Showing posts with label nature lovers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature lovers. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Rain

I leaned against the window frame watching the rain dripple sadly down the outside of the glass for yet another day, and I imagined myself as a beautiful woman in a music video staring pensively out to a rainy day longing for her love to return, except my longing was not for a man, but for the sun.  Oh sweet sun, where fore art thou?

It had been raining steadily every day of 2026 in The Forest of Dean, or at least it felt like it; it had been the wettest January on record and seemed like it was going to be the wettest February as well. The persistent damp wetness and misery of it was depressing.  They say there is no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothes, but this really was bad weather, and on some especially wet days, no amount of waterproof trousers, puddle suits, waterproof jackets, thick jumpers, hats, gloves, scarves or wellies could tempt us to walk outside.

However, there were rare days where we did decide to brave it, simply because we couldn’t face another day shut it without fresh air or sunlight on our skin (no matter how weak) and those days were, to little boys at least, an adventure.

We stopped one day on the way back from church at a spot beside a stream where we had paddled in the summer and played in the gentle flowing waters which bubbled merrily over the pebbles.  We had stood up to our shins in the slowly flowing water, sun on our backs, and skimmed stones over its smooth, glassy surface. We had plunged our arms into the fresh cold water to pick up a particularly interesting stone or to try and catch a tiny fish which flashed through our fingers and away into the weeds.  At one deep spot the boys had even jumped into the water in their swimming trunks and played in the friendly pool, leafy green bowers overhead creating a living, summery roof and forming dappled light which sparkled across the surface of the shimmery water, and kept us warm n spite of the cool freshness of the water.

This day could not have been more different.  The water rushed down that same stream in an angry torrent, at least four feet higher than in the summer.  It foamed and gushed, brown and heaving. The landscape was utterly changed.  Where the stream had previously wound and twisted, now it gushed in one straight, furious river.  Trees, which the boys had previously swung from, had been swallowed up into the ranging water and still others hung precariously over the edge, their roots just barely clinging onto the bank.  At one spot roots jutted out absurdly across the stream where the water had washed away the surrounding soil, leaving the roots exposed and vulnerable, like stranded, bony limbs reaching out for rescue.

After so much rain, the water no longer looked friendly and inviting, but menacing and hostile.  Where in the summer the cool water had been inviting, now it was frightening, and, as my children crept to the edge of the stream bank, craning their necks to get a better look over the edge,  horrible fantasies flashed uninvited into my head of them falling in, being sucked under and dragged down the stream, then getting tangled in nature’s flotsam and jetsam of logs and sticks which traversed the stream, creating a deadly barrier to trap and ensnare and drown.

I quickly pulled them away from the edge, shook the image out of my head and encouraged them that it was time to go home.

The footpath beside the stream was a muddy, slippery mess, and we skidded and slipped our way back to the car, sometimes we had to use stepstones or logs to cross massive puddles to avoid filling our wellies with cold, brown water, balancing precariously like tightrope walkers, holding hands to balance and traverse and parts that were impossible to walk through, we finally made it back to the car and headed home to our dry house. 

The windscreen wipers flashed furiously across the windscreen in a fruitless attempt to clear the water from my view. At the side of the road rainwater poured, like newly formed streams, down the road, in some spots creating huge puddles which stretched across the entire road.  As I drove through, great waves of water flew up and crashed like tidal waves into the nearby hedges and across the car, the children thought this was fantastic! A muddy carwash! I on the other hand was less enamoured, and more concerned about flooding the engine, or accumulating water in our already very rusty chassis. We made it home without calamity and ran to the house for shelter.  How grateful I was to find my husband had turned on the heating and we were able to hang our sodden jackets up to dry and warm ourselves inside.

Rain was a familiar sight in the Forest of Dean, I wonder if it is part of why Foresters are so stoic and hardy seeming, they have had to endure.  But then, I considered, the rewards that came in spring just about made the misery of the rainy winters worth it, for come April the fields and forests would be lush and green again, all those rainy days preparing the ground for new-life, growth and abundance.

 The raindrops continued to dribble sadly down the window glass as I fantasised about the coming warmth of spring.  Not long now, I thought to myself.  On the horizon I spotted a small hole in the clouds, and blue sky, hope! I can’t rain forever!

Saturday, 31 January 2026

Mist


    Car headlights appeared, spectre like in the night, materializing almost out of nowhere and floating like eyes from an unconnected from head. Driving felt precarious in these conditions, bends in the road, potholes (of which there were many) and other vehicles constantly took me by surprise, all shrouded in a thick, heavy fog. 


