nichepoetryandprose

poetry and prose about place

Archive for the ‘virtual cycling along the Cornwall coast’ Category

jet-lag (days 46 and 47)

with 2 comments

~

I had a great time during my week in California, but it has been hard to return to my regular routines.  The four-hour time shift left me out of sync.  For about ten days after arriving home, I was constantly sleepy, napping at odd times through the day.  I also had a hard time regulating my eating and for a few days, breakfast was a three course meal (doesn’t make sense since in California, I would still be sleeping).

~

I slacked off my biking as well and after only two 30 minute sessions in 10 days, I woke one morning to find my knee in pain and almost locked into a bent position.  Besides its other benefits, I think the stationary biking keeps my knee flexible and lubricated.  I started biking again every two days and now my knee is back to ‘normal’.

~

46 and 47

~

7-46  November 13, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (from Port Navas to Constantine)

~

Being able to climb stairs easily is important, especially since I wanted to try out this set of stone stairs along the road in Cornwall …

~

IMG781_crop

November 21, 2013 ‘stone stair near Constantine’ Jane Tims

~

My experience with jet-lag has shown me how much easier it is to just hop on my stationary bike and see the Cornwall coast via Street View.

~

7-47  November 19, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (from Constantine to Mawgan)

~

The route for the last few days of my virtual travel has taken me across the inlets of the Helford River.   This is interesting to me since I worked on waterways for so much of my career.  I also saw a flock of ducks on the water of the Mawgan Creek, also worthy of a look since Street View captures so little wildlife.

~

7-46 ducks on Mawgan Creek

~

A short distance farther along, the road crosses another branch of Mawgan Creek.  It was a good subject for a watercolour, so I tried to capture the reflections in the water and the contrast between the soft vegetation and the hard stone bridge.  In a lazy mood (more jet-lag???), I decided to use a spatter technique to give some interest to the scene.  I got a little carried away with the red!

~

November 18, 2013  'Mawgan Creek'   Jane Tims

November 18, 2013 ‘Mawgan Creek’ Jane Tims

~

I coped so badly with my ‘jet-lag’ experience, I now have renewed admiration for those who must travel constantly because of their work.

~

I’d love to hear about your experiences with ‘jet-lag’.

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

stiles and blue stones (day 44 and day 45)

with 9 comments

~

How do you get over a fence or a wall if it is too high to step over???

~

You can use a stairway or a stile !!!

~

day 44 and 45

map showing distance travelled (map from Google Earth)

~

7-44  October 30, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (from Mawnan to north of Durgan)

~

Near Durgan, I saw a stone stairway along the road.  As I painted, I began to believe that I saw a blue stone among the others (when I look at the photo now, I think it was a trick of the eye!).  Can you find the blue stone? (Hint: it is not one of the two blue stones in the bottom course of stones)!

~

7-44 stone stair

inspiration for ‘blue stone’ (image from Street View)

~

October 25, 2013  'blue stone'   Jane Tims

October 25, 2013 ‘blue stone’ Jane Tims

~

7-45  November 1, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (Durgan to Port Navas)

~

A short way from Durgan, I also saw a stile.  I have seen several stiles along my virtual journey, but this is the first stile I have see made entirely of stone.  A stile is a structure built in a fence, wall or other barrier to allow people to pass but keep animals in.  Stiles were often required in the UK but no standard guidelines to their construction were issued, so many styles of stile are found!  Stiles can consist of a ladder, steps, or even a narrow gap in a stone wall.

~

7-43 stile

stile near Mawnan (image from Street View)

~

As a kid, I loved to hear about stiles.  One of the stories my Mom told me was about the Old Woman who had a Pig who wouldn’t go over the stile.  She found a Dog and said ‘Dog, Dog, bite Pig so Pig will go over the stile and I can get home to my supper tonight!’  After talking to many animals, items and people, the woman finally succeeds.  ‘The Man began to marry the Maid, the Maid began to milk the Cow, the Cat began to drink the milk, the Cat began to kill the Rat, the Rat began to gnaw the Rope, the Rope began to hang the Butcher, the Butcher began to kill the Ox, the Ox began to drink the Water, the Water began to quench the Fire, the Fire began to burn the Stick, the Stick began to beat the Dog, the Dog began to bite the Pig, the Pig jumped over the stile, and so the Old Woman got home to get her supper’.

~

A rather violent tale for children as many children’s stories are.  But as a child, I loved the repetition and the idea of consequence, and the knowledge that the Old Woman got her supper.

~

When we first built our house, we built a stile over the fence by the front gate and it was so much fun to step over!

