Tuesday, 23 February 2010

Water, Water, Everywhere

The Weaver of Grass has had more than one watery post lately, and today she has prodded me to jump in and splash around with her, as I follow her train of thought. I've had a life long fascination with stuff, from the days when I dabbled in my Gran's water butt and scrubbed her garden path enthusiastically with the soft rainwater, to now, when I prefer water as a drink over tea and coffee.

An architect friend once told me that Havant is built over many underground streams and watercourses which eventually make their way to the nearby sea. In the oldest part of the town, just to the rear of St Faiths church, the ancient Homewell spring comes bubbling up from the ground, and must have been one of the major factors in the settlement of the area.
When the children were small we always had to visit Homewell whenever we parked in the nearby car park, even if it was only a fleeting visit on the way to the shops. But best of all, was when we were merely ambling round and about and could give the spot our full attention for some time.

The spring fills an area of no more than three or four square metres, if that, with a low, curved wall forming a shape almost like a quadrant of a circle, with two brick walls which join at ninety degrees at the left and top of this near quadrant. They have small, semi circular grills for the water to flow through, after it has bubbled mysteriously up through the little stones on the bed of the pool.

Tiny water creatures are sometimes discernible in the clear water, but the bubbles are the real source of wonder. If you perch on the wall and wait, you can see strings of them chasing each other leisurely to the surface, never twice in the same place, never with bubbles of the same size; little vertical bursts of spherical oxygen bubbles with inexplicable origins.

To this day it remains a source of wonder to me, that my son never ended up falling head first into the water as he dangled over the wall to feel the bubbles, or to reach for a stone to plop back into the pond. Despite many pleas on his behalf, he was never allowed to paddle, because there was no way of knowing how many broken pieces of glass hid amongst the seemingly innocuous stones. Strangely enough, I don't remember his sister being so vociferous with paddling requests, but I freely admit to my own almost overwhelming urge to do so!

Plus, I confess, on one sultry summer evening whilst on my own, waiting for a lift home, I did surreptitiously straddle the wall, and let one rather hot and dusty foot escape its flip-flop and sample the delights of cool, fresh water. Who says I couldn't still be a big kid in my thirties?

14 comments:

  1. Sounds a lovely place and it never ceases to amaze me that our children did survive all sorts of danges.

    Nuts in May

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  2. You're never too old to paddle in cool fresh water, Jinksy! Our snow is melting into flowing water in the drive and standing water in the field. If it weren't so cold, it would be inviting.

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  3. An enjoyable read. Having young children has been a wonderful excuse for me to act like a kid again and the neighbors only laugh at me a little.

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  4. Do you remember all those mosquite larvae in the old water butts Jinksy? I used to fetch a jug full - larvae and all - a hot it up to wash my hair when I was young . Those water butts were such useful things weren't they? In summer my dad used to suspend a bag of sheep manure into the butt and use the water for his tomatoes (I didn't wash my hair in it then, I hasten to add).

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  5. It is nice to read you telling about yourself acting like a kid and enjoying things of nature so much. We can be a kid at any age really. There are so many things to wonder at and get enjoyment from and some things make the kid inside us jump for joy.

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  6. I don't think "Gran's water butt" has quite the same initial connotation here. I can figure it out, butt ... Butt I think I'll leave it there. :)

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  7. Nice description of the place. You really seemed to enjoy yourself in the water. These small incidents bring back lot of old memories.

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  8. Still chuckling over A/C's comment. You know jinsky I don't think we can put an age on anything so wonderful as dipping our feet in cool water wherever we find it. Your description makes me want to visit this magical place.....:-) Hugs

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  9. hello jinksy - being a leo - which i believe is a fire-sign, i am drawn to water constantly. it fascinates me. especially small brooks, little pools, puddles, springs and even water cupped in a tree. this is a lovely post. steven

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  10. I love water too and would probably be just as fascinated with this spot. And you can't fool me, Ms. Jinsky.. you still have plenty of big kid in you.

    lol at Anvilcloud. :)

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  11. Lovely image of a thirty-something mum dabbling in the water!
    I've just had a catch up on your posts. What's stayed with me is the thought of your cookbook and the crowd of people 'jostling' around on the last pages. Perfect word picture.

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  12. here in utar, we di g and dig for wells of water having to go down 20, 30 50 100 feet before we do, i was in your country and i could take a spponful of dirt out of the ground and water would bubble up

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  13. To expand upon Hilary's comment: No poet who has as much fun as you do, who sometimes paints such silly pictures with words, could possibly be a serious grown up all the time, and thank God for that :-)

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  14. Sounds like a wonderful way to spend time with your children. Water is endlessly fascinating and on a hot afternoon there is nothing nicer than dangling your feet in off a bridge.
    Blessings, Star

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