late August – wet grass two new walks for this post – the Saturday before last I walked from St Monan’s to Pittenweem along the coastal path, and then inland via the Balcaskie estate and Abercrombie. in fact I’ve done this walk before, in early spring, but the other way round, and then I avoided Pittenweem harbour because my knee didn’t like steep slopes and lots of steps. the knee is so much better now it isn’t a problem, but this way round there’s no steep downhills. the two harbours are still working, used by local fishermen. between them there’s no beach to speak of, more a rocky foreshore exposing the geology. out there is a rather pointy large boat. I assumed it was military, but in fact it was a luxury vessel, on which Tom Cruise may, or may not have been, according to local rumour. inland more drawing than phone snaps around Inch farm the entrance to Balcaskie which has an ornamental gate and twin doocots (that’s dovecots for sassenachs) tree avenues a handsome gothicky house and park full of trees that just ask to be drawn then there’s the little disused church with its yews I’ll be going back with more paper scrap sketchbooks suddenly saw jaws in the gate latch … the combines were advancing as the day dried up and the sun was out. everything looking ready. I started this one early last week, it’s my last big piece of canvas off the roll, so 180 cm wide and about 170 tall. under that wash of pale pink and green are two or three more layers, but I wanted something much more fluid. Craiglug is the hill with rocky cliffs exposed above Dairsie. the track below it is lined with wild flowers, and rosebay is big and bold through August, its magenta pink enlivening the soft greens of tall grasses and cut hayfields … like this painting another day we walked along the Eden, which is infested with another pink flower, himalayan balsam, impatiens glandulifera, less welcome, being an invasive alien. I picked a big bunch and inserted it in the folds of a huge wool and silk shawl, making a huge bundle, to boil in my neighbour’s eucalyptus gunnii prunings it left pale green prints, which may not be light fast, deeply 3D impressions, and some vague peach-coloured marks from the flowers. the seed pods explode and shed hundreds of seeds everywhere. it tolerates low light levels and also shades out other vegetation, gradually impoverishing habitats by killing off other plants. rosebay willow herb is more elegant and fringes the dunes at Tentsmuir, and the stone walls around Cupar with its feathery pink fronds. once a week we walk at Tentsmuir … it’s always the same but always different. the light last week was silvery as the sun is lower in the sky now at 8.30 am grass of parnassus flowering now beside the pools, also known as the ‘bog star’, it isn’t actually a grass at all, belonging to an entirely different botanical class related to the saxifrages. it used to grow in the Norfolk broads, it likes damp places, and why it grows in a couple of places in Cairngreen wood, flowering much earlier, I have no idea. the sea was so calm and blue and the sun warming, one felt like swimming but two of these large lion’s mane jellyfish stranded on the beach would not encourage me to get in there. they deliver a very nasty sting with multiple hooks. two dead on the beach surely means a lot more in the water. back to the studio and I am working on a series of studies about Glen Feshie heather purples obviously … butterfly oranges little dark green triangles for the young pines then a slightly larger collaged (bits of an old map of Norfolk) canvas which started with a green and pink pour with lots of medium to keep the colours translucent and then when I painted over it I allowed quite a lot to show through or scratched back to it so it glows. then some text – Glen Feshie, and Sròn na h-Iolaire painted, scratched out partially, written with crayon which scratches through the wet paint .. a loose piece of primed canvas was the drip sheet, and all these lovely marks and runs are developing into something else, but I want to extend this canvas. I have the sewing machine out, making myself and others pj type trousers, and I’m thinking a zigzag stitch … it’s very Frank Bowling and to be honest I AM very influenced by his work just now. but I’m hoping that will take me somewhere new and interesting. I’ve always used drips and runs, and stuck things on the canvas (parts of a linen shirt as well as paper) the studio is feeling quite crowded the garden actually has some things in flower – red midget, a kind of prairie coneflower. these are spectacular, not in my garden, but on the second of the two new walks, in Foodieash. We parked on the green and took a path through trees to Cairnie fruit farm they have a maze, a tea room, endless things for kids to play on, there was a dog show, pick your own strawberries suspended at just the right height to pick, but we were just passing through to follow a long track, 1.7 miles to Moonzie the grass was very wet, and then quite tall, so we got wet feet and trouser bottoms. summer walking is worse for my poor boots, it’s like wading through water. views of all these big rolling hills topped by woods which are so typical of this part of Fife it was quite a steamy day, sun and cloud and high humidity after rain crops not dry enough to combine some already harvested this ruined tower house was built by the Lindsays in the 1500’s. it had five storeys and was L-shaped. not much of it is left. all the stone edgings of windows and corners have been taken. you can see more about it here we walked up the hill to Moonzie Kirk and wondered if we’d be able to see Norman’s Law, an Ochill we’ll like to have a go at just north-ish or north-westish. maybe that bit of brown hill. so that will be a post for another day. Post navigation O Caledonia, stern and wildtowering 4 Comments I always enjoy your blogs Jane. Even if I’ve seen the photos on FB, the narrative you weave on your blog refreshes and revives them differently. Thank you Bx Reply thanks Biddy, I’m grateful that you come here to read it! it refreshes it for me too. Reply Love the colours of these paintings, and love all the photos of these walks, love following you round! Reply Dear Trish, thank you! love that you love following me around! Reply Leave a ReplyCancel reply This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
I always enjoy your blogs Jane. Even if I’ve seen the photos on FB, the narrative you weave on your blog refreshes and revives them differently. Thank you Bx Reply
Love the colours of these paintings, and love all the photos of these walks, love following you round! Reply