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Filey 22/23: 13 – 26 August

It’s the last week of August and outside my window the trees are thrashing furiously in the strong wind, while down in the harbour the waves are crashing against the harbour wall with the blind persistence of rugby prop forwards. The sky is the colour of the kind of porridge you find congealed on sidewalks. Suddenly it feels like autumn.

All the more reason, then, to bring a little colour back into the world with a flaming, bright red gansey. I finally finished it on Saturday. I seem, by the way, to have created my own “Zeno’s paradox” of ganseys: on the second cuff I managed to knit the first half (three inches) easily enough; but by then I’m starting to run out of steam, and the next inch and a half takes just as long; then the next three-quarters of an inch; and so on.

So a job that should just take a few days ends up seeming to last forever. (To make matters worse I had to rip out and re-knit a couple of inches when I realised that I’d made a mess of the join between two balls of wool, so that a stray loop of one of the ends was left peeking coyly out.)

But it’s over now. It’s very red – so bright in fact that I keep thinking I’ve left the light on; and several times I’ve gone out to admire the sunset, only to find it was the glow of the gansey reflected in the window. Once it’s been properly blocked and dried I’ll ship it down to my friend in Edinburgh; I’ve already warned him to be careful, or he’ll look like he’s been caught in an explosion in an Italian restaurant.

Meanwhile it’s time to take a short break, and start planning the next project. It’s going to be another cardigan (c.f., Margaret’s Fife gansey in the gallery), knit in Frangipani cream, and will probably feature some of the intricate and riotous patterns from the far north of Scotland.

It’s a scary thought that it will probably be the New Year before that one is finished, and the bleak (very bleak!) midwinter will hopefully be on the wane. Since moving up here I’ve come up with a new definition of summer: videlicet, any day when I don’t need a hot water bottle. So far this summer has consisted of about 19 days.

By the way, I’ve just discovered I have an allergic reaction to something – but I don’t know what. Speculation is rife: what can it be? It’s not grass or tree pollen, or dust: could it be porridge? Vegetables? Reality TV shows? Proust? Work? So long as it’s not coffee or bread, I can probably cope; but (gulp) – what if it’s wool…?

Filey 21: 6 – 12 August

I don’t know if you’ve ever experienced a rock festival at the bottom of your garden? It’s years since I went to one, so Allah, in an obvious Mohammed-mountain parallel, decided to bring one to me.

Wick hosted the B-fest festival this weekend, Friday night and all day Saturday, down by the river, just half a mile from our front door. It was like being shelled by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir’s heavy artillery division.

The main stage, before the festival

By some oversight the sun was shining on Saturday, no need for anti-rickets medication this weekend, so we decided to slip away to recover our hearing and stare at some scenery. This involved a trip along the coast to Strathy Point, a little peninsula jutting out into the North Sea, an hour’s drive over the border into Sutherland. Strathy is a crofting township, scattered bungalows and ruined stone huts, and you can see a remnant of an ancient way of life in the pyramids of peat stacked out in the fields to dry like ancient stone cairns, contrasting strangely with the satellite dishes on the crofts themselves.

It’s a mile or so’s walk from the car park to the lighthouse, downhill through a rocky defile filled with sheep who watch you as you pass with the silent menace of inner city gang members, except that sheep mostly chew grass instead of gum, and drug-related crime among them is comparatively low. We sat on the grass at the end of the point, the sun on our backs, the ground curving away below us like the bows of a submarine, and watched gannets diving for fish out past the rocks—the whole restless North Sea laid out before us, nothing between us and the distant curve of the far horizon but a few weathered slabs of rock.

Looking north

Driving home with the windows open, breathing the scent of freshly-mown hay, it felt like summer, or rather, the coming to an end of a summer we never had. In a month it will be autumn; and the year will start to wind down like a top running out of spin. Schools go back in Scotland next week—summer’s over already, sorry guys.

