Friday 27 January 2012

27.1.12 Wings

I heard it.  They don’t really twitter, they twinkle, little glittering sounds like tiny silver bells.  I couldn’t see him – his tiny form, a ruckle of brown feathers, must have hidden somewhere among the sterility of chrome and steel vents and grills above my head.  He could flutter there, perch on his bony little feet, to stare down, head askew, eyes like bright black berries.  Below him, the flocks of migrating humanity strode by, important and focussed, looking at screens, phones tucked between shoulder and cheek, bags following neatly behind on obedient little wheels or strapped heavy to their backs.  They queued, they waited, patiently or not, drank tea, opened laptops, but always with an ear for the metallic voice that would tell them was their turn to take to the air.   
But I heard him.  His sweet little voice spoke of the clarity of mountain air, the freshness of a treetop, the bloom of snowdrops by the burn, the promise of springtime amid winter frost.  He can fly without a cardboard ticket, passport in a battered blue cover.  No security check for him, no need to chaotically divest himself of belts, shoes, bags.  No body search for him, no waiting, waiting, waiting to spread rigid metal wings and drag himself to the sky.  He’ll be off, swerving and gliding, rising up in a series of loose curves, like waves on an empty beach.  He knows how to fly.  I can only wait for my noisy imitation.  
But I’m glad I listened to him.  For a few seconds he took me with him.

Friday 20 January 2012

15.1.2012 ‘Born on a Volcano’ Santa Cruz de la Palma (Canary Islands)

Almond trees in flower
The wind was ripping white foam off the wave tops as we arrived in Santa Cruz de la Palma, the pale clouds scudding across the sky, the ship’s flag stretched out flat at the stern.  The third smallest of the Canary Islands (only El Hierro and La Gomera are smaller), La Palma lays claim to one of the largest caldera (craters) in the world, and this was what we set off to see.  The road uncoiled, snake like, up through the town and into the foothills, passing flamboyant bourgainvillia in magenta, orange, scarlet; blood red poinsettia, taller than the houses and perennial here; prickly pears, like bushes of bright green table tennis bats.  Then came the deciduous sweet chestnut trees, unusual in their autumn colours; laurels; almond bushes, their tiny flowers blushing with the most delicate of pinks. 

A little church, white and volcanic grey rested easily beside a shaded village square, perched on the steeply sloping mountainside.   Large trees grew as they had done for centuries through the neat cobbles.  It’s Sunday and the priest’s voice, deep and rich, echoes through the sun and shadows.   Past the church, the ground fell away, ledges crowded with banana palms and jostling tobacco plants surrounded white houses, dotted across the crevasses below and above.  The church was lit by chandeliers, which picked out the ruby red drapes along the walls.  Altar nooks were home to carved saints, one surrounded by baby clothes – a tradition to donate these at Christmas time, so that they can be distributed to needy families in January.  The most detailed Nativity scene I had ever seen filled the entire front of the church – behind the stable scene, little caves contained figures and animals grouped with their animals around tiny camp fires – the more one peered the more little little tableaux appreared.  Instead of the usual little family in a lonely stable, this one was in the heart of a whole community of activity.

We travelled onward and upward through the precipitous slopes.  Then a tunnel punched through the massive heart of the mountain, and we emerged into bright sunshine and tall Canarian pines, their soft thread like leaves, bunched like feather dusters, moving gently in the breeze, the ground below dappled with sunbeams on dry tan pine needles.

The rock faces of the caldera were stark – brown rock so sheer that not even the ubiquitous pine trees could cling on.  To convey the precipitous nature of the landscape is impossible, even by photographs.  Place your chin on your chest and stare down – you cannot see anywhere near the bottom.  Now raise your head till your neck cricks, and, shading your eyes, you can just pick out the fretwork of trees rimming the cliff tops.  The sight inspires awe; the total silence of it, reverence.

Across the chasm, one tiny house perches on the cliff face, a green field surrounding it.  Its occupant, we are told, lives there alone, making his own cheese and wine, producing his own meat and vegetables.  It takes him forty five minutes to walk and scramble to his van, in order to begin the long, twisting descent to the market to sell his goods.

