Three Things I Learnt In the Meadow

in Natural Medicine4 years ago (edited)
An English meadow is far superior to the sunburnt grassplains of my home country in Australia. Whilst you might be forgiven for not seeing the clover for the grass in a long view, to look closely you discover a quiet different story. As is the fashion on these long rambles of mine in the sunshine in this time of pandemic, I find myself learning vital lessons from the natural world. I find myself hoping that others too have been forced outside into the vitalism of nature, and learn to live a little there, even if it is not in a way they expected.

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Today, I relearn three lessons - or at least contemplate them, with the fingers of the warm sun resting on my neck. I am out for hours, and hours. I don't want to let the landscape go, and hug it like the bees hug the white and red clover.

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One, a field of buttercups is not just a field of buttercups.

Hour after hour they ponder the warm field -
and the far valley behind, where the buttercup
Had blessed with gold their slow boots coming up

I think of the war poet Wilfred Owen when I see the fields of buttercups, and his rememberance of walking with his brother. Later, this becomes an image in a contemplation of men facing their deaths, looking at life behind them and gazing ahead to the ridgeline lit up with artillery, caught in a moment of luminosity.

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I think of death then, and this liminal time we are caught in, and how we are so busy being scared of it that we are scared to even walk in warm meadows. This is what this shutting down of the world is - a desperate need to control any risk that we might die. How far removed we have become from something so inevitable and so natural. We have become so scared of death that we have forgotton how to live. And so I will always walk out into the world, despite what dangers might lie there. To do otherwise is not to live at all.

There is more in a buttercup field than poetry and thoughts of death, too. There is clover, and pignuts, and plantain. There are tiny black butterflies, rare and easily missed, called chimney sweeps. Their wings are tipped every so slightly white.

A meadow will look like a sweep of one thing, but it's not until you look closely that you see all the other life within it.

Two, sometimes they let the sheep in too early, and destroy the flowers.

This, I learnt from a couple I stop to chat with on the way. They give me a fright as they come up from the valley, and I am crouched photographing clover. We talk for a good half hour. She names grasses for me - by the end of the walk, I have only remembered one, the purple yorkshire fog, named for the billowing smoke from the northern factories. There's another she has me pick and strips to smell, telling me it is used for perfumery. It is they that show me, and name, the black chimney sweeps.

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We talk about ancestry, and the virus, and nature. She tells me how some meadows are full of grasses that are good for biodiversity, working in a kind of symbiosis with other plants, and some grasses just take over. She laments that the farmers let the sheep in too early, so the flowers that should flower and seed for the next year don't get a chance. We both lament that people have lost touch with nature, and if we hadn't, we wouldn't be in this pandemic pickle we are in.

Three, you can eat ox eye daisies.

I adore the swathes of plants that beg attention, die and give way to another to steal the show. When we arrived, it was daffodils, those cheery heralds of spring, and for a long while I was captivated by hawthorns flowering, and bluebells nodding in wet woods. In the meadows the buttercups and oxeye daisies are stealing the show.

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The couple I meet in the fields say that they've been eating them in salads. Later, I find online that they are good fried in tempura batter - what wild edible isn't? Apparently, they are good for asthma and bronchitis as well, but there is more research to be done on my part here - a bit useless if I can't find them in Australia, though.

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I have never felt such regret leaving England. Whilst it is right we are leaving, because home calls and all the things that await us there, I have not enough time to learn lessons from the meadows. I feel like I have only just begun. I want to sit for hours in the sun blessed fields with my camera, and stare at the shapes of petals and clouds, and the extending shadows from the tree lines. I want to suck the nectar from the petals of this country, to walk barefoot for months in the damp glades and dry hills, to feel the life from this natural world beat it's heart in time with my own.

But for now, this day in the meadows will have to do.

With Love,

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The photography are beautiful!

 4 years ago  

Thankyou Pov. I know you enjoy my photos! 💚🌱

It hurts me a bit , those fields are like the Dutch fields , i will never walk them again .
The softness of those grass , the smell of those flowers ..... i miss it a bit .
But i made a friend that collects all kind of herbs on the Greek Mani olive fields and rough nature .
I will learn many new things from a last generation cheep herder that out of greed by others had to sell his cheep . I will walk fields and nature and devolve myself back to a simple and free life . :-)

 4 years ago  

De-volvution - re - loveution. Back to simplicity. That's what I loved about it so much. People miss out by not looking closely, and whizzing on by. You don't think you'll ever walk Dutch fields again? I wish I'd seen the Greek nature. One day. Earth has it's treasures everywhere - it's just different.

I left the Netherlands to never return , to become a new me , free from all .... a step in to the wild , the less i have the more i gain . So no , i plan to live my life in Greece till it ends one day . I burned my ships for it ... and the hurt , it's just a bit , i can live with that :-)

 4 years ago  

Oh! That's both lovely and tragic xxx

A greek salad with a view , makes me forget where i came from for a while :-)

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I think of death then, and this liminal time we are caught in, and how we are so busy being scared of it that we are scared to even walk in warm meadows.

