Monday, 16 May 2011

The Loch of the Green Corrie

Poets' Pub (Norman MacCaig, Sorley MacLean, Hugh MacDiarmid, Iain Crichton Smith, George Mackay Brown, Sidney Goodsir Smith, Edwin Morgan, Robert Garioch, Alan Bold and John A. Tonge)

Last night I met up with some friends and attended an evening at The Lemon Tree in Aberdeen celebrating the life and work of one of Scotland’s most well known and well loved poets, the late Norman MacCaig. It was the final event for Word 2011, the University of Aberdeen Writers Festival.
For those not familiar with his life and work, MacCaig - a man of remarkable talent and humour - was born in Edinburgh to a lowland father and Scalpay born mother. He spent most of his life split between his home in Edinburgh and the hills of Assynt in the far north west of Scotland which, as he was careful to point out during an interview shot before his death, he did not use as direct and immediate inspiration but rather used ‘to fill my [his] camels hump’. He was reknowned for his sharp wit and for 'testing' those who came to fawn at his feet.


'Oooh I love your stuff Mr MacCaig' they would say
'Why?' 
It was in Assynt that the writer Andrew Greig, found himself looking for Lochan a Choire Ghuirm (Loch of the Green Corrie) after promising the ailing MacCaig, shortly before his death, he would fish for trout in it on his behalf :
“fish for me at the Loch of the Green Corrie. Only it’s not called that. But go to Lochinver and ask for a man called Norman MacAskill, if he likes you he may tell you where it is. If you catch trout, I shall be delighted. And if you fail, then looking down from a place in which I do not believe, I shall be most amused“.



Greig penned his book ‘The Loch of the Green Corrie’ based upon his search for the loch – but it is much, much more than that – it is journey of discovery. We were treated to a screening of the film of the same name shot on a subsequent trip with Aly Bain (Scottish fiddle maestro), Andrew Greig and Billy Connolly hiking to the coire to fish. All three were great friends of MacCaigs and the film was as much an emotional journey for the audience as it was for the three ‘stars’ – tossed high on the crest of hilarity with tears of laughter rolling down our faces as Billy and Aly tore strips off each other’s fishing skills,  before the tears were replaced a very different kind and a lump in our throats when all three remembered, and missed, their friend. It was a beautiful film and so well done, I really did feel I understood the man a little more, and by the same token his poetry, by the end.
After the film, Andrew and Aly (both in attendance) read some of MacCaig’s poems, including my favourite Small Boy (which has me close to tears at the best of times, let alone when I’ve had a wee drink!)
He picked up a pebble
and threw it into the sea.

And another, and another.
He couldn't stop.

He wasn't trying to fill the sea.
He wasn't trying to empty the beach.

He was just throwing away,
nothing else but.

Like a kitten playing
he was practicing for the future

when there'll be so many things
he'll want to throw away

if only his fingers will unclench
and let them go.

A short interlude later, we were treated to Aly playing Bonaparte’s retreat before local musicians took the stage and the evening ended with a selection of traditional Scottish tunes.




Really, a bloody great night!

Saturday, 14 May 2011

Happy Happy Happy



I can't believe its been nearly an entire month since I last blogged! To be fair (to myself), the new job did take precedence for a while but now things have settled into a happy routine and I've found myself with a few hours to spare of an evening and so have turned my attentions to the house.



Its the first house I have ever had where I am completely on my own and therefore don't have to take anyone else's thoughts into consideration vis a vis décor and its great! Partly inspired by the country look I grew up with, partly by the Scandinavian look I am a huge fan of and partly from the eclectic look (thanks to both my parents and Nina's Apartment for inspiration) my little house is becoming a home.


I have to admit, I have always hated DIY but now, possible fired up by this new found freedom, I find myself getting excited over paint colours and material and am more than happy to spend an evening after work sanding down an old book shelf to paint or hanging home made curtains. My weekends are spent raiding second hand furniture shops, picking up things I've got from Freecycle or just wandering garden centres looking at Pretty Things for the house (don't worry, I'm not turnin' into a gurl or anyfink).




My proudest moment so far has been putting up the two shelves above (and a knife rack). This won't sound a lot but it is to me. They're straight, they're secure, I didn't drill through electric cables in the block walls and I made them. Well alright B&Q made them but I customised them.