Still, autumn is prime gansey weather. I’m sauntering down the sleeve, over half way now, taking my time and enjoying it. I reckon of my 13 balls of 100g Wendy wool I’ll have just under one ball left by the end. I hope my friend David, who the gansey’s for, has been keeping in shape. It feels as if it weighs as much as a deep-sea diver’s suit—he’ll think gravity’s been increased once he tries it on.

Thanks to everyone who downloaded copies of my novel The Bone Fire when it was on free promotion last week. Remember, if you should happen to read it—and enjoy it—a review on Amazon would mean a lot, and help the book enormously next time it’s on a promotion.

So there we are. The fun fair’s packed up, the rock festival is over, Margaret’s heading off on her travels again—it must be time for Ganseys.com to take its summer break. Just a short one this time—we’ll be back on 27 August, hopefully with a completed gansey to show. Till then—enjoy the summer—while it lasts…

Filey 20: 30 July – 5 August

So here we are: with all the fanfare of a submarine slipping its moorings in the predawn darkness one cold winter’s morning, my second novel was launched on Amazon this weekend. It’s called The Bone Fire and is a contemporary fantasy novel, set partly in Edinburgh, partly in the shaman spirit world, and is probably even stranger than that sounds. And it’s free! (At least till Wednesday, anyway.)

You can read more about it, if you’re interested—and you can always go to Amazon and read the beginning online, or download a sample. As ever, the hard part is getting noticed among the deluge of self-published books; but short of renaming it “A Good Shag” to capitalise on the Fifty Shades of Gray market, there’s not much I can do—and anyway, knowing my luck, it’d just get lost among all the other books on pipe tobacco…

Anyway, as ever, if you feel so inclined, any help you can furnish by letting people know it exists via Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads.com, or blogs would be a huge help; and if you should happen to read it, and enjoy it—stranger things have happened—then an Amazon review would be much appreciated.

Thanks to everyone for your solicitation over my blocked ears last week. I duly had them syringed on Friday. I don’t know if you’ve ever had it done? Basically, the nurse plants one foot on your chest to keep you steady, while filling a syringe that looks like something a market gardener in the 1930s would use to spray greenfly on his roses. She then inserts the nozzle in your ear and squirts.

Teepee? No, it’s the bonfire-in-waiting

Now, if this was a Bugs Bunny cartoon a jet of water would immediately arc out of the other ear. But no. In fact, the effect is rather like having a power shower turned on inside your head, and it’s only a wonder the nurse doesn’t look in the basin afterwards and say, ‘Oops! Is that a piece of brain floating in there?’

Not that I’m complaining. The good news, I can hear again; the bad news, the fairground parked down by the riverside was suddenly far more annoying, like having a Bruce Springsteen fan parked outside your house for several hours a night. (I didn’t go to the fair; I find them a bit tacky, plus those rides that spin you round have an unpleasant effect on my stomach, turning me into a sort of human muck spreader, with unfortunate consequences for anyone happening to look up as I go whirling past…)

The fair was here for Wick Gala, and it all finished off with fireworks over the river—we could see them from our house, thus saving us the inhuman effort of a five minutes’ walk. But the really cool part was the fog: at ground level all was clear; but higher up there was a dense cloud of mist, so when the rockets went off all you could see was a coloured haze in the sky, like Captain Kirk torpedoing Klingons in a nebula.

I’m on the second sleeve of the gansey, and as usual it’s going slower than the first. I’m never sure quite why this should be, but it always happens. I suppose it’s partly the feeling of starting all over again, and partly because the top of the sleeve is wider than the cuff—so each row takes half as long again as you’re used to. Still, I’ve seen off the gusset, and am slowly getting back into the zone.

Now it’s back to Amazon to see how my book is doing. And remember, if you only read one novel this year combining the shaman spirit world, Arthurian knights, and foul-mouthed talking animals, please make sure it’s mine.