Come Rain or Shine

26th June 2018

First thought
Cow parsley
Hemlock and hogweed
Then felt a raindrop
Yet best umbrella’s at the beach
According us shade from the glaring sun


24 words written for Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Umbrella

Posted in Poems (Some Silly) | Tagged , , | 13 Comments

Friday Fliers

A selection of butterflies, damsels and dragons. And a treat from our archived walk on 13th June 2022. Enjoy

13th June 2022

🔼 Small Tortoiseshell 🔽

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Two moths’ caterpillar: A rather fussy-looking yellow-tailed moth 🔼🔽 and a mullein moth

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Butterflies: comma and 🔼🔽 an unmistakable orange-tip

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

A blue damselfly couple, coupling 🔼🔽⏬ and what I think is a female emperor (empress 😂) dragonfly freshly emerged from it’s nymph-stage. A rare moment to watch, which we did while we lunched

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Hope you enjoyed.

Not sure what I’ll have for you next week, but I’ll have something. Season’s not over yet!

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Don’t Pick These Flowers

Do not pick these flowers!
Yet, foolish human, look what she does
Doesn’t she know what will follow
The torrential downpouring heavy showers
Heavens cracking, splitting, renting
Thunder clapping, tight clouds snapping
Sparks shocking, tearing down to earth
Such destruction for a flower
Foolish human, doesn’t understand their worth

Posted in Crimson's Creative Challenge, Photos, Poems (Some Silly) | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Crimson’s Creative Challenge #048

Every Wednesday I’ll post FOUR photos (if you want to get a head start you’ll find them marked in that week’s Sunday Picture Post and Tuesday Treats). Lots of choice!

And here they are – with apologies for the slightly different photo format:

You respond with something CREATIVE. Perhaps an  answering photo, or micro-fiction, or a poem, or just a caption

As before, there are only two criteria:

!!!!! Your creative offering is indeed yours !!!!!

!!!!! Your writing is kept to 150 words or less !!!!!

If you post a link in the comments section of this post I’ll be able to find it.

Here’s wishing you inspirational explosions. And FUN

Posted in Crimson's Creative Challenge, Photos | Tagged , , | 15 Comments

Tuesday Treats: Verge and Fenny Flowers

A selection of flowers featured on our walk from the archives (13th June 2022). Enjoy

13th June 2022

Scrolling this collection I noticed a distinct ‘white’ theme to these roadside flowers 🔼 white campion 🔽 stitchwort

13th June 2022

Almost keeping to the white theme is this honeysuckle 🔽

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

In the dampened grasses of the sodden common, orchids 🔼🔽 and ⏬ always a delight to see, ragged robin

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Two fruiting bushes 🔼 the commonly-found wetland currant, this one red-berried and 🔽 the blackberry bramble, its pink flowers kissed by a hungry bee

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Continuing with the pink flowers 🔼 one of the many species of cranesbill, 🔽 foxglove and not quite so pink ⏬ woundwort

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

That’s all folks. Don’t forget to check out Friday Fliers. There’s a treat waiting for you there

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Seed Fall Ch30

Chapter Thirty of my current wip. As before, all and any comments very much appreciated

Please note: This is a weekly post

Back at base Jess woke to horrific screams, frantic they were, full of denial. Not exactly the usual dawn calls from the forest. Louder. And Jess could only discern the one voice. Not a troop of noisy monkeys then. Besides, it wasn’t yet dawn. Jess grabbed his stun-gun.

He’d not been the only one called from their sleep. The base buzzed with chatter, stun-guns in every hand. But though Jess scanned the base he could see no intruder. Maybe hidden behind a hive?

Antel emerged from the hive he shared with Zeke, Brib and Miax. None of those held stunners.

“Put your weapons away.” Antel accompanied his shouted words with calming motions. “No invasion, not under attack.” He turned to Jess. “He’s conscious now if you want to speak with him.”

Jess turned back to his clutch. “You heard. All this commotion, that’s just Canipse regaining consciousness. Take that as a warning, anyone else thinking of pointing their stun-gun at their head. Bed. Sleep.”

The previous morning at the cave, after Antel had examined Canipse and declared him alive, the Banmakka hunters had melted away. Not foolish enough to risk a return through the forest until the sun was fully risen, Jess and his team stayed in the cave with Canipse. But even in daylight to negotiate that trail wasn’t easy. They numbered four – how they’d have managed with less, Jess didn’t want to think. As for that precipitous track up to the farm, Jess hoped never to repeat that experience. But at least they didn’t encounter predatory cats, nor disturbed disgruntled boars and snakes.

Kookka took one flier, Dorsin with him. Jess took the other with Antel and the miraculously still-unconscious Canipse. Arrived back at base the catering overseer still hadn’t recovered.

“Why?” Jess wanted to know. “When we take down an attacking animal it recovers faster than this, though it might be ten times the size of Canipse.”

“I don’t know for certain,” Antel said. “But I can guess. Those stun-guns always remain charged, yea? And usually in close proximity to the Techs? That suggests that, as with the psi-lights, they’re psi-powered. And I’d say that without the Techs, they draw their charge from us instead – at least from those who can fly.”

