Covid-19 Lockdown - A Rural Diary - Day 11

Friday 3rd April

I have just come back in from a beautiful evening walk, much-needed after a day at the computer and technological headaches.

I set out with a fuzzy head, brain-addled and crabby of mood. For the first 20 minutes I just downloaded my frustrations to G as we walked along the track above our house, heading west into the sun which had been popping in and out of clouds all day. There was stillness all around, the sound of birdsong, a soft evening light brushing the hills with gold, and shadows across the valley. Not a soul in sight, no sounds of cars rushing along the main road below, the breathless reservoir a mirror for the surrounding hills. Slowly the birdsong impinged on my frazzled brain and I started to properly absorb the beauty around me.

We took a left off the track into a valley which I had never seen even after 17 years of life here. A sheep lay bloated and dead by the wall, stark reminder - as if we needed it right now - that nature is not always kind. Picking our way over rough tussocks of green-brown grass, smoothed by rains, the valley opened up before us, intimate and alluring in all its simplicity. Green slopes rose up to left and right, a small pond hidden in marsh grass, a natural watering hole. On cue, two large stags with magnificent horns burst from the copse in the middle distance, paused briefly to survey us and bound behind each other up the hill, following an unseen path. We stood and watched, privileged to exist side by side with these noble creatures, until they passed from sight. Ahead, beech trees clustered behind a dry stone wall and, as we resumed movement, our feet crunched over the small brown empty husks of its long lost fruits. A grey squirrel scampered through the trunks, beneficiary of its autumn bounty.

A view opened up ahead of us to the next distant valley, pine-clad slopes and the glint of another sheet of still water; beyond that, a long golden vista of hills and dales stretching west towards the Welsh Mountains and the Irish Sea, timeless as the setting sun.

Turning back towards home, we revelled in the last long rays of light as we climbed a wide broad hillside towards the telephone mast, unwelcome reminder of the modern world. As we descended the other side of the hill, all was now shadow in the valleys but still nature had some treats in store. A large hare rushed across my path, bursting forth from nowhere, and zig-zagged his way downwards, cross, no doubt, at being disturbed. And as we came over the final undulations of the hillside, the ears and nose of a curious lamb came into sight, soon followed by his mother and three other ewes with their delightful charges. If there are lambs, it is Spring. And if it is Spring, there is hope. 

Comments

Tunstead said…
Followed the same route last sunday with a distant (2 metre gap) friend.Makes one realise why we live here!
Hi Carah. I’m blogging again too. My blog has become something I do every few weeks rather than all the time but like you I wanted a record of these strange days. I feel we are living through a period which is unlike anything we have ever seen, certainly in recent times. I know I won’t remember what we did and how it felt. As you say, people like us with space and without pressing money worries are the lucky ones. Anyway I’ll be interested to read your experience too!
Carah Boden said…
Thank you Tunstead for commenting. Indeed it does :-). So beautiful and even more so now without the sound of rushing traffic on the main roads in the valleys below or planes in the sky. Total peace and the air just filled with birdsong.

And thank you Elizabeth too. Rest assured I shall be reading your experience too, always beautifully written :-).

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