Monday 31 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 4.45pm.

The fading willow herb stalks swaying in the wind are the kinked and spine collared necks of alien flora waving as they feed in the currents of an outlandish sea.

Thursday 27 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 6pm.

Man wants to play fetch. The brindled dog with bow legs thinks it's much more fun to tease him by running round in circles so he can't get the stick.

Wednesday 26 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 3.40pm.

Blackberries jeer. Their plump faces grin down from high and thorn-guarded fortresses and compounds among the bracken. I tell myself they are inedible anyway, probably tainted by traffic pollution.

Tuesday 25 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 4pm.

This is a turbulent day of wind and sun and rain. A woman dressed in green lies on her back and holds up a book between her face and sky.

Monday 24 August 2009

St Helena, anticlockwise. 5pm.

I am still drawn to the clear orange and green of rowan trees. But the common looks tired, dried up and sunken, as if summer has taken its teeth out.

Sunday 23 August 2009

St Helena, anticlockwise. 8pm.

In the western sky the setting sun darkens and reddens a vapour trail so that you would think that a plummeting disaster has ripped open a rent in the heavens.

Saturday 22 August 2009

St Helena, anticlockwise. 6pm.

On a scruffy web strung between two tired grasses, a pearl green spider hangs by two feet and manipulates with foot and pedipalps a bundled speck of silk-wrapped prey.

Friday 21 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 3.15pm.

Dark rain on my grass green skirt. A robin with a berry in its beak laughs at the girl who swore she could get out and back before it started.

Thursday 20 August 2009

St Helena, clockwise. 6.30pm.

Nothing appeals here. I look over the road to the Lower Cricket Ground and watch the tiny scenes playing out there. A toddler lurches along, pivoting from foot to foot.

Wednesday 19 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 8.15pm.

It's dusk. A woman on the top road talks into her phone. Suddenly she screams. I freeze. She says: "Jesus Christ, that gave me a fright." My nerves stand down.

Monday 17 August 2009

St Helena, clockwise. 3.30pm.

He picks up litter and puts it in the bin and wonders how people can drop cups and bottles in a place like this. His brindled dog wants to play.

Friday 14 August 2009

St Helena, clockwise. 7.30pma

I got up early specially. I thought it would be silent. There is an insistent whining sound coming from town and the crickets have already started. I am very disappointed.

Thursday 13 August 2009

St Helena, clockwise. 3.30pm.

A brown woodlouse. I wonder if he's dyed his shell auburn because he thinks the traditional grey makes him look tired, and now all his friends are laughing at him.

Tuesday 11 August 2009

St Helena, clockwise. 4.30pm.

In tree shade, hoverflies hang at eyelevel, loom close and dart away. In sunlight, a white butterfly flaps drunkenly across the path. Seed fluffs surf air currents into the future.

Monday 10 August 2009

Rock Cottage, clockwise. 6.20pm.

Docks are pushing their seeds into the sky. The colour of metal rusting in a dark wet place. The colour of a mahogany table in a rarely-opened dining room.

Sunday 9 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 7pm.

A stout pigeon (out for an evening waddle) cannot bear to share the path with me. He takes flight in respectable disgust -- even his dust grey feathers wheeze their disapproval.

Friday 7 August 2009

Rock Cottage, clockwise. 4pm.

The creeping slugs have slid out today. They are dirty mac brown and the deep wet wrinkles on their backs are scored like the chasms in faded Brylcreemed hair.

Tuesday 4 August 2009

Rock Cottage, clockwise. 2.45pm.

I like to move up out of the cool shaded air in the valley to the warm still air in the sun at the top of the zig-zag path.

Sunday 2 August 2009

Mount Ephraim, anticlockwise. 6pm.

A birch tree on the hill holds up green-grey tresses and skirts. A shudder runs through the leaves as if the tree is disgusted by something in the grass.