After those few words, Jess had left Kookka and the medic to settle Canipse into Antel’s bed. Jess had objected to Antel’s offer of his hive. But the overseer would need continuous observation until he’d recovered and where better than there.

Now with caution, Jess entered the medic’s bed-cell. Canipse’s throat must have been strained from his screams for now they’d subsided to croaks. He thrashed, eyes open, gaze lifeless. Conscious he might be but… Jess turned to Antel. “Where is he?”

“At a guess? The psi-sphere.”

Jess stared at Antel, for a moment agape. “The stunner sent him there?” He closed his eyes and tried to think, to logic it out. But though he’d the study and training of mineralogy and metallurgy, he hadn’t the years of studying life-forms that was Antel’s training and his ongoing interest.

“My guess is the stunner created a loop.”

“But he wouldn’t open to the psi-sphere.”

Forced a loop?” Antel amended.

Jess looked around him, as if he’d find answers scribed on Antel’s wall. “What do we do with him? He can’t remain in your bed. And we’ll have to find someone to…to feed him and do. That’ll have to be one of his operatives. Will he recover, do you think?”

“I’m not a Fire-keeper.” Antel scooped the bedcover from the floor where Canipse with his thrashes had thrown it. “Let’s just arrange his care – before he pisses the bed. My bed. He doesn’t smell too sweet as it is.”

Canipse’s home-hive was Number Five, shared with Guul and Azal, the textile and domestic overseers, and the ‘liaison operative’, Inchat. Liaison operative was an ancient and obscure designation whose origin was lost to the wideness of the universe. Within the GM Programme, liaison operatives served wherever needed in whatever capacity. Despite the evidence of Joel to the contrary, Jess thought of them as unskilled general workers.

“We’ll take Canipse to his own place, and swap Inchat with Dov,” Jess decided. Dov was a healer who served Antel when needed but otherwise worked alone. He’d be ideal. “As to a replacement overseer…?” Without pulling someone from the farms, there was really only Mavlin, from Hive Six.

“Enjoy playing Tech?”

Jess ignored Antel’s jibe. “Let me know the moment there’s any chance of getting any sense from him.”

*

Jess hadn’t been able to sleep after that disturbance. He spent the rest of the night and into morning writing reports. The report on Canipse, the Banmakka and the cave took the longest. He didn’t know when his reports would reach the eyes of a Tech, but he’d rather be prepared.

Reports written, Jess called Mavlin to his hive. Despite his initial doubts as to the wisdom of appointing Mavlin to catering overseer, during their chat Mavlin showed himself capable. He had farmwork experience, wasn’t averse to the digging and hoeing, and could cook.

“How long have you been with the GM Programme?”

“My fifteenth assignment.” He had a slight lisp, lacking two front teeth.

“Then it’s time you were promoted.”

“As at every assignment I’ve hoped.”

When Jess looked in query at him, he added, “Techs don’t like me.”

Again, Jess looked in query at him. “We were assigned as cooks, sister and me. A chemical processing place. We refused to cook what they gave us.”

“Which was?” Jess asked but Mavlin refused to answer. Jess left it. “Well, if you perform at your best and impress me, we could make this a permanent post.” He was reluctant to allow Canipse back into the privileged position. “At least until the Techs catch up with us.”

The workday done and still no news of Canipse, Jess hooked his favourite drum from the corner near his cell door and settled into the comfort of his hive’s soft seat.

His favourite drum – it was his largest. Tall rather than chunky. It had taken him three years to craft it, another year to treat the skin for its head and to set it tight. It had a good tone from curb to centre. Maybe it couldn’t transport him to the Animosphere like Kookka’s harp, but at times it took him into the psi-sphere and at the very least it helped unwrap the tight threads of tension that too often of late bound him at day’s end.

He was lost to the taps and the rhythms. The rain pattering the roof, the heavy sound of the four-footed hive-sized dlangi on the run. Cela-Byi’s light gasps as she laughed. He stopped drumming. Cela-Byi. He had left her in that cave, an outcast of her dow. He ought to return and ensure her safety. If anything happened…he was responsible.

“You didn’t have to stop just for me,” Kookka’s deep voice crept in from the door.

Jess covered the moment with a laugh. “Resting my hands. Too much drumming gives you calluses.” He waved his hands as evidence.

“First time I’ve heard that. More like you were somewhere and I called you back. But since you are back –” he held up a black distended bladder “– our precious Saker has been brewing, again.”

“In which case, best you come in. Take a seat. But haven’t you brought your harp?”

Kookka settled beside Jess, his legs still pressed against the monster-drum. “I thought we might talk.”

“Of things that can’t be said while Techs are near?”

Kookka passed the bladder to Jess. “Techs and others. I’m thinking this could be the place.”

Jess didn’t immediately answer but allowed the bladder to squirt a cold sweet liquid into his mouth. That first mouthful left a bitter aftertaste. But Jess had experienced Saker’s brews before and knew the second mouthful would chase that away.

