Tuesday 22 April 2014

Wild Coastal Swimming


If you know me at all, you'll know that I love swimming. Weekends often take me to the sea and alongside my beautiful friend Dot I've been swimming early alternate mornings in our local outdoor Lido throughout this winter.

Daniel Start's beautiful (oh so beautiful) book, Wild Swimming: Coast, has to be one of my favourite non fiction works of all time. Over the Easter break we headed to Pembrokeshire with Jamie - what better to do on that craggy coastline in the spring time than a wild swim?

St Non's chapel, where legend has it Non (as she was then) birthed St David (as he became) in 500AD alone in a howling night storm, acted as a guiding marker to the steep, stony wild flower-festooned path leading down to our launch point.

The remains of St Non's Chapel
The boy leads the way

Jamie framed by thrift
Beguilingly tropical

The third cave along was our aim
Lightening skies bode well

Launching
At this point we left cameras and modern-day reality behind. Swimming into and out of an ancient cave passage, marvelling at the murky heights above our heads and hearing the sea's sounds amplified through stony speakers left us all tired, elated and speechless with wonder.

Outer Hebridean Expedition

I've been a bit quiet on here lately. Well, truthfully, I've been very quiet while hunkering down to my MA (in Fine Art) over the winter months. This doesn't mean that the coastal expeditions have stopped. Before I post about the latest trip, here are some photos from our expedition last September in the van to some parts of the Hebrides (Skye, Harris and Lewis).

Looks a bit like a Caspar David Friedrich painting...
Weather moving in on yet another sheep
Boy doing his thing  

Me doing my thing

What a trip it was! Assuming that wildness and weather do for you as much as they do for me, get yourself to the Hebrides.