Posted in Writing

Writing and Holidays…

As a regular blogger, it’s difficult to get my head around the fact my last ‘apperance’ on this blog was to promote Jessie Cahalin’s debut, A Gift for Maisie Bloom. That was March last year. Since then, I seem to have fallen down a rabbit hole. Part of this was a bit of a wrestling match with my current WIP, which wasn’t behaving itself. Back in Autumn 2024, I began a new book. I’d decided to return to Somerset for this, my twelfth story. What I set out on paper should have worked, but as I started to write, it soon became clear that it wasn’t going in the direction I wanted it to, or in any direction for that matter. To cut a long story short, I shelved the whole project and decide that a return to my Cornish town of Kingswater was on the cards. I’m not divulging the plot, or the characters. I will only say that there was one key resident who had the potential for their own story. And I’m glad I decided to make this change of direction, as the whole thing is working out so well. Now 89,000 words in, I’m almost there. Well not quite, as typing THE END is only the first part of the journey. There is more to do – a whole lot more before I can forward it to my editor.

What have I been doing during my year’s absence? Well a few niggly health issues have caused some unwanted road blocks and diversions to writing and to life in general. As for the writing journey, I’m hopefully nearly at the end of this annoying intrusion and hope to navigate the rest of 2026 in good health. Reading also took up some of my time

Holidays, of course, featured last year. In May we stayed in Wells Next the Sea in Norfolk; a place we’ve been regular visitors to since 2008. We have friends who relocated there and it’s always good to meet for lunch and catch up. Telephone calls and social media are fine, but it’s always good to meet in person over good food and a glass of wine.

July saw us staying just outside Winchester. It’s one of my favourite cities, whether making a summer visit or wandering around their Christmas market. Our two night stay in the village of Easton, with its thatched cottages and houses, gave such a relaxed atmosphere and a feeling you were stepping into an episode of Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple. Such a relaxing couple of days plus a wander around Winchester wrapped up with the bonus of lots of sunshine.

The final holiday saw us back in Fowey, which due to my last three books being set on the south coast of Cornwall, feels like coming home. The coastal town of Kingswater, which features in all of my Cornish Coastal series, is a cross between Fowey and Dartmouth. Two communities (Fowey and Polruan and Dartmouth and Kingswear) facing each other across a river estuary, have been ‘borrowed’ in order to create my fictitious piece of Cornwall – East and West Kingswater. Although the weather wasn’t as co-operative as it usually is (drizzle on our visit to Trurto), we did find some sunshine. It was enough to recharge the batteries and immerse myself in the atmosphere there in order to move my WIP forward. Although Fowey is a popular holiday destination, you can still find places to wander, with wonderful views of both countryside and coast.

This year we will be staying in Dartmouth for a week in May and catching up with family, then in July we return to Casterton, near Kirkby Lonsdale. It’s a place we visited in 2022. It’s within easy reach of the Lake District, so we’re hoping for good weather there too.

There will be more updates soon, and special news towards the end of the month…stay tuned…

Posted in General

STRIKE A POSE…

This is my last post before I disappear on holiday. This time we’re heading north-east to Derbyshire and the Peak District. I’ve only ever driven through here on my way to somewhere else, but can remember it’s very beautiful so there’ll be a lot of photo opportunities. We’ve a rented cottage in the village of Over Hadden which is just outside the town of Bakewell. The good news is that the cottage is equipped with every modern convenience; the bad is there’s no wifi. However, I will have my phone so I won’t be totally out of touch. I do, however, have issues with typing on a microscopic keyboard. I have very small hands and that means small fingers but I still fail to cope with a simple message without backspacing and cursing. I’m totally amazed as I watch people beating out a message with their fingers in overdrive, making it look so easy.

