Showing posts with label potter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label potter. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 5

The Story of Ballyferris. Chapter Thirteen. Some Dad-type Incidents.

Me ...Dad ...and Rosie

 This chapter is a story about dad and it could only be told after he had passed on. It's hard to believe that he died nearly forty years ago, because my memories of him are so clear...though that may be because I am  now close to the age he was when he went! 

In our hidden garden, here at The Potters House in Penketh, every autumn we are amazed at the variety of fungi that crops up under the birch grove and the grassy paths of the labyrinth. Mushroom and fungi are everywhere. I'm astounded at the size of some of them for those in around the labyrinth are the most beautiful, tiny little orangey-red ones.


 I've looked in my fungi book in the summer house, but it's hard to know exactly what we have. So I just warn the grand children to look but not touch. Nowadays fungi is one of the most talked about subjects within the scientific world. Centres such as Kew are publishing reports of how it is a basic provider of environmental health on the earth's surface and I read about the link between fungi and trees in Merlin Sheldrake's book.."Entangled Lives"..well worth a visit!  But in the 50s I thought that the mushrooms which came with my Ulster fry were from a farm somewhere in the country. So it was with great anticipation that I was allowed to go with dad very early one summer morning, leave the caravan field and go up the lane and on to Greystone Road the one that led to Carrowdore...you remember Carrowdore? Once there to enter the best field where fresh mushrooms were to be found and take them back to mum for the breakfast she was cooking. 

Some of the fungi to be found here at The Potters House.

What child living in a city in the 50s knew that the best field mushrooms were to be found where the biggest cow claps were! Not me.  Big white umbrella like fungi that grew on the edges of  brown claps where dad and I picked enough to feed the family for breakfast that morning. I have really never since had such a wonderful taste as those freshly picked that day still with the early morning dew shining on their tops. And when they were fried in the pan with foaming butter and us all seated around the little table and the sound of the sea and the smell of the wild flowers in the long grass... well that was heaven. 

But this story of dad and Cassie and her field is a good one and all the better for a comment I received recently from someone who discovered me on my blog and was also in Ballyferris with her family at the same time as us. We always seemed to eat well at the caravan. Maybe it was the fresh air, maybe it was the smell of the calor gas stove or maybe it was because after a day roaming the beaches, we were just plain ravenous.  So as I have written, I learnt from dad that the best place to look for mushrooms was around the periphery of old cow pats! I suppose you could say that they were very well manured. As I have already said the difference in the taste of a freshly picked field mushroom and a lily white button one salvaged from the ravages of some supermarket shelf cannot be described with mere words. I would need you to smell and taste these plump, snowy morsels after they had been gently marinaded in hot butter by mum and arranged on toast... also dripping with butter... and placed on the caravan table sometime around eight in the morning, just after a successful search. The best field to find these jewels of the morning were always at Cassie’s farm. Cassie was an old woman living alone in her farm up on the right of the Greystone Road looking away from Hope's property. As kids we used to climb on the back of Wully Hope's tractor and cling on for dear life as one of the Hope boys drove at breakneck speed up the narrow road to Cassie’s to work in the potato fields gathering the harvest. In my memories this was normally Neil, the younger of the two sons, who allowed us on to the back of the tractor. Can you imagine this happening today? Of course it was a bit dangerous, but in all the years that I did it, I knew of no accidents. That’s not to say that there were none but I never heard of them. Cassie’s farmyard was a lot smaller the Hope’s. but just as exciting for us townies. I can't imagine now that I did very much gathering for the potato harvest, but to be with the others and the joshing and joking that went on was just such a wonderful memory.


 "The Quaint Couple" by Charles Vincent Lamb. 1893-1964

There is a great family story concerning dad and Cassie. One early morning he went out alone to pick some mushrooms. He was wandering about in one of her fields scanning the ground for fresh white goodies by the cow pats, when a voice cried out to him in a lovely Co. Down accent,

 “ I think you’ve strayed!”

He looked up and noticed an elderly farming woman approaching him pointing a loaded shotgun in his direction. But being the charmer that he was, he gave a chuckle and agreed. " I think I have!" However Cassie was having none of it, and dad had to carefully retreat back out of the gate and off down the Greystone Road. Dougie's charm was not enough that morning to calm the situation. Alas, that was the last time we ever gathered mushrooms there for our seaside breakfasts. 

Cassie had every right to defend her land. A woman living alone out in the country needed to know how to protect herself. Then again, maybe that’s why she was alone! I’ll never know. Moments like this are there to be savoured and remembered in the difficult times that all of us encounter in life. All I know is that she was highly esteemed by the Hope family and that's enough for me.


Fly Agaric under the birch grove in the hidden garden.

I believe them to be magic mushrooms....but I've not tried them so I have nothing to report!!


