Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Goodbye 2013

Breaking almost a whole back tooth on a toffee was the final straw for 2013. Thankfully my dentist has at least made it smooth and comfortable until I can get a new crown fitted. However, that final straw, will not be the last straw for me because I intend to 'Pick myself up, dust myself off and start all over again'! I have a god feeling about 2014
www.justgiving.com/Daphne-Belt

If you like poems I copy on to this blog please be very kind and donate via the above link to the children spending their days at the beautiful Chestnut Tree House Children's Hospice


Drizzle, Mist and Quiet Joy  

Soft mist or super fine, lightest, drizzly rain
Not sure which it was of the two was true
Starting out along a familiar woodland lane
I marvel at the thousand faces of the same
Place I have for years wandered through 

Most of it hides from view this day
Just fifty metres in any direction clear
Then falls the shrouded backdrop play
Clopping unseen riders chattering gaily
Hearing them invisibly coming near 

None of my favourite ‘Big Birds’ call
They seem stop-at-home in the wet
I imagine them huddled up in some tall
Tree deeper in the wood or scarp hill fall
With patience to wait to feed later yet 

Seriously slip-sliding on a cambered path
Muddy spreading puddles now demand
Some focus to avoid a cold mud bath
With chosen steps I hold a tree as a staff
Preventing a hurly-burly roll before I land 

The Saxon village shapes below cannot be seen
As all paths at this point climb and link
The mist thickens higher up and seem
Like low cloud in a mysterious movie scene
Yet in familiarity nothing scary here I think 

Soaked to the skin and cloaked in mist
Surrounding landscape lost from sight
Hat back on to help the chill desist
My gloves un-pocketed to cosily enlist
Still a huge pleasure in dim midwinter light 

The sheep cluttered crown of this dismal place
Gave some perspective through the drear
Still closing dampness to start a downhill pace
Path lost, so found the wrong gate at the base
My right handed gait brought me this to face 

A left turn quickly put the route to right
And back to where I knew I should be
Cloud clears putting mystic mist to flight
Green fields of winter cabbage bright
As my age old path down the valley I see

Monday, December 30, 2013

Winding down 2013

The annual end of year turbo session was done yesterday with friends from Tuff Fitty Triathlon Club and just a few of us from Trinity. Much more civilised in their venue in Arundel than in our very cold packing department at Stephen Belt Antiques and Shipping. I did three hours, of the four hour session. Whilst my husband/coach/best friend Steve, soldiered on to the end, I went for a nice walk in the woods with my daughter Jakki's dog Louis. He is staying with us until his family get back from a short holiday in Turkey. The notes I took during this walk resulted in yet another of my nutty poems that have become a daily feature of me life. The poems are my self therapy sessions and save me from self combustion!

Fallen Tree 

A full grown tree
Downed by the storms of late
Lays like an unconscious giant
Not so much uprooted
As is more common
When trees are felled by a tempest,
But viscously torn apart
As if by massive teeth,
Ripped asunder
Toward the base.
What force,
Completely smashed
This once lovely tree.
Clean exposed core wood
The colour of desert sand
Faces out and upward
Among huge splinters
That themselves give evidence
To the monstrous destruction.
Close to the sodden ground,
The torso, the corpse,
The recently sound trunk,
Has itself committed
An almost equal crime;
As it fell,
The sheer weight of the big tree
Brought about life’s finale
For two younger, weaker trees
That now involuntarily support it,
Slightly off the ground
Like the worlds strongest man
Lifting the Olympic medal winning weight.
Ivy still clings to the great mass
Stretched like a bow string over the
Decimated woodland giant
That has stood handsomely there
In the middle of a tight,
Closely tree-ed wood
Showing off the beauty of its
Abundant foliage for decades,
Now it lies, mangled, mutilated,
Humbled and beaten
Beyond any hope of repair,
Still sucking the last drops of sap
From the minute strands
Still attached with weakening sinew’s
To the stricken base,
And by that to the life giving roots
Still firmly implanted in the ground.
No miracle surgery can save
The life of the broken tree.
The time it has left….
Is only in wait for the saw and axe.