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All content of this website, including text, images and music, is © Dixon Hill 2009-2012. Feel free to link to the site but, if you'd like to use anything you find here, please ask first.

Friday
Nov162012

Two Leaves

Two Leaves

 

two lone leaves

flags atop a wooden ship

carrying cargo of memories

bilberry and heather hued

into the tides of hoary winter

Sunday
Nov112012

Bird Photo Booth

The amazing camera bird feeder!

 

You know me.  I love taking pictures - and what I most like to photograph is the natural world around me.  Landscapes are great.  But better still is sticking a macro lens on my DSLR and getting close.  Really close.

All well and good when I’m shooting leaves or flowers.  But my biggest photography frustration is not being able to get decent pictures of the birds I feed daily.  Even my tame robin is camera shy.  To photograph him and his friends, I’d need a zoom lens (don’t have one); and even then I’d have to creep up pretty close and exercise oodles of patience.

Imagine how excited I am, then, to discover a new Kickstarter project that will allow me to shoot stunning macro bird images with just my iPhone - no creeping required.  Bird Photo Booth is a beautiful bird feeder, modelled on a 1950s Land Camera, into which you pop your iPhone….then repair somewhere cosy to record video or snap images via a remote app.

I am beyond giddy at the possibilities this amazing invention opens up.  This is one project I’m backing for sure.  Please spread the word to every bird lover or photographer you know and let’s make sure this one becomes reality.

Thursday
Nov082012

Changing Places: Oliver Dowding on Home

View from Southdown

 

Today’s Changing Places post is a special one.  Special for two reasons.  First, it was written by a chap instead of a girl (about time!).  And second, Oliver’s changing place is the village in Somerset where he’s lived his entire life.

 

As opposed to changing places, I've ‘stayed put’! I was born in one house in this village, moved to the one next door when I was 22 and, many years later following divorce, I moved to another property less than a mile away and still in the same village!

Why so static? Well, my father was a farmer and I followed in his footsteps. When you're farming, that acts as a huge magnet!  I do wish I had travelled more when younger, to both ‘see the world’ and see other ways of farming, but my father was 70 when I left school and keen for me to return to the farm so he could have successive hip replacement operations.  So the travelling was postponed, me telling myself it would be possible later.  Both my younger bothers toured Europe/the world at various times and extensively. I'd be lying if I said there wasn't a touch of jealousy that they were able to do this and I felt the need to keep my nose firmly fixed to the grindstone.

When divorce discussions were underway there was a momentary flirt with the idea of moving to New Zealand.  However, that was partly a tax consideration and, despite the fact it would have been advantageous, it was clear it would mean cessation of friendships and everything that had been my life for 51 years; and, more critically, it would have realistically meant hardly ever seeing my children again. I don't mind what people say about social networking, the Internet, Skype etc., you can't replace physical meetings with electronic alternatives. So that idea was shelved and here I am, still where I started 55 years ago. Do I regret it, overall?  NO. I could have moved, friends would have come and gone, some places I would have lived in might have been nice while others would have been less so.  I could have managed other people's farms and thus moved around, but chose to stay put.

There was a moment when one move was mooted. My father took a fancy to a farm about 20 miles away in Wiltshire. I was 17 at the time and in the middle of A-levels. He’d done detailed calculations and, perfectly naturally for somebody who'd grown up through the depression, refused to borrow money. Therefore he needed to be sure that selling where we were in the spring would cover what he was going to have to buy the previous autumn. He couldn't be certain. He then wanted me to make the decision! Where did I want to live and where did I want to farm? Always presuming that I wanted to farm. To know that sort of thing age 17 isn't always obvious, even back in the mid 1970s when the options weren't so seemingly plentiful and varied and global as they are today. Therefore, we stayed put.

Looking back, the reality is that I live in a gorgeous part of the UK.  The war photographer, Don McCullin, lives about five miles away. He came to speak recently to a small group and I was able to have a chat with him. He says that in all his travels, when he returns home he realises he lives in the most beautiful part of the world. He is right!  Those who come to stay with me always say the same.  Added to that, hardly any traffic passes my door and I hear little of it, and yet I'm only three miles from three local towns, offering diverse and plentiful shops, and other facilities.  The food on offer may be slightly more expensive than a supermarket, but the quality and service compensate, plus I am maintaining the local society and its fabric.

With the internet speeds now improving, one can operate a business just as effectively from home as from an office in a city. The latter means much travel and eco-cost. If you don't have to, don't do it.  Enjoy where you are, cultivate where you and and who you live amongst, and see the best in everything, and the desire to move will be mitigated.  I realise only too well that for many, even for most, moving is imperative both for finding a job or career enhancement. I'm well aware of how fortunate I am that that's never been an obligation upon me, although most of those I meet who have been regular movers don't seem to regret it until later in life, when the hankering to root becomes greater.    

Some people might suggest that it must be boring to live in the same place for ever. I can tell you that I quite frequently realise how little of where I live I actually know. There are villages within five miles or so that I rarely pass through or go to. You have to make an effort to explore and to observe, and it's arguable with our attachment to screens these days, we do less of this than our predecessors; and it's arguable also that we are the poorer as a consequence. I'm no different in that regard. Being aware of this is one thing, but making the break from the screen and all it offers us requires commitment.

So, the bottom line is to ensure that you make the most of where you live, appreciate it to the max, and be absolutely certain that in moving you will be finding somewhere better.  It’s the second most stressful thing people do, unfortunately also sometimes a relationship breaker (but perhaps staying put could be too); and be sure not to ‘throw the baby out with the bathwater’! 

I'm going nowhere!

 

Oliver

Oliver’s organic farm is in Shepton Montague, Somerset.  He grows cereal crops and also markets wheatgrass and broccoli sprout juices.  Find out more at Tonic Attack.

Changing Places is a guest post series about the power of place to change us.  You can find more stories in the series here.  If you’d like to share your own story, please contact me for submission details.

Tuesday
Nov062012

Come Walk With Me

Today I’m taking you on a walk.  Photo collages are all well and good but it’s difficult to see the detail, isn’t it?  Today, let’s have the whole picture!

The morning light is plentiful and golden…

Morning Light

The trees are leaf naked; the ground clothed thick…

Bare twigs, fallen leaves

Frost ices each skeleton outline…

Touched by frost...

The humblest brown leaf becomes a thing of wonder….

A leaf of wonder

We head onto the moor where frozen puddles are etched with patterns…

Etched patterns

Pebbles have become embedded in icy works of art…

Frozen art

Rime coated grasses emerge from frozen worlds beneath…

Emerging from the ice

 

For the first time in months, the ground is hard.  We can easily walk for miles…

Where we're walking

Sunday
Nov042012

Sunday Morning

Sunday Morning

 

It’s foggy here this morning.  Mist shrouded, thickly still.  The air bone cold and saturated with the scent of last night’s bonfires.  Smokey and delicious.

Sunday morning slumber blankets the fields.  No-one stirs but the birds and us.  The robin is first at the seeds as always - there before I’ve finished pouring.  Tame.  Unafraid.  Determined to feast first. 

Last night the sky exploded with colour: fireworks shooting up from the valley.  This morning the same world’s a soft, milky grey.  Scarcely breathing.

The frost’s slipping away now.  Joss is rolling on the still damp ground, a flurry of fur and fallen leaves. My muffled footsteps head for the house.  There‘s fruit cake for breakfast.  And the Aga‘s warmth.