Back down again we find Santa Cruz de La Palma is a relatively small city, as yet largely unaffected by tourism.  Two storey houses line the shore, old carved balconies slightly askew with age.  This is the most volcanically active island of the Canaries.  Out of the thirteen eruptions there have been here in the last five hundred years, seven have been here, the most recent in 1971.  Our guide could remember it – a deep forbidding rumbling that foretold what was about to happen, but not where.  This was the most terrifying bit.  Once the volcano showed itself, you knew where you were.  In fact, it was good for business – tourists came to see it, and it ended up producing acres of extra land that went on to be sold for banana plantations.  In fact, the neighbouring island of El Hierro is erupting right now, underwater near the island, and a new island is beginning to break the surface.  But it has also killed all the fish, and as that island’s main economy is fishing, that is a real anxiety.

Our guide said people ask her if it doesn’t make her nervous, living here.  ‘No’, she said ‘I was born on a volcano.  I live on a volcano.  That’s just the way it is’. 

14.1.2012 Las Palmas, Gran Canaria (Canaries)


Last time we were in Las Palmas in Gran Canaria, we had hired a car.  Ignorant of the layout of the town, we spent the afternoon wandering down streets lined with office blocks.  To make matters worse, it was raining.  I have never felt that interested in Las Palmas since.  So this time we invested in a guided tour.   This pointed out that there was a huge golden beach, only minutes from where we were, and which we had totally missed last time.  We then went to the old town.  A fairy tale hotel building, nestling in palms and Bird of Paradise plants, built originally by a British guy – the Brits appear to have been quite influential here.  Trade had achieved what Nelson could not (it was in the Canaries that he left his arm behind).  The old town is elegant, with tall, pastel shaded buildings, carved dark wood balconies, flowing bourgainvillia, little open air cafes.  Dragon trees, stubby branches and blood red sap.
Like the other major towns, it claims Columbus for its own, even though he was Italian.  He stayed here in the Governor’s house on his way to ‘discover’ the USA (we suspect the native Americans actually already knew perfectly well it was there).  The house was built of volcanic rock in three colours – black, being lava cooled in the sea; tan, lava cooled on land; and green, lava cooled in fresh water.  In typical Canarian style, the building cradled a quiet courtyard in its midst, where a tall palm reached for the blue rectangle of sky, past carved wooden balconies, a fountain, and two parrots, red/green and blue/yellow, who were preening each other on a small stone birdtable.  
Columbus was Genoese, and tried to get Italy and then Portugal to pick up the tab for his daft-sounding idea of sailing west to get to Japan.  They decided it was a pretty dodgey business proposition, and would probably end with their investment tipping off the edge of the world.  However, the Spanish Queen, persuaded perhaps by his swarthy Latin charm, coaxed her husband to cough up the necessary, and so with three little ships – minute compared to our cruise ship – he arrived in Gran Canaria to get kitted out for the journey across the ocean.  Then off to across the seas to Japan (he thought) but not before stopping off in nearby La Gomera to spend some time with a local lass he fancied – and by all reputes, left a memento with her nine months later. 
His success led to Hollywood and Big Macs, but the locals there experienced even worse problems as a result of Columbus’ tourist adventures.  The Guanches of the Canaries could have told them what was coming their way. 

A tragic sculpture in a lush garden depicted three of them throwing themselves from a high cliff into the sea.  Apparently, the Guanches were so distraught at the loss of their islands to the Spanish, and the prospect of years of serfdom, that they committed mass suicide in this way.  History is a harsh story teller.

That night, a walk on the deck, staring down at our neighbours in the next berths - two elegant square riggers, rigging a tracery of spider webs among their masts, shining ethereal in the darkness.
'Christian Radich' and 'Lord Nelson' in Las Palmas

16.1. 2012 A Life on the Ocean Wave (Madeira)

We woke again in beautiful Madeira, our cruise circle complete.  The sun was warm on our backs as we strolled along the waterfront beneath the curving palm branches, and settled on little white chairs constructed of twirling wrought iron, to sup our last milk shakes of the holiday.  Soon our bus would sweep us back to the world of endless airport queues, security checks - unpack computer, take off belt, strip off jumper, walk here, stop there, don’t forget your boarding card, watch the overhead screens for details of gates etc. etc. etc.  But for now a chance to absorb the cheerful tourist chatter, watch the little boats in the bay.