He passed the bladder back to Kookka. “I agree it’s the best place any has ever looked. But the very thing that makes us say that is the very thing that makes me hesitate.”

“Because you’re the zem?”

“Without those Techs I’m now fully responsible for the clutch.”

“We could leave it till the final year. Schedules and routines in place, any problems arising sorted. Everything smooth as my chin.” Kookka caressed his jaw.

“And that’s the other thing.” Jess held his hand out for the brew-bladder. He hadn’t wanted to discuss this yet but now Kookka had broached the subject…“You say everything will be smooth running, but there’s been contact at Hives Seven and Eight. How long before the operatives there are driven to…” he couldn’t say it.

“Mate?” Kookka supplied the word.

“And die? Kookka, this clutch is on course to destruction. I took Joel, Zeke, Saker and Brib with me to sort that problem with Poalt. So, it was a Banmakka female, not from our breed-pool. But born of an Itamakku mother? Hear what I’m saying?”

Kookka took the brew-bladder out of Jess’s wildly gesticulating hands. “All the more reason to make this the place. Could be the only way we survive. You might think about that.”

But Jess didn’t want to think. He slammed his hands across the tall drum’s head and beat out an angry tattoo.

To continue next Monday

Hope you enjoyed

All comments welcomed

Posted in Fantasy Fiction, Mythic Fiction | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Sunday Picture Post: A Walk to Wheatfen

This week the soaring temperatures have kept me housebound. So it’s just as well I’ve archives to call on. Here’s a walk from 13th June 2022. I know I’ve shared various photos from this walk before but – well, let’s let the photos speak for themselves. Hope you enjoy

13th June 2022

The bus drops us at Hellington, and we never can resist yet another exploration of this wonderful old church 🔼🔽 of all the photos I’ve taken here, this one I like best. It has a Renaissance feel to the view. And old porches like this are rare

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

A little used lane leads us to the common 🔼🔽⏬ oddities to be viewed along the way

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

The common, looking ahead 🔼 and 🔽 looking back once we’ve crossed a field ⏬ Why none taken in between? I clicked a few flowers and butterflies, but generally, with it so wet underfoot all focus was for staying dry and upright!

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Wheatfen is a wetland nature reserve, part of the Norfolk Broads 🔼 we sit on a thoughtfully provided bench to eat our lunch ⏬🔽 before making our way down to the River Yare – sails seen beyond the reeds

13th June 2022

13th June 2022

Wetlands can be very wet, and in places dangerous. A boardwalk allows access to oft-flooded areas 🔽

13th June 2022

Then the walk has to be reversed to catch a bus home

If you missed my previous posts featuring Wheatfen and Hellington church, check them out here and here

Hope you’ve enjoyed

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Lake of Dreams

There was no avoiding it, she had to say it, for no matter how she turned it, Kerrid could suggest nothing other. She drew in a deep breath.

“That dream we share, that nightmare of falling through a storm, it’s a memory. A memory of our banishment. And we fell – were pushed – from the highest place, the place of divines.” She wanted to hide her head. Such audacity. And she hadn’t yet said it plain. “We are banished divines.”


79 words written for Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt: Audacity

No apology for my outright audacity in using Sammi’s Weekend Writing Prompt to sneak in a small promotion. I know she won’t mind.

Posted in Fantasy Fiction, Mythic Fiction, The Spinner's Game | Tagged , | 10 Comments

Friday Fliers

A selection of the butterflies we encountered on our walk 6th August 2025. Enjoy

6th August 2025

🔼 Speckled wood  🔽

6th August 2025

6th August 2025

🔼 Green veined white 🔽 Holly blue

6th August 2025

6th August 2025

🔼 Gatekeeper 🔽

6th August 2025

6th August 2025

🔼 Common blue 🔽 ⏬

6th August 2025

6th August 2025

6th August 2025

🔼 Silver washed Fritillary 🔽

6th August 2025

🔽 Red admiral

6th August 2025

And that’s all for now folks

 

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CCC047: Howard’s Flat Tyre

I was scarcely out of the gate when Howard skidded his bike up beside me.

Heart aflutter. A thousand insects river-dancing in my cavities.

“You going mistletoeing?”

I held up the twine I’d use to pull the clusters closer so I could cut them. No stone yet attached, I’d find that later.

“Can I join you?” He tapped on the pole strapped to his crossbar. “Dad’s apple-picker. Could make it easier.”

He’d no need to tempt me. Howard had been my crush since middle school. And now he wanted to come mistletoeing with me? Oh wow.

But I discovered all was not as it seemed when, later, he proudly displayed his bunch of severed mistletoe.

“Now, thanks to you and your help, Melanie won’t be able to resist me at the Christmas dance.”

What? Melanie? Not me?

I left Howard to walk his bike home, because Howard’s bike now had a flat tyre.


I might have exceeded the word limit. I do apologise.

Posted in Crimson's Creative Challenge, Mostly Micro, Photos | Tagged , , , | 15 Comments