close
Wayback Machine
81 captures
23 Oct 2019 - 03 Jan 2026
Feb MAR Apr
03
2022 2023 2024
success
fail
About this capture
COLLECTED BY
Collection: mega002
TIMESTAMPS
loading
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20230303103537/https://landscapestory.co.uk/
Skip to content

Landscape Story

  • Home
  • Writing
  • Photography
  • About

Gift

BERJAYA

Skeins of pink-footed geese trumpet over, their arrows made up of anything between 30 and 300 bugling birds. In six weeks, their regular passages over the valley’s airspace to find feeding in flatter fields of winter crops will end, as they migrate back to their summer breeding grounds in Greenland and Iceland. And this is … Continue reading Gift →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Feb 27, 2023Feb 27, 2023

Promise

BERJAYA

The first daffodils fringe the canal at Callis, while on the other side of the towpath, among the communal gardens of the narrowboat community, snowdrops crowd on the edge of the hazel coppice. In Ingham Clough, at the base of an unnamed and unheralded waterfall, boulders wear a shaggy coat of moss threaded with lesser … Continue reading Promise →

Paul Knights Landscape Story 5 Comments Feb 19, 2023Feb 19, 2023

Iridescence

BERJAYA

Morning frosts melt into mild and fragrant afternoons. More songs are added to the growing ensemble in the school-run woods; great tits sing the praises of teachers, a song thrush methodically works through its repertoire from high in a birch, dunnocks self-consciously rush through what they have to say too quickly for it to be … Continue reading Iridescence →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Feb 12, 2023Feb 12, 2023

Remains

BERJAYA

Chatter filters down through the trees from the terrace of Lumb Bank. This grand house was built at the beginning of the 19th century by Gamaliel Sutcliffe to look proudly down on his creations, the Lower and Upper Lumb mills. Their two chimneys periscope up through the swell of the winter tree canopy, but little … Continue reading Remains →

Paul Knights Landscape Story 4 Comments Feb 5, 2023Feb 8, 2023

Heeding

BERJAYA

The snow vanishes not a great deal less abruptly than it arrived. The emerging grass on the green has a sickly, light-starved pallor, and the line of the sledge run is matted and threadbare. Two molehills appear just beside its fastest stretch. What did those poor creatures make of the rumble and roar going on … Continue reading Heeding →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Jan 29, 2023Jan 29, 2023

Intake

BERJAYA

A sudden, unexpected hour of downy flakes transfigures the landscape. The Horsehold beeches and Callis birches glimmer in the sun that swiftly follows, sun that lasts, almost unbroken, for a week, colouring the south-facing slopes green during the day, only to have its work undone nightly by fresh falls. The village green, with its two … Continue reading Intake →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Jan 22, 2023Jan 27, 2023

Palimpsest

BERJAYA

The rain is incessant, washing over the Pennines in band after band. At Mytholm, the black-tea Colden meets the milky-coffee Calder in a headlong, frothing rush, both far above their standard levels, putting the newly-repaired river wall just downstream through its first proper test. Old field drains in the high pastures are overwhelmed, spilling a … Continue reading Palimpsest →

Paul Knights Landscape Story, The Lay of the Land 2 Comments Jan 15, 2023Jan 15, 2023

Beginnings

BERJAYA

The Hebden Water whirls into the River Calder at the Black Pit, having dropped 1400 feet from the moor after an eight-mile journey through reservoir, ravine, wood and town. At the second dawn of the year, bright and clear after endless rain, a song thrush strikes up its first verses since last summer, and the … Continue reading Beginnings →

Paul Knights Landscape Story, The Lay of the Land 3 Comments Jan 8, 2023Jan 16, 2023

Echoes

BERJAYA

The woods that mantle the northern side of the valley – Rawtonstall, Knott, Marsh, Naze, Cowbridge, Spring, Common Bank – are browning and bronzing. Distinct woodlands 150 years ago, the abandonment of the steep valley-side fields that separated them has created a continuous band of tree cover, and is probably the most significant landscape-scale change … Continue reading Echoes →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Dec 27, 2022Feb 10, 2023

