I do not especially enjoy getting up at 4.30am, or 5.30am for that matter, but when the weather is as good as it has been for the last fortnight, it’s less of a chore. Our home in Broadstairs faces due east. Thanks to an elevated position, looking over a random roofscape towards the sea, the house is bathed in light the moment the sun rises above the horizon. Over the years a Santa Cruz ironwood tree (Lyonothamnus floribundus aspleniifolius) has begun to diffuse the light coming through our bedroom window. This is a blessing in high summer, especially at the weekends when a lie-in is usually in order. But the real joy comes when I come downstairs and open the front door each morning. First comes a sudden rush of cool air, always much chillier than I was anticipating, followed by the scent of damp leaves and moss. Slanting over the low, flat roof of a neighbouring building – once a printworks, now a gym – comes a dazzling, barely-yellow light which illuminates only those plants closest to the front door. For the last month or so a lanky specimen of Pelargonium papilionaceum, the butterfly geranium, has been producing countless tiny pink flowers. They remind me more of moths than butterflies with their fiercely backswept petals and fiery orange stamens. Tiny hairs on the pelargonium’s leaves and stems glisten when the warm light catches them.
Despite being firmly in the middle of a busy seaside town, at this time of day one can hear a pin drop. Occasionally the silence is broken by the wailing of seagulls or the cawing of our resident magpies, but on still days the peace is enveloping. I want to stand on the doorstep and be embalmed by the sweet, moist air, unsullied by car fumes or the headier scents of evening. At first light I can be completely at one with the garden, see it newborn again, before the hardships of the day have an opportunity to detract from its loveliness. TFG.
Categories: Flowers, Foliage, Our Coastal Garden, Photography, Plants, Trees and Shrubs
I have a similar experience on Tuesdays, waking in the Isle of Wight and travelling across the Solent on my own journey to Londinium – couldn’t have expressed it as well as you though.
Enjoy the long days!
Beautiful! I raise my hat to you – I am happy to meet the day slightly later! Love the geranium
Oh, such a poetical description, just beautiful. I am one for early rising, love November and December when the sun is up at 5 am, though here from first light to piercing sunlight takes only 30min, that is the reason one has to get up early to experience what you so perfectly describe.
Lovely post and yes, early morning is enchanting once you ARE in the vertical. BUT getting up early is torture!!!
(Personally, I’m not myself before 10am – though of course that doesn’t mean I’m allowed to sleep that long…)
I’m rarely up that early but, like you, our house is on the south eastern tip of the country and greets the rising sun before the rest of the UK. Early summer sunshine first thing in the morning is a beautiful thing.
Oh memories … cuppa and berries and pastries in such a gorgeous setting… sob sob now back to cold, grey and wet…. missing our fabulous adventures! ❤️
That is an early start for a long commute! Thanks for the reminder that it is daylight at silly o’clock! I do like it when I have made the effort to get up early but I am starving by 10 am!!
I’m having second breakfast by then 🤓