Cruising is something you could get used to.  Amazing how quick you develop a routine – get up, peer out of the porthole – a new dock, a new landscape each morning.  Then the big decisions of the day begin, ie which venue to have our breakfast – the Seven Seas Restaurant, crisp white clothes, cheerful waiters, or the Lido Cafe – round white tables with green and blue chairs, buffet service, views over the polished stern deck area.  And what to have?  Juicy fresh pineapple, melons red and white, grapes, raisins, walnuts, cheeses, all manner of fries, toast, jam, muffins and more besides.  When breakfast stops, lunch starts – Chinese noodles, vegetable korma, shepherd’s pie, golden roast potatoes, turmeric rice, soft twisting pasta.  When lunch stops, afternoon tea begins – scones, cakes, biscuits that taste like shortbread, and bowls filled with mounds of jam, others brimming with cream.  And afternoon tea runs straight into dinner, dinner into supper. 
 
Out on deck, we can find a sheltered nook and get out the books and crochet, or, Bill’s favourite, the onboard crossword, new each day.  Or sleep in the sun.  It’s also possible to play board games, compete in quizzes, watch films, play table tennis or deck quoits, listen to singers, have a massage, take dance lessons, and so on and so on – you get the idea.
And yet a man declared he had nothing to do, and another that there was nothing to eat.  Some people just refuse to be satisfied with anything.

Vegetable bouquet
One afternoon on the pool deck, there was a demonstration of fruit and vegetable carving.  Three chefs sporting their tall stiff hats and armed with knives which they whipped and twirled in their fingers, took melons, small tomatoes, oranges, onions, carrots, and sculpted a huge bouquet of flowers, a little girl’s face, trees full of small fat birds.  Another sunkissed afternoon, a huge block of ice, like misty glass, was chopped, filed and planed until a horse’s head, mane flying behind it, appeared from within.
Evening dinner was either formal – five courses in the Seven Seas Restaurant, waiter service, shining glasses on white clothes, and followed by singing waiters full of fun, or else informal – little candles on checked clothes in the Lido Cafe.  And then the rush to make sure of seats in the theatre at the bow, glittering song and dance routines, singing to rival the best you could get onshore.  Normally, we avoid holiday entertainment like the plague, but this was different.  Youthful energy and enthusiasm coupled with skill and professionalism.  It was all colour, brilliance, movement and music.

And the most regular activity of all – wandering the polished wooden decks, watching the crew deploy the ropes as we docked, and loose them when we left, coiling them into tidily huge cushions, ready for the next port.  Watching over the rail as the foam glowed white in the moonlight, expanding along the ship’s sides, as like a plough cutting soft earth, she cut the ocean before her, wrapping it over on itself in soft folds.

'Destiny'
It was fun, it was relaxing, it was a break from the hurly burly of life at home.

Tuesday 17 January 2012

13.1.2012 Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Tenerife)


Santa Cruz de Tenerife
1490 they came, 2000 Spaniards with permission from their King - permission to take over the nine Guache kingdoms of Tenerife.  I’m not sure how you can give permission for someone to take something that isn’t yours, but the King of Spain was not the first and certainly not the last to do so.  So the Spanish came, bringing with them a wooden cross, since known as ‘The Cross of the Conquest’, a name which in my view is a libel, given all that Jesus both taught and modelled about how we should treat one another.  But again, it wasn’t the first libel of this sort and it certainly was not and will not be the last.  But that is how Santa Cruz – Holy Cross in English – got its name.

It crouches at the foot of some extremely jagged and irregular mountains, making some attempts to struggle its way up into the foothills with modern apartment blocks.  The hills are dry and dusty, much more so that they were the last time we were here, four years ago.  At that time, the north of the island was green and lush, and only the south was dry.  It appears that Morocco’s shortage of rain applies here also.  (The cynical Scot in me wonders if this is because we have taken everybody else’s rain this year as well as our own generous share – certainly feels like it).

