The rough and the smooth
I don't know if anybody out there is reading this nostalgia-fest, but it's been bloody enjoyable trawling through my old notes to pick out the highlights (and a few lowlights) that my young self committed to paper... as I've said before, it's cheap therapy!
Dungeness March 1978
My stay has come to an end. April has just taken over from
March and the weather seems to know it, with the scudding greyness having been
removed by bright gentle warmth. I’m
sitting in one of the mini railway carriages that are pulled by the RHD steam
engines that ply the ‘model’ railway track from Dungeness to Hythe. And then, from Hythe, a coach back to London.
My attention is drawn to the recently emerged bees busily
foraging amongst the gorse blooms. A few butterflies also flit in and out of
view. It looks like spring – it even smells of spring. I desperately want to
get off of the train and return to the observatory. Bugger it! It almost hurts
to contemplate leaving and returning home. It’s not as if what awaits me at
home is undesirable, it’s just that Dungeness has become a very special place
to me. The birds, the people, even the scenery in a perverse sort of
way…they’ve all melted together to form a secondary life that I want to
experience on a full time basis. Why don’t I just get out of the carriage now
and stay. Resign from being an art student. Sign on the dole. Live at the
observatory and act as assistant warden. What’s stopping me? The truth is I’m stopping myself, Mr. Bloody
Sensible, that’s who. Why can’t I be carefree for once in my life instead of
toeing the line all of the time. What am I afraid of? Insecurity? Uncertainty
of the future if I don’t complete my education? There’s no money in wardening
that’s for sure, but so what, I’m only 19, there’s plenty of time to settle
down yet. The steam whistle sounds. Passengers scurry into the carriages and
the conductor joyfully waves his flag towards the driver. What’s he got to be
so happy about? Doesn’t he know that in a few days there’ll be Willow Warblers,
Whitethroats and goodness knows what swarming over the peninsula while I’ll be
in an Epsom art college missing it all. The train slowly draws away, mini
carriages full of proportionately large but still only normal sized people,
mostly families out for a novelty ride, except for me, using it as public
transport and feeling ludicrous as well as dejected.
Dungeness May 1978
How sweet is a stolen day. Should be at art college but I
have persuaded a fellow student, who happens to own a car, that he really needs
to see this shingle wonderland. A pleasant drive down is taken through a sunny
Kent countryside foaming with Hawthorn blossom. A casual pint and a game of
pool at the Jolly Fisherman precedes a seawatch where I happily scope my first
ever Pomarine Skuas (a flock of seven spooned delights) as they lazily beat
their way up-channel, along with a pink-flushed Roseate Tern. Back at the observatory
my offer to do a net round is taken up and I joyfully remove a Wryneck from a
mist net on the edge of the desert. I wander around in a beatific state until
late afternoon when a flock of four Turtle Doves are flushed from behind the
café and continue inland. I could so easily have missed all this.
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Bob