Town
Travel - My favourite town by Dizzy Greenfield
I’ve
never been one to stay at home - always happy to get on a flight to anywhere –
so I thought it would be difficult to choose where to write about. I started
jotting down snippets about the far-away places that I’d visited and then I
stopped. I realised that I’d never spent long enough in any to really know
them.
So,
my place isn’t in a town or a city, and not on the other side of the world –
it’s in a tiny hamlet, hardly on the map. But this is the place I have loved
for twenty four years, and forever.
The
farmhouse nestles in front of a wood, protected by trees on three sides and
sited on a remote country estate on the Somerset/Wiltshire border. I remember
every inch of it, from each room of the house, to the fields and hills which
lay beyond our tiny windows. From the warmth of the kitchen, my back against
the Rayburn, I watched the season’s change.
Overlooked
by the site of an ancient hill fort, way up where the ground rises above the
farm, the oak tree had been a natural playground for our daughter. The sheep
and lambs used its branches as a shade from the sun, and sheltered from storms
and snow in its hollowed-out middle.
Although
the woods weren’t an original plantation (new beech tree’s had been planted
after the Second World War), it always felt as if the landscape had changed
little.
Frequent
power cuts and winter cold made it easy for me to imagine the history of this
place: the people and animals that resided there long ago. The ground floor of
the house had once housed cows, and I could picture the people who’d lived
upstairs and benefitted from the warm of the beasts as central heating. The
back house, that used to be the milking parlour, still smelled of the past
- the brick floor worn to a channel down
the middle, where the spilled milk and water of generations had washed the red
brick’s to nearly pink – reminding me of the days of labour that had gone on
there. Gradually, through the house, I absorbed a strong sense of those who had
gone before me. A continuity that felt vital.
My
partner’s family had lived and worked this farm since 1947. Even as a naive
twenty-one year old, new to the landscape, I soon realised - along with the
growing love I felt for the place – that we were living in a house which future
inhabitants would probably decide was quirky and outdated. People now prefer
central heating, clean lines, a reliable stove, and no lurking ghosts from a
former age - but my blacksmith partner and I liked things to be freer. The farm
suited our personalities. Maybe the
ancestors welcomed this - they only twice threw a tin off the larder shelf to
remind us that we weren’t the first there. But even though it had a history of
several hundred years, circa something or other, the farm didn’t feel troubled.
We
moved there in 1989, with just a handful of donated furniture. We had a
somewhat unreliable Rayburn called Daphne for company, no heating, a small
flock of sheep, and hope.
This
was the place where we brought home and raised our child. Kittens and lambs
arrived – plus two greyhounds that brought joy to our walks. Between them all,
they filled our lives to bursting.
Shortly
after the foot and mouth outbreak, though, we stopped farming. The decision was
already out of our hands. We diversified, started a blacksmith’s forge and
clung onto our dreams and tiny farm. We
did all these things. We gained wrinkles, a bit of wisdom, but mainly an
overdraft.
Steady
and unchanging, our beloved home housed us while we went through twenty-four
years’ and three and a half months worth of events – there were celebrations,
deaths, births, and even an entirely new
clan of people to get to know, when my birth family made contact with me.
When we got the news that we could no longer
secure a permanent lease, the blow was devastating. Reluctantly, we began to search
for another forest dwelling.
Although
we are now settled again, with two enthusiastic whippets rushing about our
heels, our much¬-loved greyhounds are buried in the garden of the old farm, in
unmarked graves that we are unable to visit. The girl that played in the hollow
tree is grown up and living her own version of a country life, with sheep and
forty-three hens.
Although
we can never return, my daughter captured the memory of my favourite place in a
drawing that sits above the fireplace in our new cottage. The trees show a
winter’s day, their branches stark against a colourless sky. I look at the
picture and am transported back again. The snow will be here soon.
Book:
Strays and Relations, Dizzy Greenfield
Website:
http://www.dizzygreenfield.co.uk/
http://silvercrowbooks.co.uk/
Email:
dizzygreenfield@gmail.com
Twitter: @DizzyGreenfield
Other Town Travel to visit...
Leiden, the Netherlands with Pauline Barclay
Barnstable, UK with Helen Hollick
Lectoure, France with Michael Reidy
Next Town Travel is Wednesday with ... Barbara Gaskel- Denvill to Las Vegas
1 comment:
(apologies I've been busy editing so have back-tracked to visit these posts) Loved this favourite place - wonderful description, I felt immediately immersed in the tranquillity and could smell the fresh air! Lovely - thank you for sharing!
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