Cyggie Talk – Way Down Upon the Swannee River

“Snort, snort, snort, grunt, grunt, hiss, snort”, three large cygnets, willed on lovingly by their mother, sang in unison from the middle of the Teign River (where it passes the Passage House Inn – at Newton Abbot – where, coincidentally, Chris chose to park by the river in order to read my blog posts to Mum, as he does every Saturday morning when we take Mum shopping.)

Translated from swan language, the final verse to a traditional swan song, followed by a conversation went something like this…

“When will I see de bees a-humming, All round de comb? When will I hear de banjo strumming, Down in my good old home?” the cygnets sang and their mother hissed her praise.

“Oh, Mama,” snorted the smallest cygnet who was also the brightest, “what’s de banjo?”

“De banjo,” their mama began grunting her explanation between snorts of laughter, “is a stringed instrument for strumming tunes like de one you were just hissing. It so funny, I thought you was going to ask what ‘de comb’ means, not de banjo!”

“Mama, I already know what de comb is. It be the funny looking red bit on de top of de chicken’s head – I wouldn’t want no bees a-humming aroun’ it if I were a chicken,” the little one rolled his eyes amusingly.

“All de world am dark and dreary today, Mama, ain’t it?” the eldest cygnet grunted his rhetorical question and he gave a wink to show that it was a joke – it was a cloudy day.

The mother swan arched her beautiful white neck back with pride and snorted like a drain.

“De pen is mightier than de sword!” hissed the third cygnet, knowing that her mother would not be able to stop snorting (she had an uncontrollable and peculiar snort – three short blasts and two long – that was rather comic and which endeared her to those around her).

“Ma, look over dare,” came a faint hissper from the youngest, “dat lady is taking photo’s of us with her mobile phone.”

“Can’t we ebber get no peace on dis ribber? Listen, dis is what we’ll do…” hisspered Penny and they huddled together, and their four long necks made two big hearts (one a little lopsided).

The mother and cygnets left their huddle and swam in an arrow, mother at the helm, towards me.

“Oh dear,” I thought, “they think I have food for them. Maybe they think my phone is a slice of pink cake or bread.” And, feeling guilty for any accidental deception, I made a run for it.

Back in the car I noted that they continued on their way to the same spot where I had been standing and they stayed there, necks peering over the grassy river bank to stare at me accusingly, for at least a minute or two. At last the penn led her little bevy away from the bank. I thought I heard her hiss and grunt:

“She’ll bring us some bread next time, my dears. Way down upon de Swanee Ribber…”

 

 

Down on the Farm With Mary

After visiting my niece, Lizzie, in hospital yesterday (don’t worry, she and her baby bump are doing well) Chris and I thought we’d pop in to see Mary at Rosie’s farm. My lovely sister is looking after the animals while Rosie is attending to the latest addition to her own family.

As you can see from the photographs, we joined Mary for a pleasant evening walk with Sasha, Jaz, Malachi and Inca; along the way we met a few of the other interesting (and interested) characters on the farm.

It warms my heart to see Mary in her element. The dogs adore her and she loves them back.

“I know why people have more than one dog,” Mary began.

We smiled and listened, although the rest came as no surprise…

“When they have one gorgeous, intelligent, faithful and loving dog, and they have the space, they think, ‘Why not have four?'”

And who could blame them?

 

Way Down Upon de Swanee Ribber (de Exe Estuary)

Intrepid cyclists like Chris and I don’t mind dark clouds overhead or the promise of rain so we cycled to Cockwood Harbour anyway. The tide was out, making it possible for us to walk under the railway bridge and around to the mud and stones on the estuary side. I had a feeling the swans would be there and I wasn’t disappointed. The gregarious creatures made a beeline for me and, regardless of the fact that I had no food for them, they seemed to enjoy being admired and photographed.

Another photographer, armed with a splendid looking camera bearing a long lens, set up position some twenty yards from me on the stones near the harbour wall; he was out to shoot other birds, perhaps rarer and farther off than the swans. Meanwhile, using my trusty little mobile phone camera, I risked disappearing into the soft mud in order to get these shots for you.

