Tag Archives: photography
The old birch woods above the Kyles…
I have had a lovely day today.
It has been a gorgeous warm spring day, and I took a walk in the hills with Andy. We drove over the Cowal Peninsular to Colintraive- around a 20 minuite trip- and walked up through the farm into some lovely high country- broken craggy tops with little walkways and ridges to climb through. We disturbed only the odd sheep, accompanied always by lambs.
The views out over the Kyles of Bute were great- a little hazy, but full of the movement of yachts taking advantage of a favourable wind to fly through behind brightly coloured spinnakers.
We came down through some birch woods, just coming alive. We were surrounded by the noise of brooks and birds, and walked through a carpet of cowslips.
I have wanted to explore these woods for ages. They look so inviting from the road at any time of the year. In the winter they are almost purple-bare, but around the spring time, they start to wear a bright bright green as the buds come through.
A couple of years ago, a woman who was staying at the Colintraive hotel went for a walk somewhere in these parts. She was never seen again, and not a trace of what happened to her has ever been found, despite extensive searches. It must have been incredibly sad and difficult for those she left behind. She kept coming to mind as we walked. It must be incredibly difficult for the loved ones she left behind, but today, it did not seem to me to be such a bad place to have your last resting place. May she rest in peace.
A few years ago I took a little walk in these parts on my way home from work- and wrote a poem. So here it is!
With all the optimism of the early spring
I turned the car from the road home and looked to the hill
Taking the camera more for motivation I head for the high point over the Kyle.
I feel the old excitement in the smell of wild places
All around I can almost hear the soil coming alive
The whisper of the wind in the larches sounds like blood flowing
Sap rising
And, unconcerned as my unsuitable shoes take on water,
I climb through heather and the old years dry grass
Up through ancient Gneiss outcrops
Still holding the shape of their birth in lava poured out in days so distant
That there seems no point calculating.
My feet cut into slow growing mossbanks
And scatter the stalks of bracken
And in the moment, I fear that I bring a human rhythm,
In this place unwelcome, discordant
Drowning out the stillness
Oil on water
I notice blackened heather stalks swept by fire
Perhaps lit by a smouldering cigarette last summer
And remember that this place is everywhere marked by men
Close cropped by the sheep, the land curves towards
The regimented contour crop of Spruce trees in the valley below
And half hidden, there is the evidence of older dwelling places
Now memories in the soil
Barcodes in bracken and dead nettle
Feeding on the residual richness
Leached from these poor houses
Whose people drained away.
Then perspective shifts again
To the far horizons
Across the sparkling Kyle lies Bute
Then beyond, Arran’s hills rise above Lochranza
Still wearing winter white against the blue sky
I stood and gloried.
Awed by things much bigger than I
By creative forces far beyond my understanding
But by Gods grace
Not beyond my reach
Blessing received, I take photographs recording only human spectral light
Then scramble back to shiny car, and head, too fast, for home
Anxious to see my loved ones
Eager for my own slice of civilisation.
Mountain eats man…
I took a walk yesterday with a mate. And the mountain ate us.
They do that.
There is this real tendency to see oursleves as significant. We make the things of our small lives into megaliths. We wall ourselves in with worries and concerns that come to tower over us, and the risk is that we become so accostomed to the shadows that we forget that the sun ever shines.
But today, the mountain was bigger than me.
Hallelujah.
Dunoon, empty in the evening mist…
Michaela and I have just been to the little local cinema to watch the Sherlock Holmes film- ripping good fun…
As we came out, the eery Victorian London smogs had descended on Dunoon.
The few folk who left the cinema with us soon dispersed, and we were left alone.
Spooky.
And beautiful.
(And I had my camera in the car!)
Strachur, and fiddling…
We are just back from Strachur, where Emily has joined the Lochgoilhead Fiddle Workshop sessions.
It is a whole new thing for her- the move towards learning traditional music by ear, not by reading notation. It is exciting to see her playing moving forward, and being linked into lots of new possibilities. She is also starting to play mandolin.
It is a big change for the family too- it is a 35 minute drive, and a hole in our week. But worth it I hope.
Music is so important to most of us. It is the backdrop to life, the carrier of culture and emotion- the shaper of memory. It is also a way of bringing us together and allowing us to communicate using a deeper, older kind of language.
May music find its way into your life, and your community this next week…
Whilst Emily played, I went off into the woods above Strachur. I combination of coniferous plantations along with some standard planting done by the Victorian landowners. I put up a lot of deer, and waded through all sorts of bog. There are few footpaths- just the firebreaks, and the tread of the deer along the edges of streams. It was warm today- and the dusk is lengthening the day.
Of course, I took the camera. The old Kirk in Stachur was a starting point…
Lessons on mindfulness from early French photographers…
I was listening to Johnathan Miller talking about early photography on Radio 4’s Front Row programme this evening.
Apparently, photographers struggled to convey the idea of movement.
In fact, because of the long exposures needed by photo chromatic material available, photographs of street scenes were eerily empty when developed. Movement rendered people invisible- blurred into oblivion.
It was only people who were still whose image could be captured.
So- to all you preachy types, I give you this as a sermon illustration.
Something to do with the need to find stillness- to linger and to be fully present. To learn the art of mindfulness and openness to God and others.
Otherwise we become caught up in a lesser life- lived in a fast pace, here, then gone.
New year meditating…
So- Happy New Year to you all. I hope your celebrations tonight are suitably exuberant, whilst still sufficiently mindful of the potential damage to your liver…
Our house is filling up with old friends and their kids, up here for Hogmanay. To those who could not make it- you will be missed.
Many of us use the turning of the year as a period of reflection- over what the old year has been, and what the new one might become.
Time enough for resolutions (and then no time at all- which was the point of my last post!) perhaps we would be better to spend time just reflecting, and meditating.
And if I might suggest a theme for such ponderings, I wonder if you might find these questions helpful- which I have mentioned before– the stuff of ‘soul friendship’…
How goes it with your soul?
What is draining you lately?
What is recharging you lately?
How have you felt God speaking to you?
How have you been able to see and serve Christ in the elderly, the poor, the young, the needy, or the rejected?
What has been a spiritual high point? Low point?
What challenges are you facing in the coming days?
And in all these things, in these days, may the peace of God be with you.
This Fragile Tent Christmas card, 2009…
I’m going to take a few days break from blogging. If I can. No-one reads blogs at Christmas anyway- we have far better things to do!
Like most of us, I have been busy- cleaning shovelling snow and grit, and wrapping.
We were out carol singing yesterday, and I really enjoyed it- it has become a Christmas tradition that is increasingly important to me- we take out trumpets and trombones and pianos that most of us only play once a year, and we visit some old folks homes and sing…
It is such a blessing to give- and so may you find much blessing…
And to all of you who read this blog, may this Christmas be wonderful.
And may you discover Emmanuel. God with us.
Above all the neon blaze
And electric flicker
May you still
Be blessed
By starlight
Amongst all the old recycled songs
And the fake sleighbells
May there be a moment
When peace
Falls like perfect
Snowflakes
But when we’ve overfed
And over drank
When all the gifts are given
Let us remember
That the child
Became a man
Snow in the woods…
Early winter…
Some photographs taken on my way back from Bute yesterday, driving over the middle of the Cowal peninsular from Colintraive.



























