Thursday 18 July 2019

Bellahouston Thunderstorm. Growing up within the Great Forest.

                                              ALL PHOTOS CLICK FULL SCREEN.
It's not always easy when you have been exploring the outdoors for as long as I have- over 55 years- to find new or interesting places to visit. Travelling into the mountains usually costs money, which I do not have much of at the moment, or inclination to go myself as a solo trip, but fortunately I have many other outdoor interests nearer home I am equally content with at present- great beach walks- city walks- cycling-    kayaking, ( risky sport on your own though) micro worlds- history of places and architecture. So loads to choose from.
 But my first and greatest passion has always been woodlands, farms, (cattle and horse dotted fields), streams, waterfalls, and rolling ridges. Pastures and Parkland settings mainly. I consider myself very privileged indeed to have grown up in Pollok/Nitshill ( reputedly the original area was pronounced Nuts-hill, named after a long gone hazelnut wood not itchy head-lice or angry local bams. Hence local pub in Nitshill village- The Hazel Wood.) on the southern outskirts of Glasgow, as, although I grew up within a fairly rough council estate it was, in Mr Weir's words ... " very easy to escape from." Above is a view over Pollok Country Park from Bellahouston Park with the Kennishead hi rise flats in the distance. A much loved lookout and park in my case. Mature deciduous woodlands stretch south for miles in a wide unbroken realm which also includes  Haggs Castle Golf Course, Pollok Golf Course, Cowglen Golf Course, Crookston Wood, and the well preserved ruins of Crookston Castle, former home of Lord Darnley and Mary, Queen of Scots, where they were reputedly matched up in the mid 1560s before getting hitched, even though neither were actually from Scotland in heart or mind. An early version of the 'dream team.'  Lord Darnley was born in England apparently (Yorkshire), his father having large estates in both countries originally but the Scottish ones were stripped from him after he backed the wrong side, a common occurrence during that troubled period meaning he'd only returned to Scotland after decades in exile.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crookston_Castle

 Lord Darnley did have a claim to the Scottish and English thrones as did Mary, Queen of Scots, an extra political incentive to get married. Although born in Scotland, after the age of five Mary spent her childhood in France only returning here as a recently widowed adult, so she did not really know or remember Scotland much either. Although they left an indelible mark on the nation's consciousness and in local place names it could be argued neither enjoyed their short time here very much with early death and long imprisonment just around the corner a few years after they arrived on Scottish soil.
By way of contrast, I, and several generations before and after me, enjoyed in full the golden years of this great estate. Why? Well... going back several generations from when I was born in the 1950s it was mostly private land, ordinary children had far less free time to play before adulthood, often going down the local coal mines from a young age until retirement, ill health or death.... and at the other end... 1990s to the present day, children have far less freedom outdoors without adult supervision. We had little in the way of toys, wealth or material possessions but we were rich in other ways.

From around the age of six or seven we, my friends and I, began exploring this wonderful kingdom every weekend, setting a template for my later outdoor life. Before that age we were largely confined to a few streets, usually within spotting or shouting distance of the house but after that age the pull of a vast unexplored region on our doorstep proved too strong as fields, woods, streams, ponds, grasslands and ridges lived five minutes walk away from my house. And at that period of time in history we were free to explore it all on our own, all day long, as long as we returned for dinner or before darkness descended, usually 4:00pm in winter- 7:00pm in summer... if dry. An almost unimaginable concept now in this internet age of instant tracking and minute by minute child- parent contact but perfectly normal then. Indeed, if we arrived back early from a local wander with pals, turning up at the house after only a few hours on a sunny day that's when our parents got concerned. ' 'Did you have a fight with your friends?' ' Aw, could you find no- one to play with- are you bored?'

