Friday, July 11, 2025
Highgate in the Heat
We are supposedly in the middle of a heat wave, but to me it doesn't feel that uncomfortable. It's warm -- about 30º C or 86º F yesterday -- but we've had much worse. I took a walk over to Highgate yesterday and I debated whether or not I should go, given the heat, but it turned out not to be a problem.
I wanted to see a show of paintings by an artist named David Evans at a Highgate art gallery. I read about it in the paper a couple of months ago and made a mental note of it, and I didn't have a chance to follow up on it until now. (The gallery is only open on Thursdays and weekends.)
In the decades before he died in 1988, Evans owned a classical music record store in Kensington and made fanciful and highly detailed watercolors of city life -- nightclubs, concert halls, traffic jams -- as well as landscapes, portraits, drawings and collages. The show is small but I'm glad I went as I loved his large colorful paintings, which seemed both very '60s and timeless. I bought the catalog for £15.
To get to Highgate I took the overground to Hampstead Heath and walked from there, after fortifying myself with a coffee from Starbucks.
I crossed the Heath and walked up Parliament Hill to check out the view. That's looking southeast toward Canary Wharf (L) and the city (R). That view has changed a lot in the 14 years we've lived in London. If you look at the last picture in this post you'll see what it looked like back then -- there was a lot more open space, rather than the wall of buildings we see now.
I also passed that yellow house in the top photo. I was taken by the painter's orange overalls. That road had so much traffic I only had a chance to take two shots and I'm glad that one worked out.
I found this six-spot burnet on knapweed on the Heath -- the first one I've seen this summer.
After checking out the show and wandering up and down the Highgate high street, I walked back across the Heath to home -- about two and a half miles. It felt good to get some exercise and cross something off my list of things to do.
I've been posting so many pictures of Olga sleeping that I thought I'd show you a more lively video. This was yesterday morning, as she sniffed around where the foxes tend to wander in the back of the garden. The old beast still has some bark in her, though as you can see, she is a bit wobbly!
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You had a good walk, and 30C is still bearable for a walk (in my experience) as long as it's not too humid and you can walk in the shade every now and then.
ReplyDeleteThe house in the first picture is very pretty, but I suppose when it was built there was much less traffic - a very busy road would certainly put me off wanting to live there.
What a beautiful butterfly! (Or is it a moth? I know the difference is easy, but I always forget.) I don't think I have ever seen one like this around here.
Yeah, it's a pretty house, but I agree -- the road is too busy for me! A six-spot burnet is a moth. There are other types of burnets too, and the Cinnabar moth, which looks very similar and I think must be related.
DeleteIt was evidently a fulfilling and well-rounded day, one marked by art, time in nature, a touch of reflection, and the faithful presence of Olga in the garden. Indeed, it is often the quieter accomplishments that bring the greatest satisfaction
ReplyDeleteI am all about quiet accomplishments!
DeleteOlga even as an old lady has to protect her kingdom..
ReplyDeleteHa! She certainly believes so.
DeleteWobbly but willing! Dear old Olga.
ReplyDeleteNot just the buildings have grown, so have the trees, thankfully
Yeah, it's interesting how they've allowed that growth to occur, given that they're trying to preserve a vista there.
DeleteAnything over 25 degrees is too much for me, so well done walking in 30. The burnet moth is beautiful, but it is sad to see buildings encroaching on all the green spaces - slow, but insidious.
ReplyDeleteI think a lot of the buildings you see on the horizon were built on formerly developed land, not green spaces. In fact in East London, around Stratford, they've created that huge park (where the Olympics were held) on former industrial land. So we've actually gained green space.
DeleteI have heard that London wants to use some of its green belt, the outer ring of preserved land, for more suburban housing, though. I'm not a fan of that idea.
David Evans's style was certainly distinctive. For a moment I thought that "Profile portrait of man smoking, circa 1975" was you until I realised it was actually Mick Jagger.
ReplyDeleteMick and I get confused all the time.
DeleteThanks for the old link. What a change in the vista! I love the orange and blue painter on the yellow wall. And oh how I love that house! The moth is beautiful, too. Great shot. Olga has still got it, wobbles and all.
ReplyDeleteShe feels very fierce!
DeleteThat first picture is great. I'd also like it close cropped around the painter. That would be a great watercolor. Good to see Olga still active in her territory.
ReplyDeleteI'll have to try editing it with my "Waterlogue" app!
DeleteThat view has sure changed over the last 14 years. I love Olga's bark and it is good to see her in action.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing how much new construction there's been?
DeleteI like the brightly colored painter's outi=fit against the mellow yellow.
ReplyDeleteFeisty Olga is always fun.
Yeah, the painter is what caught my eye. I doubt I'd have shot the house by itself.
DeleteWoof! (this is my yard, stay out!)
ReplyDeleteExactly! :)
DeleteEvans was certainly not all sweetness and light, was he? Those are the kind of pictures you could stand in front of for a very long time and not see it all.
