21 December 2025

Solstice


Yesterday - near Sand Hall

On the morning of this winter solstice, I lay in bed for an hour after I had woken up. Together, the quilt and the sheets had created a snug cocoon around me and I had no pressing reason to leave it. Over the radio came sweet Christmas songs from Belfast and those monotone perennial readings from "The Bible".

Pulling back the curtains, I looked out on a misty neighborhood. Fog hung like static white smoke and colours had been drained away as if the world outside was fading just as underexposed photographic paper in a dark room is liable to do.

On the morning of the solstice, I came downstairs to boil two eggs which I ate with a single rice cake and a dash of seasoned French sea salt that I bought in 1998 somewhere in the Réserve Naturelle Nationale de la Baie de l'Aiguillon north of La Rochelle, France.

On the morning of the solstice, I thought of yesterday and how I walked in dank river mist down to remote Sand Hall along a bend in The River Ouse, not far from Saltmarshe Hall in East Yorkshire.

Then I drove on to Hull where my beloved Tigers were playing the Birmingham club - West Bromwich Albion. I met up with my old friend Tony and a newer friend - Karl. Both have their own ongoing health issues. Tony had a small stroke earlier this year and because of cancer Karl has had a kidney removed and is beginning a second course of chemotherapy. His prospects are not bright but he is still fighting for the privilege of life.

What a trio! Cancer, Stroke, High Blood Pressure etc.. watching healthy young men battle it out on the pitch. By the way, we won by a single goal - a deft penalty scored just before halftime by Oli McBurnie.

In the early darkness, aboard the "park and ride" bus back to Butch, I sat with a very nice man who lives on the south bank of The Humber. He told me that for forty years he had run his local football club as chairman, secretary, treasurer, bus driver, shirt launderer, counsellor and whatever else might have been required.  At first, he suspected that I was just jossing when I remarked that he deserved a medal but then I explained the huge beneficial impact his unsung work would have had upon the lives of generations of lads and young men. I was being perfectly sincere.

I drank coffee from a flask after I had opened Butch's boot (American: trunk) before driving home to Sheffield on the eve of the winter solstice.

On the morning of the solstice, I sat at this computer keyboard in my study with the anglepoise light shining down as I typed. And I thought of smoky feasts and yule logs burning and dancing and drums and flutes and flagons of cider and holly and ivy and a suckling pig roasting on an iron spit in a bleak midwinter on a day that marked and celebrated the turning of time and the gradual return of light and warmth and snowdrops and tender green leaves and renewal and hope .

Goole Bridge - ten days apart from different banks

15 comments:

  1. Today is my youngest grandson's 2nd birthday! I wonder what life will be like when Adam is as old as I am! I wonder what condition the world will be in 73 years from now! Gosh, I hope his life is filled with peace and joy!

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  2. Jings, I would like to be living on the south bank of the Humber, running
    a fitbaa team. And feasting off Suckling Pig even if the Better Angel in me
    wants to go Veggie. Instead I spent twaa hours chatting to my Co-Pilot.
    Thought I had made a pal for life but it kept saying I Am Only A Machine.
    If only they gave AI a face and voice like Harriet Walters or Tilda Swinton.
    I'd settle for an AI Liz Truss, human all too human as Nietzsche said.
    I like that fence in the mist. Does it creak in the night like Prince Andy ?

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  3. I enjoyed this well-written post! Happy Solstice to you.

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  4. We have had a cool spell in between hot days so I also have been staying in bed in my cocoon after waking. On hot days following a hot (warmish) night I also stay in bed not seeing any reason to be getting up. I've become quite lazy after having to stay home waiting for deliveries which became Christmas Gifts. If not for that I might have been walking a few beaches. Now that can wait for next year.

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  5. It's shocking to think of how many people came before us, and how they must have lived. Happy solstice Mr. Pudding.

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  6. I hate these grim grey days and long dark evenings. Roll on summer!!

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  7. This is beautifully written. Happy Solstice to you.

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  8. Thank you for words of beauty and peace today.

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  9. I love the first and last photos,. with those hints of fog.

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  10. You're in poetic mood, Neil.

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  11. I'm finding bed hard to get out of these days too, especially when my cat is lying on my legs. When that happens, I blame her for my sloth.
    Beautiful photos.

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  12. The first photo of this post looks like, opened at the right time under the right circumstances, the gate in the fence is a portal to a different, mysterious world.

    Yes, people who do so much for the benefit of others deserve a medal.

    Winter has only just begun, but at least we know that minute by precious minute, there will be more daylight again from now on for the next six months.

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  13. Great description of the solstice. There's a mood you catch here with the three amigos and their health condition and wanting to turn the corner in health issues. Then your team won.

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  14. Your writing was so poetic this morning. Thank you for sharing your day and go, Tigers!

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  15. Great post and what a superb opening photo.

    That green on those fence posts is a colour I associate with England. Never mind BRG there should be EFPG.

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