~

7-45 style

inspiration for ‘stile near Durgan’ (image from Street View)

~

October 26, 2012   'stile near Durgan'   Jane Tims

October 26, 2012 ‘stile near Durgan’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

dooryards and doorways (day 41 to 43)

with 8 comments

~

In the Falmouth area of the Cornwall coast, my eye has been drawn to the human landscape, in particular the dooryards and doorways …

~

map day 41 to 43

map showing distance travelled (map from Google Earth)

~

7-41  October 18, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (within Falmouth)

~

On the 41st day of my virtual cycling trip along the coast of Cornwall, I spent all my time in the city of Falmouth.  The best part of the trip was along High Street where the store fronts and signage make me want to stop and look around.  Lots of people too!

~

The fence post and red door in the image below resulted in my favorite watercolour to date.   I love the colour red!

~

red door

~

October 15, 2013  'door in Harbour Village'   Jane Tims

October 15, 2013 ‘door in Harbour Village’ Jane Tims

~

7-42  October 23, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (from Falmouth to south of Goldenbank)

~

7-42

~

October 23, 2013  'Roscarrack Road'   Jane Tims

October 23, 2013 ‘Roscarrack Road’ Jane Tims

~

7-43  October 27, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (from Goldenbank to Mawnan)

~

When I paint, I often edit out the items I don’t consider to be ‘beautiful’.  For me, this includes garbage cans, litter, plastic of any kind, and so on.  For example, in the watercolour below, I ignored the background.  However, I think that great art probably hides in those not-so-pretty necessities of life …

~

inspiration for 'gate on Old Church Road'

inspiration for ‘gate on Old Church Road’ (image from Street View)

~

October 24, 2013  ' gate on Old Church Road'   Jane Tims

October 24, 2013 ‘ gate on Old Church Road’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013   Jane Tims

Written by jane tims

November 1, 2013 at 7:23 am

gates and wirescape (day 38-40)

with 4 comments

~

On Day 38 to Day 40 of my virtual bike trip along the Cornwall coast,  colourful houses and storefronts caught my eye …

~

Map Day 38 to Day 40 b

map showing distance travelled (map from Google Earth)

~

7-38  October 8, 2013  25 minutes  3.0 km  (Penopal to south of Mylor Bridge)

~

As usual, I also loved the gates I ‘saw’ along the way. The gate below, on the road to Mylor Bridge, had shaped posts.  When I painted them, however, they looked like milk bottles, so I squared them off.  I took other liberties with this one as well …

~

7-38

inspiration for ‘gate on Carclew Road’ (image from Street View)

~

October 12, 2013  'gate on Carclew Road'   Jane Tims

October 12, 2013 ‘gate on Carclew Road’ Jane Tims

~

7-39  October 11, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  ( south of Mylor Bridge to Mylor)

~

The houses in Mylor Bridge are quite colourful, so I stopped to paint this row.  Painting the wire overhead takes a steady hand and concentration …

~

7-39

inspiration for ‘houses in Mylor Bridge’ (image from Street View)

~

October 12, 2013   'houses in Mylor Brdge'   Jane Tims

October 12, 2013 ‘houses in Mylor Brdge’ Jane Tims

~

7-40  October 13, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (Mylor to Flushing)

~

More colourful houses caught my eye as I ‘biked’ along the Penryn River near Flushing.  The purple pigment would not cooperate so the tumble of flowers ended up red in the painting!  …

~

dooryard in Flushing

inspiration for ‘dooryard in Flushing’ (image from Street View)

~

October 14, 2013  'dooryard in Flushing'  Jane Tims

October 14, 2013 ‘dooryard in Flushing’ Jane Tims

~

The scene below is from somewhere along the streets of Falmouth, just across the Penryn River from Flushing.  I loved the colourful houses and storefronts but after I had painted the scene, I could not find the image in Street View.  I wonder what the woman in the painting would think if she knew she was the star of my Blog today! …

~

October 14, 2013  'side walk'   Jane Tims

October 14, 2013 ‘side walk’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

fields and ferry crossings

with 4 comments

~

7-35  September 30, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (north of St. Just in Roseland to ferry across River Fal)

~

The thirty-fifth day of my virtual bike trip left me scrambling for an image to paint.  I biked over miles of country road and although the countryside is lovely, I couldn’t seem to find an image that ‘spoke’ to me.  In this end, I chose a tree along the road to Philleigh.  Greens are so difficult for me – I couldn’t seem to achieve anywhere near the yellow hue of the greens in the photo …

~

7-35 tree by road

inspiration for ‘countryside near Philleigh’ (image from Street View)

~

Oct. 3, 2013 'countryside near Philleigh'   Jane Tims

Oct. 3, 2013 ‘countryside near Philleigh’ Jane Tims

~

7-36  October 2, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (ferry across River Fal to Feock)

