I’ve
discovered I’m a noctambulist!!
It may come as no
surprise to you, but the another night over dinner I was reminiscing! More of a surprise might be the fact that it
was about TV / Radio “appearances” I have made, and maybe even more of a
surprise that with subjects as diverse as playing conkers in the playground, educational
links with Romania, sponsored bike rides, recycled toilet paper, and night
walking, I haven’t managed to have a “big break!!!”
Many years ago,
normally in the company of man’s best friend and at times simply because the
dog needed to go out even though it was blowing a gale with driving freezing
rain or worse, I discovered the joys of walking at night. The world not only drains of colour during
the hours of darkness, but sounds intensify and senses other than sight come to
the fore. This poem I wrote some years
ago seems apt here:
The Gin and Tonic Ghost
( or Nocturnal Nasal Meanderings! )
The night was still and frosty,
Mist hanging around on street corners,
As I climbed to the open
Deserted summit of the common.
There I was alone
Save the moon and Max my faithful hound.
The moon was turning on and off,
As the clouds drifted lazily across the sky.
Max faded into the darkness,
But with the reassuring tinkle of the discs on his collar.
Then it came distinct,
Permeating the air
Unmistakably the smell of a .......
Gin and tonic.
Intense, it was that sort of smell,
That sort of evening
With not another soul around!
The moon then from behind a cloud,
Sent out its eery beam
To put my mind at rest?
Nobody there ..............!
I guessed it was not a night
For public spirited gestures,
So turned and fled
To habitations not far hence.
To have my nostrils once more assailed,
By logs on a fire burning slow,
Sending the woodsmoke up chimneys low
To drop heavy and heady all around.
More steps another smell
That made me think at this late hour,
Perhaps too long I'd stayed
And morning fast approached.
That unmistakable smell of
Lightly browned, just right .........toast!
It was a night for smells,
And at home
As I pulled off my wellies
Filling the porch.
The pungent smell,
Not of my socks!
But of freshly brewed coffee,
Home sweet home.
Well, I have for years
enjoyed the quiet solitude of a still dark night, the crackle and sparkle of
frosty moonlit nights, or the roar and thrash of windblown trees, viewed from a
safe distance during fierce night time storms, and many other ever changing
scenarios, all worth any discomfort that the associated inclement weather may
bring. Just today, shortly before
writing this, after a wild day of heavy driving rain, I finally decided that it
wasn’t going to improve and the dog needed to go out as dusk was beginning to
fall. He doesn’t seem to mind what the
weather is doing and today he slipped and skidded round the muddy woodland,
chasing anything that moved, any scent he caught from the multitude of
squirrels that live in the wood or the pheasants being bred there who rise
clumsily with a clacking squawk, seeming to taunt any canines in hearing
distance into immediate action. Having
finally made the effort, with rain flowing freely down the cagoule and onto the
legs of the trousers, the wellies making it easy to splash though the puddles
and the trekking pole providing a third leg and making it safe to do so, it
suddenly didn’t matter what the weather threw at me, it was quite simply great
to be out; wet, slippery and increasingly dark yes, but also moody, atmospheric,
impressionable and special, an adventure in the dark and wet made even more
enjoyable knowing that a warm house and a cup of tea were waiting not too far
away!
Then, when I started
working as a Voluntary Warden for the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural
Beauty (AONB) and gravitated away from working on footpath improvements to
leading guided walks in The Cotswolds, “one of the country’s most treasured and
quintessentially English landscapes,” as it says in a visitor map for the
region that I recently picked up.
Several times a year, I would lead one of these walks and interpret the
landscape and tell stories of the past and pass on local folklore to the many
and varied participants. When checking
out the routes I was able to take Max, the dog I then had, with me, but on the
day itself the AONB policy was “No Dogs”, so Max would watch forlornly as I
packed up my rucksack, donned my boots and coat and set off into the
countryside. He’d then be there waiting
on my return, tail wagging, dogs don’t as a rule bear a grudge, but he still
needed to go for his constitutional! So,
often after night fall, both on days of the guided walks and indeed in the
winter months after work, we would set off into the dark of the night to
explore the commons high above our home in Stroud, in the heart of the
Cotswolds.
