Esther Chilton’s challenge word for this week is edge. You can join in here: https://estherchilton.co.uk/2025/10/29/word-prompts/
Mining for Clay (shadorma prose)
When I was nine, my family moved to George in the Western Cape for the first time. It was supposed to be a permanent move, but my father hated the year-round rain, so we only stayed in this town for six weeks before moving on to Cape Town. Mom was due to give birth to our youngest sister, Laura, so Cath, Hayley and I were sent ahead to live with our grandparents. Granddad Jack came to fetch us three girls in his old hatchback, but I don’t remember anything about the journey.
When we arrived, Granny Joan was entirely consumed with looking after Hayley who was only thirteen-months old. She was a difficult toddler and refused to eat, a terrible problem for Granny who believed in stuffing children with food all day long. Good food was necessary for children to grow up strong and able to fight off illness and diseases. Cath and I were happy as we got to run wild and get up to whatever mischief I thought up.
One of my grand ideas was to mine for clay in the ditches that ran along the edges of all the dirt roads leading out of the town. Granny and Granddad’s home was reached by one of these dirt roads at that time because they lived close to the start of the forest.
On the afternoon of the great clay mining, Cath and I spent the entire afternoon digging clay out of the ditches with sharp sticks. We stored it in a plastic shopping bag I’d ‘borrowed’ for this purpose. We had to be home by 5pm and when we arrived, Granny took one look at us and started shouting. We were filthy. We had clay all over our dresses, in our hair, and all over our arms legs and faces. Fortunately, I’d seen fit to climb into the ditches shoeless, so our shoes were not full of mud. We were instructed to go to the bottom of the garden and wash ourselves, our clothes and our hair with cold water from the hosepipe. I’ll never forget, five-year-old, Cath, shrieking with displeasure at being squirted down with cold water.
Despite being in trouble over letting my little sister get so dirty and wet, I was thrilled with the clay we had gathered. Cath and I, with Granny’s permission and Granddad’s supervision, spent every afternoon for the next few weeks creating an assortment of ‘ceramic’ goods from this clay. We made baskets filled with fruit, plates, cups, a teapot, and several other interesting figures and creations. Granddad told us to line our artworks up on the step so they could dry in the sun. Once dried, he provided us with some paints and paintbrushes so we could decorate them in vivid colours.
I think Granny was pleased to have us gainfully occupied in the backyard for this time and not running amok ‘looking for trouble’.
young artists
creating artworks from clay
gleefully mined
from ditches
poor Granny had her hands full
looking after us
d’Verse
De Jackson’s d’Verse prompt is to use whirl in a quadrille poem of exactly 44 words. You can join in here: https://dversepoets.com/2025/11/03/quadrille-235-take-your-poem-for-a-whirl-around-the-block/
Spring Cryoconite
sidewalks and streets filled with purple
swirling and whirling in strong, spring winds
fat blossoms pop loudly under feet and tyres
treacherous November brings heavy rains
beauty transforms into saturated mounds
colour metamorphosizing to a purple so dark
it could almost pass as cryoconite 1
1 cryoconite is the name for black snow falling on land that is composed of dust and soot caused by forest fires and man-made global warming factors
The Flower Hour
Terri is hosting a Flower Hour challenge which you can join in here: https://secondwindleisure.com/2025/10/28/the-flower-hour-sunflowers-fade-to-black/



It must be hard to write a quadrille poem. I’ll have to try it some time. I love the smell of jasmine, too, so sweet and bright.
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Hi Priscilla, I usually overshoot the word count with quadrilles and I have to eliminate words. It’s a fun form 💗
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Oh! I used to do the same thing with the red clay in my yard, and when I visited in Mississippi it was even better.
My mom never got upset.
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Fun times, Patty. You had a nice mother.
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Yes. Overall mom was mostly understanding.
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Wonderful photos and verse Robbie. I really enjoy your childhood stories.
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Hi Brad, that is very nice to know 💞
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What adventures you had playing with the clay, Robbie! I think every kid played in the dirt (I did, too)! Beautiful poem! I can smell the jasmine from here. That bougainvillea is amazing! You must have a similar climate to San Diego, California. Both those flowers grow there profusely, along with jacaranda. Thanks for linking to The Flower Hour!
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Hi Terri, California is also a warm climate. Modern kids don’t play in the dirt much. Everything most kids do these days is organized for them.
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I always enjoy reading about your childhood adventures/ stories. Lovely Haibun and photos Robbie.
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Hi Sadje, I am pleased to know that 💜
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You’re very welcome ❤️🧡🩷
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I love your childhood stories, Robbie. You knew how to have fun 😊
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Hi Esther, we did have fun. Cath says I haven’t changed. I always have some project up my sleeve.
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What a beautiful childhood story, Robbie. Your artistic abilities bloomed at an early age! Love the poem and photos as well.
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Hi Jan, I was always very arty. Thank you 💙
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I love your story, Robbie! Reminds me of my carefree childhood. Such fun. The mud washes away but the memories stay forever!
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Hi Dwight, yes, we had great childhoods 💙
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yes we did!!
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cryoconite!
Thank you for arming me with this new word. 🙂
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My pleasure – it’s a good one 😊
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Fascinating stories and wonderful pictures, as always.
