So much has happened.
My talented brother Steve died at the age of 85 and we had a wonderful send off for him.
In the garden we are waiting for the paths to be redone, we keep and lose gardeners, R has radically swept away veg beds but has recently been spreading the snowdrops yet more.
We are beyond the start of spring, the thrush and wren are belting it out and the woodpecker is drumming in the trees. We have had ducks on the pond and the heron most days for breakfast.
So to some pics - Fatsia in fine fettle
So what to do, well Damson Press are publishing a pamphlet of my poems - I wonder when the poet laureate is retiring? But he is much younger than I.
Title poem -
THAT WAS THEN
Legs less limber, he walks the fells
In his head, sees things as they were,
Remembers trees now fallen, walls gone.
Where there was a path is bracken,
Chest high and laced with bramble,
Pasture is bog, fields scrub.
He thinks his way down to the beck
And climbs the fence, can almost smell
The sausages baked in the fire
His mother made, taste the cold water.
The brown stones in the river bed
Are still slippery and hurt his feet.
And he can hear the raven call
As it sheds air from its wings
And falls whirling from a crag.
His collie nuzzles at his hand
And he strokes it’s head,
Takes a deep breath and smiles.
But that was then, and now
He puts the kettle on, makes tea,
Retrieves a biscuit from its tin,
Puts his feet up by the fire,
Gets out his iPad, opens Kindle,
And escapes from reality.
Time for a coffee . . . .