A cloud had descended on the Forest of Dean.  It was not an unfamiliar experience, sitting as we were so high in the landscape, we often woke up in a misty veil which might stay for a few hours or a couple of days.  From our bedroom window, the distant hills of Malvern and the Black Mountains usually such familiar humps on the horizon, were blocked completely from sight by this white, impenetrable cloud. It made us feel cocooned, isolated, like an island in the sky, the whole world miles and miles away, just us, dreamlike, floating in the heavens.

Occasionally we would wake up on a cool Spring or Autumn morning and find ourselves perched atop the clouds. The mist sitting like pools of soft foamy milk in breakfast bowls in the valleys and dips of the landscape and we would look out like fairy kings and queens over our fantasy cloud kingdom. The mist took on a magical quality on days like this; it seemed to hide treasures and secrets in its lacy folds, I could imagine it sprinkling magic into the ground as it floated dreamily across, planting spring seeds or sending the ground to sleep.

The mist seemed to take on a physical form on days like this.  Driving through the Forest would take you in and out of the resting mist as if diving in and out of a milky ocean.  One minute above the mist, the air crystal clear and fresh, the next diving down into a cotton wool sea, and just as quickly rising out of it again.  At other times the mist would seem alive, crawling menacingly over hedges and tumbling into the road like a deadly virus out to consume all it encountered.

But we were in the midst of winter now, a cold, frosty and icy January, neither the hope of new life which spring brings, nor the cosy cuddle of Autumn, but the bleak, endless, hopelessness of winter. 17th century German Romanticist painter Casper David Friedrich perfectly captures the feeling in his painting “Wanderer above a sea of fog”, we stand surveying a bleak horizon, brooding and Darcy-like taking in the moody landscape as if it were doing this on purpose just to spite us. And yet even in the face of death and hopelessness, the Forest continued to take me by surprise in forming beauty with the most unlikely of materials; Dark, bare forests transformed into beautiful enigmatic paintings, bare tree limbs and branches, less spider like and more delicate, seemed to reach through the mist and reveal themselves in layers like a series of net curtains gradually revealing the players on a stage, the performer; nature itself.


 

Wandered Above a Sea of Fog by Casper David Friedrich

On a forest walk at this time of year I imagine myself as Cathy in Wuthering Heights, or Jane Eyre walking through a Gothic, enigmatic, Northern landscape, holding up imaginary skirts and encountering mysterious men who are taciturn, ancient hansom and loyal, but who aren’t men at all but trees only disguised as mysterious men, hiding their beauty and soul behind a rough, craggy bark, bare branches, and emerging hero-like through layers and layers of vapours chiffon. One could easily fall in love with a man like that, and just as easily I have fallen in love with the Forest.


But alas, I wasn’t Cathy and the Forest of Dean is no Heathcliff, especially not on nights like this, nights where  I am just a mother driving her son to Cub Scouts, knuckles whitely gripping the steering wheel hoping that the next bend in the road would reveal no more surprises and I could get him to the Scout hut without encountering another car along a narrow winding lane forcing me to reverse uphill, blind.  I had done that before on a clear day and I didn’t fancy it when I could see less than three meters ahead, let alone behind and without the benefit of headlights to guide me. No, driving in the Forest on a misty night did not transport me to a romantic scene from an Edwardian novel, it left me shaken and longing for a cosy sofa and roaring fire to envelop and hold me, the only defences against the cold and damp Forest of Dean winters. That was winter here, cold and damp, a damp that penetrated to the bone, with no blustery, moorland wind to drive it away.  A damp which sits and waits for the forces of its enemy spring to drive it back into the wet ground and rotting wood. 

But I wasn’t about to let the cold and damp crush my spirits, because I knew that that was what was needed in order to experience the rich, greenness of a Forest of Dean Spring. The mists would eventually melt away like a winter snow, and like a bride lifting her veil at the alter the Forest’s beauty would be revealed.  And so, I left the car on the muddy drive, headed into my house to warm up and closed the door against the penetrating mist, it could fill fields and spill into roads and drift quietly through forests, but it couldn’t enter my own safe dwelling.  And through the bedroom window in the morning I admired the beauty of the mist which shrouded our house still, and I pulled my dressing gown tighter around my shoulders girding myself for another chill day, I lit a candle and imagined myself as a heroine in a Bronte novel, waiting for her hero to return.