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Thank you, Andrew. I was a lucky girl
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You’re welcome.
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🌷
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Wonderful story Robbie.
These days were the best, spent outside.
Love your poems and photographs too.
Thank you for sharing.
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I had a wonderful childhood, Maggie. I tried to replicate some things for my sons although they didn’t have the same freedom.
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Its a different world now Robbie
Too fast paced and very little human contact.🙄
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Yes, you are right. Also to much crime and traffic so children have no freedom.
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Hi Robbie
Yes, you would need to be watching your children constantly 😥
I spent most of my childhood outside.
Wonderful memories like you.🤗
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What a brilliant post. First of I loved the story and poem from your childhood- you know I will be savoring every word when you post on this topic. Then I never heard of cryoconite – as we have never had both a wildfire and a snowstorm in the same season- but it was very interesting to find out that it is a possibility.
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Hi Violet, I’m really happy you enjoy my childhood pieces. I was a very lucky girl. I came across the concept of cryoconite by accident and thought is was horrible and sad.
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What fun you had with your sisters. As a grandparent I do have some sympathy for your poor grandmother, looking after young grandchildren is somehow more scary than one’s own were !
That was very impressive pottery.
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Hi Janet, Granny Joan was overwhelmed in retrospect. She loved having me on my own. I was very quiet and could entertain myself for hours.
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A word I had not heard, and I do love the way the bloom transform into this.
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Thank you, Bjorn. I came across that word by accident. Horrible and sad like the poor crushed blossoms.
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You bring that landscape to life, Robbie, in your quadrille. Beautifully done.
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Thanks, Dora. I find the poor crushed petals rather sad 💜
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Don`t ask my about the metric, Robbie! That a great secret to me. But the poems are wonderful and creating colorful and interesting images in my mind. The story about your childhood is also fantastic and show how important it is giving children enough freetime to evolve their skills. Now i know better why are you such an great multisided artist. Best wishes, Michael
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Hi Michael, I am always delighted to see a comment from you. I was most fortunate to have a wonderful childhood. I agree that all skills evolve through opportunities and support. Have a great day.
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What a lovely story, and I your memories of that time still exist because of it.
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Yes, I am glad I have a good memory as my sisters remember little.
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Very engaging Mining for Clay and Spring Cryoconite, Robbie. The photos lovely.
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Thank you, Tim. I had such a good childhood.
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Having worked in clay – it can be a mess to clean up – even the purified clay!
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Yip, very messy and marvelous fun. Do you have pictures of your ceramics?
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That clay mining sounds like great fun! If my brother and I had attempted such an endeavor at my grandparents’ house, my grandmother’s head would have exploded.
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Well, Granny Joan did have a fit but Granddad Jack saved us. It’s a great memory – the art not the scolding. I never intended to be naughty.
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Do you still have your clay creations?
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Oh no, they stayed behind when we moved on to Cape Town.
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Heh, heh . . . (I thought that might have been the case.)
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That’s a great story Robbie. And I like how your grandfather turned it into a creative and productive activity. Taking care of three young energetic children is not for the faint of heart. (K)
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Hi Kerfe, I agree that three young children to look after is a lot of responsibility. I was always quiet and keep myself busy and entertained I just had big ideas. I still do 😂
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And you manifest them! something that most of us don’t do, even if we have ideas.
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I don’t know about other people, but I do usually attempt to things that interest me. I am a determined person.
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granny should have joined in: she might have enjoined it 🙂 I have never worked with clay: would like to one day ; what gorgeous blooms !
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Hi John, I went on to work with fondant which is similar in some ways. I’d like to try ceramics but time is a factor.
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your fondant works are marvels, Robbie 🙂
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That is a great childhood story. I am impressed how you turned all that clay into art under the supervision of your grandpa. The poems were fun and the flower photos beautiful.
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Hi Thomas, I was lucky to have interested grandparents. Granny was an artist and I was her protégée.
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That is great. It probably helped developing your talents.
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Love that story.
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Thanks, Craig 💞
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An altogether fascinating post!
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Thank you, I’m pleased you enjoyed it 💗
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🩷
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I love the story of you and your sister mining clay. My daughter still does this. We have lots of sweet jasmine growing here and it smells wonderful. Bougainvillea is everywhere here too. That plant is an orangey-red.
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Love the stories, photos, and poems!
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I enjoyed this story, and can picture you and your sister covered in clay. Despite the cold wash, you got to use the clay to make artifacts and paint them. Such a great memory, Robbie.
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Lovely story and poems. I too with my sister got into trouble for making mud pies. We had visited our grandparents in their country home – our cousins weren’t in and the adults wanted to talk in private. What ever did they expect us o do? At least we weren’t scolded to badly, hosed off and were allowed back inside 🙂
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Yip, mud pies are awesome. I made them with my kids all the time. We all had to be hosed off – haha
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I really enjoyed this, Robbie — both the clay-digging memory and the “Spring Cryoconite” imagery. That line “swirling and whirling in strong, spring winds” feels so alive!
~David
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Thanks, David. That’s lovely to know 🥰
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what fun you have had and continue to have
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Yes, thanks, Annette 🌺
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