In the harbour itself, two men of the sea chatted at leisure before returning to work on their boats; and a sailor, carrying bags and equipment for a voyage, made two trips to his tender – he was waiting for the tide to come in enough for him to take out his small boat into the estuary where his sailing boat was moored. The old sailor passed the time of day with me and said he was sailing to Dartmouth for the day.

I felt a bit envious of the sailor; but I couldn’t have gone sailing today even if he had asked me because I have to finish painting the top steps at home – and besides which, I don’t know how to sail a boat. Ah, but it would have been nice to have a try… (Dere’s wha my heart is turning ebber). Instead, I cycled back to de old plantation and washed de mud of de ribber off my trainers.

 

Everybody’s Going to Looe – What About You, You, You?

By now you may realise that our friend Roland and I went to Looe in Cornwall – you ought to as I have mentioned it a few times in my blog posts. It’s just that Looe, and the trip itself, came as a complete surprise to me. I hadn’t planned on going anywhere, then I was going to go fishing, then it rained, and then I was suddenly going to Cornwall.

Often the best of times are had when things happen impromptu, as they did yesterday. In fact, the day was full of surprises, not least because I thought I had been to Looe before and I wasn’t expecting the town to be as big, or as old (some of the buildings date back to the fourteen hundreds), or as beautiful. As you will see from the photographs, the beach and coastline are spectacular.

I was also surprised to learn that a friend of ours had been in Looe on the same day; then later last evening, when Chris and I were watching the property programme, “A Place in the Sun – Home or Away”, where do you think one of the home houses was located? You guessed it!

The other lovely surprise was that the rain held off…

 

The Season for Swans – Cockwood Harbour

Almost exactly a year ago I took photographs of the swans at Cockwood Harbour – the harbour was full of them and, it being early morning, the swans were all asleep and had their heads tucked under their wings. Now I’m not normally a particularly early riser but this morning I awoke at six-thirty with the impulse to go for a bike ride to Cockwood and Chris and I were away within the hour.

The sun was shining and the gentle breeze had the coolness of morning, making it a very pleasant ride, and even more-so because the roads were pretty well free of traffic; it was too early for the morning dog-walkers and sightseers on the cycle-paths and the serious cyclists (in Lycra) kept to the roads.

The tide was out and the slender snake of water remaining was still trickling out under the railway bridge and into the estuary; disappointingly, all the boats were sitting on mud and the harbour was bereft of swans. Nevertheless, we parked our bikes by the railings and strolled around to the bridge. When the tide is out you can walk under the bridge, stand on the other side and take in the view of Exmouth across the water; and, as we discovered, you can see also a flock of swans silhouetted against the sun and the glistening water…

Oops – No Towel in Roland’s Shower!

It was a white wash day today, not white-wash paint, or a whitewash in terms of a cover-up, although, as it happens a cover-up would have been mighty difficult in the circumstances.  You see, earlier on, Roland (our visitor from Australia) had put his towel in the white wash (his towel was white, of course) and maybe because he had put it in the wash himself I simply forgot to replace it…

Roland came out of the shower a few minutes ago. He wasn’t wet, in fact he was completely dry and fully clothed, but he looked as though he was about to burst out laughing…

“I may be a Philistine,” he said, coming into my studio, “but I do require a towel when I come out of the shower.”

Now I’m not sure what being a “Philistine” had to do with anything but I did feel a bit responsible for not replacing the towel – but I didn’t want him to think I was responsible.

“Why didn’t you check before you took your shower?” I asked nonchalantly.

“Do you check every time you shower?” he retorted.

“Yes,” I fibbed then laughed and added, “well I’m sure I would have noticed.”

Our friend looked at me in disbelief.

“I checked out the flannel and thought, no,” he began again and we both chortled at the thought of him drying himself with a flannel. “So what do you think I used then?” he asked.

The airing cupboards don’t live in Roland’s quarter’s – he would have had to go naked down the passage and into the other bathroom to find the upstairs airing cupboard, and I couldn’t imagine him doing that. However, in the fitted wardrobe in his room I keep my sewing machine… and the old towel I use to put under it when it is on the tabletop.