Looking back it seemed almost a crime not to stay out all day as a youngster when you left at breakfast as it usually meant you had to be entertained, looked after, and fed by grown ups. Most parents would chase you out the house unless it was pouring with rain, a collective UK mindset at that time even though bad things did happen, especially in the rougher council estates. The difference was it was mostly word of mouth communication about any dangers in those days... radio, early black and white TV, and newspapers having far less dominance or influential in most folks life's or thinking processes. Especially children who only read the cartoon page in newspapers and watched very little TV then. With no gadgets or fridge freezers in the house, bigger families, and a lack of labour saving devices, housewife's seemed to be constantly active then anyway... either cleaning, washing, shopping daily, or cooking... with little time to look after children.
But for us, growing up, free time was always an adventure to be truly savoured... outdoors. Egg hunting, jumping streams, playing with newts and tadpoles, finding conkers, mushrooms and berries in autumn; Raspberries, gooseberries, strawberries, brambles, rhubarb, and apple hunting in season sprouting in the hedgerows and abandoned orchards. With little in the way of snacks or money any free treats we could get off the land provided us with extra energy, juice to quench thirst, and the satisfaction of the quest. The area had once been a well tended grand estate but now, mostly donated to the public, we could wander anywhere- large sweeping meadows, old buildings, fields, large reservoirs, old orchards... and none of it out of bounds.
A slice of Pollok, Nitshill and the Brownside Braes above Barrhead and Paisley in this photo above. The Misty Mountains of my own personal 'Shire'. Renfrew-shire that is- fairest of a thousand kingdoms reputedly and I truly believe that.
It wasn't all paradise back then however and it certainly had its dangerous elements- places where children and teenagers could easily find themselves captured and tortured by rival gangs or malicious strangers, beaten up or killed, dangerous surroundings where one wrong step could plunge you from a height or suck you under and things that looked innocent and benign but weren't. At that time, 1960s to 1980s, gang violence in the various estates was pretty bad all over Glasgow and many of the streets in Pollok, built before and after the war years, had seen better days. The earliest constructed of the big four estates/ schemes in Glasgow with mainly flat roofs.  It was far rougher and more threatening then than it looks today with long rows of older tenements crawling over the ridges of a 30 thousand strong population council district,  many streets already half abandoned and listed for demolition by the late 1980s by my twenty something years. An interesting, fairly exciting place to grow up though and I did not find it dull at all.
Pollok late 1980s. Not a place to play in unless you lived here but certainly my happiest working experience- every day exiting, filled with adrenalin, and completely unique. Much better than working in an office or a factory as we often covered all Glasgow's council schemes city wide. I was even paid to go into these areas at night- a wild education. A 1980s version of the Wild West that sometimes had us riding shotgun duty up on the stagecoach.
Yet 30 minutes walk from my front door in the other direction, heading away from Pollok and Glasgow, I also had this. The pleasant peaceful water world of The Barrhead Dams. Variety in abundance. I would not trade my childhood and teenage years for anything as I don't think I would get anything better than this.
Anyway, back to where I was at present- which was Bellahouston Park in summer. Beautiful photographic light as a thunderstorm was predicted. Having completed my own blog challenge of going ten years outdoors in Scotland without a rainy day I decided I could treat myself to a downpour. This was one occasion when I did want rain on a walk and loads of it.
Leverndale Tower during heavy rain. I did get my wish an hour later with both thunder and lightening over the distant ridges and forests, bad weather and dark skies gradually approaching my position on top of a hill. I stayed dry under a tree when the rain hit then moved slightly downhill when the lightening flashed overhead.
Really enjoyed it as everyone else scurried for shelter out the park, leaving it empty of humans. A lot of water splashed down very quickly in a summer burst of humid energy. Although intense and tropical in nature it did not last long and 30 minutes later the sun made a watery appearance. Being under a mature deciduous broad leaved tree for that time I was still comparatively dry- judging the shelter time perfectly between rain first hitting tree tops and ending before the delayed drip effect trickled down to when it was time to be in the open again away from the wet branches which would soak you long after the rain had passed.
It also gave me a chance to examine the new wildflower borders, planted in many UK parks as an aid to insects ( butterflies, bees etc) to try to reverse their dramatic decline. The strange thing is... looking at the rough council estate photo above... in the 1960s to 1980s period of heavy industry, still smoking chimneys, a busier river, crumbling housing stock, and closing factories the world still seemed a vast, underpopulated place to its inhabitants. Now, on the surface, it looks much better visually, what houses around there are look scenically attractive- if not always affordable, but the world, its forests, it's natural resources, climate, and wildlife are no longer limitless. And it's not really climate change that's the biggest problem- that's just one immediate danger ahead on a long motorway. The main elephant in the room is human population growth competing for the remaining fresh water, land, minerals, food, living space, money and possessions. One thing about being poor is that you soon realise you do not need very much to live a comfortable happy life- just enough money, food, water and shelter to get by without the added stress of chasing the latest available technology, a new car, a bigger house, more promotions at work, etc which is in itself a familiar reliable recipe but now stretched to breaking point at this particular period in human history.
Pansy display. Walled Garden.
House for an Art Lover. Bellahouston Park.
Outside panel detail. More wife/artist Margaret Macdonald than Charles Rennie Mackintosh here I suspect as she went in for female figures in groups throughout her designs. As I've said before, many years ago, when I first discovered Mackintosh designed buildings in Glasgow in my early 20s it took a while for the penny to drop that all the finest creations that left a lasting impression on me belonged to her.
Without the panel decoration this back elevation would not have much going for it.
Walled Garden view. There are only a handful of parks in Glasgow that have these treasured enclosures.
Flower mix.
Sun- flowers.
Big Foot.
Red Roses.
A delicate display of colour.
Mosspark view.
Looking South over Mosspark towards Darnley. He left behind a tree he took shelter and rested under as he was feeling unwell, tended by his royal wife, and a place name as a legacy of his time spent in this district. Wonder if he enjoyed his woodland realm as much as me? Probably not as he was ill during this flying visit on horseback and dead by the age of 21. Murdered. Nae luck at all. Partly self inflicted through drink, bad temper, arrogance, and doing dodgy stuff with women of ill repute, other than his wife.
Blood on the leaves.
Entering the realm between the seen and the unseen now. Multiverse creatures appear. Beware of falsehood ahead.
And again.
Do we even live in reality any more?... and how can we tell?... look closely at the bench...















