August

House in the Woods by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk).It is already the 12th of August – where is time going? Before the month flies past I dip into my seasonal reading again. Stephen Moss, in his book Wild Hares and Hummingbirds, describes August as “the height of summer: long, hot, sunny days…” That’s not quite matching our experience so far with temperatures below what they were in June. Still it’s much warmer than last year’s summer in Scotland. When I take Little Owl to meet her friends at the nearby splash park she is the first to strip off, amazed that her pals think it’s cold. However we could do with some really fine weather to ripen off the tomatoes, which are abundant but all green. In Moss’ garden in Mark, Somerset, berries are ripening everywhere and the first fruits of the harvest are celebrated by a harvest supper the locals call Harvest Home. This sounds to me as though it coincides with the traditional festival of Lammas, where the first wheat harvest would have been greeted with celebrations.

Steve Roud discusses Lammas in his book The English Year. He says that the word ‘Lammas’ comes from the Old English hlafmaesse, which means ‘loaf-mass’, often celebrated with loaves of bread. We’ll be hanging on for September for our harvest celebrations. As I read Roud’s chapter on August I’m reminded that, although it is interesting to look back at the customs of our ancestors there’s much that should stay firmly confined to the past. Wisely, Roud doesn’t go into extensive detail when he mentions old customs of bull-baiting and cock-fighting. Sparrow-mumbling is another term I would suggest you don’t look up. While there is much wrong with our world and society, thankfully there is now small tolerance for such abuse and cruelty.

On a lighter note Roud relays the amusing tale of the Congleton Bells, a custom that fell on the 12th August in Congleton, Cheshire. The church there is dedicated to St Peter ad Vincula (St Peter in Chains – read Acts 12 if you’re not sure) and so a local feast was held on his day in August. The town would be woken by the din of a noisy procession carrying “horse collars hung round with numerous bells of peculiar shape; these collars were placed on men’s shoulders and, walking through the streets of the town, the men shake the collars vigorously and thus cause the bells to emit a loud noise.” Apparently this was supposed to mimic the sound of St Peter’s chains. The bells and the rights to process with them was hereditary and passed into the hands of a family of chimney sweeps named Stubbs. Roud says, “They had taken to profaning the occasion by getting drunk and descending into burlesque. Finally, when two branches of the family were disputing ownership of the bells , and both had been locked in the town gaol for fighting, the town clerk took the opportunity to buy the bells, and from then on they belonged to the town’s corporation.” Those naughty chimney sweeps!

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Eggs

Wood pigeon egg shellWe found this shell in the garden the other day. I was hoping it would be the egg shell of something really exciting. Just recently a species of fly that had been thought extinct turned up on a nature reserve near us, so you never know. Some lesser-spotted something or other would have been cool. Little Owl suggested it might be a dinosaur egg but given it was only the size of a fifty pence piece we decided that was probably doubtful. It turned out to be the discarded shell of a wood pigeon chick. Not very exciting at all. Still, fun to turn natural history detectives for half an hour.

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Home

Photograph of a kite in the sky by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)We’re back from our holidays, our suitcases crammed full of happy family memories and a copious amount of stowaway sand.

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Holidays

'Lunky' by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)As today is the first day of the school holidays it has obviously poured with rain all day. Tomorrow we are off on our holidays to Pembrokeshire so have been packing. I’d like to promise sketches on my return but keeping Finch from charging off a harbour wall or diving into the nearest rock pool may keep me busy.

Here’s a little monkey who’s also packing.

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July

Dragon! by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)In my seasonal reading, Stephen Moss, in Wild Hares and Hummingbirds, describes July as a month of stasis, “a chance to reflect on the rollercoaster ride of spring.” Now chicks have been raised, parent birds are moulting ready for the colder weather to come. Insects take centre stage. He describes grasshoppers, bees, butterflies, moths, including the very special Hummingbird Hawkmoth. He discovers all sorts of beetles and snails on a pond-dipping expedition with his children. The month starts with the white froth of elderflower and hogweed but gives way to the lilac hues of purple loosestrife and the various forms of willowherb.

The festivity that stands out in July in Steve Roud’s book, An English Year, is the Well-dressing traditions of Derbyshire. Roud describes the decorations here: “One or more boards with a raised edge are prepared, depending on the size of the project. Hundreds of nails are driven into the board, to help keep the other materials in place, and it is then covered with a smooth layer of well-puddled clay, half an inch to an inch thick. The basic design has already been marked out on large sheets of paper, which are laid across the boards, and the lines of the picture are pricked out through the paper on to the clay. The outlines of the design are then filled out using hard objects such as small cones, berries, seeds, or pieces of wood. The full picture is then coloured in, painstakingly, using moss, leaves and individual flower petals, all pressed into the clay by hand.” Despite claims of a history that dates back to pagan times, Roud says the tradition cannot be found to have existed before the eighteenth century, and only then in reference to the village of Tissington. I think it sounds lovely, although can’t you just imagine a Midsomer Murder-type intrigue happening between rival well-dressers?!