Field Studies #12

BERJAYA

Malham | We have been to a number of agricultural shows – Todmorden, Halifax, Bingley, Kilnsey, Otley – since our son was born, making as they do an ideal family day out. But of them all, Malham is our firm favourite and a fixture in the calendar. It has everything you want from a traditional … Continue reading Field Studies #12 →

Paul Knights Landscape Story Leave a comment Nov 30, 2022Dec 7, 2022

Posts navigation

Older Posts
Follow Landscape Story on WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

@LandscapeStory on Twitter

My Tweets

@landscape_story_ on Instagram

The Scout, Widdop. Cruttonstall, Calder Valley. The Knolls, Wensleydale. Sycamore, Walshaw, Calder Valley. Cellar of farmhouse ruin, Calder Valley. Heptonstall Church, Calder Valley. Sunset, Calder Valley. Edgewood and Glen View, Rawtonstall Wood, Calder Valley. Langdale, Lake District. Mam Tor, Peak District. Hawthorns, Lodge Hill. Bishopdale.

Current Landscape Reading (* to son)

Rooted: Stories of Life, Land and a Farming Revolution (2022) by Sarah Langford.

A Black Fox Running (1981) by Brian Carter.*

Recent Landscape Reading

Regenesis (2022) by George Monbiot.

Wild Fell: Fighting for Nature on a Lake District Hill Farm (2022) by Lee Schofield.

Ask the Fellows Who Cut the Hay (1975) by George Ewart Evans.

The Living Mountain (1977) by Nan Shepherd.

Wensleydale (1936) by Ella Pontefract and Marie Hartley.

On Gallows Down: Place, Protest and Belonging (2021) by Nicola Chester.

The Lost Spells (2020) by Robert Macfarlane and Jackie Morris.*

Portrait of Elmbury (1945) by John Moore.

By Rowan and Yew (2021) by Melissa Harrison.*

Swallows and Amazons (1930) by Arthur Ransome.*

Silver Ley (1931) by Adrian Bell.

The Railway Children (1906) by E. Nesbit.*

Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960) by Scott O'Dell.*

By Ash, Oak and Thorn (2021) by Melissa Harrison.*

Danny, the Champion of the World (1975) by Roald Dahl.*

Stig of the Dump (1963) by Clive King.*

Native: Life in a Vanishing Landscape (2020) by Patrick Laurie.

Worzel Gummidge (1936) by Barbara Euphan Todd.*

The Stubborn Light of Things (2020) by Melissa Harrison.

Down the Bright Stream (1948) by BB.*

The Country Child (1931) by Alison Uttley.*

Swaledale (1934) by Ella Pontefract and Marie Hartley.

Bambi, a Life in the Woods (1923) by Felix Salten.*

The Light in the Dark: A Winter Journal (2018) by Horatio Clare.

Under the Rock: The Poetry of a Place (2018) by Benjamin Myers.

Corduroy (1930) by Adrian Bell.

Little House on the Prairie (1935) by Laura Ingalls Wilder.*

Who Owns England? (2019) by Guy Shrubsole.

All Among the Barley (2018) by Melissa Harrison.

Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm (2018) by Isabella Tree.

Curlew Moon (2018) by Mary Colwell.

Tarka the Otter: His Joyful Water-Life and Death in the Country of the Two Rivers (1927) by Henry Williamson.*

Little House in the Big Woods (1932) by Laura Ingalls Wilder.*

Rebirding: Rewilding Britain and its Birds (2018) by Benedict Macdonald.

The Little Grey Men (1942) by BB.*

Website Powered by WordPress.com.
Landscape Story
Website Powered by WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • BERJAYA Landscape Story
    • Join 69 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • BERJAYA Landscape Story
    • Customise
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...