Fog and Gateways and Life, Moving on . . .

All through the night, the freighter sitting within a few hundred metres of my bedroom has been sounding its foghorn. This is a very loud foghorn. Luckily, I was tired enough that I slept through most of it, except for a few times in the night when I woke, wondered, recognized, and, reassured, fell back to sleep. After all, if you’re stationary, and in a cozy warm spot, there’s nothing threatening about fog. Rather the opposite, in fact, that muffling enveloping grey being something of an immense security blanket.
Still, comforting though that grey bank of humidity might be from the comfort of my bed, it can put more than a bit of a damper (sorry, pun not intended) on the mood in the daytime. So I thought I’d post some sunny-day photos from a few weeks ago, walking around the island.
This beautiful hand-wrought gate was built by a Hungarian refugee who landed on this wee island sometime after that big outpouring in the late 50s, as I understand the gossip/history. He moved along close to a decade ago (and there’s another good story there, but not for sharing so widely, sorry). The property has changed hands, and for a while was kept up, but it seems to be reverting to the land piece by piece, yielding a different kind of beauty as it does.
And as its cycle moves in one direction, another neighbour is spinning the wheel in a more positive arc, creating another beautiful fence by hand. Isn’t it magnificent in the afternoon fall sunshine?

Whoops! Just looked at the clock and I’d better run if I’m going to catch my ferry. Hope there’s some sunshine in your day!

10 Comments

  1. Susan Tiner
    21 October 2010 / 4:58 pm

    Yes, the fence is magnificent. Your neighbor is an artist?

  2. Susan B
    21 October 2010 / 5:40 pm

    Each of those fences is stunning in their own way. I love the character that wood develops over time.

  3. LPC
    21 October 2010 / 8:33 pm

    I hope you caught your ferry:).

  4. materfamilias
    21 October 2010 / 9:55 pm

    Susan: He teaches Woodworking, Drafting, etc., to high school students and builds in his spare time — but I'd say he's an artist, on this evidence. . .
    Pseu: Yes, too bad we can't appreciate this patina of age in our own organic surfaces. 😉
    LPC: It was close, but I made it, thanks!

  5. Duchesse
    21 October 2010 / 10:51 pm

    Hope someone rescues that little A-frame with the gate; it's magical, like someting out of a children;'s story, or the retreat I've always dreamed of.

  6. materfamilias
    22 October 2010 / 4:28 am

    Duchesse: I know! Isn't it just? I keep my fingers crossed. And the gate itself is a wonder, hand-adzed big timbers.

  7. Glennis
    22 October 2010 / 1:40 pm

    I've been traveling so I've had to catch up with you. I'm reading your Opera posts – just fascinating!

  8. La Belette Rouge
    22 October 2010 / 5:09 pm

    That fence looks both modern and archetypal. How extraordinary!
    Hope your day has sunshine, boots, and music.xo

  9. Unknown
    22 October 2010 / 11:43 pm

    I agree with Duchess on the "A" frame–I want to move in!

    Love all your fence pics–your neighbor is certainly talented. I have some fence pictures also–something sort of romantic about them, no?

  10. materfamilias
    23 October 2010 / 3:44 pm

    Aunt Snow: I'll have to hurry over to your place to find out where your travels have taken you.
    LBR: What a lovely wish: sunshine, boots, and music!
    f>50: I know! It's a storybook illustration.

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