~

Ferry crossings are always fun.  The Ferry across the River Fal didn’t look very different from the crossings here in New Brunswick …

~

7-35 ferry crossing River Fal

the blue flat-decked boat is the ferry … and look at the big ship just up river (image from Street View)

~

I especially liked the house where the ferry docked on the west side of the river – lots of flowers and stone …

~

ferry landing at River Fal
~

September 27, 2013  'flowers near River Fal'   Jane Tims

September 27, 2013 ‘flowers near River Fal’ Jane Tims

~

7-37  October 8, 2013  25 minutes  3.0 km  (Foeck to Penpol)

~

If the thirty-fifth day of my travels was mostly fields, the thirty-seventh was mostly trees.  I love the circular ‘tree tunnels’ formed along the Cornwall roads when the hedgerows are pruned.  In this interpretation of one of one of those archways, I decided not to paint a single individual leaf …

~

7-37 tree tunnel

inspiration for ‘road tunnel near Penpol’ (image from Street View)

~

October 3, 2013 'road tunnel near Penpol'   Jane Tims

October 3, 2013 ‘road tunnel near Penpol’ Jane Tims

~

Along the way, I often ‘see’ enchanting gateways.  I particularly like the gates with stone post like this one near Feock …

~

Oct. 4, 2013 'gate near Feock'   Jane Tims

October 4, 2013 ‘gate near Feock’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

mudflats and hedgerows

with 4 comments

For eight months now, I have been encouraging myself to exercise by pretending to cycle far from home.  I use Street View in Google Earth to explore the countryside in parts of the world where I have never been except in imagination.  From January 30, 2013 to June 28, 2013, I cycled virtually in Central France, from Lusignan to Ile de Ré.  Since July 1, 2013, I have been following the coast in Cornwall, beginning in Rame.  In each post, I have presented Street View images I have ‘seen’ along the road.  I have also shown you the drawings and watercolours inspired by the images.

~

Change is always refreshing to me, so I am going to alter the way I report my bike trips.  In part I am doing this in order to be able to do more posts in my ‘colour of the month’ series and about writing my novel.  I might also return to posting some of my poems.

~

In each post, I’ll report on one or more of my days of exercise, and I will show you the drawing or watercolour and the Street View image that inspired the art.  I hope you enjoy comparing the ‘real’ image with my artistic interpretation.

~

map day 32 to day 34

map showing distance travelled for day 32 to day 34 (map from Google Earth)

~

7-32  Sept. 24, 2013  40 minutes  3.0 km  (Portscatho to Bohantha)

~

South of Portscatho, fields are separated by hedges and rows of mature trees.  I loved this view of trees against the blue water of the Atlantic …

~

tree line south of Portscatho

inspiration for ‘row of trees south of Portscatho’ (Image from Street View)

~

September 21, 2013  'row of trees south of Portscatho'   Jane Tims

September 21, 2013 ‘row of trees south of Portscatho’ Jane Tims

~

7-33  Sept. 28, 2013  35 minutes  3.0 km  (Bohantha to St. Mawes)

~

My virtual bike trip on September 28 took me along the Froe River at low tide.  The brown mud dominated the scene and reminded me of some of the areas around Moncton, New Brunswick where we have huge differences between high and low tide and spectacular carved mudflats …

~

Froe Creek

inspiration for ‘Froe Creek’ (image from Street View)

~

September 19, 2013  'Froe Creek'   Jane Tims

September 19, 2013 ‘Froe Creek’ Jane Tims

~

7-34  September 30, 2013  30 minutes  3.0 km  (St. Mawes to St. Just in Roseland)

~

I continue to be enchanted by the way the roadside vegetation is managed in Cornwall.  There are strict rules about how and when to trim the vegetation of the verges (the area between the hedge and the road surface) and the hedge.  The Cornish roadside hedges are unique in having a ‘stone and turf’ structure.  The hedge is basically a stone-faced earth bank,  The vertical face of the hedgerow is populated by ferns and flowering plants. On top of the hedge is turf or a shrubby hedgerow.  This area is often occupied by oak and other mature tree species.

~

The resulting environment provides habitat for wild life species, including the wild flowers that have been a delight along every bit of my virtual journey.  When vines occupy the face of the hedge, it means the hedge has been cut back too severely.

~

For a fascinating read, have a look at the leaflet ‘Cornish Hedge Management For hedges adjacent to highways’ at http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/default.aspx?page=13777

~

road tunnel

inspiration for ‘road near St. Just in Roseland’ Image from Street View)

~

September 26, 2013  'road near St. Just in Roseland'   Jane Tims

September 26, 2013 ‘road near St. Just in Roseland’ Jane Tims

~

I hope you have enjoyed this part of my virtual journey.  Please let me know what you think when you compare my watercolours with the images that inspired them.

