
1 minute read
Winter
The first signs of Winter were apparent when snow enveloped the landscape in the Ribblesdale Valley on the border of North Yorkshire and Lancashire in December 2021.
I was heading for the famous Ribblehead Viaduct, but strong winds which had brought the snow had also blown over several trees, which blocked the roads on my way. So I painted some views around where my journey was halted – around the Settle area – and painted up on the sides of the snowy hills, surrounded by some very hardy sheep.
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I also visited Staithes on the East coast, as well as Ambleside in the Lakes, and Kirkby Stephen and Reeth on the Pennines.
Staithes was quite a beautiful throwback in time, with butchers, bakers and candlestickmakers all walking around the tiny cobbled streets covered in the spoils of their profession. So I felt quite at home as a messy artist, covered in oil paint from head to toe, carrying bags of paints and an easel.
Storm Erica erupted when I was in Reeth but I was determined to work and not be beaten by the weather – after all, it is a part of our landscape! So, I managed to find a sheltered spot against the wind on one side of an old ruined shepherd’s hut.
It excited me how many beautiful greys there are in the Winter months, and, only having a certain amount of daylight hours to work in, I tended to work quite quickly and without inhibition. Ribblehead Viaduct was a bleak experience: a combination of freezing pouring rain and being endlessly photographed by Japanese tourists.




Ribblehead Viaduct, rainy day, Winter 26 x 41 cm


Snowy landscape nr

Settle, Winter
12.5 x 17.75 cm.jpg