Friday, April 17

Ceramic Sales...David slays Goliath/ NHS slays coronavirus19


The year 2002 was quite a year for us at The Potters House Penketh.
Alan's dad..Sydney Snape died.
We bought an old guest house in Morecambe 5 minutes from the beach.
We went to Spain for the first time and stayed in the beautiful apartment owned by our niece and nephew... up the hill from Marbella.
Alan made this large bowl with his typical comic aproach to some of the Bible stories.
I loved it.
I didn't want it to go.
He often stashed it on the top of a storage cupboard in the back studio.
In that way ...it wasn't going to sell.
Until today.
The buyer asked about Gath...was it local?
So the potter told the story of the small David and the great big hulking giant Goliath.
She'd never heard it before.
I think Goliath is "coronavirus 19" and David is little NHS...that defeats it.....chops of it's head!!

This year...back to Morecambe one day soon I hope.

Next year back to Spain..I hope!

Wednesday, March 25

A New Beginning




These are strange times....
and strange times...with time to think..and the normal hurley burley of existance gone...give rein to 
reconsidering old ways.
I started blogging in 2010...goodness!
I feel the need to put some thoughts done each day now.
The potter and I are in lockdown...we are of an age...so I walk eery morning in the garden looking for the new buds....new life.
The magnolia...like so many others ...is magnificent this week.
Stay safe...stay well
Much love from the Potters House Penketh.

Sunday, November 19

November Bonfire


Nothing makes the potter happier 
than a quiet Sunday afternoon 
sitting watching the old branches and the autumn leaves burn 
as the smoke flies up wards in the still air.


Saturday, January 14

Art challenge...Day Six...Jonah in the Boat Asleep.




Day Six of the potters art challenge.

Many of the series Alan has produced have been based on well known Bible Stories. 
This is from the story of Jonah who disobeyed instructions...and ended up inside a BIG fish!....he eventually obeyed ...though still wasn't very happy...read it for yourself!
In this piece from the series Jonah is asleep in the boat...just before they throw him off to the fish!!!! Typical of the potter's sense of humour.


Friday, January 13




Day five of the potter's art challenge....and this camel seen in the window at the Buckenham Gallery in Southwold...is ready, willing and able to paaarrrtay!!
Where do the ideas come from?...I dread to think!
I think this sweet camel is long gone...off partying somewhere classy...but others will follow where he has lead no doubt.
You can always pop into the Potters House here on Heath Road Penketh to see what the potter is conjuring up at the moment.



Looking in  and...



...he's looking out!!

Wednesday, January 11

Art Challenge Day Three




Day Three of the potter's art challenge.
Most artists hate commissions...takes them away from what they want to do...it means they have to ask questions!!
But commissions are also bread and butter for an artist! 
This commission was however a pleasure for Alan.
This is a Baptismal Bowl commissioned by a newly renovated Liverpool Church. 
(pics by G)


Monday, January 9



Day One...and the work from Alan Snape...aka the potter...
This is from the early days when he was still working on canvas and wood and metal assemblages....

"Honesty"...oil on board.6x6...still on the wall in our home...I love it. Gx


Monday, April 18

Somerset Levels Commission.

This commission came from an Irish friend, for some relatives living in Somerset and loving the levels.

 The potter is more used to his land and seascape pots based mainly on Southwold and Aldeburgh..so this was a new venture and much perusal of google pics and pinterest boards were looked at, before he sketched his ideas in a book and started the heavy job of raising a large ceramic pot. It is big...not quite a metre high but not far off! 

There were certain requirements made for the decor on the exterior...hares, heron, water and reeds...and the potter added his usual wonderfully modelled bridges, fences and landscape. The glazes are chosen to enhance the fired clay and the final glaze firing reveals whether or not it has been a success.
Well this is the second one...not that the first wasn't good it was, but experience tells you that often the next one manages to capture the essence of a piece. Soon it will be on it's way to The Levels...then we shall see if it has done it's job. 