I've still no carpets down but again, to be fair, that's more to do with mine and the carpet layers schedules never being er..harmonious. Well, I'm sorry but I'm not giving my house key to a stranger and no, with just starting a new job I can't just take a day off because you couldn't make it on Saturday like you said you would when I first sodding booked you.

 I'm fairly confident I'll get something laid this month. Maybe. Possibly.



Generally though. Happy, happy, happy :)



Monday, 18 April 2011

Heaven


Heaven does exist and I found it tonight.

I've had this vision of where I'll end my days in my head for years. A small island, with a few trees in a fjord or lake somewhere - and then, as I was just idly browsing through Blipfoto tonight, I came across it. Lake Eibsee in Germany - Bavaria to be precise.

Saturday, 2 April 2011

Its all about the pie...



This week has been nose to the grindstone. I've lived solely on chicken and broccoli (diet), tapped out 11 hour days and a zillion, billion words on the laptop (attempting to write something coherent), wrestled with skull splitting headaches (caused by tapping..), cats with attachment disorders (missing my parents) and ex RAF (now AA insurance) men on a mission. By Thursday I was ready to kill and so decided it might be an idea to meet up with a friend of mine from this half of the country and get some Fresh Air. God bless her, she agreed and so we arranged to meet half way between this, my temporary northern residence, and her home in Inverness.


With gale force winds and horizontal rain lashing against the window this morning, I had little hope that the prearranged 'bimble' along Findhorn beach with said friend, hereafter known mysteriously as 'M' would actually materialise - but as I drove towards Elgin  - delighting in the power that is a car less than 5 years old (I've stolen my mums while they're in Portugal), the sun was beginning to break through the cloud. By the time I turned off for Kinloss it was windows down and radio up weather and at Findhorn itself, I was greeted by wall to wall sunshine and quickly stripped down to just one jacket! In April?! In Scotland?! I know!


Findhorn Bay is a place of outstanding natural beauty and quite unlike anywhere else on the east coast of Scotland - M and I were trying to figure out what made it so special. Is it the quiet? The stunning scenery? The trees right to the shore? The wildlife? God knows but its one hell of a place.


Its no wonder really that Eileen and Peter Caddy set up the Foundation on its shores really. The Findhorn Community was started in 1962 by Peter and Eileen and their friend Dorothy Maclean. All three had followed disciplined spiritual paths for many years and they first came to northeast Scotland in 1957 to manage the Cluny Hill Hotel in the town of Forres, which they did remarkably successfully. Eileen received guidance in her meditations from an inner divine source she called 'the still small voice within' and Peter ran the hotel according to this guidance and his own intuition. In this unorthodox way – and with many delightful and unlikely incidents – Cluny Hill swiftly became a thriving and successful four-star hotel. After several years however, Peter and Eileen’s employment was terminated, and with nowhere to go and little money, they moved with their three young sons and Dorothy to a caravan in the nearby seaside village of Findhorn.


Findhorn Bay looking over the Moray Firth towards the north of Scotland
Feeding six people on unemployment benefit was difficult, so Peter decided to start growing vegetables. The land in the caravan park was sandy and dry but he persevered. Dorothy discovered she was able to intuitively contact the overlighting spirits of plants – which she called angels, and then devas – who gave her instructions on how to make the most of their fledgling garden. She and Peter translated this guidance into action, and with amazing results. From the barren sandy soil of the Findhorn Bay Caravan Park grew huge plants, herbs and flowers of dozens of kinds, most famously the now-legendary 40-pound cabbages. Word spread, horticultural experts came and were stunned, and the garden at Findhorn became famous.




Universal Hall at the Findhorn Foundation


That's how the story goes anyway. Choose to believe it or not, its grown since then to a good sized eco village with its own shop, activity centre, arts centre and even supports various small businesses such as woodturners and potters. It is a major spiritual hub and I spent a lot of time there in my twenties, eager to 'find' myself. I didn't (I'm still looking and enjoying the search ta!) and to be honest, I became a little disillusioned with the whole set up. I think the original idea was honest and wonderful but like a lot of things, they change over time - and not always for the good.
Path mosaic at Findhorn Foundation
Whatever my, or your, thoughts on the place, its well worth a visit. After a stomp along the actual beach setting the world to rights, we intrepid explorers summited a sand dune to get our bearings and set off for the Foundation - had a gorgeous lunch from the Blue Angel cafe (may I recommend in particular the Almond and Chocolate torte..), a peruse of an exhibition by John Hodkinson - digital prints and mixed media work exploring ideas and themes found in the stories and recollections of Scotland’s Travelling people and then a wander through the eco-village itself. I'm particularly interested in buildings at the moment as I'm researching for The House that Jo Built so we took a tour round some of the self builds there. 
Its a little like a flat northern Norway really. A jumbled mix of wooden built houses with a definite scandinavian feel. I was happy. Its the look I love and the style I will...or more accurately, the builders (I've seen Grand Designs, I've seen what can go wrong if you try and build yourself!!) will be building one day.





