As I walked along a pitch black Falmouth seafront this morning – long, long before dawn, to beat the incoming bad weather – I saw not another soul. (Oh all right then, just two dog walkers and one runner.)
So, all but alone with my thoughts, I indulged in an enhanced spot of blessings-counting.
To the accompaniment of the gentle swish of the sea as the little waves, their white crests clearly visible, rolled in, I remarked once again just how lucky I am to live in such a lovely place, no matter the “depths of winter.”
Especially now, in fact, with the latest alarmist yellow weather warning still ringing in my ears. It includes the risk of snow and ice today for a large area of the south, “stretching to Cornwall.”
Thing is, at this end of the county at least, we hardly ever see the white stuff, and you can bet your mortgage that there’ll be no such thing as a single flake in sight down here today.
How our attitudes change. As a boy, I so wanted that white world. When there was any chance of it, I’d listen to every word of the forecast . . . which, so frustratingly, would nearly always end with “except in the extreme south west,” i.e. my Falmouth, where it would be possibly sleet, at best.
I wanted my snow so much, in fact, that I would even pray for the stuff. Honestly.
Now, six decades or so later, I’d be more inclined to pray for it NOT to make an appearance!
Fortunately, I can guarantee that, whatever much of the rest of the country may be about to suffer today, we will once again escape snow-free.
(But if I look out of my window later today and find it’s all turning white, rest assured I will take down this blog post faster than you can say “don’t tempt providence!”)