The city centre is a mixture of modern rectangular boxes, romantic Spanish-style houses in green, yellow, cream, peach, with swirling white decoration and an air of elegance, and dramatic modern designs, some breath taking and some in the ‘why did they bother?’ category.  In the dramatic group was an opera house which, although smaller, could rival Sydney, with a huge, free standing arch, open at one end, sheltering a series of smaller arches.  It looked like the white sails of a ship, about to be overwhelmed by an immense wave. 

There are small squares, one resplendent in ceramic tiling which covers the ground, the benches and the pool; another with a magnificent marble fountain, in which plump cherubs pour water into fluted basins while above them a man appears to be wrestling a snake into submission.  A large park, full of whispering bamboo walkways and unusual grey-green palms, concealing in its greenness fountains, and modern sculptures in a range of shapes that teases the brain and the eyes.  A floral clock, (Gifted by the Danish Consul), less intricate than the one in Princes Gardens in Edinburgh, keeps time with a splash of joyful colour.

We came upon a market, a peach and white wall surrounding market stalls.  It was a much neater, cleaner and less vibrant version of Morocco’s souk, but beguiling none the less.  Outside, a mammoth motor bike stood, flags of several nations flickering atop, two conventional wheeled suitcases strapped to the sides, and names of far flung destinations painted all over it.  Its owner, who was deaf and mute, proved to be a somewhat mature Hell’s Angel, who had in fact ridden all around the world on this between 2000 and 2011.  A map defined his route, which wiggled its way over the many continents of the world, showing he had touched everywhere, just about, from Shetland to South America and all points between.

Later, we strolled along the colossal quayside as the evening light faded and the glimmering lights of the city reflected across the water.  Three muscular tugs, with trimmed Goth- style necklaces of huge black tyres, bucked in the swell, and a flotilla of tiny dinghies whispered across the wave tops, while behind us the Destiny glowed and hummed with life.  Tomorrow another day, another port.

Monday 16 January 2012

12.1.2012 Bikes and Germans (Lanzarote)


I like Lanzarote.  Its black glittering beaches, its conical brown mountains, its sea - royal blue and warm, its square white houses, its pitch black rocks pock marked with holes like Swiss cheese.  Not everybody does – ‘Lanzagrotty’ some call it, shocked perhaps by its violent geology, its brutal volcanic landscape, its black gravel replacing grass.  When I first saw it, I was unsettled by it too.  But it needs a second take, a chance to absorb, a determination to abandon one’s assumptions that landscapes should be pretty, soothing, green.  Then you become thrilled by its difference, excited by its drama, charmed by its architecture, awestruck by its volcanic power.  Well named ‘ Lanzarote - the Flame Thrower’

On arrival in Arrecife (capital of Lanzarote) we decided to go cycling.  This seemed a good antidote to the endless buffets, afternoon teas, five course evening meals, midnight suppers etc. etc., available night and day on just about every deck of the ship.  Not that we have over-eaten.  Well, not a lot.  Ok – a lot.  We had tried to fight back by avoiding using the lift and climbing from our cabin on Deck 2 to the Sky Lounge on Deck 12.  But as we had not packed oxygen cylinders, we didn’t try it again, and instead reverted to scones with jam and cream as a restorative.  Hence the bikes.  

We met at the desk on Deck 4, kitted out as best we could.  One fellow cyclist was waiting already, a chap about our age.  Good – he’s likely to sweat and puff as well, we thought.  However, brief conversation revealed that he got rid of his car some years ago and now pedal pushes everywhere, rain, hail or shine.  Then Raoul turned up, a Brit with a similar figure to ours, but considerably less of an antique.  Somewhat intimidated, we suddenly recognised the attractions of the Lido Cafe, by now serving morning coffee - but we resisted.  Perhaps because we were suddenly joined by our guide, whose lithe and muscular physique appeared to have been poured into red and black lycra, whose sleek black hair and golden skin denoted many a mile spent on the saddle.  His designer sunspecs reflected rainbows making him inscrutable.  He told us he was Brazilian and that his name was Abraham.  The cycles were produced, along with red and white cycle helmets, and so down the gangway, we followed Abraham into the desert.  Having nearly fallen off my bike in the dock car park, Bill and I took up position at the rear of the party, a position which we maintained throughout the day, with varying distances separating us from the rest of the group.  In fact, Abraham proved to be an excellent guide, long suffering of his puffing, red faced charges, and providing local information as we went along, although often we were too far behind to hear it.