Sunday, January 10

Chalk Paint

It's been a long time coming, but at last, at last,  we have redecorated the dining room.
I say we...you who know me will realise that the royal "We" usually means ..The Potter!.
But I did my bit by keeping up the supply of coffee and tea and making soup for lunch from the stock saved from the holiday meats and bones. Never, ever did a carcass get thrown out at the Ormeau Road home in Belfast while I was growing up. Bones and giblets, onion and carrots, rice or barley and the homely smell of stock simmering on a low gas!...ahhh! .
...Anyway the walls are now a soft grey, the ceiling white and the wooden staircase wall white as well. Things have yet to go back in place, but it's starting to regain a life of its own again .
For a while it had become a dumping ground...the table always full of items crying for attention .......or not!
 I also did my duty and went to IKEA! Obviously, I bought a box of candles....does anyone ever go to IKEA and not buy candles? I bought new cushion covers in glorious shades of grey...very tasteful I'm told ..a sort of zebra rug thingy to put under the table...to warm our feet...the room is not the warmest spot in the house.
 Oh and three little sheepskin rugs to cover the seats of the wooden chairs. That idea I saw in one of the blogs I follow " Lisas Hus "....http://lisashus.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/ett-vackert-julslut.html....brilliant...so now there will be warm feet and warm derrières.
I'd bought some chalk paints about a year ago when I first mentioned the redesign of the room to the potter and there they sat all year, clogging up the kitchen surfaces. But today, was the day to bite the bullet and brighten up the old wooden chairs.
We used to be antique dealers. Hmmm....what have we not been I ask myself!...and to paint a windsor chair was tantamount to betraying one's country....treason!
What rubbish...I plonked it on the studio table and got the job done...love it. Another two to do tomorrow and the job's a goodun...as they say around here.


Friday, January 23

The Rhinoceros

The potter has an uncanny knack of being ahead of the game.....the word game I use lightly!  No football meant.
He produced his first penguins a few months before "The March of the Penguins", arrived on the big screen. The polar bears before the global warming fears were played out on the small screen each night.
The latest animal to emerge from the heat of the kiln...is the rhinoceros.
She...for it is she....is ready for a night on the tiles with nails painted red as she sashays out into the big wide world.
The great white rhino is all but extinct ....I believe only five exist in the world today and they are all in zoos...how sad that man's greed....sale of the magnificent horns...will mean generations to come will not have the joy of knowing this armour clad beast in all her grandeur.


This magnificent creature will be on display at The Gallery Bank Quay House, Warrington from tomorrow in a new exhibition there.

As will this photograph of The Old Girl's Grammar School Palmyra Square Warrington. By your's truly!

 Open until 20th April.....

Wednesday, January 21

A Poem for Thursday...."I know a man".


David Harsent....winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize this week....
"If I can't hear the music, I don't think it is a poem".

I mulled this over for a few days....my backround is words and music...it's how I feel.

            I know a Man

I know a man who takes the basic earth wetted 
Turns it in his hands with concentration
Yet as if in a dream enters a dreamlike state and
Pulls the clay and pushes it down then lifts it up to form a vessel. 
His broad long fingered hands seem too big for the intricate
Flattened models that he places on the pot.
Shells and fish and rocking boats with stormy
Waves lashing the hulls that rise and dip around the form.
Then turns it on a turntable and views the work
Reviews with a critical eye.
Tweaking the soft shapes into submission.
And both man and clay submit to one another.

Tuesday, April 22

Pelicans...



...a new commission has brought these fellows into being....
...wearing boots and ready for action...
...they will soon leave so I'm making sure that I have a memory of them...








Monday, May 20

Sun up...Sun down...

Bird song...loud enough to wake the sleepiest...
...daylight creeping through the gap in the curtains earlier and earlier...
... and I creep out of the bedroom without waking the sleeping potter...
...down the creaking stairs...why do all stairways creak?...
...kettle on for a cuppa and a hottie...a hottie?...well I'm going out into the garden and traipsing down the field to the summerhouse with camera and book and a hottie just in case it's a wee bit chilly down there.
...snuggle up into a wicker chair with a  blanket 
tucked over my legs.......excellent...luxury....wonderful!

The sun is just rising at the front of the house and a mist has turned the trees to pale gold...


...six in the morning ...and all is well...


....and the sun makes it's way through the alleyway  where the sunbeams dance in the mistiness...


...soon the mist  dissapates and the old apple tree receives the strengthening sunbeams  
filling the path in the potter's allotment...


I settle down to listen to the birds...and watch them search for food in the dew washed grass...
...food to keep their progeny plump and happy.

The working day soon takes over 
and the garden is deserted.

But evening brings with it the western light...low in the sky...and a glimpse out of a window reveals another garden altogether...


...no mist here...
... the air is sharp for a May day this year... but that brings with it  hard light and long crisp shadows stretching along the grass.


...the blue of the bluebells seems almost iridescent in this light...
... May's foliage is soft and emerald green...
..the smell of the bluebells intoxicating..
...it draws me out..back down the path ...
...under the arch..
..into another world.

Sunday, April 7

Back in the Garden...

What a winter...but at long last we are getting into the garden and trimming and protecting, and all of the other things that probably should have been done in March.
Nobody was doing any gardening in March around here!!

The frogs have spawned and the little pond at the bottom of the field is full to overflowing with it.





The potter is climbing ladders again...and very happy to be doing so.
This apple tree is a great fruiter but needed the centre opening up.
He's the man who can!




...and this year we were determined to get to the cherry tree before the wood pigeons...
Two years ago it was so prolific that I was able to make a glass "topf"  full of cherry brandy.
....my sister's German recipe.....