Well, on one such
occasion, after a well attended and successful daytime guided walk, we had a
truly magical moonlit walk, the dark common being given an unearthly veneer
from the bright full moon, with the stars twinkling faintly due to the strength
of the moon and the vast sky reaching far all around and fringed by the bright
lights of nearby towns and villages or the dark hills and woodlands in between.
And, as so often happens when out walking in the night, I got to thinking and
suddenly a light as bright as the distant moon lit up, it what is often called
a “light bulb moment” and I thought how great it would be to share this magical
experience with other walkers, particularly those who never venture beyond the
harsh neon lights of town, except when its daylight.
Of course, back home
some doubts raised their head; not least could people be persuaded to leave the
warm cosiness of their houses to drive out into the dark to meet a total
stranger who wanted to take them on a walk into the even more remote
countryside and would the AONB Health and safety / Insurance allow such
escapades? Well, the first was easily
sorted, start the venture in the summer and meet in daylight and walk into the
night, making it easier to rendezvous and less walking in the darkness. As it happens the second was just as easily
sorted as when I approached the powers that be, the answer was simply “Yes, go
ahead, what a good idea!”
So started my series of
“Walks in the Dark” not the park as I had to make clear to some people, and
before long had acquired a bit of a following and as the seasons changed the
walks had to start at least in the twilight, then often in the pitch dark,
people having to phone to book for precise instructions and to limit numbers as
looking after 12 walkers in the dark was preferable to a couple of hundred!! It was about this time, with a walk scheduled
to start late on a winter Saturday afternoon, that I got a call from BBC Radio
Gloucestershire! They had seen the walk
advertised in the local paper and were intrigued, not least as to why people
would tear themselves away from the warm settee in front of the telly and
venture out into the cold dark countryside!
They wanted an interview and whilst I was imagining a trip to the cosy
studio, with a bit of corporate hospitality in the “Green Room!” I realised that
the presenter wanted to meet me on the common at the point where the walk was
due to depart the following weekend. So I
found myself waiting on the edge of the common after work on a rather wet and
windy teatime, as what little daylight there had been began to drain from the
sky, the blustery wind blowing in and out of the nearby trees and the wheels of
the cars carrying people home from work to their warm cosy homes, whooshed
passed on the wet road sending cascades of water dangerously close to where I
was standing, out of the car putting on a brave face for my “five minutes of
fame!” well it was all about the great outdoors and what harm was a little rain
going to do! In fact, I’ve always said
that unfortunately, as particularly then I carried a few extra pounds, a bit of
rain doesn’t shrink you!!
The radio presenter
arrived, a young lady, totally unsuitably clad in trendy pukka jacket, fashion
hat and heels with a tape recorder over her shoulder, in imminent danger of
being swamped by the passing traffic!!
Then, the problems started, with the thrashing trees and whooshing wet
wheels totally throwing the recording levels and likely to drown out the
interview. So, she decided that the
interview needed to be done out in the wilds of the open common land where the
walk was to take place, to give it atmosphere, and we ended up venturing
further and further out onto the waterlogged common, the presenter’s heals
sinking deeper and deeper into the ground the further we went! But, I suppose all BBC reporters must have
had “the show must go on” training and unfazed, she was finally happy we had
the required solitude and atmosphere and could manage to talk over the gusting
wind without the trees and the driving rain, all the time thinking that the
ensuing broadcast would probably be enough to put off even the most intrepid
walker. So hoping for at least one
participant, as we parted company back at the cars, after the presenter had
used the best part of a box of tissues wiping the mud from her heels and the
odd splash on her tights, I invited her to come for the actual walk that
weekend! She was somewhat non-committal,
but not unexpectedly, didn’t arrive, despite it turning out to be a beautiful
crisp evening with a full contingent of hardy being happy to leave the comfort
of their homes.