Abraham surveys his charges
But it was exhilarating, gliding down hills past the fat little palm trees; gardens in which the snake-like irrigation systems refreshed the cacti, aloe vera, and red hot pokers sprouting from the black gravel; the jagged black rocks over which the sea broke in mists of sea spray which brushed our foreheads.  Costa Teguise, our objective, was reached at last - a little resort with lots of charm and golden beaches on which red and blue sunshades sprouted like colourful mushrooms.  The sea was rough; grey green waves which gobbled up the few windsurfers, and, curving like polished glass, exploded onto the soft sand.  

As Bill and I collapsed into the nearest cafe, there arrived another group of about twelve cyclists - slim, muscle bound, lycra tight, sinews taut, not a bead of sweat or a tomato coloured face amongst them.  These, Abraham told us, were a group from the large German cruise boat berthed behind ours in the harbour.  It has 1,900 passengers as against our 1,450.  Unable to manage the arithmetic, I was hopeful that our four against their twelve did not reflect too badly on us Brits.  Abraham then told us that this was only one of three groups of cyclists from that ship – in total there were at least 70 German cyclists out today, and the others had all gone to the volcanoes, a 50 km route up inclines that would terrify any sane person.  Ah well.  But Abraham used to work on that ship, and he says he prefers cycling with fat Brits any day.  So our national pride remains intact.

Back on board, feeling very virtuous and fit we stroll to the Lido Cafe past the plump forms of fellow passengers occupying the deckchairs all over the pool deck. Until we spy Raoul, our fellow cyclist, already in the pool, arms powering through the water, feet producing a froth of bubbles behind him.  Maybe we should join him?  Maybe...  But those scones smell awfully good.... And then surely we deserve a deckchair too?

Friday 13 January 2012

11.1.2012 Goats in trees and snakes in boxes (Morocco)

Tree climbing goats
City walls
The dawn had drawn a rumpled, fleecy blanket – fiery red – across the sky as we clanged down the silver gangplank and made our first ever arrival in Africa.  A light mist of smoke hung over the city below us; a square orange castle clung to the hillside above.  Obediently herded into the bus by Hassan, our guide, cool in his flowing cream robe, we watched as Morocco unfolded – white or terracotta cube houses, wide open plains stretching dry between the blue Atlas mountain ranges,  which trimmed either horizon.  The dryness was punctuated by prickly trees with dusty dark green leaves and small yellow fruits, by plump, dusty sheep herded by men in flowing black or brown robes, and goats perched high in the trees, cropping their sharp leaves.  Rich terracotta walls, battlemented with rectangles that made you want to jump up and walk along them – up, down, up, down - their straw and mud manufacture conjuring up pictures of Pharaoh and the Israelites.  Here and there, weather and years had worn away their neat corners, leaving a row of orange teeth, bared against the open plains all around.