I really loved this one...


A house built of bales....
and one built of barrels (big ones...)

I loved the blue one

and this one reminded me of Bristol Airport..
We rounded of the afternoon, and our circuitous meanderings by walking along the tide line of the bay and taking arty photos (none of mine came out anything like they did in my head). I didn't really want to leave but I had a prior engagement with my brother who needed to discuss Ice Road Truckers and so I set off, a little bit weary, a little bit sunburnt (or might be sandblasted - not sure yet..) but very, very happy.


As they say in Clwyd...


Grand...



Friday, 25 March 2011

O.M.G



On a recent trip to Nottingham, I was directed, by my hostess with the most-est, towards this hidden gem. Situated on the Derby Road in the city centre, Danish homestore is the UK's biggest supplier of Danish furniture Classics imported directly from Denmark. It was started in 1981 and is family owned. We spoke at length to Jamie, one of the restorers, and he was so helpful I really did have to stop myself buying the Ib Koefod Larsen rosewood sideboard. Ok alright, it was more the fact I'm skint and wasn't sure that Eastern Air would accept it as hand luggage that stopped me...


But I found a little slice of heaven and I can dream.....


Check out their website at www.danish-homestore.com

Hans Wegner designed 'Sawback' oak dining chairs.
Designed 1952 and produced by Carl Hansen

Hans Wegner 'heart' chair
Produced by Fritz Hansen 1952
Vintage danish desk in Wenge designed by Bodil Kjaer for E. Pedersen and son 1959 . I need this.

Heaven on the high street

Skovby maple cabinet
Rosewood sideboard
Designed by Ib Kofoed Larsen and produced by FAARUP møbler

Rosewood sideboard door detail

Sara


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Monday, 14 March 2011

The Mother


 
She stood on the frozen platform, her face pressed against the cold perspex of the security barrier, watching her daughter and granddaughter board the train. She felt a lump rise in her throat as the train pulled away and as she watched it disappear into the grey, cold granite landscape it seemed to drag the remaining warmth from her. Choking back the tears, she lifted her head and replaced the rigid mask of composure she had always worn under times of stress or sadness, and turned to face the rest of the station. Striding purposefully towards the coffee shop and her two thirty coffee meeting, she talked herself down in her head. 

They’ll be back in April. It’s just a few weeks. She needs to go home. How lovely it would be to have her son-in-law back from Afghanistan in eight days she thought quietly, so as not to jinx it, and how lovely it will be for them to be together as a family again after seven long months! Her granddaughter would soon be reunited with her dad. Ah, bless her little face. She was gorgeous wasn’t she. Her mum was doing a great job of raising her despite her own tender years and it can’t be easy living out there far away from your family, alone for long months on end with only a toddler for company. Aye, she had the indominatable family spirit right enough.

Though she still felt a deep, lingering sadness, her heart had responded to a good talking to and by the time she reached the coffee shop and her waiting friend, it had definitely lifted a little. You look well! How is everything? It’s fine. You know. Maybe a bit quiet sometimes but there’s always writing to be done and of course doing up the place takes up a lot of time. They chatted about her middle son Alex who was doing well in his final exams and now coaching a local youth football team in his spare time. She spoke at length about her eldest son Andrew, now a Royal Marine. Was she worried about him going to war? Not really. It was very unlikely he would get sent over there apparently. His commanding officer had said so only days previously. Too soon after Passing Out or something. Funny how the family had suddenly become inexorably linked with various Armed Forces over the last few years wasn’t it? Her son-in-law in the regular army, his brother in the Paras, her eldest son a Marine...They talked about the funeral of the children’s grandfather a few days before – how had they all coped? ‘Admirably’ was the reply, and it was true. She was proud of all her children. 

