Javea Grapevine 343 | Page 105

The days were full of sunlight - the tanned bodies, the bright colourful costumes and towels, and the purple shadows beneath sunshades, the deep emerald and prussian blues of the sea infused my paintings; and in the evenings the orange light on the Peñon and the gorgeous sunsets, gold and red streaking ultramarine clouds piled up on a sky fading to delicate shades of turquoise on the horizon warmed my soul. Holidays in Spain weren’t enough, and after twenty years of teaching we made our permanent home in a whitewashed village amongst the orange groves. It was, however, the white walled village streets which provided a canvas for purple patterns of shadow, doors, windows and flowered balconies which became the main motive of my watercolours. Another escapee from the daily grind in our village was Gill, a nurse tutor. She had retired early so looking for a way of occupying her time with something more useful than painting under my tutorage she volunteered to work in Uganda. We followed her there for three weeks, resulting in a number of watercolour studies of the people and the buildings. When her next assignment came up in Sri Lanka in 1998, naturally being her groupies, we went there. She met us off the plane and whisked us up to the ancient capital of Kandy, site of the famous Temple of the Tooth, and installed us in a bungalow guesthouse with the delightful Dunawile family; a place which has since become to us our second home in the world. We paid the grand total of three pounds a night for bed and breakfast. You always know that you have become part of the extended family when you are invited to dine in the kitchen. During that three weeks we toured ancient cities, cave temples and the World Heritage Site of Galle Fort, where we stayed in the New Oriental Hotel, reputed to be the oldest hotel on the island. The peninsula of Galle, had been fortified first by the Portuguese but derives much of its character from the Dutch occupation with its verandahed houses and stone