Seashore

By Ashleylister @ashleylister
These are strange days indeed. I was planning to serve you up a sandy Saturday Blog - and will endeavour to do so still - but the progress of Coronavirus (alias Covid-19) is starting to make its presence felt now in dramatic fashion. What started as a strange new strain of a respiratory illness in Wuhan, China, is now sweeping with all the attributes of a pandemic right around the world.
As I type this blog, and to try and give some sense of perspective, there are more people living on Central Drive in Blackpool than there are confirmed Covid-19 cases in the whole of the UK at the moment (798 was the most recent official figure for the latter); and for the majority of people who contract this new strain of Coronavirus, the effects will be no worse, allegedly, than a mild bout of flu. Those citizens who are most at risk are the very old and anyone with an underlying respiratory issue. I fear a little bit for my uncle, in his nineties and living in a residential care home in Blackpool. I worry for my daughters who both live and work in London (one in the fashion industry and one at London Zoo) and that concern is as much for the economic impact this is going to have as anything. For myself, as supporters' liaison officer for Blackpool Football Club, I shall be kicking my heels for a few weeks, given the EFL's decision to pend all league football until April at the earliest.
I suppose what people fear most is the unknown: exactly how high the exponential rise in confirmed cases  is going to go and over what time period; whether/when parts of this country will have to be put into lockdown as appears to be happening in various European locales (Europe now being the epicentre of the pandemic, we're told); what the economic impact is going to be on those hundreds of thousands of businesses that rely on human footfall for their viability (and the staff they employ and the families they support). Thank you, China! (an ungracious thought, but one has to wonder exactly how all this started).
Once I've posted this blog, if the sun stays shining as it is currently doing, I shall take a long and bracing walk along the seafront in the jewel of the north, with its six miles of golden sand. If the tide is out (I haven't checked the tide tables, I'll just turn up and see) I might go down onto the seashore and let the sunshine, the rush of ozone and the open vista blow these viral blues away.

The first seashore I was taken to was a sandy beach near Lagos, Nigeria, as a small boy. I've seen photographs of me on the shore looking at the Atlantic rollers coming in but I don't remember much apart from the big blue blobs of stranded jellyfish melting in hot African sun. Then it was Southsea beach near Portsmouth, where my maternal grandparents lived - but that was all pebbly! Living in the east of England upon returning to the UK (Peterborough and Cambridge), our jaunts as kids to the seashore were typically to Norfolk, where Hunstanton with its wide expanse of sand was a favourite, although summer holidays to the Devon coast were also happy times.
Given my affinity with coast and sea (which I put down to my Viking lineage), it was strange that I should find myself residing and working in Hertfordshire (about as far from any seashore as it's possible to be in this country) for most of my adult life. Week-ends and holidays were always an opportunity to head to the margins of the land (be it in this country or abroad), to walk on the sand, to enjoy the sea and that special light that one finds where beach and ocean meet. Now that I live just minutes from one of the finest seashores in the British Isles, it can be a daily pleasure and I consider myself a very fortunate Seasider indeed.
Right, I've gone a bit Celtic fringe with this week's poem, something I shared as a work-in-progress with my friends of the Blackpool & Fylde Stanza group the other evening. They told me it was too long - so I've cut it into two separate poems and here's the first of them. (The other will appear at some later date, I'm sure). My thanks to my fellow poeticals for their helpful feedback, which I've taken into consideration in completing this piece.
I'll say no more in terms of a preamble except that Mwnt beach is in Ceredigion, South Wales, it's a worthwhile challenge to get to (my wife and I first visited it with our one-year old daughter in 1987 when it was in the middle of MoD land, though I believe the National Trust has now acquired it), plus it's a good place to see dolphins and sunsets and was cited recently as one of Europe's top ten loveliest hidden beaches (though don't all rush there, please). Oh, and the poem mentions splendid isolation, so it's also spookily topical. How about that? I hope you enjoy it.

Climbing Down To Mwnt
Under steep Foel y Mwnt it lay,
the hidden beach,
enticing and unpeopled,
a perfect sandy half-moon bay
hemmed by its silver tangle tideline.
The way to shore proved difficult,
downwards at forty-five degrees
with no obvious path,
exacting for its being so sheer
through coarse damp grass
and jagged yellow gorse
snagged with the fleece of sheep
perched unperturbed on such a slant.
They cropped at salty verdure
in mid- morning sun
in seeming defiance of gravity.
I marvelled that they didn't all
just roll down woolly to the shore,
as we navigated slowly past,
side-footing each steep step
by careful step, you leading,
laden with rugs and picnic basket, I
with our year-old daughter in my arms,
for we were young and strong
and all things were possible.
Glancing briefly up behind us
from the flatness of the strand,
that slope looked more imposing yet,
those dotted sheep the more improbable.
Apart from it not being on any map,
it's no wonder so few ventured
down to where we spread out rugs
in splendid isolation and set
our sand-child free to play.
We saw never another soul
all that perfect summer's day.
Thanks for reading. Stay healthy and have a good week, S :-) Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook

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