Tuesday, 8 May 2012

a hunting of the hares

 small patch of sunlight
hares over the Devon hills
hounded by rainclouds

I was down in Devon the other week, staying in the Thrushell valley near Lifton as a guest of Richard and Ute at Barbaryball; a lovely spot, and highly recommended. The rain was at times positively elemental, so that the smaller roads became rather more like rivers. It was good fun, and made the occasional sunny interlude all the more welcome.

dawn over the Thrushell

I sat in the car park at Brent Tor for a while, listening to the rain hammering on the car roof, then gave up my intention to scramble up. There were sunny intervals in Devon on that particular day, but they and I were never in the same place at the same time.


Still, it was good weather for wandering around churches, and I was particularly pleased that Kelly was very close to where I was staying, as it is one of the seventeen places around Dartmoor where you can find three hares.

Nice as it is to find the three hares where they should be, it is perhaps even nicer to find something new and unexpected, both in the fabric of the place and in the encounters, like the brindled lurcher in the church at Throwleigh who came to say hello while the owners attended to something; though that encounter was a part of the fabric of the place too, of course. Some of those things I'll keep to myself; some of them are in the picture below. I especially liked the owl, because I didn't know it was there. And the green man at Drewsteignton was a treat, too; peering up through the gloom, I saw what I was sure was a face peering back at me, and so I took the picture, and hoped. And there he was, when I uploaded the pics to the computer; looking like a friendly hippy, or the sort of chap who has his own pewter tankard behind the bar at the pub. But without the folk songs. Result.

1. South Tawton hares
2. Cheriton Bishop hares
3. Throwleigh hares
4. Kelly hares
5. Tavistock hares
6. South Tawton owl
7. South Tawton green man
8. South Tawton green man
9. Drewsteignton green man

6 comments:

  1. Elemental makes more interesting pictures than bright and sunny...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Isn't it strange just how much pagan imagery finds its way into churches - especially the green man? The Drewsteignton Green Man looks slightly frog-like but I love the South Tawton one.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Entirely agreed, Caroline!

    The mermaid and the sphinx on the pulpit at Cheriton Bishop were a bit of a surprise, too, Bella!

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/belvedere/7115722399/in/photostream

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/belvedere/7115722481/in/photostream/

    ....have you encountered any sheela-na-gigs?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Gorgeous photos, there's nowhere quite like Dartmoor (I spent some of my childhood there) - and I didn't know there were so many versions of the three hares.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The closest we have here is a pagan neighbor's very big bunny.
    Dru, I love all your pix but the first one above is a masterpiece, like something by one of the great landscape painters.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Lovely. Can't wait till Friday's trip now!

    ReplyDelete