The
weather forecast said, among other things, bursts of sunshine. It was
recommended that I not read the ‘other things’, but I caught a
glimpse of them anyway, something about snow, hail and rain. But the
bursts of sunshine sounded good. And the sun shone, most of the day.
There were one or two bursts of hail, but not much and not for long
and mostly over in another valley or blotting out the peak of another
mountain.
We
climb up to a cemetery and the gravestones explode in colours –
rust red and sea green, mould green lichens. The sun gleams on the
snowy peaks of Ben Nevis. Thin straggling lines, like cornrow plaited
hair.
And
the parallel roads? Old drover roads? I ask. No, they are the old
shorelines, old beaches, where the sea reached long ago, ice age long
ago, so the new theory goes. Lines cut along the sides of the
mountain. Some clearly visible. So – no, not drover roads, where
the cattle passed, on their way to market. Tracks now like small
rivers, red and turquoise stones glinting like jewels just below the
surface, the stepping stones, the left-behind stones, stones among
peat, covered up by peat, cairn stones, marker stones, stones that do
not shift beneath your feet.
Mounds
of green moss, that give way underfoot, soaked with water. Moss of
reddish, orange, terracotta, pink and purple colours, honeycomb
patterned, growing high up on the hillslope where only skylarks see
them. Wasted beauty. Only the hail clouds drifting like thin muslin
curtains from one valley to the next, screening the hill behind. They
see them. Skylarks and hailstorms, that’s all.
Boots
squelching into a moss-topped bog. Thin yellow grasses, dried-out and
forming a loose weave over the moss clumps. Wish they had woven a
mat, a raft above the water-surface. The ground is saturated.
The
path peters out, into quagmire. We change direction and head for the
wood and the river. When we reach a sandy track we stop, take off our
boots, and wring out our socks. After that, walking now along the
track, with no clumps of springy sodden grass, my feet feel almost
dry. The track reaches the river, and follows alongside it.
Birch
woods. A cuckoo. The first I’ve heard this year. One or two
skylarks. A grasshopper warbler. Woodpecker. And the river passing
between banks of grey rock. When it tumbles over falls, it’s the
colour of champagne. Away from the high rocks, down deep in some
chasm underwater, the surface turns mahogany. Unimaginable depths,
once you’ve stepped off the banks of rocks.
Cupped
handfuls from a small spring, the water tastes of cool sweetness,
evaporating on the tongue.
The
track turns into a paved road and comes out at Roy Bridge. We cross
the road, and then the bridge over the railway line, and find another
path that leads through the woods, and follows the river again.
There’s the road, with its sound of traffic. Then there’s the
railway. And the path slides between the rail track and the river.
Comments
I like your site, you have some interesting posts. My site My Perfect Pitch compliments yours, consisting of interesting articles from a published author, and a free writers yearbook with over 1000 book publishers currently accepting submissions. Keep up the good work.
Regards, Brian
I've been away from my blog for a couple of weeks and I'm just now catching up with comments.
Rubyxx