Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2024

I went for a walk in the rain...

It was dusk and I needed some solitude so I set out up the hill.  It started to rain but this didn't deter me.
I saw so much beauty, a few examples of which I will share.










 

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

My bright yellow raincoat

20150529_132317

Usually, when it comes to making expensive purchases, I um and ah over this for a long time.  I'm fine making charity shop purchases that cost a couple of pounds (do too many of these) but I worry about spending a lot on one item.  Yet, when I do, they usually end up being very useful.  Like my Doc Martens last October, they cost me a lot of money but were invaluable through the winter for my 3 miles a day walk to and from school.  For a good long time, I've wanted a good raincoat. The cheap raincoats I've been using up till now have not beeen great, they are only showerproof and I get wet, they are unstructured and they make me sweat- especially as I often running 'late' in the rain and want to get there quicker. Enter Seasalt Cornwall, whose products I came across last July when I bought a Seasalt dress in Hay on Wye. I discovered they have an excellent range of raincoats which make use of cotton with a special waxing called Tin Cloth. Not only that, but they look cool too!!!

I fell in love with their Seafolly raincoat, a cotton-based raincoat with Duffle coat toggles and a fun stripy lining but scuttled away at the cost.
 Months and months had gone by (about 9!) and I kept looking at them and thinking I really wanted a good quality raincoat.
Finally, we went to Totnes and I saw that there was a Seasalt shop in Totnes so I could go and try on the raincoats.  They had a special promotion that day with money off so I bit the bullet and bought it.
It got lots of use in Totnes over the week

20150529_134755
I am so pleased with my raincoat- it worked well in the rain and I can wear it when it might rain.

I bought a size 10 rather than an 8 so I can wear a jumper under it.  I can recommend it highly. It makes me smile every time I see it! It also kind of completes my rainbow of coats inadvertently!

On this day in Totnes, we were visiting Sharpham Vineyard and I wore it with my Cath Kidston Ricrac dress from my Dad/Step Mum for my birthday.


IMG_4211
And should I get lost, you'll see me a mile off!


On the cliffs...
20150530_170517


20150530_171803

What do you wear in the rain? Do you do lots of walking like me and need a proper raincoat?

xxx

Friday, February 21, 2014

Rainbows in Suffolk

IMG_1219
This half-term, with great forward planning and thinking time (er- half a day?), CBC and I decided to head to Suffolk and the borders of Norfolk for 2 days.  This was thought-up and executed on Monday.

Tuesday morning, we set off in the car, all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed (cue that BBC music) in the car and headed first for Aldeburgh.  Aldeburgh is most famed for being the home of celebrated British composer, Benjamin Britten and his partner, Peter Pears.  Britten, who was our first great composer for around 400 years (since Henry Purcell. I am quoting my lesson plan here from a year 4 lesson), fell in love with the Suffolk coast and moved there.  One of his most famous operas, Peter Grimes is set here- beautiful, beautiful music but a horrid story-line!  Snape Maltings, a couple of miles from Aldeburgh, is the home of the Aldeburgh festival, a great classical music festival every year.  CBC was a steward here once and the whole experience had a huge impression on him, so he was keen to visit.

Sometimes called the Hampstead of Suffolk, Aldeburgh is a picturesque seaside town with a selection of independent and high class shops and one of he best fish and chips in the country.  Fair enough- we decided not to rally against public opinion and bought some fish and chips to eat on the beach.
IMG_1236
As we sat and ate our food, reclining on the shingle of Aldeburgh beach, listening to the lap of waves onto the stones and listened to a child excitedly talking to his dad, I reflected on the wonderful effect the sea seems to have on me.  It's like a reset button, or something like that- but I feel that all things are well when I hear that sound and smell that air.
IMG_1207
IMG_1206
Eyed up by ravenous and menacing-looking seagulls, we decided to take a jaunt along the beach in search of the famous and contraversial Aldeburgh sea-shell sculpture.  Apparently, it is considered contentious by different people because they say that using aluminium or whatever metal it is made out of is going against keeping the seaside natural at Aldeburgh.   Luckily, we found it a fair stretch along the beach.  Shingle is really hard to walk over!!! It makes you really slow!
IMG_1243
Everyone wanted a piece of the seashell, so we could only grab a few shots.
IMG_1237
The quote comes from the aforementioned Peter Grimes.  It started to rain a little, so some people tried to shelter under the sea-shell.  We walked back towards the town.  The rain was that most disgusting sort- the one that is really really cold, wet and horrible and leaves you really soggy and cold.  BUT, there was an unexpected boon of staying out in it.  As we reached the town, we saw the most amazing primary AND secondary rainbow stretched across the sky, ending as if like mist into the water.
IMG_1257  Again and again, I snapped photos in delight at this sight of beauty and peace. It was hard to leave it. According to the comments of someone local which I earwigged on, they've been getting double rainbows all week!
IMG_1248
IMG_1252