      











10 comments:

Kay G. said...

The freedom we had as kids! We would ride our bikes in the street. Only scary part, you would ride past a house and a dog would chase you. I can still hear the barking and the dog's breath just at my ankles as I pedaled for my life! Never stopped my bike riding though.

Carol said...

I suppose you'd grow up street-wise anyway. Richard has an even better approach - that of the 'grey man' favoured by the SAS and so on. He basically passes around unnoticed. I always get into trouble in urban areas as I have a kind of 'in-your-face' look about me and it attracts attention. When people start, I have to finish it (I can never back down) so it escalates rapidly. I'm surprised I've never been beaten to death by a gang. But I don't go to urban areas much...

When we were kids we went out in a morning and didn't come back till tea-time (usually late). We used to go right across the moors in a 'gang' - probably about 14 miles there and back - to the War Memorial and a cross which was up there which was above a cave. If we stayed more locally, we went beck-jumping or similar. We were such noisy kids the whole village were glad when we went far away - especially our parents!

Anabel Marsh said...

We certainly live in a dear green place”! I had a lot more freedom than kids nowadays too. Though I shudder at the memory of playing in an old, dupisused Hut next to a railway line …

Rosemary said...

Not sure what is mean't by - Do we even live in reality any more?... and how can we tell?... look closely at the bench...
I did, however, notice that the lady sitting on the bench is also featured on your image No.9.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Kay,
yes, cycling was fun as well, except for the over the handlebars crashes and head butting the concrete a few times over the years. Very painful.

blueskyscotland said...

I can just picture you as a rebel Carol. I'm a quiet boy me and usually avoid the head on in your face approach which is why I'm still so handsome and walking the earth today.

blueskyscotland said...

Probably the greenest part of the city Anabel and the least built up, even now. Loads of tree filled areas you usually only find in well established upmarket estates like Bearsden or Kilmacolm. Unusual in that respect.

blueskyscotland said...

Glad you asked that Rosemary. Most of the people, and dogs, and other oddities were drawn in by me afterwards onto the photos. They are not really there. Also a nod towards a soon to be rolled out future where it will be almost impossible to tell if something or someone is real or not, given the recent great strides in 3D graphic art, 3D printing, and robotics. Fascinating times we live in. The future is not all bad.

Carol said...

I TRY to avoid the 'in your face' approach - it's not my approach - it seems to be my general 'air' or the look of me or something. Perhaps it's my size? I don't know really but I know I can't go out in an urban area without getting into a fracas!

Ian Johnston said...

Great variety in this post Bob, from the brutalism of a run down estate to the delicacy of the flowers you've captured. There have been some cracking thunderstorms over the last month or so too!