Saturday 29th March 2014 – 3.30-715pm
Intend to burn stuff today. I only have until the end of March to do any burning of rubbish and debris on the allotment. If I miss that window, then I’d have to wait until November. So, loaded up the car with bags of twigs and other wood from my fallen Rhus, took some matches and newspaper and headed to my plot.
Such a lovely warm spring day at the allotment. I breathed in the air and allowed my shoulder blades to find their way down my back to their correct position. Just breathe.
To start things off I dug a shallow hollow in the soil and put some rolled up newspaper into it, which I lit with the matches. On top of that I added small, dry twigs. Everything went out pretty quickly. Tried again several times without success. It’s been a long time since I started a fire. I know what you’re thinking and it’s not that. As a child we had an open fire with a boiler behind it to heat the water. It was one of my jobs to start a new fire in the grate each day. I have to say that I was good at it.But now, after many attempts and increasing frustration, the small twigs began to just smoulder like charcoal. I added more twigs which gave off lots of smoke, blackened in the increasing heat then turned to charcoal again. No flames. The natural gusts of wind made the embers glow. So I moved the lower layers to create air spaces and suddenly flames appeared. Over the baby flames I made a wigwam of twigs. This worked well and the wood began to crackle and spit. At last, a small but satisfying fire. Nature called and when I returned from the loo the flames had gone leaving smoking wood. Aaarh! I knelt down as if praying and blew hard on my non fire. I fanned it and the flames reappeared. I slowly began feeding it as if it were a sick child that needed delicate handling. The orange and purple flames rose higher and danced in the wind. Sparks were carried by the breeze as was the smoke. I tried to stay out of it’s reach but my eyes burned from the smoke and no doubt every stitch of my clothes reaked of it too. I abandoned delicacy and now threw handfulls of dry wood onto the fire as it became even hungrier. Beautiful. I just stood and watched, entranced. The sun was sinking behind the embankment in the west. Bagfulls of debris were consumed and I was tempted to burn even more, but it was getting late and I knew that I could not leave a fire unattended. I stood in the low light watching as the flames wilted leaving irridescent glowing remains.
A small mound of beauty occupying its own space and time, allowing me to share in that brief existence.
I reach the allotment exit at twilight and a bat flutters overhead. Swooping at emerging or retiring insects, then it’s off northward.