Mint tea
An hour later, an elegant entranceway of cool tiles, a ceiling decorated with the twisting plasterwork patterns, and into a tranquil cafe, its greenery an antidote to the dust outside.  Open tents of thick, rich fabric - maroon, gold, blue – settees upholstered in peach and red velvet; a man serving mint tea from the curving spouts of silver and gold teapots - pouring it, sparkling amber, from shoulder height and with complete accuracy, into tiny glasses, filled with fresh whole leaves of mint and stacked on embossed silver trays.
Then the walled city, its cream ramparts shaped as in a children’s fort, square battlements, wide curvaceous gates, arched at the top, pinched in the middle, like a plump lady whose corpulence is nipped at the waist with a tight belt. 
And so into the souk or market.  Narrow passages under a high roof, the pungent mix of herbs and spices fills the nostrils.  Stalls crush and compete.  Piles of plump dates, shiny nuts, dried prickly pears (don’t eat too many for fear of dire effects on the digestion) all piled high; spices in drums, each carefully shaped into neat cones at the top – orange, yellow, black, white – every shade of each.  Boots hanging neatly in pairs from the ceiling; robes and scarfs of every colour and pattern; leather shoes, with long pointed upturned toes, in yellows, browns, greens.  Carved wood, butchers stalls with meats hanging above the counter, metalwork produced while you wait.  A whole alley of furniture makers, chiselling and sawing, create small tables, huge dressers, wooden spoons; elsewhere are baskets, two handled, in all sizes; woven panniers for the donkeys which are to be seen in the streets outside, laden and pulling carts while the bikes and motorcycles weave between them and the long glossy tourist buses.  Vegetables of every colour and shape, some recognisable, some not.  This year, the rains which should have arrived in October and lasted till mid-February, have not yet appeared, and it’s early January, so fruit and veg have quadrupled in price as a result.  Pottery, mostly brown, and featuring everywhere the shining tagine pots, with their typical conical shape and tiny chimneys. Fish, displayed packed tight like silver leaves; velvet cushions in high wobbly stacks, purple, blue, gold.  The stall holders call out, entice, beseech.  Bill tries a bit of bartering, but the deal does not turn out to our satisfaction, so no purchase ensues. 
Music!
We arrive in a broad, open square with trees scattered across its cobbles.  There’s a man with a cobra in a wooden box.  He sits on a carpet, trying to drum up business before beginning to charm it with his pipe, but interest is sparse, and apart from once raising its sinuous silver head briefly, the cobra makes no further appearance. Two musicians entertain, broad smiles, long striped gowns and pill box hats.
Groups of men, swathed in the traditional robes – long, with a pointed hood, wizard style, at the back – are sitting in the shade of the trees, talking and smoking.  A group gather around a tall, dark man, a blue turban wound loosely about his head.  He has a carpet thrown out on the cobbles, covered with dried herbs and small bottles, and he’s doing a hard sell on what appear to be medicaments of uncertain origin.  He soon draws a sizeable group of men to watch, little white woven hats, like small baskets, leaning forward and nodding.  He’s doing much better business than the snake charmer.  There are men everywhere, bartering, smoking, sitting at the round cafe tables, laughing on the pavement.  But very few women.  Pondering on this mystery, we depart, airconditioned, to the high white walls of the Destiny - a little bit of Britain, roped to Morocco by seventeen stout ropes. 
Some of the other passengers have refused to leave the ship today, staying by the pool, anxious, they say, about the culture, the country, the people here.  For us, admittedly cocooned as we were in a tourist group, it was not as much of a culture shock as we expected.  The hubbub was not as relentless as India, the market similar to Romania.  But yet different it certainly is.  60% Berber, 39% Arab, the population presents a mixture of history and culture that is largely unknown to us.  Worth the visit without a doubt.

9.1.2012 - Moonlight on the water (Madeira)

On board ship at Madeira
Like a torrent of amber gemstones, tiny lights flood glittering down Madeira’s steep ravines into the black sea below.  Slowly they shrink behind us as we power our way along the road the moon has laid towards Morocco, 399 nautical miles distant.

The day started wet and dark in Glasgow Airport, and progressed uneventfully towards the soft palms of Funchal, and the technicolour of Bourgainvillia, flowing over its walls and roadsides. 

Madeira is steep.  That is the word, but not one that really conveys the narrow winding streets that rear up at what seem near vertical angles.  Yellow buses, no way discouraged by the mountaineering task before them, twist their tortuous way upwards – on one side of the street the roofs spread below them, on the other, steep gardens with houses perched atop.  Every home in Funchal has a spectacular view, down the precipices to the harbour.  There the cruise ships lie, great white swans amidst the tiny fishing boats, which foam in and out past their towering sides, while their fishermen in orange T-shirts and work roughened jeans heave fish boxes across decks tangled with ropes, floats and nets.

Viewed from the wide wooden decks of our ship Destiny, the city look like a child’s ambitious lego creation, tiny box homes scattered, one above the other, over a rumpled green blanket.  Here and there a thread of road hurls itself from cliff to cliff, lightly springing across spindly concrete pillars.  High above, a fringe of tall trees marches through the clouds.  Had I not been here before, I might have assumed that this was the peak of the mountain, instead of only the lower foothills of a volcanic giant.  Madeira is steep, steep, steep.

