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dolphins

THE HEADLAND

Beside the steep, rough pathway to the headland

blackberries are purpling. As we pass,

stone chats – with their melodiously

metallic call – rise from feasting on the fruits.

Once through the kissing-gate at the top

we are on the smooth turf shorn by walkers,

sheep and winds. At sea level the bay

seemed crystalline, jade. Up here the sea

is a lexicon of blues. The horizon –

empty of shipping and coasts – is a curve

of geometric perfection. The weather

is still, but the waters shift, ripple, swell.

There is a pre-human silence here – the airs,

the tides lapping at the cavernous cliffs

below. A pod of dolphins breaks the surface.

A pair of gannets dives into a darker shade

of water that may be a shoal of fish.

Later, we will pick some blackberries

as we descend the path, scattering

the clamorous stone chats.

 

 

 

SEASCAPE

David Selzer By David Selzer3 Comments1 min read1.3K views

Once we have climbed the steep track to the cliff top

and seen that the coastal path is narrow

and edgy along the range of jagged cliffs

that stretch and turn for miles, we decide

discretion is the better part of aging

and sit on a new bench provided by

the kindly dead. We can hear the wind

in the gorse, sheep cropping the tussocky grass

at the very edge, and the waves out of sight

on the rocks below swell and fall, swell and fall…

 

There is a container ship turning slowly

on the horizon; nearer, the white sails

of a dinghy, the shimmering shadows

of a shoal of fish; and, bobbing closer still,

half a dozen lobster pot marker buoys.

Two seal heads appear briefly above the waves.

 

Suddenly a solitary dolphin

breaks the surface a hundred yards away.

We hear it exhale – its head, fin, back

glistening as it dives… And then a stillness…

almost a holding of breath…

 

 

BENLLECH BAY LATE SPRING 2021

All the songbirds of North Wales this afternoon

it seems – in the old woodlands behind the beach –

are singing their undaunted polyphonies.

Three narrow streams trickle onto the strand.

Under the glinting grains of sand is water.

A flock of oyster catchers speeds squeaking

along the sea’s edge. On the horizon,

where there are always ships – sailing at high tide,

or anchored at low water – there are none

this late afternoon waiting to cross the bar,

only layers of cumulus catching

the last of the sun above the large island

beyond the empty skyline to the north.

An owl hoots in the woods. Perhaps there will be

dolphins out in the bay.