Journey To Tir Nan Og, Land Of The Ever Young

14/05/10

Journey To Tir Nan Og, Land Of The Ever Young by Robin Lloyd Jones

Robin Lloyd Jones, a former president of Scottish PEN and recently-retired chair of its Writers in Prison Committee, writes fiction and non-fiction. Much of the latter stems from his mountaineering and sea-kayaking and love of wild places. Robin is working on a biography of mountaineer, writer and conservationist, W H Murray.

robinlloyd-jones.com

Journey To Tir Nan Og, Land Of The Ever Young

At 4 a.m. the sun filters through my tent. I listen to the ocean lapping at the shore and the seabirds calling. I slide my kayak over dewy grass into pink dawn water. It glides across the glassy surface.
 

fish splash
profound reflections
vanish
 

With a salute to Basho, I point my narrow craft to the North where the coastline disappears over the horizon. I paddle past colonies of seals, bays, skerries and miles of sand.
 

gulls rising –
a blizzard of wings
shell-flecked strands
 

Between islands windows open onto wider vistas. This is the ephemeral mid-tide zone which exists for only a few hours each day, a half-revealed underworld of short-lived lagoons and wet encrusted rocks. My zeppelin shadow flits across the shallows and I push through swaying kelp, thick and slippery, winking bright. A swell from an unseen ship slants across my thoughts. I land for a tea break in a quiet cove.
 

scrunching underfoot
dappled sea-smoothed pebbles
might be plovers' eggs
 

As the day passes more islands rise above the horizon to stab the sky. My dipping paddle multiplies shoals of waning suns. Storm clouds are building. A brisk wind springs up.
 

where land and sea meet:
green waves, white-capped,
face white dunes, green-topped
The sun sinks into the Atlantic, setting the massing clouds afire.
on a crescent beach
deer tracks curve from sea to sand
beneath a sickle moon
 

I am tiring. I look for a place to stop where I can erect my tent.
 

Stiff knees eased from narrow kayak. Aching joints and muscles. At seventy-five, am I too old for this? Where can I shelter from the impending storm? Inland, I come across a rubbish dump and a rusting car slowly returning to the earth.
 

glinting mountain range
knife-edge ridges, fluted peaks –
crumpled plastic sheet
 

Robin Lloyd Jones

Back to New Writing