Monday 24 August 2020

The Sea! The Sea! I Wish I Saw the Sea!

 

"Oh to go down to the sea again
          To the lonely sea and the sky."

Well I got as far as the front where I removed some weeds and cleared up a wee bit.  That and aches makes up my day.  I did this job because I thought 'Hermes' were delivering and I wished to be at the door to ensure he did not run away again.  Naturally it is tomorrow he is coming...
At least I was outside for a while.


How I miss the beach at Bournemouth!
There are other small coves around where it is possible to enjoy the sea, especially when few are around.  My dream home would have the right sea view in front of me and not far behind a railway, preferably a 'Heritage' railway, running steam every so often.  The view is somewhat different at the moment.  
One day when I am rich...


A stolen picture, taken from 'Edinburgh Past & Present' on facebook.  I even forget the lassies name, sorry.  She took this while landing at Edinburgh Airport (still called 'Turnhouse' by me!).  This is the area where I spent my first two years and then entered the school almost hidden high on the top left of the picture.  The view from the house we moved to looked over the Forth towards Fife, a super view, and on that page people often post pictures of sunsets and dawns to make me jealous.  I see trees and a park...  
This could be a worse view of course.  When I came here I was offered a basement in Dovercourt with a car park behind.  The view, and the mould on the wall, now attended to, was not to my liking, so here I reside.  Dovercourt is by Harwich which is a famous Submarine base, this was attractive but the flat was not.  The wee town itself was a bit rundown in spite of the tourist possibilities.  Not that I saw any submarines there now.  Sometimes I wish I had tried to 'go to sea' as so many used to in the past.  The idea of a rough crossing may have been what put me off.  Interestingly, my father was living just up from Granton Harbour having gone to the school just above the dock, yet he joined the army in 1925 when he could get no work.  I often wonder if he had tried for a seaman's job or if the waves put him off also?  The ships he saw as he grew up and paddled by the beach included the 'Grand Fleet,' or at least part of it based at Rosyth.  These must have impressed him, and he showed me where big guns once stood to defend the harbour, yet maybe a bullying corporal in the army was better than a ship rising and falling in the waves?
Better than most of the jobs I did have.


 

3 comments:

the fly in the web said...

Dr. Johnson once said, “No man will be a sailor who has contrivance enough to get himself into a jail; for being in a ship is being in a jail, with the chance of being drowned.”
But equally said “Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier, or not having been at sea.”
I miss sailing, or chugging off in a motor boat to go fishing but to be fair the knees are no longer up to clambering over gunwales so I must be content with the memories....the Essex mudflats, the chancy tides, the shifting sandbanks...and the occasional day when all went well.

Dave said...

There is somethings very relaxing about listening to the sound of the waves. Living by the sea....what about rising sea levels and coastal erosion.
The Hermes man who delivers for us is very good and fingers crossed we have never had a problem.

Adullamite said...

Fly, I wish I was down at the mudflats.

Dave, Send your Hermes man down here....