I mentioned earlier
that I ended up with a bit of a following, and after several walks we decided
that as many of the participants were single people wanting the security of
walking in a group, the walks could become a novel form of “dating agency” with
codes in the walk description to alert those interested to the possibilities,
things slightly more subtle than walkers invited who enjoy travel and theatre
visits and have a GSOH (good sense of humour, for those not in the know!! Well, in our flippant moments, whilst
strolling in the moonlight, we thought that if you met with someone on a night
walk, liked what you heard then you could arrange to meet up on a daytime walk
and find out if you liked what you saw!
I’m not sure if I can claim any romantic successes, or indeed subsequent
relationships, but such talk does remind me of what must be one of my most
memorable guided walks ever, in daylight or darkness!
A couple of days before
one night walk I received a phone call from a lady wanting to come on the walk
with her husband, but she was a little worried as they were a little elderly
and would we be covering much distance or venturing onto very uneven land. I assured them that the walk was quite short
with plenty of stops for me to interpret the night time environment or to spin
a yard or two and that we would be staying on the top of the common on
relatively level paths, easy to follow as they had been worn down onto the
underlying light –coloured limestone, and lit by the lights shining up from
Stroud and reflecting off the clouds or if it was a clear night by the light of
the full moon due that night.
As we gathered in the
dusk the lady and her husband duly arrived and introduced themselves. They proceeded to tell me that they were on
holiday from Australia, where they had emigrated some forty years previously,
having originated in Stroud and they knew the common from their courting days
at the end of the Second World War!! All
assembled we set off at a leisurely pace across the common, stopping for me to
point out interesting places, how the lights and darkness accentuated the
geological features and a highwayman thrown in for good measure! However, it quickly became apparent that although
now quite elderly and making what they thought would be their last visit
“home”, the intervening years hadn’t dimmed the memories of evenings and night
time spent on the common watching the night sky lit up by the German bombs
falling on distant Bristol and other highlights of their courting, as they
started to get quite giggly and nudge one another and ask if they remembered
the night that was lit up by their antics in that particular dip or old quarry
on the edge of the common. They ended up
stealing the show, much to everyone’s delight, and at each stop before giving
my spiel, I ended up asking if they had anything to tell us and more often than
not they did and their stories were generally saucier than mine!! A memorable night was had by all, as they
reminisced about their memorable nights all those years ago, as I ended up
leaving them too it, their dialogue being far more entertaining than mine. Sadly, they were due to return to Australia
shortly afterwards, so I wasn’t able to invite them to lead another walk, but
hopefully their last night walk up on the common gave them plenty to talk about
with their friends back in Australia, and how this time they had an audience!!
Therefore, this has
been a rather long winded explanation of why I’m a noctambulist, not a
sleepwalker in the sense of a somnambulist, who rises from their bed in a state
of deep sleep and wanders, but rather one who is wide awake and chooses the
hours of darkness to wander in wonder, aimlessly or with a deep sense of
purpose, indeed therapy, marvelling at the scenery as well as managing to if
not quite to put the world to rights, at the very least sort out that niggling
problem, the solution of which has totally eluded you, whilst remaining
sedentary at home. If you’ve never tried
it, I thoroughly recommend it, as did fellow noctambulists:
I have been one acquainted with the night. I have walked out in rain – and back in rain. I have outwalked the furthest city
light. Robert Frost
I often think that the night is more alive and more
richly coloured than the day.
Vincent Van Gogh
And it doesn’t have to
even be out in the countryside in the middle of nowhere;
Walk some night on
a suburban street and pass house after house on both sides of the same street
each with the lamplight of the living room, shining golden, and inside the
little blue square of the television, each living family riveting its attention
on probably one show; nobody talking; silence in the yards; dogs barking at you
because you pass on human feet instead of wheels.
Geoff Nicholson, The Lost Art of Walking
Geoff Nicholson, The Lost Art of Walking
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