Hardly children now though. All off doing their own thing. She felt a pang in her breast. She wasn't sure what it was but it had been appearing more often of late and she wasn't sure why. It wasn't lonliness. She liked living alone – not long after she had got all the children to school age and the first marriage ended, she’d got herself a job and a house for them all further west. They’d been latch key kids, bought up by their bootlaces and, by her own admission, she had not been much of a motherly figure and enjoyed having time away from the children at work. Unsurprisingly they’d all left home as soon as they were old enough.  Actually she wasn’t sure if it was wholly her fault for working too much and not giving them enough attention or perhaps the wayward family gene could share some of the blame, for as many as her failings as a parent were, they were now as close as children and a parent could be. It had taken some time to repair the bond between her and the eldest boy though. He'd been 'difficult' and when he reached fifteen and she could no longer cope, she sent him to live with his grandmother. She'd never forgiven herself and he hadn't forgiven her until recently. Now though, perhaps with the maturity that her years had bought, and that his military training had given him, they had put aside their past and started afresh - enjoying spending time together and getting to know one another. She loved him fiercely, she loved them all fiercely but she also valued her own freedom.

She’d married again though -  years later, and though he was essentially a good man, there were major personality clashes, too many compromises and she found it impossible to be the Wife and Mother he had so desperately imagined her to be. Though they loved each other, the second marriage died an inevitable, long and painfully uninteresting death. There was no shouting or screaming, just a quiet departure from the marital home one saturday afternoon and like a wounded animal seeking a bolthole to retreat into and lick its wounds, she sought out space and silence to grieve. That was exactly what she found in a lovely little house under the protective arm of her beloved mountain and within easy reach of her most trusted friends. 

Months passed, the pain eased and she was now on amicable terms with him. In some ways, they had a better relationship now that they were apart than they ever had when they were together! It felt all very... textbook. The sort of healthy relationship you had when you ‘graduated’ from a How to Deal with Divorce course run by a nauseatingly smug counsellor who probably wore cords and drove a Volvo.

She smiled inwardly at the last thought as, dropping a gear to crest the last hill before home, she heard her own battered old Volvos exhaust blowing. Must fix that she thought to herself. Perhaps she should take it to the local garage and introduce herself? That was important in small villages. She liked this one and already felt like she belonged to, well, something akin to a large family. Even Dora the village Post Mistress had called a cheery hullo to her across the market square the other day. 

Arriving home just as the snow started again, she quickly rummaged for her keys and opened the door. The silence struck her immediately and as though to keep it from getting a hold on her thoughts, she set about tidying before even taking off her coat. It would be good to get the place back ship shape and Bristol fashion after a week of her granddaughter ‘painting’ the walls with banana and colouring in her expensive Swedish quilt with pink felt tip pen. Nice to sleep past 5.45am. Though she would miss her granddaughter waking her up by clambering in the bed beside her and singing Peppa Pig loudly in her ear. It would be nice to watch her choice of DVD of an evening again, though she would miss her daughter Emily rolling her eyes at the fifth viewing of the Gavin and Stacey Christmas Special. Yes, it’ll be nice to... she picked up the pink potty from the living room and could almost hear her granddaughter giggling. Yes, good to get back to my rout... she picked up the spare toothbrushes from the bathroom and placed them in the 'spares' box. Oh, and she could get on with her writing again she thought to herself as she placed the tiny pink sock on top of the pile of Forgotten Things that she would post to Germany on Monday.

Yes. Perhaps things would settle down a bit now. The separation had been hard but these things always are. The funeral was, despite the lack of contact between her and her ex father in law in recent years, surprisingly painful and she had found it very hard to keep herself composed for the kids sake when she weakly allowed her thoughts to drift and to remember the fun times she’d spent with the old guy. Still, he’d reached a grand age really and he was in a better place now wasn’t he.  His death had also made the fourteen year feud, sparked by a bitter divorce between her and his eldest son Dave, seem pretty childish. At the wake, she and Dave called a truce, talked and played with their granddaughter. The children had liked that a lot. You could almost hear the collective sigh of relief. They knew what their father was like but he was still their father. They also liked that the split from her second husband Dan had been reasonably amicable and that he still wanted to see them. They’d even been round for tea with her and he seemed to be moving on now. She’d tried to take everyone’s feelings into consideration, she hated hurting anyone, and though it had been tough sometimes, things were slotting into place. Not a moment too soon she thought with a doleful smile as she made herself a cup of tea, cut a slice of gingerbread and sat down with her laptop to write. They’re all happy. All healthy. All safe.
 
It was 17:56 when she got the text from Dave.

“I’ve just spoken to Andrew. They’re sending him to Afghanistan next month.”