I'm interrupting the run of holiday photos just to prove that I'm still alive and functioning in these 'crazy days'. In common with the rest of Europe we've been having a heatwave, with record June temperatures. In truth, Yorkshire has been on the edge of the heat dome and not quite as boiling hot as places in the south of England... but it has still been very hot.
It's been a battle of ingenuity to keep the temperature and humidity in my flat as bearable as I can. It doesn't get the sun until early afternoon, but then the temperature just climbs and climbs right through to the late evening. It's been up to about 33°C (91.4°F) outside, and very humid. I've managed to keep the flat below 28°C by various ingenious means (screens, fans), but even so that's hotter than I'm comfortable with. I'm now looking into getting a portable air conditioning unit, as these 'crazy days' seem to be increasingly a feature of our warming climate. Everywhere is sold out of them at the moment though! I know compared to the temperatures many countries endure this is really only 'warm' - but not to me! And our UK homes and lifestyles have not yet evolved to take high temperatures into account. Hopefully it is returning to average this coming week. It was more bearable yesterday as there was a strong breeze.
Having said all that, it's been something of a novelty to take a walk before breakfast, when it has been rather cooler and quite pleasant. I do feel I need to continue getting some exercise and I can't do that in the heat of the day. Luckily there is some shade on the canal towpath too, so it's been pleasant to join the dog walkers, school students and commuters on their early morning routes.
I'm currently reading a book called 'The Walking Cure' by Annabel Streets (appropriate name!), an enjoyable exploration of walking through different landscapes and how they can calm, energise or refocus us. She has this to say about canal towpaths: 'Unlike any other landscape, canals and their towpaths operate in a liminal in-between place - neither completely natural nor completely man-made, neither all water nor earth, neither strictly rural nor strictly urban. In their melding of brick, water and path with wildlife and wilderness, and as aquatic arteries linking cities with countryside, canals and their towpaths form a uniquely hybrid walking landscape that simultaneously soothes and inspires... Canals exist in a fascinating intersection of past and present, urban and rural, artificial and wild... a waterscape like no other. One that continuously piques and intrigues, offering tantalising glimpses of long lost lives while herons unfold their wings from the bank. No other landscape offers this beguiling blend of industry, history, architecture, water and wildlife, green space and blue space, peace and people.'
And that is exactly why I love my canal walks.

















































