Posts Tagged ‘wales’

Photo of the Day: Exmoor Rainbow

Rainbow in Exmoor National Park

This was taken last week during our vacation in Southwest England.  We spent a few fun days poking around Cornwall, Devon and Somerset, glimpsing a side of England that I had never seen before.  I had previously spent most of my time in England in Brighton (about an hour south of London), which has a completely different atmosphere and pace of life than what I experienced in the Southwest.  Brighton is bustling, busy, throbbing with culture and counter-culture.  The areas I visited in the Southwest were comparatively much more quiet and rural, with a relaxed, easy-going atmosphere.  Granted, we did tend to spend more time during our vacation touring the national parks, rather than seeking out big city life.  

During this trip I really fell in love with the moors.  The first time I saw moorland in Wales, I have to admit I wasn’t very impressed.  It looked scrubby and boring, with not much vegetation.  I much preferred towering trees, falling leaves and wild bushes of edible berries.  However, the moors grew on me over time.  I’ve come to really love the sense of bleak desolation and moodiness that accompanies the moorland.  The colors of the vegetation are often beautiful, ranging from burnt orange and crispy yellow to drab olive green and patches of violet.  Add to this the atmospheric hues of washed out blues, greens, and blue-greens comprising the undulating hills in the distance, along with the often grey bundles of clouds trundling above, and all-in-all it becomes a rather impressive, thought-provoking environment.  Flocks of grazing sheep and wild ponies are often sprinkled around the hills, alleviating the desolate atmosphere with their lively and innocent presence.

I also have to admit that I fell in love with the moorland even further after seeing the 2006 BBC adaptation of Jane Eyre, which was aired recently on the weekends just before our vacation.  I haven’t read the book yet, but I really enjoyed the BBC version, and felt there was something endlessly beautiful about Jane’s desperate and tragic wanderings through the empty, unwelcoming moors.

But, tragedy and desolation aside, I managed to snap a slightly more happy photo of the moorland in Exmoor National Park.  This shot was taken near Dunkery Beacon after rainfall.  It was a perfect rainbow, and I’ll save the shot of the other end of it for another day.

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Castell Henllys

Yesterday we took advantage of the unexpectedly good weather to visit Castell Henllys, an iron age fort in Pembrokeshire.  The thatch buildings were interesting, but I had trouble taking interesting photos of them.  So I experimented more with the super macro function of my camera, and wound up with some promising shots.  After fiddling with them in Photoshop, here is what I came up with:

Pensive Bee in Castell Henllys

Bee in Pembrokeshire, Wales

Insect at the herb garden of Castell Henllys

Ram in Wales

Chow time for the pigs at Castell Henllys

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Wet, wet Wales

Hills of Wales

Sometimes it seems as though the rain will never stop… and when it does, the sky is still grey and the air is still damp.   This is Wales.  A near constant drizzle crescendoes into a generous downpour, followed by curtain of relentlessly grey clouds, interrupted by occasional bouts of meek sunshine before the drizzle washes in again.  The brief moments of bright blue skies and sun come as a welcome relief, (amidst disbelief), and is relished like a temporal/fleeting gift from above – always borrowed, never permanent.  It becomes precious.  Growing up in the Sunshine State, I’ve practically had an overdose of sunshine and warmth (the Welsh seem to think this is impossible).  Because of Florida’s humidity, I’m used to moisture in the air, so the damp doesn’t bother me (yet).  Because of the 6-month Atlantic hurricane season, I’m accustomed to daily rain showers.  But not on this scale.  The main difference is that in Florida, after the rainy spell subsides, there is the fail-proof promise of perfect skies and soul-warming sunshine.   I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen the sun here.   Today there was an article on WalesOnline declaring this to be The most miserable August on record - receiving only “about 90 hours of sunshine over the past 3.5 weeks”.  So we’re not just imagining it – the weather really is gloomy!

Welsh landscape

Sometimes I miss the ease and convenience of reliable sunshine, but on the whole it doesn’t phase me terribly.  I see this inclimate weather as an opportunity to look inward, instead of outward, for comfort and entertainment.  It offers an excellent opportunity for further creative explorations and soul-searching ruminations.  Perhaps due to the relative luxury of a tropical upbringing, I’m still in the phase where I see ”bad” weather as a novelty.  For a long time I’ve harboured romantic notions of what it must be like to spend time in Antarctica, Alaska, Iceland, or Tibet (for example, just a few places on my extensive “must-experience” list), and the weather in those places is far more extreme than what I’ve experienced here.  (Hmm, maybe I’d change my mind after living through a Welsh winter?  Although I did easily spend 3 weeks in the Himalayas over December and January in a hotel room with no heat except the miniscule warmth elicited from a tiny candle… so that’s something, eh?)  Growing up, I’ve always loved reading accounts of mystics, saints, yogis, monks and nuns who endured harsh environmental and climatic conditions for the sake of spiritual growth.  It’s part of the package of looking inward and facing reality.  It’s the appeal of asceticism and living in tandem with the rhythms of nature.  Although I’m inspired by those who have done it, I must admit that I’m not extreme enough at this point in my life to feel inclined to live in a barren cliffside cave in a remote mountain range for any length of time - I do like sitting next to cozy fireplaces!

hillside view in Wales

Wales is a remarkably, stunningly beautiful place of rolling green hills of amazing hues, dotted with flocks of grazing sheep; small villages tucked in snug corners; narrow, winding lanes lined by high hedges.  It is a country imbued with a quaint, untainted sense of authenticity.  It is simply one of the most beautiful and charming places I have ever been.  As a child growing up in Florida, I used to daydream about a magical, distant setting of green fertile fields and meandering rivers, where I could run free and be alone with nature, believing that such places only existed in the past, or in fanciful imaginations.  I’m delighted and enchanted to see my childhood daydreams materialize before my eyes in the form of this tiny country. 

A couple months ago I was lucky to view a showing in Aberystwyth of Sleep Furiously, a wonderful documentary about life and change in rural Wales, which I would recommend to anyone with an interest in either Wales, the pace of rural life, or the decline of small-scale agriculture and its effects on communities.

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ssssssssshhh…..

I’ve been a bit digitally quiet lately, working on art and exploring more of the Welsh countryside, but mainly working on a total revision of my website, which is proving to be intensely time-consuming!

In the meantime, here is a shot of the Welsh countryside. I particularly like this photo for the strong sense of isolation, and almost desolation, that I feel it evokes… a thin (one-lane) stretch of road snaking across empty terrain on a grey, overcast day. I feel it conveys the sense of quiet beauty that comes with open, empty spaces.

Lonely road in Wales, photo by Thaneeya

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Hello WALES!

I currently have 3 pieces on display at the Mid-Wales Art Open in Tregaron, Wales! They will be on display through April 19. Visit the Arts Center website for more info:

www.cambriaarts.org.uk

Celf Cambria Arts

Tregaron

Ceredigion SY25 6RS

Wales

T 01974 298965

Art fair in mid-Wales

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