This week a magazine in the States asked to use a couple of photos they had seen on one of my blogs. I happily agreed and offered to send them higher resolution versions. All I had to do then was find them. I knew they were taken somewhere between 2007 and 2017 and were digital so that meant I only had about 25,000 photos to go through. Many of my natural history photos for that period are labelled. The rest are not. It proved quite a task to find the ones that were wanted but it was successful and most enjoyable to be reminded of places and things I had totally forgotten. In future I shall try to label my photos better.
I am currently reading Elly Griffiths's excellent "The Lantern Men", the 12th Dr Ruth Galloway story about crime and forensic archaeology. In it the hero mentions the first time she visited the stone circle at Stanton Drew - a 'strange, sullen place, not welcoming to outsiders'.
There were two older women also circumnavigating the circle and we met up at the entrance. "Well," said one of them, "That was the strangest experience I've ever had." I asked in what way. She said she couldn't explain but it was as though the stones wanted her to go away. Her companion looked quite shaken and agreed so I showed them my goosebumps and explained how I had felt. We all agreed that we would never want to visit there again. Years later Jo and I went there but I stayed well away from the circle while Jo walked around it. So far as I can recall Jo was not affected but there were a lot more people there that day and that may have made the atmosphere different.
The only other place I had a strange inexplicable experience, similar to that - but not the same, was in the Old House in Bakewell.
Have you ever had an experience like that?