Dark Enchanted Isle ~ Gavin MacGregor.

Reblogged from heritagelandscapecreativity:

The small ferry left Stromness as the storm began to rise. With the distant island mountain already backdropped by troubled skies and foregrounded by rising waves, it struggled to land briefly at Graemsay, spilling out people and packages hurrying to avoid the incoming tempest.

By the time we arrived on Hoy, cloud and rain was racing angrily towards the shore. I zipped my waterproof tight, stooping, rain driven into my face by an unforgiving wind I began to make my way uphill through the storm. With an hour or more walk along the old moorland road to Rackwick, I had resigned myself to being soaked by the time I reached my destination but began to worry about the practicalities of pitching a tent in these conditions.

Continue reading at heritagelandscapecreativity

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Presence ~ Michele Jones #writephoto

Emme couldn’t believe it. She managed to get back to the school, back to the classroom. Tears streamed down her cheeks. Once again, her incompetence caused a problem. Ora was dead. The Three didn’t appear. No one came. For being the Chosen One, she certainly felt less than adequate.

She slumped into a desk chair and sobbed for a few minutes, feeling sorry for herself. Her mistakes risked the lives of everyone who tried to protect her. Now, she followed the rules, and Ora was killed anyway. How could this man keep finding her? Something wasn’t right. But what.

As she sat trying to get herself together, the door opened. She jerked her head up as Jadis ran inside.

“We need to get you out of here. Now. The compound has been compromised. Hurry.”

“How?—”

“No time to talk. Follow me.”

Continue reading at Out of the Shadows

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Charles E. Yallowitz shares: Immortal Wars: The Summoning Part 1 #fiction

Reblogged from Legends of Windemere:

Disclaimer: Immortal Wars was the book I came up with and wrote in high school.  I hadn’t even hit college by the time I wrote the first two books.  That means I hadn’t developed my style yet, wasn’t good at self-editing, and the story was fairly basic. So, you’ve been warned that this is the ultimate author throwback segment for my blog and will show my author origins.  FYI-  I put the first book (The Summoning) through a Print-on-Demand publisher and the second one (Light, Blood, & Tears) never saw the light of day.  Enjoy!

It is nearing the end of the twentieth century.  In the center of the sun, an ancient man, with pale skin, wakes up to another long day of waiting.  His sapphire-colored eyes are still trying to open as he slides himself out of a king-sized bed and pulls on a bright, red terry-robe.  The man’s chiseled face and dirty blond ponytail make him appear no older than thirty.  The last of the original guardians wishes that he felt as young as he looked.  Centuries of isolation and waiting have caused him to be much weaker than he ever was.  The only memory of his true power is dangling around his neck.  It is a fist-sized medallion with one big, orange pearl that is surrounded by nine little gemstones of various colors.

“Master Solix!  Good morning, sir.  I hope that you slept well,” says a weird mechanical voice that seems to come from all over the room.  It is the Sun Base’s eternal computer system and it is capable of talking to anyone who is on the sun base.

Continue reading at Legends of Windemere

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Presence ~ Michael #writephoto

There was a presence, there always had been a presence.

Whenever you entered the field with the stones, it was there.

Sometimes all around you, sometimes decidedly pressing in on you.

The eeriness was profound, and at times it felt as though it could easily be rubbing against you or gave you the sensation of being tapped on the shoulder as if the presence had something to say to you.

Within the community, there was speculation as to where the stones had come from and what they meant. Most believed they came from druid times and had some significance to the movement of the sun.

Continue reading at  Morpeth Road

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Discoloured Past ~ Phillip Knight Scott #writephoto

The rocks mark the ground
between prospering weeds enriched
by the warmth of a sun surging overhead,
encircling those of us interred
on a planet whose
percussive heartbeat rocks me to sleep.

Continue reading at  Reverie in Reverse

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Unseasonable weather?