~

Copyright 2013  Jane Tims

Written by jane tims

October 16, 2013 at 6:48 am

sea side bright 7-31

with 5 comments

~

Portscatho on the Cornwall coast is a village of bright white houses and views of the sea …

~

7-31 Portscatho

~

As in most of these seaside villages, there is public access to the shore …

~

7-31 quai

~

and a place to stroll along the waterfront and watch the boats at dock …

~

7-31 seaside

~

If my bike trip was real instead of virtual, I would ask the owners of the patio below if I could sit and watch the ocean for a while …

~

7-31 patio

~

Best View: a shed, covered in vines, near Portscatho …

~

September 15, 2013 'shed near Portscatho'  Jane Tims

September 15, 2013 ‘shed near Portscatho’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

Written by jane tims

October 14, 2013 at 7:00 am

finding places to grow 7-30

with 4 comments

~

Stone walls are a common site in the coastal towns and villages of Cornwall.  On today’s virtual bike trip, I noticed how plants find growing space in the crannies and crevices of these walls …

~

7-30 crannies

plants growing in the nooks and crannies of a stone fence (image from Street View)

~

Vines also take advantage of stone surfaces and climb over stone shed and houses until they take the shape of the building they climb on …

~

7-30 roof with vines

vines take on the outline of a house (image from Street View)

~

In a maritime climate in particular, lichens often find a place to grow on rooftops or on stone surfaces.  Orange-amber lichens have established themselves on the roof and walls of this grand house in Trewithian …

~

7-30 Trewithian

amber lichens on stone and roof (image from Street View)

~

Three interesting names today … Treworthal, Treworlas and Trewithian …

~

Best View:  shadowed road on the way to Treworthal and a gate near Trewithian …

~

September 14, 2013  'road with shadows'   Jane Tims

September 14, 2013 ‘road with shadows’ Jane Tims

~

September 14, 2013  'afternoon by the gate'  Jane TimsIMG731_crop

September 14, 2013 ‘afternoon by gate’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013   Jane Tims

Written by jane tims

October 9, 2013 at 7:00 am

small-scale economies 7-29

with 2 comments

~

Did you ever sell vegetables by the road or help your kids run a lemonade stand?  On Day 29 of my virtual bike trip, I saw two examples of this kind of small-scale economy.  Selling roses and pots of plants provides some extra money for the vendor and something pretty or useful to buy along the road …

~

7-29 journal

~

7-29 map

map showing distance travelled (map from Google Earth)

~

Setting up a roadside stand means finding a way to display the merchandise (a small bench will do), making a sign on a piece of paper or cardboard, and being ready to run out when you hear a car stop in the yard …

~

7-29 FOR SALE_crop

selling roses along the road (image from Street View)

~

7-28 PLANTS FOR SALE_crop

selling plants along the road (image from Street View)

~

Best View:  for some reason cars caught my eye on this virtual bike trip … a green car travelling on a highway near Treworlas  and cars with their headlights on as they drove through a dark tunnel of trees near Veryan …  I used ‘resist’ to keep the green car white until the last and learned the hard way that too much ‘resist’ will lift the fibres from the paper ! … won’t do that again!!! …

~

September 7, 2013  'green car'   Jane Tims

September 7, 2013 ‘green car’ Jane Tims

~

September 7, 2013  'headlights in dark woods'   Jane TimsIMG728_crop

September 7, 2013 ‘headlights in dark woods’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright  2013  Jane Tims

climbing roses 7-28

with 2 comments

~

Climbing roses seem to me to be one of the quintessential elements of England.  On the 28th day of my virtual bike trip along the Cornwall coast, roses seemed to clamour over every door …

~

7-28 map

~

7-28 journal

~

These are a few of the climbing roses of Portloe …

~

7-28 roses 2

~

7-28 roses 1

~

7-28 roses 3

~

Best View: the rugged coast at Portloe … I am trying ‘resist’ to keep small areas white as I paint … you apply the ‘resist’ to the watercolour paper before you begin to paint and then rub it off afterward … worked well, but I have to pay attention to the shape of the small areas of ‘resist’ …

~

September 7, 2013  'rugged coast at Portloe'   Jane Tims

September 7, 2013 ‘rugged coast at Portloe’ Jane Tims

~

The ‘resist’ can also be used to leave white space where flowers should be …

~

August 25, 2013  'roses in Reviskey'   Jane Tims

August 25, 2013 ‘roses in Reviskey’ Jane Tims

~

Copyright 2013  Jane Tims