Tide

Words by:
Maxim Griffin
Featured in:
July 2025

By Maxim Griffin.

The dog knows the score – yips and whimpers of excitement – you promise to let her off when you reach sand – an old gate has been replaced with a metal stile – new signage warns of fines for overnight parking – you turn onto a concrete track flanked by impenetrable crowns of gorse – swarms of big flies, orange berries, spikes – coming the other way is a pack of seven tiny hounds pulling a lady behind them – they do not stop but in this brief encounter the lady has explained most of their medical histories – Frederico has a skin condition and is totally blind – Barney was rescued from a house fire in the foothills of the Pyrenees – Toby has ennui.

A finger post directs you onto the King Charles Memorial Heritage Coastal Footpath but you decline the offer – you and the dog cross into the dunes on a path of your own choosing – a rabbit worn meander takes you up and over and down and over again – the North Sea lies before you, eventually – there’s no one about so now is a good time to release the hounds – as is her way, she engages in several huge celebratory loops, practically skipping before returning to the relative safety of your side.

It is good to be in a wide open space – and there are few spaces wider or more open – south of the ports, north of the resorts, that’s the best bit of the coast – you’re partial to Mablethorpe at the season’s height but since the beach police got contracted in it’s made summer trips slightly uncomfortable – still – here you are – a heat haze wobbles the horizon – Fata Morgana, bent light – faraway tankers shimmering – the breeze conceals the strength of the sun – already up in the twenties and it’s not even lunchtime – a thread of footprints point east, paws with them – these are scenes that have followed us from the Mesolithic – walking out at low tide with a dog and a stick to see what you can find – you scan the sand carefully for interesting lumps and bumps – a dark mass draws your eye and you whistle the dog along – good girl – you cross an oily seam – sand and something slick – ten steps and your boots are thick with it – you almost slip but manage to maintain your dignity – you reach the dark mass and begin your inspection – sea burnt wood, real heavy – fixing of iron, encrusted nails you could sell as relics – seven feet of oak – this is obviously old – there are plenty of wrecks offshore to choose from – 19th-century clippers mostly – hardly anyone has written about the Bella Donna, a straggler from the Armada that sank in the murky shallows somewhere off Saltfleet – this timber is too big to salvage, the sea will have it back soon enough – you lift it up – it’s soft and there are things living on it – you place it down gently – the sand burps.

Exploring barefoot
Go on – you give the signal for the dog to run ahead – she gallops through mud and salt – you look south – figures of similar pilgrimages wriggle in the haze – they are miles away – you can’t see but can read from their body language that they have a dog or two with them – your dog comes bounding back, lapping at standing water in search of a drink – you pour some of your water into a cupped hand and she licks it up – you take a draught too – that’s better – clouds track steadily along – sun on skin – a bar of fine dry sand, very soft, very pale – you stop and peel off boots and socks – you’ve always preferred going barefoot – when you were a kid you were warned not to go unshod on the beach – sticklebacks, it was said, would come for you, would prick your soles, would drag you into the briny – you walk on in a methodical fashion – the dog pads softly, now more sand than fur, tongue out, onward.

The world reveals itself to those who travel on foot – the sea is closer now but you must first cross a series of glittering channels – a flock of tiny white birds strafe the surface of the first channel as you splosh through – the dog is cautious of water but takes your lead – the water is warm, clear – the dog enjoys this crossing and zooms back for another go – victorious leaps shake the muck off – a little climb up another bank of white sand followed by a wider channel – it’s shallow, ankle deep and sparkling with wind and sun – you and the dog are speckled with reflections – you feel positively tropical – you look up and ahead – the sea – good.

Seaside swim
Surf’s up and it is beautiful – white tipped waves as far as you can see – sun, water, space – the dog still doesn’t quite know how to react to the motion of the sea but if you’re happy, she’s happy – you go in a little, getting your shorts wet in the process – you watch the strandline carefully – the tide is still receding but it’ll turn soon – you’ve got Charles Trenet on your mind – La Mer – you look down the coast – deep breath – you look up the coast – breathe out – there’s a fella a mile or so north – he’s limbering up to swim by the looks of things – ah – he’s completely in the nip, skyclad – a bare bum to the sun as he plunges – good, good for him – it’ll give the seals something to chat about.

The sun is reaching its zenith – June high – you call the dog – good girl, good girl – you trace the line of your footprints until the ground requires boots again – you don’t bother to return your socks – an older couple herd a pair of small grandchildren – you buckle the dog up because it is polite to do so and compliment the young ones on their spades and buckets – they compliment the dog on her fineness and the transaction is complete and they disappear east toward the tide that will soon turn.



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Grantham school joins Carol Service in celebration of town’s hospitalPupils from St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy are taking part in the first Carol Service to celebrate the special relationship Grantham and District Hospital has with the town and surrounding communities.The school children will join in the singing of favourite Christmas Carols as well as perform their own set musical piece at the Carol Service on Thursday 11th December at 7pm, in St Wulfram’s church, Grantham.Deputy Head Teacher Olivia Mumford said: “The Carol Service is a fantastic opportunity for our pupils to share the joy of music while showing appreciation for the incredible work done at Grantham and District Hospital. It’s a privilege to support such an important event in our town."The Carol Service has been organised by United Lincolnshire Hospitals Charity, who work closely with staff at Grantham and District Hospital and provides those extras for staff and patients that NHS budgets are unable to fund. Further details on the Grantham NHS Carol Service can be found by visiting www.ulhcharity.org.uk/news/christmas-carols-at-grantham-st-wulfram-church-in-thanks-for-towns-sup... ... See MoreSee Less