One of the nicest aspects of holidays is the opportunity to take photographs but I don’t just restricted this to times when I’m away.  Whenever I go out for walks locally my camera comes too.  I have always loved photography, the only trouble is very often my visual expectations far exceed the capabilities of the camera.  This means what I’m seeing is not what I get when I take the shot – oh and I guess I ought to throw the limitations of the photographer into the mix too – with the best will in the world I’m no David Bailey!  Too optimistic I think is the word we’re looking for.  However that does not take away the love of seeing things and wanting to capture them on film (or memory card as it is now).  A lot of my good shots I have to say are luck rather than judgement.  My friend Jane Risdon is the lady with the camera.  She has posted some wonderful shots and I bow to  her expertise!

One really funny memory wrapped around photography was when we went on holiday in Spain back in the eighties.  The husband of the couple we went with was a total

Guadalest
Guadalest

photography geek – it was a major hobby and he had his own dark room.  This was the first time we had been on holiday with them and although we knew about his passion for photography we  had no idea what what lay ahead. Every time we left the villa it felt like an expedition – the stuff he insisted carrying with him was amazing, including, of course, a telescopic tripod – he almost needed his own private Sherpa!  We went up into the hills one day to a place called Guadalest.  There were fabulous views right back down to the coast and he took ages changing the lens and getting this damned tripod set up to capture each shot while all we wanted to do was to find a bar and a cold beer! These were the days before digital cameras were generally available so all his shots were taken on film. A few days after our return home his girlfriend rang to tell us that when he went to take the film out it had broken off inside the camera.  In his dark room when he took the back off he discovered there was no film – he had forgotten to put one in!  Total geek then!  All that effort, all that fussy preciseness in setting up shots of views had been a complete waste of time! Not sure whether he learned any lessons from what happened as a job move saw them leaving the area later that year and we never went away with them again. Having said that I’m convinced had they stayed we would not have put ourselves through a holiday with a photographer with OCD for a second time!  Once was quite enough!

Denim Patchwork Horse, Bruges
Denim Patchwork Horse, Bruges

Of all the couples we know it seems I’m the only female who likes taking photos.  Not only do I find it a good pictorial reminder of where I’ve been, I’m one of those people who find things beyond beach and cityscapes and want to capture them if only to show other people – much easier than trying to describe what

View from Corfu Villa
View from Corfu Villa balcony

I’ve seen.  Like the denim horse in Bruges last October when we were enjoying a city break there.  It was in the entrance to a number of clothes boutiques and was too good to resist.  Then there was another the year we went to Corfu with friends.  We arrived at the villa and unloaded the luggage.  The men carried it upstairs and we opened the doors to the bedrooms trying to decide who was having which room.  I went into one of them pulled open the shutters, walked out onto the balcony and was totally blown away by the view.  I knew if I left it I would never be able to capture that shot again so grabbed my camera.

My local ventures into photography have come about because even after years of living here I am totally mesmerised by this area on the eastern side of Bath where I live.  Bath is all hills, built in an extinct volcano, you cannot enter or exit the city without negotiating some sort of gradient.  On our side of the city we have Solsbury Hill, made famous by Peter Gabriel’s song of the same name.  It looks across to Bathampton Downs to the south of Bath.  The River Avon, main rail line to London, theKennet and Avon Canal and the A4 trunk road all run from east to west along the valley floor between these two hills.  The place where I live is slightly east of this and gives us amazing views both across and down this valley.  Tucked against a hill with a large sprawl of wood above it, it became the inspiration for Meridan Cross, the fictional West Somerset village which features in my books.  I never tire of watching the cycle of the year and the ever-changing colours of the trees. I had always imagined that leaves were all the same shade of green. Not so, there’s an amazing variety as I have come to learn.  When it rains there is always low cloud which threads its way eerily through the wood and if we should  by any chance get snow it looks as if someone has taken a huge icing sugar shaker and dusted the trees – absolutely magic! Next week the Peak District’s dramatic landscape will no doubt be offering more good photo opportunities. I can’t wait!

Take care and I’ll  be back blogging on 20th July.  In the meantime there’s a slideshow below of some of my favourite shots – enjoy!

 

 

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Jo x