IMG_1263
We then walked into the town and went into apparently, according to the Independent, one of the top 5 ice-cream parlours in the country!  Despite being cold, I enjoyed a double cone of chocolate orange and chocolate.  CBC had blackcurrant sorbet and maple-walnut.  They do many flavours including Christmas pudding flavour! We wondered if anyone ever orders the pink-grapefruit sorbet- not my idea of fun!
After a quick stroll along the high street and a nip into Joules, where I almost bought a fox-jumper (too expensive) and amazing fur-lined navy-blue snow boots  (tiny bit too small despite being  42!), we headed off in the car towards Beccles, the entrance to the Norfolk Broads apparently.  The drive was beautiful with sunsets and yet more amazing rainbows.  CBC forbade me to take photos whilst he was driving, but there was a HUGE patch of really vivid colour on the horizon.

Arriving at the Swan Inn B&B in Beccles, we were taken up to our room in the loft.  It was a deliciously cute and cosy room with a lovely chintzy chaise-longue,
IMG_1281and lovely-beams to bang your head on (if you are clumsy like CBC and I!).
IMG_1265
A cute shower room and a cupboard that had Orla Keilly mugs, Tea-Pigs tea-selection and some chintzy tea cups and saucers
IMG_1268Since we don't have a TV, we were really excited to be able to watch the winter Olympics (which was unfortunately curling.  What a strange sport!) and see Netflix for the first time which we watched Dawson's Creek on after dinner!

Heading down to Dinner, the Swan has a great restaurant where everything is cooked from scratch and they offer a 2 courses for £14 option. I went for the Cauliflower and stilton soup (to be honest a little boring) and CBC had a pate (nice).  For my main, I enjoyed apple and pork sausages, mash, broccoli and onion-gravy (though looking at this picture makes me want to retch. I get like that when I've eaten meat too often!)
IMG_1284 The Swan in Beccles has a HUGE beer menu and they list all the different varieties and flavours in their guide, giving a little history of each one- heck, they made Budweiser sound posh!
IMG_1283
After dinner, we headed back to our room to watch Modern Guy and the very first Dawson's Creek episode.  I love a bit of teenage angst.  All together now: "I don't wanna wait... for this life to be over..."

More tomorrow...


Thursday, November 01, 2012

Cascades

It had been a long day.  My heart heavy, my bag, cumbersome.  With hunched shoulders and downcast eyes, I trudged the lonely trail home through puddles, a cascade of raindrops pouring from my head, rivulets streaming down my cheeks and tricking into the collar of thin coat.  Stepping, trudging, trailing, traipsing.  Seconds became minutes became like hours for a burden of thoughts.  

At long last, I was home.  First thought, to put down my bag and get warm and cosy.  But I stopped, wanting to see what was good and beautiful in something that can feel so miserable, the cold impersonal deluge.  I put my bag down on the doorstep and stood.  The  dashing of cars on their way to a dozen important and unimportant events had formed a steady ostinato to my plod home.  But as I stood there, for a moment, as I listened, felt, saw and smelt the rain, all sound ceased. 

The only sound remaining was the gentle ticking of a million droplets falling.  

One second...  

Two seconds...  

And as if time stood still, all cares and troubles were gone and it was just me and the rain.  It cleansed my tears away, the gentle rhythm, a lullaby to broken hopes.  The feeling of delight and healing spread over me like the calm after the storm, and my heart, the sun after a biblical flood. 

All was well.  



*    *       *



This short passage is inspired by that moment I love when it rains and you are out in it where you forget to be miserable and irritated by the rain and stand still and for one or two glorious seconds, all other sounds cease and you just feel and hear the soft pitter patter. It never fails to send a shiver down my spine of delight! I was inspired to think of this moment by reading a beautiful blog entry I read here about rain: http://foxglovelane.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/raindrops.html

Do check it out, it certainly felt serene and delightful to me.



Thursday, October 11, 2012

Green-eyed monster


It calls for a 'Singin' in the rain' type jump don't you think?

Oooof, attacked by a green scarf snake!




 I am increasingly enamoured with this dress!  It is so so comfortable!  I know it has already featured twice in the past 2 weeks, but I thought I'd try to give it a slight remix!  I tried to keep my pallette to green, purple and white. 
Dress is Clockhouse via Charity shop, necklace - Asos gift, scarf: dodgy East london shop, Lego earrings craft-fair, beret- H&M, Purple boots and green leggings- Primark. Rose bracelet: Bay.
Umbrella:  borrowed from the Medical room at school.
Because you know that you want a watering can handbag! It matches, doesn't it?  Sort of?
The Pylones watering can handbags are the best!  You can buy this one on Folksy.  Or if you want to sift through this lot in Google, good luck to you!