The primulas, I can understand. For all their delicate beauty, they are hardy little souls and are happy to flower in winter, even poking their petals through the snow. But, for the rest of my son’s newly planted garden, there is no such simple explanation. Maybe, having spent the whole summer and autumn contending with building work last year, it decided it couldn’t face the exigencies of winter too and thought it would give it a miss.

I would have expected, by now, to be left with just the evergreens, adding their own touches of colour to a pale and wintry world.

But, while the weather forecasters speak of Arctic temperatures and winter gales, Nature is busy doing her own thing. Anemones that were planted as spring flowers, due to blossom between April and May, decided to start opening in December. Perhaps, I thought, it was just one confused rogue corm that had taken the initiative? But no, they are all at it now and show no sign of stopping, just because it is only January.

The roses are happily blooming away, with an array of buds waiting in the wings… and are already being attacked by clusters of aphids that should have been cosily invisible by now. New growth is appearing on all the newly planted shrubs and rose bushes and the spring bulbs are coming up apace.

The green stars of crocus leaves, their central buds already visible, are not as surprising as the hyacinths… though at least one of those will struggle as its flower bud has been eaten by unseasonable insects. Caterpillars are still about, happily munching their way through the violas and pansies… and yesterday, I saw both a bee and a butterfly.

Even the fish in the pond, who should be in a state akin to suspended animation at this time of year, are swimming around and demanding to be fed…

I, personally, will not complain if my heating bills are lower than usual this winter or if my fingers do not turn black with cold. And I can’t see the small birds complaining either at the unexpected abundance of food that is keeping them away from the bird feeders. But I do worry about how their young, born too early, will fare if the predicted cold snap materialises.

Nature, though, moves at her own pace. We may force growth under glass, but we cannot control the seasons and they take no notice of our neat little calendars and expectations. Just because we dream of, or worry about, snow in winter, there is nothing to stop it snowing in June as it has in the past. And there is not a thing we can do about it. So, if the garden has decided that spring will come early… all we can do is enjoy it. And keep the bird feeders filled and ready…

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Astronomical Monuments ~ Jim Adams #writephoto

Standing stones are found all over the world, and most were erected in the Stone Age between 5000 and 2000 BC, although in Western Europe their major development occurred in the third millennium BC. The monuments are set in stone so that they specifically to line up with the movements of the Sun and Moon, although scientists and historians continue to debate their purpose, construction, and meaning. A lith is an indicating stone or rock like a megalith that is used to construct a structure or monument, either alone or together with other stones.

Continue reading at A Unique Title for Me

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Illusions #midnighthaiku

Full moon reflection

Golden incongruity

Beyond perception

Day illuminates the night

Illusive beliefs challenged

*

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Liz Lloyd is Beetley Pete’s guest…

Reblogged from beetleypete:

I am delighted to present a guest post from British blogger, Liz Lloyd.
This is her own short bio.

‘After 35 years as a primary school teacher and school librarian, I started two blog sites based on my main interests in history and books. I am a volunteer researcher at my local Workhouse Museum as well as following my own family tree. I also enjoying travelling, especially to the Algarve’.


Liz has two blogs. One is solely concerned with book reviews.

https://lizannelloyd.wordpress.com/
Her second blog features her travels, photos, and visits to places of historical interest.
https://somerville66.blogspot.com/

Here is her unedited guest post, a sad story of poverty, and forced migration.

British Home Children in Canada.

Since 2013 I have been researching the lives of people connected to the Union Workhouse in Guildford, Surrey. Initially we were preparing for an exhibition at The Spike museum about the changes from Workhouse, to war hospital in both world wars and later a General Hospital but subsequently I became particularly interested in what happened to the children who had stayed in the Workhouse, many of whom went to Sail training schools, Scattered homes, into domestic service or apprenticeships. However, the most alarming fate was the decision to send the children across the ocean to a new life in Canada.

Continue reading at beetleypete

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Presence ~ Neha #writephoto

Your presence lingers

in the faded memories

of childhood

when we ran through summer meadows

under sunshine,

Continue reading at  Forgotten Meadows

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