- Sail You On. An imaginary tale in the style of a sea shanty.
- A Country Fair. Some observations from attending the Sotterley (in Suffolk) Country Fair set
to the tune of Come to The Fair.
- A Hagstone. Just some of the different superstitions attached to the pebbles with holes
through them. They have a variety of names in different parts of this and other countries.
- A Walk on Southwold Beach.
A romantic winter walk on this Suffolk beach.
- After First Light.
An old man watching the end of First Light celebrations in Lowestoft, Suffolk.
- When Banksy Came To Town. These were the main four in Lowestoft, a cause of great local
excitement!
- Benjamin “Buskey” Tripp. In honour of an actual person.
- Covehithe. A sometimes quiet beach in Suffolk. Given to erosion by the sea.
- Somerleyton’s Craft. There is reconstruction of Sir Christopher’s workshop in the Lowestoft
Maritime Museum.
- Latitude. A festival well worth a visit!
- Shapes of Beccles Past. In October 2022 a ‘Shadows of Past’ Exhibition was presented at St
Michael’s Church, Beccles, Suffolk honouring previous residents (now deceased).
- Sing a Song Of Suffolk. Just a few lines in honour of Suffolk.
- Three Jolly Sailors. Connecting a public house that overlooks the sea off Lowestoft where oil
tankers have been seen to moor. Probably unlikely in reality!
- Waiting For Snape. Written during lockdown.
- Walber the Walberswick Crab. A crab’s eye view of the crabbing, one of the things for which
Walberswick, Suffolk, is known.
- We Wait For The Light. Sitting in Holy Trinity Church, Barsham. Suffolk waiting for a man
created phenomenon that is sometimes witnessed in the Spring and the Autumn Equinox. A
technical poetical point; each line has thirteen syllables and the poem is thirteen lines long.
- Welcome To Our House. About a large house run by the Emmaus Charity, providing shelter
and work for otherwise homeless people.
- The Guava Plaque 31/01/23. A dedication ceremony for a Plaque in honour of those lost in
the Guava Fishing Vessel, seventy years before. There is also a plaque commemorating the
loss of The Reclaim twenty-five years earlier.