At last managing to upload something after long pause.
101‐6338 bees at hive entrance garden, bristol wax crayon 25 x 35 cms
In the intervening time my partner Susan has become a bee keeper. We’ve had the hive for a couple of weeks now and definitely adds something to the garden/allotment scene. They are busiest around 3 in the afternoon when the sun is full on the hive entrance. Gradually getting to better understand their anatomy by drawing.
101‐6337 bees on borage garden, bristol wax crayon 25 x 35 cms SOLD
On the allotment the borage plants are thriving on a sunny well drained bank. Succession of gentian blue, hanging flowers with dark violet snouted centres that the bees are busily probing.
101‐6293 primrose, cuckoo flower & celandine
Retrospective post from scarce field outing. Gale force winds out at local reservoir. Seems like the wind drove lots of arctic terns up the bristol channel… and some of them spilling onto the reservoir. At times good views of this large group (over 100) tacking over the choppy water.
Taking shelter later and sketching the laneside flora.
101‐6292 arctic terns bristol reservoirs permanent marker 28 x 38 cms
101‐6261 pulmonaria garden, bristol oil pastel 38 x 56 cms
Sitting in the garden sketching to re-engage with field sketching equipment. A few bees visiting the pulmoria but not the usual frenzy of activity I’d expect at this time of year. Experimenting with oil pastels that move a bit faster than the wax crayons I had been using.
101‐6260 pulmonaria garden, bristol oil pastel 36 x 28 cms
These were the last woodcuts I was working on… enjoying direct cutting compositions based on last years watching of the kittiwakes at Dunbar and St Abbs. but then chickening out before attempting something larger.
101‐6258 kittiwakes & guillemots st abbs woodcut 21 x 29.7cms (A4)
101‐6257 kittiwakes st abbs woodcut 21 x 29.7cms (A4)
101‐6256 kittiwakes st abbs woodcut 21 x 29.7cms (A4)
101‐6255 kittiwakes st abbs woodcut 21 x 29.7cms (A4)
great white egret, shoveler & black-tailed godwits
Uploading something as a marker to remind me to do more… this sketch now a distant memory from the 17th. Trip to the somerset levels. Since then locked indoors relief printing. I’ll write up more tomorrow….
With more fine weather back out to local fields. Nowadays I try to start drawing as soon as anything holds my interest, usually the drawing then heightens the interest. Frequently other things come along once you’re sat drawing. Sense of taking the eyes for a walk. I started out with the crows & sheep again.
bl-007 crows & sheep mendips ink pen A5 sketchbook
After heavy frost overnight I had full winter gear on in the morning, by mid afternoon it was more like summer on the sunny slopes. Very few flowers yet.. the odd celandine and only a single peacock butterfly.
bl-012 landscape mendips wax crayon 29.7 x 42 cms (A3)
Fieldfares being quite furtive in the woods…a few starlings and redwings in with them. Looked like they were flycatching some of the time, or just lazing in the ash branches. Maybe they’d already fed well in newly ploughed fields above and could afford to rest in the heat.
bl-009 fieldfares mendips wax crayon
The highlight of the day was a strange viewing of a fox… first I saw one dashing across one of the sheep fields (I think it was the same young male as on the previous day)…. shortly afterwards 2 dogs came bounding around in the undergrowth on the slope below me…
bl-002 roe deer mendips ink pen A6 sketchbook
No sooner had the dogs gone than I saw 2 roe deer a bit further along the slope. They look in very good condition glaring white rumps and slightly oily looking pelt that has a prussian blue sheen… (I’ve only ever seen that once before and doubted it afterwards but even in the last light it was there this time for sure).
bl-015 roe deer mendips ink pen A6 sketchbook
The deer bounded over a fence and not far into the wood… I looked around for them with the telescope and instead of a deer the telescope was filled with a sleeping fox… a different animal to the running one… again in prime condition… unwilling to move it twitched ears and looked suspiciously in my direction but carried on dozing. Something special to share time with the animal laid out on the woodland floor…. quite different to seeing a fox on the allotments at home.
bl-016 fox mendips ink pen A6 sketchbook
bl-001 fox mendips ink pen A6 sketchbook