Friday, 27 March 2020

Covid#7 - The benefits of Cornish isolation



Britain came out onto its doorsteps, driveways and balconies to applaud the staff of the NHS at 8pm this evening.  We watched it on the BBC and it was really very moving and uplifting; a reminder of the hard work of our doctors and nurses at this most desperate of times; a well-deserved show of admiration, confidence and gratitude; and a wonderful display of national solidarity.  Here in Cornwall, we didn’t stand on the doorstep and clap; aside from the badgers and horses, there’s no-one to hear it.  We were there in spirit though.

This is one of those remote corners of the land that feels a world away from an emergency.  It still felt unreal last week when I was at home in Bournemouth, which was then still relatively untouched by the virus – people said it was like watching a film – but here, at the southern-most point of Britain, you could turn off the news and be almost oblivious to anything untoward happening – until you try to go anywhere else or visit the supermarket, of course. 

Living in a small village surrounded by open space and looking out to sea, there is an understandable hope that the virus won’t spread as wildly here as in towns and cities with their greater concentrations of population, but no-one is complacent.  People aren’t visiting each other and when you see someone, they’re sociable but strict about keeping two metres distance.  There is the same fear here of that first case in the village as there is everywhere.  The locals are all worried for their families and for the elderly and vulnerable residents.  The giftshops wouldn’t yet be open for the tourist season, but this year they won’t open at Easter as they should.  Obviously, the few pubs, cafes and restaurants in the village all have their curtains drawn and remain in darkness.  There’s concern about the impact there will be on the local economy.

People have commented though that living here, enforced isolation isn’t very different from everyday life.  They walk to the village butcher, waving to neighbours through their windows or greeting them in their gardens as they normally do, and when they get there, the butcher’s is well stocked.  You walk the dog through the village to the clifftop and then for miles in whichever direction you please, only passing fewer people than usual.  Many villagers don’t travel far, nor often but it’s rare to see the Police in the village anyway so no-one expects to see officers here checking where anyone is going.  They’re content occupying themselves in their homes, with their gardens, with a good book, a game of cards or a jigsaw puzzle.  For many, it’s why they choose to live here.

My exercise today was with my parents’ dog across heathland, alongside babbling brooks, through sharp ravines, over the cliffs and beside the sea.  We accidentally flushed snipe, were followed by buzzards and ravens and spied upon by a peregrine; we scattered the meadow pipits and rabbits and seals ducked under the waves as we passed.  There was a chilly breeze but all the while, the sun shone gloriously.  We walked for ten happy miles and saw only four other people.

With the rest of the world in meltdown, this place ticks along at a barely changed pace.  I’ve wondered what villages like this were like at other times of crisis – during the war, for example.  Did the war seem a world away?  It’s easier here, not exactly to forget about the virus, the catastrophe it’s causing, the pressures it’s bringing and the deaths, but to find peace in isolation in an already-isolated and beautiful corner of the country.  I’m lucky to find myself here.


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