Last year the pigeons made it before us and we only managed to salvage a handful of cherries.
They eat the the buds ...they must be sooo sweet...before they have a chance even to start to become cherries...

Well yaahooo!!
you fat wood pigeons....got there before you this time
...not as if there isn't lots of other lovely stuff to go for...
...and by the way birds...
lay off the peas also this year!!


Friday, March 1

Would wood?






 March 1st and the wood is low...a quick call to Joe the wood man for one more load and then hopefully the actual spring....
....it's the first of that today apparantly...
... will have warmed the bones enough to do without a blazing fire early each day.
Meantime the potter has cleared the dry stuff from the back...have you noticed how things make their way to the back of cupboards?...


...and is tidying the green wood up for next winter....brrrr!!!



...nothing as artistically pleasing as a pile of stacked wood in a wood shed me thinks!

Men and their sheds.....!

Monday, February 25

The Bike Deserted.




The instructions from the medical man....no cycling at the moment!

Oh dear....it's a bit like cutting off his arm, for the potter.....he is used to cycling everywhere.
In younger days I can remember him coming back from the local wood yard with half a shed on the back of the bike and the usual grin on his face which always meant that he knew I would shake my head in exasperation....but with nothing that I could do about it!
So walking out has now sort of taken over, which means it's much easier for us to do it together.
Yesterday we walked from Sankey Bridges....

 
... along the Sankey Canal to where it meets the Mersey.




While we have lived in this area for more than 40 years...we had never taken the path before!
Partly because, when we first arrived here the site, which had been part of a farm, was just being turned over to a rubbish tip.....so pungent smell and seagulls in their thousands!
Now it's greened and treed...if that is a word... you know a bit like treen....and if not then I've just made it up!!!



Sankey Brook runs a few yards from our front door and was used in the earliest attempts to make a usable water way down to the River Mersey, and thence on out to the port of Liverpool.




It was Sankey Canal that was then dug out as the first proper one, and used to send coal  down to the  Mersey and bring chemicals  back up for the glass works at St. Helens....


 ...and the mooring post for the barges are still there as a reminder of the history gone before.

The canal has now become a heritage site, and the route for the cycle and footpath of the Trans Pennine Trail...


..where there are always lots of serious walkers and cyclists .........

....and  there in the backround.... the power station at Fiddlers Ferry.


... this is "The Meeting of the Waters", as we say in Ireland.....
....Sankey Canal and the River Mersey.

Of course there is now that grand Manchester Ship Canal running through the town as well as the Mersey River.  but that's another story!


The railways came later and the tracks still run parallel to the canal ...coming from the direction of Liverpool...

...and travelling on east towards Manchester.




Anyway this is not a history lesson....honestly!!....just a post to put up photos of our local environment and for me to be shamed into realising that as I drove past it all every week, and never gave it a backward glance.......what other goodies have I missed in my hurray to grow old!!!! .

Sunday, February 17

Jammy time of year then!!

I saw some Seville oranges up at the farm shop last week and had a golden vision ...
...of marmalade on a slice of hot toast...dripping with butter of course!

You know how it is...you buy something with the best of intention of  using it...
...and then the days go by...
...and the days go by...
... and time ticks on.........

Anyway...there's always the potter to keep me up to scratch with food!!...he likes it!
So yesterday we set to, knives in hand, and with both of us cutting  up fruit in the finest strips possible, we had the job done sooner rather than later!


Actually....I think that one might say, honestly, that this is thick cut marmalade!

.....I'd forgotten that it has to marinade for 24 hours...
...well that was good, as I had other things to do.
 I decided to make it whiskey marmalade and added the whiskey my sister-in-law had given me from the aunt's house clearance......goes with the Scottishness of marmalade I think....adds a frisson of excitement for the morning break!



Just look at the dried up memory on the page of the recipe book....
...well you can see how long ago it was when we got it from the lovely Mary...
....mum..
....it has been used and used over the years...

Jam pan couldn't be found...so this had to do the job...
...a bit small for the amount of fruit ...
...but needs must...as they say.

Fruit simmering away and the warm sugar added to the pot and a rolling boil attempted...
...the recipe said 10 minutes and it should be ready...
...they lied ...!!


....but the smell!...wonderful...so I didn't mind it taking three quarters of an hour ...
...that was mainly due to the pot being a bit too small and a rolling boil  therefore a bit dangerous...
...spillage!!




 The potter had washed the jars and warmed them in the oven......love all those quirky different shapes...I'm a sucker for collecting a well shaped jam jar...I can get quite choosey over it!



And then all were filled without a crack in any of them and ...
...in comes the hovering potter and says...
..."want a nice cup of tea?"
"natch"

Get the bread...
...lather it with butter...
...pile on the hot sticky whiskey smelling aroma of freshly made marmalade...
...and there you have ...
"two happy bunnies"...