ReplyDeleteLove the yellow house/orange-suited painter.
And I think if I saw one of those six-spot burnets I might gasp so hard I inhaled it.
Yeah, Olga! You tell those foxes!
Yes, that's exactly what I like about the paintings! They take a while to absorb and process.
DeleteWow...the view certainly has changed! It reminds me of the Police song Synchronicity for some reason about something crawling from a Scottish loch, getting closer and closer...
ReplyDeleteYour six spot burnet looks quite goth.
I love that song! That was one of my favorite albums when I was in my senior year of high school.
DeleteShe Looks Solid - She Is Wobbly In The Rear - She Still Has Enthusiasm - Hopefully She Still Demands Meals - But She Really Has Aged From The Previous Video - Breaks My Damn Heart - Please Sip Her A Just Because Treat , Even If She Is Looking
ReplyDeleteKeep The Faith Brother Reed ,
Cheers
She has apparently aged rather rapidly in the last month or so, I agree. She was still going out daily with her dog-walker up until mid-June and that's inconceivable now. I'm happy if I can get her to walk to the corner.
DeleteThat six-spot bernet is amazingly beautiful and I'd move into that yellow house today if could! It sounds like a terrific day and walk. Now I need to check out David Evans!
ReplyDeleteI think you'd want to move the house first. It's on a pretty busy street! It's a great neighborhood, though -- one of the most expensive in London.
DeleteNot just his orange overalls but his blue shirt.
ReplyDeleteYes, the combination!
DeleteThe change in views is dramatic. Buildings and trees have changed greatly.
ReplyDeleteThe spotted insect is most unusual. I've seen paperweights and jewelry like this but thought it was all art and not truly nature.
Walking in good weather is so appreciated.
Olga told that fox to move on, pronto.
Insects are amazing. I think we as humans don't look closely enough at them, to be honest.
DeleteI love the overalls. I'm apparently in my Overall Era because I just ordered my 3rd pair. What the heck.
ReplyDeleteThey are very useful, I'm sure! I had a pair briefly but then I moved to NYC and they looked stupid there so I gave them away.
Deletethe six spot shows up nicely on the purple flower .
ReplyDeleteThat's one of their favorite plants, knapweed.
DeleteI couldn't have braved a walk in that temperature, but it certainly seemed worth it for the view and the exhibition.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry but to me, Starbucks and coffee seems like an oxymoron 😉
Ha! I actually like Starbucks. I am a longtime fan. But a lot of people don't go for their typically dark roast. I always get an Americano with a splash of milk.
DeleteFor minute there I thought that bug was one of those spotted lantern flys that infested New York a couple of years ago. I remember reading about those.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear that you found the temperatures to be comfortable. I've been concerned reading about the heat wave. I'd hate to think of flying all that way to trade one kind heat for another kind.
Every time I visit London, I see more and more growth. It is truly amazing. I remember when you and I took that walk into the city thinking there was no way to squeeze another building into that space but they were doing it anyway.
Those lantern flies are beautiful -- too bad they're such an invasive menace. I've read that in many places the experts ask people to squash them! Yeah, when it comes to real estate, there's always a way, it seems.
DeleteYou find the coolest insects! I've never seen anything like that spotted one. Glad to see Olga can still show off for the foxes. I prefer high 70s to low 80s but we're up in the high 80s/low 90s for the next week. Ugh.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that's kind of where we are until Monday or Tuesday.
DeleteSounds like a perfect day.
ReplyDeleteTurns out the moth releases cyanide when threatened. Nature is lovely.
What?! A six-spot burnet releases cyanide? Is this true?!
DeleteWell, you could do an immersive journalism taste test and let us know.
DeleteYes. True but harmless to humans.
Love the photos, you really are a wonderful photographer. That video of Olga reminds me of my old dog, she's still fierce, even if she's wobbly:)
ReplyDeleteThank you! I think it's great that Olga, in her mind, believes herself capable of warning away the foxes. :)
DeleteWonder if the painter always wears that combo or if he tries to coordinate with the color paint he's using!
ReplyDeleteSweet Olga. She is so well-loved and has a great life.
Ha! That would be a very forward-thinking painter!
DeleteStill lots of tail wagging in the old girl, too :)
ReplyDeleteIt pulls at the heart strings, though, to see the wobble.
What a beautiful moth. All we have here are beige ones, at least as far as I know. Maybe I'm just not looking hard enough.
Oh, yeah, she wags her tail all the time. Just now she did it when she saw me looking in her direction. I bet you have more going on moth-wise than you think!
DeleteThe wide stance she's got suggests that her world is tipping a little. I get that when I spend too much time on a boat and then go back on land. What is an overland? Bus? Above ground subway car?
ReplyDeleteYeah, standing with legs wide apart is apparently characteristic of vestibular disease, which she has. It's a balance issue. The overground is a local commuter train -- kind of like the tube but above ground.
Delete