Pages

Friday, 6 December 2013

Out In The Storm


A Gap In The Clouds       

The wind began last night, rattling the trees and roaring round the chimney stacks. With it came rain and, oddly for midnight in December, a rise in temperatures. I woke several times in the dark as bigger gusts of wind banged and cracked. By dawn the temperature had dropped below freezing and everything was icy with frozen rain. Light snow was falling and the wind was still very strong.

Heavy Snow Falling

By afternoon the wind had dropped to merely gale force. A bitterly cold north-west wind driving thick clouds and heavy snow showers across the sky. The temperature was -1C, the highest it reached all day, when I ventured out to see what I could of the stormy world. Underfoot the ground was crunchy and slippery, icy patches hidden under a thin skim of snow.

White-Out

The snow came horizontally, driven hard by the wind. Cold and dry it streaked across the land. Gusts of wind picked up fallen snow and sent it whirling through the air in great clouds. At times as the swirl of snow from both ground and sky whipped all around me I was in a near white-out, only able to see hazy distant trees and tufts of vegetation. The snow stung my face and I walked with my gloved hand shielding my cheeks and my jacket hood pulled tight.


A Glimpse of Distant Hills



The world felt confined and small, enclosing me in a cocoon of snow, yet at the same time vast and endless, a white cloud stretching to infinity. The hills were invisible except in a brief gaps below the clouds. Mostly the world was restricted to a few hundred metres or less.

As I walked home the clouds parted to reveal a thin crescent moon hanging in the cold winter sky.

4 comments:

  1. "Cold and dry it streaked across the land." I like that!

    Bill Gordon

    ReplyDelete
  2. Life as everyone at some point all should know,miles of pure nature the richest man in the world standing here in nature cant buy it one cant buy paradise

    ReplyDelete
  3. Iv,e been to some amazing spaces in Scotland,then i traveled to south of france,sadly many of the awesome rocky seacoasts have been turned into millionaire playgrounds our scotland is wonderfully wild never should she be tamed by money

    ReplyDelete
  4. Walking in mist passing the cuillins that look different every day neist point, where the sea will allow you a flash of whale or the strange staffa rising from the sea and its own comedy show........the puffins

    ReplyDelete