Towel elephant
Destiny is an old boat.  But her thirty years of providing holidays afloat have imbued her with an atmosphere of calm and welcome that makes you forgive the occasional dented table or section of scratched deck.  The crew are numerous, neatly dressed and endlessly friendly, cheerful and humorous.  Food is good and everywhere – you mount the stairs to yet another deck and find yet another buffet confronting you.  Likewise entertainment – a full scale musical performed with a dizzying range of twinkling costumes and energetic singing and dancing on one deck, quizzes, dance classes, even towel folding tuition available on others (when we arrived back our cabin tonight, a towel elephant welcomed us).   

Tomorrow the day starts with compulsory tuition on how to abandon ship, to be provided in the CanCan Lounge.  Hopefully we will get through the night without needing the details of this – the sea is gentle, and the boat rumbles on, rolling softly as she goes.

And so we will see if Destiny can do her job of refreshing us after what has been a pretty frenetic autumn.  As we watch the ruffled silver sea below, this seems quite possible.

Thursday 5 January 2012

5.1.2012 The Winds of Time (Millport)


There are winds and there are winds.  Some are gentle, soft, brushing your cheek and ruffling your hair like affectionate hands.  Some are brisk, fresh, making your face tingle and ruffling the sea into diamonds.  And some are roaring ferocity, rumbling in the chimney like a monster trapped, making the curtains tremble in terror, hurling rain like bullets against the glass.  They tear down aged grey trees, swathed in soft moss, and leave them, branches twitching, to die on the wet grass.  They torment the ashen faced sea into a fury and then smash it against the wet rocks into ragged, sharpened shards.  

And they rip up the spindly heights of pylons and hurl them onto the forests below, and so condemn us to the silence and the darkness.

So here we sit, faces orange in reflected firelight, the flickering shadows like children’s drawings on the walls, little oil lamps glowing on the mantelpiece.   Dependent on battery, candle, paraffin and coal, we are refugees to a bygone era.

It was yesterday morning, after a night when the gale hammered on the roof like a giant possessed, that I reached out for the light switch and nothing happened.  That was 40 hours ago, but still I reach out to the light switches and wonder why nothing happens.  I think I’ll find out when the power will return by just turning on the TV...... The man from the power company even advises (by 'phone - amazingly still functional) that they’ll keep us informed on the internet – of course, why didn’t I think of that.  Just turn on the router – oh ah.  He asks for my account number.  I visualise trying to search through the filing system by the light of a guttering candle.  I decide it can’t be done and he is a bit disappointed.  He’s sympathetic but he’s also in Portsmouth, about 500 miles south.

This morning at the town grocers, a generator greeted me with its rumbling hum as it sat on the pavement.  That and a lantern illuminated the shop while we queued at the tills, which of course were not functional, and our purchases were laboriously calculated on scraps of paper.  Tonight the pubs were open, lit by the glow of candlelight, and no doubt providing a bit of welcome warmth, internal as well as external, for their besieged customers.

This evening at home, pork chops and onions cooked over the coal fire in the living room, and eaten by candlelight, was our cordon bleu meal for the day.  Meanwhile, our freezer, full of future meals, thaws slowly and silently in the kitchen.

But heating by portable gas, or being cold, lighting by tottering candlesticks or stumbling in the dark - this is the stuff of which accidents are made, especially for the town’s population of numerous elderly people.  Last night we watched as the helicopter’s lights grew larger and brighter, at last enabling us to make out its grasshopper outline as it bounced onto the dark wet turf of the football pitch, to take an injured islander to a mainland hospital.  But at least our little island hospital does still have power – it glitters on the hill behind our house, shining alone against the blackness, its generator glad of a chance to show what it can do.

And yet there are unexpected pleasures in this involuntary step back in time.  There are so many things you can’t do – hoover the carpets, do the laundry, wash the dishes, waste time and money on ebay, get the gossip on Facebook, watch meaningless TV.  

So I settle down to crochet a bedspread for my granddaughter Molly’s teddy bear.  Bill starts a crossword.  Time even to write this blog.  Simple pleasure we wouldn’t have made time for if we had had electricity.  It makes you think..... 

Right, I’ll just upload this blog now.  Uh oh.......