By the way, there’s a dragon hidden in the shed and Dad must never find out!

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Rocket box

'RocketBox' illustration by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)If you sat quietly in our living room you could be forgiven for thinking that we’ve got a fairly serious plumbing issue. From all corners of the room comes a steady chorus of dripping, punctuated with the odd bubble. There’s nothing wrong with the plumbing but Big Dreamer has been busy home brewing. On various shelves and in several cupboards there are bottles and buckets gently fermenting their way to readiness. His first attempt at a beer made from hops necessitated the purchase of the biggest pan I have ever seen. Little Owl was delighted with the box it came in and adopted it as a rocket.

She has spent hours decorating it and has even slept in it. She insists on being blasted off upstairs come bedtime. Finch edges eagerly around the rocket box while deep inside Little Owl keeps watch for any incursions using her periscope. Finch has finally got the hang of walking. He has the stance of a cowboy and tucks his thumbs under his armpits, his elbows out at right angles as if he were about to do the hornpipe. He is no match for Little Owl however. No matter how hopeful his beaming smile he will never know the wonders of the inside of the rocket box; he’s far to easy to overbalance. Just wait Little Owl, I say, just wait!

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Veg patch update

illustration of an owl by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)Little Owl did very well in both her performances this week. We’ll be singing the songs to Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat for some time to come. I was completely mobbed on the Hook-A-Duck stall at the school summer fete. Two hours never passed so fast! There are still three weeks to go until the end of term and I’m feeling exhausted already. We’ve got Sport’s Day and Parent’s Evening to come yet. I don’t know how the teachers do it. Here’s an update on our veg patch. I’d love to know how your’s are doing.

Beetroot: planted three rows two weeks each apart. Coming on well in spite of the sparrows pecking their leaves.

Spinach: First row of perpetual spinach has given us multiple pickings already. The second two rows are a variety called Red Cardinal and keep bolting.

Peas: Pods and flowers everywhere – yippee!

Courgettes: no sign of them at all. Probably should have started them off indoors. I’ve given up and sown kale.

Tomatoes: I have only lost two plants of the beef variety and the cherry tomato variety is looking good. Leaves have stopped turning yellow since I remembered to feed them! I’m doing my best at ‘pinching out’ like it says in the books but I still don’t really get which to pinch.

Pumpkins: three plants coming on very well. One seedling eaten by slugs (or was it the sparrows?)

Sorrel: definitely distinct red-veined seedlings have appeared. It must be the sorrel surely?! Very, very slow growing. Thank goodness it’s a perennial.

Lettuce: brilliant, just grows and grows and grows.

Beans: Have recovered from initial slug attack and are making good progress.

Sweet peas: gone completely mad. The house is littered with jam jars full of them.

Fruit: the raspberry bushes are still little and won’t fruit until next year but we have a smattering of gooseberries and blackcurrants. One of the gooseberry bushes is a cutting taken from one of the bushes on the farm so I feel very proud.

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Sketchbook

This week I’m drawing more cyclists.

Sketch of two men on a tandem by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

Sketches of cyclists by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk).

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Garden warfare

Swimming Hippos by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)It’s going to be a busy week in our house. Little Owl is not just in one theatrical production but two. Then Friday is the school fete. It’s my first ever school summer fete so I’m pretty excited! I’m in charge of the Hook-A-Duck stall and have been busily painting signage. 50p a go and you get a prize every time. What’s not to like? Then of course there’s the ash tree seedlings to do battle with. What?! I hear you shout. There is a large ash tree that spreads its canopy over our garden and it is ladened with seeds. It’s a beautiful tree but those seeds are a menace. If you should ever want an ash tree sapling do let us know because they spring up from every nook and cranny. In fact, we could probably start our own ash tree nursery based on our patch alone. With each warm day the threat of this year’s crop casts a darkening shadow over the garden.

However, an incident last week did mellow my attitude slightly. One morning a brightly coloured bird peeked in at our back door, swiped some straw from our hanging basket liners, and flitted off up into the ash tree. Do you know what it was? A goldfinch! The bird with the jolly colouring of a clown. And it wasn’t just one goldfinch but five, all clowning around in the seed-heavy branches. So I’ve called a truce with the ash tree, if not with its seeds, and will think of the goldfinches every time I pull up yet another ash tree seedling from the vegetable patch.

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Sketchbook

This week I am drawing cyclists.

Sketch of a man on a penny farthing by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

Sketch of a woman and her bicycle by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

Sketch of a man on a bike by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

Sketch of a man on a bicycle. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

Sketch of a lady and her bicycle by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

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