“The towel for the sewing machine!” we blurted out in unison.

“I hope there weren’t any old pins in it?” I giggled.

“No, but I checked,” he answered. “I expect that towel has been used for the last six years?”

“Only about about two, but it’s still clean,” I said hopefully (after all, how dirty could it have gotten in the cupboard?).

He might have thought it was a bit of a whitewash on my part.

Think I’ll just take a couple of towels upstairs now….

 

“Weren’t you on a Boat in Teignmouth Last weekend?”

“Where would you like to go fishing?” I asked.

“Wherever there are fish,” answered Roland, our friend from Australia.

In truth, we hadn’t had much luck on either of the times we had gone fishing down on the breakwater here at Dawlish (though we did have an excellent view of our house).

“How about Babbacombe?” I suggested pointing to an oil painting on one of my studio walls.

Roland’s hopes were raised by the sight of the five fisher-folk depicted in the painting and off we went to the more promising-looking location; in any case, it was a trip to another beautiful piece of coastline not too far from home.

We had not long set ourselves up in a goodish spot on the breakwater (the best spots at the very end had been taken already by a couple and a lone fisherman) when the couple approached me.

“Weren’t you in a boat in Teignmouth last weekend?” the blonde asked.

“Oh, yes, the ferry boat to Shaldon,” I said (it wasn’t hard to remember because it was the only boat I had been on over the weekend, or for a while, actually).

Then I remembered the couple opposite us on the ferry.

“You wore a yellow tee-shirt,” I said to the man before turning to the lady, “and you were sitting very close next to him, and I took a photograph because you both looked so “in love”.

We chatted like old friends for quite some time, by the end of which it felt like we were friends. These photographs are for Andrea and Graham who were down on holiday from Leicester last week…

(That was when I caught the small pollack that had to be thrown back in and I took the first batch of photographs of people “jumping for joy”.)

 

A Secret Oasis

There are no signs pointing to the oasis on Dartmoor – it’s a secret. For all I know there might even be more than one, but I know of this one only. It’s so secret that I’m not sure I should even tell you. Therefore I shall just hint at its location and you may choose to investigate further. Suffice to say, the beautiful (and exclusive) oasis pictured in the photographs below lies in the vicinity of Haytor, where we went on Monday. Actually, it is known as “The Quarry”, and that is about as much as I’m prepared to divulge. Well, we don’t want the whole world to go there and ruin it.

If you’re really desperate to find it (and the bountiful little wild blueberries lurking in the undergrowth and between rocks) please contact me secretly via my site and I will draw you a secret map – for your eyes only. Shh….

Down on the Farm With Mary and Roland

Yesterday morning Mary and I took Roland to visit Rosie down on the farm. You may remember that last year I painted a mural on the inside of the American Air Streak caravan in the garden; that was when I fell in love with the farm, and the dogs, and the llamas.

Sadly, the littlest llama, hand-reared and beloved by all, died this week at the tender age of two and a half. We girls all shed a few tears and talked llamas (as you do when you visit a farm with llamas) and then Mary and Roland went for a wonderful walk in the top field from where they looked across the valley to the sea while Rosie and I talked about new paintings for the Air Streak caravan.

Photographs of the River Teign

Saturday is generally shopping day for Chris and me, and we usually take my mum along too; but before we go shopping we nearly always take a little detour to the Passage House Inn, located in a pretty spot by the River Teign, where we park up and Chris reads Mum my blogs (which have accumulated of late owing to my virus keeping me in). It was a beautiful morning and we were driving along on the Newton Abbot road when I noticed the river on my left; the tide was in and the reflections on the water were picturesque.

“Can you pull in Chris?” I asked.

Just at that moment we saw the turn off for Wear Farm caravan park and Chris turned in obligingly. It was a good job he did because the views of the river from that vantage point were breathtaking. Strangely enough, considering we pass by so often, none of us had ever turned onto that road before. And here are the photographs, including the ones taken down by the river a few minutes later…