Friday 18 October 2013

Autumn - Nature's Bounty

Nature's Bounty - a few bits n bobs from my walk this morning



And what better excuse for a recycled Greenpatch. There must be some Useful and Acceptable Gifts I could make from this lot:

I was puffing my way up the hill to church last Sunday; at the last minute as usual, but I just had to stop and pick up these conkers.  I dithered for a nanosecond (I mean, a fifty-something year-old woman getting all excited over something like this - honestly!), but my inner five year-old won in the end, you'll be glad to hear.  The same inner five-year old that I remember popping out during my first retreat seven years ago now, as I wandered round the wild garden at CSF Compton Durville.   It was like exploring a jungle! I was  so thrilled! By the time I went home I must have gathered half of the Somerset countryside on my windowsill - plus any number of creepy-crawlies besides.
To return to last week,  off I hopped to church where I arranged my treasure carefully on the pew in front of me, and, I regret to say, didn't really take in very much of the service at all that morning. Never mind, for once I've managed to get ahead of myself, what with Harvest Festival coming up and all. I came out of the sacristy this afternoon to see one of the flower ladies busy decorating the place with a lovely collection of leaves, conkers and other autumal goodies. Somebody is going to find it rather difficult to concentrate this Sunday as well, and we're not just talking about the children. My inner Busy Fauve is dying to go for a run. As I'd suspect too,  the insect life that might have come into church with the decorations. Who knows? If they hang around for long enough, they'll be able to take part in the pet blessing service the following weekend!
 The beech husks in the photo are another 'treasure' unearthed by my resident Fauve and I on our walks which make me smile.  Do any bloggers remember the classic Joyce Grenfell monologue Useful And Acceptable Gifts where she plays a (Very Buckinghamshire) countrywoman giving a lecture to a Women's Institute on how to make a 'boutoniere' out of beech husks?  Wonderful. Any road, I'm not able to pass a beech tree at this time of year now without giggling quietly to myself. 
So, I'll be up there this Sunday, ploughing the fields and scattering away. And I'll be thinking about boutonieres, earwigs and the gifts of laughter and wonder.

6 comments:

  1. Yes, I remember Joyce Grenfell's Useful and Acceptable Gifts! And I'm glad I'm not the only one with an inner five-year-old who gets very excited about conkers. Autumn has never really begun until I find my first one - and preferably come home with pockets laden with them!

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  2. They're supposed to deter spiders as well! Not sure if that's an old wife's tale or not?

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    1. I've heard that... Got conkers on the windowsills 'cos this is the time the really BIG ones start coming into the house. Seems to be working... So far...

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    2. Bet you they wouldn't see off the ones we get. You should see them! I put it down to the atomic energy placey a few miles away.

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  3. My mother had conkers all over the ground floor of the house to deter the spiders. (shh, don't tell her, but she had lots of spiders as well)

    My autumn treasure is a hazelnut, lives in the bottom of my hand bag (all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well).

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    1. Good idea. Do you think Mother Julian would have approved of a conker instead? Some of my collection of Nature's bounty has slipped though the torn lining of my handbag and is now lost in its tardis-like interior!

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