Although being defiantly anti-authoritarian most of my years, which sometimes took me outside of the law, any semblance of that fear spoken of in your post, surprisingly or not, fell away when diagnosed with cancer.

 4 years ago  

I feared death less when I went through my father's cancer. Sometimes you have to get up close and personal with it to accept it, right? Off to read that post now.

Sometimes you have to get up close and personal with it to accept it, right?

That does appear to be true. We seem to be able to grasp things, like impermanence, on an intellectual level. Yet that seems so much more less than the reality of being close and personally real.

 4 years ago  

So, open your palms to the sky, and allow the rain to wet your skin. There's no point running in doors. This is life, in all it's glory and pain.

 4 years ago  

Yes people are afraid to live now, what sort of an existence is that. I really hear you on this and how hugging is now an act of rebellion. Today I hugged a friend in town and the looks we got. What a huge transition we are going through and you will have two different perspectives of it from two different countries. I really look forward to walking in a meadow with you and thank you for this beautiful piece xxxx

 4 years ago  

Hugging MUST return soon. It feels so rebellious. I feel I have to ask first, but sometimes it's like when you know it's time to kiss someone.. it's in the look. Xx

Thanks for the kind words x

This is so true! If it wasn't for my tiny raptor arms ( and razorsharp nails ) I would hug each and everyone I'd meet.

💚

I didn't know that about daisies. They are just starting to bloom here in new England.

 4 years ago  

I love them.. they are so cheerful!

I feel kind of cheeky leaving you this full curation comment! 😁

One of the things I find so frustrating learning about this huge range of wild edibles in the north is that we have few of them here in Australia and still have lots to learn about the native edibles. There are so few indigenous left that have a full range of knowledge on them to pass on as well.

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 4 years ago  

Oh I agree!!! I walk blind in an Australian landscape. But to be honest, there still isn't the explosive richness of England in Spring. It is just so biodiverse in comparison. I always wonder about how to learn more about indig edibles. They always seem more labour intensive.

Actually it's lovely getting a full comment from NM! It's rare for me! Xxx

What a beautiful write! You really took your readers right into the heart of this wonderful walk through the meadows; I could feel the hot sun on my back and almost smell the flowers and the grasses in that meadow!
It's my firm belief that the so called leaders of the world have totally handled this virus so wrong!
The focus should have been on building up our immune systems, getting enough sunlight and exercise every day instead of being cooped up inside...
But for now you've transported me to a beautiful field in England and it was like a breath of fresh air:)

 4 years ago  

Oh yes, exactly!!!! The focus was wrong! What IF they handed out free herbal supplements to build immunity? Distributed information letters about sunlight, stress, nature and eating well? Wow. What a different world we could live in..

For sure! But instead they focused on fear mongering and killing many many more before the virus even got close to them by hunger and malnutrition with job losses!
We had and are still in draconian lockdown but just yesterday a high court ruling found that our lockdown regulations were irrational and unconstitutional so now government have 14 days to make changes, going to be interesting!

What a delightful post @riverflows, makes me want to visit the UK even more.

“Rest is not idleness, and to lie sometimes on the grass under trees
on a summer's day, listening to the murmur of the water,
or watching the clouds float across the sky,
is by no means a waste of time.”
John Lubbock

Lovely images. You could just have stayed longer... ?? 😊 The diversity in what seems to be something so homogeneous is always intriguing.

 4 years ago  

ah, our time grows to a close. There is never a good time for leaving what you love - ever. xx

the photographs are amazing ⁦✌️⁩📸🙏

 4 years ago  

Thanks @bhattg. Which one did you like the best?

all are beautiful indeed, but I like the last one the most 📸⁦✌️⁩🙏

Learned something new about daisies... i didn't know that.
Awesome pics, btw 😍

 4 years ago  

I know right! Learnt so much here. Can't say much for the taste, but hey, they are edible! Do you have them there?

What a beautiful writing, what beautiful flowers. I would like to visit a place like this.

 4 years ago  

There's so many beautiful places in the world. One day, you might!

 4 years ago  

Call me a flower-eating hippie, but I love munching on daisies 🌼

 4 years ago  

Oh what beautiful meadows and the thoughts and lessons they conjure up!
I hear you when you say you could stay for hours in the meadows and not want to leave - it is something to be caught up in the wonders of nature and yes it has lessons to teach us!
Wonderful that you were able to connect with some locals to learn more about the local plants!
It sounds like you have created lots of wonderful memories (and photos) to carry with you where ever you may be!

@vincentnijman here

So many lessons, such a beautiful, poetic ramble full of natural wisdom :>)

We have become so scared of death that we have forgotton how to live. And so I will always walk out into the world, despite what dangers might lie there. To do otherwise is not to live at all.

( We both lament that ) people have lost touch with nature, and if we hadn't, we wouldn't be in this pandemic pickle we are in.

True that but I also like to think that many of us haven't and many more are waking up to this.

I'm sure you will often remember this place and possibly this walk and meadow.

There's beauty all around us, if we just open our eyes ( to it )

🤗 💚