Long days filled with light

For those of us in the Northern Hemisphere we are approaching the Summer Solstice, the longest day of the year.

Beautiful pink evening light on the Sound, photo by Tricia Petri-Clark

On this day at this latitude we have daylight for eighteen hours, and it never really gets dark.

The significance of the Summer Solstice is two-fold: it’s the lightest time of the year but at the same time it’s also the moment at which the year turns to ever shortening days. A bit bitter-sweet, I’d say. Just as we’re celebrating the light we’re also recognising that it’s on its way out.

I’m holding on to these long, light filled days, though. I wake with the dawn at 4.30 am. There seems little point forcing it, so I relax and watch the often rosy dawn diffuse across the sky from the comfort of our bed. I don’t want to wake my husband who is asleep next to me, so I don’t leap out and do something productive. I just relax, read a book, the news, or blogs until it’s time to get up. It still feels like a guilty pleasure not struggling into the shower and work clothes, to be honest. The day stretches ahead of me like a purring cat.

I love this time of year. This is a first for us up on the island in June. Everything is green, lush and growing. The skylark and cuckoo calls fill the cool morning air and I’m reminded that even though the house is far from finished that we are very lucky to be here, just breathing all this in.

2 Replies to “Long days filled with light”

  1. What evocative images!! I would love to have the same love of the Summer Solstice. For us it is a relief to see the end of the long days, but also a worry as the hottest, windiest and fire filled days of Summer happen in the weeks after Solstice. The shortening of days brings more gentle weather and gradually the fire danger lessens.
    It is Winter Solstice here tomorrow, the shortest day of the year. A time to pause and evaluate the year. We eat warming foods and sit by the fire (the tame cousin of the wildfire we fear in Summer and Spring) and give thanks to the Nature gods for our survival.

    Liked by 2 people

Leave a comment