Star

Words by:
Maxim Griffin
Featured in:
September 2025

By Maxim Griffin.

Can’t sleep – half two and still humid – you make coffee as quietly as possible – and take a nosey out the back door – it’s fresher outside – clear too – really clear – a satellite traces south to north right through Canis Minor – that settles it – five minutes later you are heading out – a note to the family on the table – ‘gone for stars, back before sixish, then take dog out’ – you know the perfect spot – it’s not far – fifteen minutes and you’re there – not even three.

A dark place – somewhere away from ring roads and settlements – a view to the horizon – east is best – not so much light pollution – in winter Orion rules the sky but in summer Venus is our absolute – she’s just coming up with Jupiter an hour or so behind – Saturn’s way up over the south, but it’s a little hazy that way.

Do not gaze at stars, gazing sounds weak, twee even, leave tweeness for the enemy – stare them out – stars are vast and distant and a very long time ago and they are indifferent to your attention – you are compelled to look, you have brought binoculars – the colossal violence of the stellar universe is comforting – you draw focus on Aldebaran which is due east and a hand’s width above the horizon – 67 light years away, 393,867,900,003,302 miles, give or take – as the crow flies Lincoln cathedral is only 12 miles away, but there is a hill in between you and there so you cannot be sure if it really exists – a glittering line of far off streetlights tells you that, at least in this moment, Skegness exists.

Exploring astronomy
Pick a constellation – a favourite asterism – the Summer Triangle is, from your position, pointing towards the intertidal marshland at the lips of the river Humber – you know their names – Altair, Deneb, Vega – and over there to the right is Cappella – Cappella used to be the brightest star in the night sky, but that was back when homo sapiens were used getting started – the stars and their positions should be part of our greater geography, ignorance of such things should be frowned up.

You’ve looked up local astronomy groups – there are several – actual observatories in Cleethorpes and Lincoln – and there’s a group that meets on a red hill during the new moon (this has a mysterious appeal) – there’s a rumour that there’s a fellow out near Austen Fen who built a tiny radio telescope in his shed – this goes with the territory – astronomy draws out the quiet mavericks – back in the day you knew a man who built a telescope out of things from the tip – lenses as big as a dinner plate that he’d ground by hand from salvaged glass – strange objects with seemingly occult properties.

Look – Venus is here – if you squint you can just make out her phase – waning, probably – you reach for the old, inherited binoculars you keep in your knapsack – you find an object to lean on and steady your aim with full focus as tight as you can – a wobbling dot – you slow yourself down, breathe deeply – these binoculars are meant for birds not planets but they do the job, more or less – there – Venus in crescent – it wobbles away – pigeons turn on, blackbirds begin to sing.

Closer to four – Jupiter should be up by now – should be over there – Venus is up over the houses now – every morning this season you’ve watched her roll up the roof angles – these early starts have become part of the ritual of the day – when the conditions are right you get out, solo or with the dog – if it’s overcast or rainy, you potter in the kitchen and get a head start on everything – thick coffee and Radio 3 playing very low through a tiny shortwave radio you use solely for that purpose – look – there – Jupiter is coming through the trees – can’t see the Seven Sisters though – getting too light – they’re always sharper in winter – we’ll be there soon enough.

Night into day
There are night shining clouds just visible far out on the edge of the North Sea – stratospheric wisps that are high enough to carry daylight over the horizon – Venus and Jupiter are beginning to diminish – you pour some coffee into the lid of a bashed up metal flask – the coffee is fresh enough to not have taken on the flavour of the steel yet – hot little sips – blow to cool – hot little sips – a pair of bats are on patrol – there are blackberries – a heap of brambles over to your left – most have gone or withered on the vine – you find a couple of juicy feeling ones – pick one – it falls apart as you do so – purple fingers – sweet, funky even, perhaps slightly fermented – there’s a spider on the back of your hand – you gingerly return it to the leaves – look – brighter still, you wipe the stickiness on the sleeve of your jumper – it needed a wash anyway.

There’s a gearshift in birdsong in the moments before sunrise – an intensity, a crescendo – the morning jets from America take on the look of a meteor shower – red trails heading east – you climb on top of a five bar gate – the sky is orange now – there – you squint – our star arrives – the horizon shimmers – you squint – you don’t have long to look at it – a minute or two while it’s still low to behold the god star – you list all the names of the sun – it is polite to know them – Ra, Aten, Helios, Sol, Ba’al, Surya, Apollo – on and on – night has become day – this is perhaps the oldest magic – and it never gets stale – you close your eyes, a little dazzled – you’re casting a long shadow – what time is it? half-five – good – time to get back and get things rolling – make some coffee, make a drawing, take the dog out – there’s a mist coming off the river – it’ll be good to walk through it before the sun burns it away.



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Food waste collections are coming to parts of Lincolnshire in early 2026 ♻️Here are the key things residents need to know:• New household food waste collections will start rolling out in phases from January and February 2026• If you’re in one of the first areas, you’ll receive food waste caddies and a guidance leaflet delivered to your home• The leaflet explains how the service works, what can go in your caddies, and when collections will start• All food items that are edible and inedible are accepted this includes items such as egg shells, meat bones, tea bags and so much more• The service is part of the Government’s Simpler Recycling changes• Not all areas will start at the same time – check your local district or borough council news channels for confirmed start dates• Food waste should be placed in the kitchen caddy using the supplied liners, then transferred to the outdoor caddy for collection• Collected food waste will be taken to an anaerobic digestion plant, where it will be turned into energy and fertiliser.Look out for your caddy delivery and make sure to keep an eye on local council updates so you know when the service goes live in your area.#LincolnshireRecycles #FoodWaste #Recycling #EnvironmentAct2021 ... See MoreSee Less