Our local churchyard in the snow. Nobody had been there since before Christmas, and any Christmas worshippers' footsteps had been long since buried. With the roads in a few inches of snow and the snow deadening any sound, it felt as if the village was abandoned long ago, and was now a long way from inhabited lands; as if, stumbling out of the woods, we had found a place long forgotten.
Thursday, 14 January 2010
Cemeteries and Snow
Our local churchyard in the snow. Nobody had been there since before Christmas, and any Christmas worshippers' footsteps had been long since buried. With the roads in a few inches of snow and the snow deadening any sound, it felt as if the village was abandoned long ago, and was now a long way from inhabited lands; as if, stumbling out of the woods, we had found a place long forgotten.
A Time of Deep Snow
Kington this morning was an empty town of alleyways and quiet lanes and dirty slush; misty distances and heavy skies. The road through the village is impassable in an ordinary car and we got a lift from Thomas the joiner. Even his Land Rover found it difficult.
Some pictures recently from the summer in New Zealand; it seems a long time since we have seen green. The landscape is monochrome, white fields and black trees and hedges, the skies grey and featureless.
Midwinter Snowfall
We are snowed in and have been for a day or so. Schools closed, airports open occasionally, roads blocked, the usual problems with snow ploughs and grit. We can see the gritters every now and then on the far valley road, connecting New Radnor with Kinnerton.
I will upload some photographs of the village in midwinter; a misty day, a day of icicles and haze and deep snow. And the village silent, eerily empty, roads almost impassable. Midwinter.
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