown and wet. Sleek-hooded clothes, that keep you dry and warm.
Big sky views give big weather shapes and colours; steely blues with pure white clouds above. The bands of rain below in Oxford blues, white when it snows. So beautiful, the heart swells. How the seabirds change their flight patterns with the wind force and direction. Excitement in the air. The waves crest and break, chanting it out like football fans. ‘Come on you clou-ouds’. Tension of a penalty shoot-out, screaming astonished release of ‘Scooooore!’ as they punch air, breaching the seawall.
A certain form of knowing happens by osmosis. A kenning. There comes a day when you look at a dark cloud out at sea and realise there are ten minutes to get home. So, you head home, and the rain starts just as you close the front door behind you. There is a particular kind of satisfaction in it. Not as mean as ‘smug’ satisfaction, but up there with catching something before it falls to the floor and breaks. Howzat! At one with the Universe.
The weather changed today, from warm golden sunshine to steel-blue rain. The trees smelled grateful. Yesterday, the washing dried outside; it smells wonderful too. Decided to stay home and potter. Boxed up the first books for webuybooks.com. What a rip-off that is, and a sad reflection on today’s society. ‘Why Men Love Bitches’ worth £1.15, ‘Selected Letters of Virginia Woolf’, 15p.
Ironically, some of Virginia Woolf’s letters actually were a bit bitchy.
Images for this journal have been posted on Insta @purplehaze_journals
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Comments
The book pricing thing can
The book pricing thing can work both ways. At village fetes the price list goes: shiny hardback 'written' by Jeffrey Archer - £1. Illustrated edwardian schoolgirl story - 20p. I built up quite a collection when I lived there.
I'm enjoying your beautiful photos - thank you for the link!
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Really liked your description
Really liked your description of the weather. The metaphor of the football fans was so clever. Very inspiring.
Jenny.
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loved your description of
loved your description of getting home before the rain comes! I know just what you mean - away from houses you can see the edges of what's going to happen, gauge shape and direction, and in a way the sky becomes a being, as opposed to catching fleeting glimpses through the bars of our cage
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Wonderful writing, it's our
Wonderful writing, it's our Pick of the Day. Do share on Facebook or Twitter. (The painting is by Georges Michel, Moorland, The Stormcloud, c. Late C18th, early C19th and is in the public domain.)
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The webuybooks thing
Ah, the webuybooks thing! I was surprised to get as much as 50p for some of fhe stuff I was re-homing. Kids books mostly that they left behind when they flew the nest. But some lovely old hardback jobs that my Ma left behind weren't even recognised despite having an ISBN on the cover. I fear they're still gathering dust on a shelf in a charity shop.
I loved your description of the sea and the clouds. So many colours on what many might describe as a grey day. You reminded me of treasured times in County Mayo.
Turlough
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Do you have to have an
Do you have to have an instagram account to see photos? Rhiannon
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No, I meant do I have to
No, I meant do I have to have an instagram account to access your account and photos. Rh
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