A few weeks ago we had some marvellous weather and it coincided with having visitors to stay. First my sister came to stay and we were able to go out and visit nearby Avebury without needing welly boots and a brolly. We did not go the full round but wandered around the village in the centre of the stones and looked at the unusual shops that sell stuff to the tourists. They carry the usual tourist stuff like models of everyday objects covered in the Union Flag, but being in a place of ancient stones, one shop specialises in Celtic art, amulets, posters and books on witchcraft and magic, suitable for the inevitable New Age bearded and bead be-strung visitors who see something mystical in structures that were built a number of millennia before building regulations were invented.
The outer stone circle at Avebury |
No doubt the builders of the stones would have been most surprised at some of the interpretations of their work, which they no doubt had a perfectly compelling reason to build and which may have had nothing to do with any of the ideas modern people associate with them.
One of the stones with new age visitors |
The National Trust has a nice restaurant close by and we stopped and had lunch there. The menu it seems is also designed to appeal to the more green and mystically oriented clientele, featuring mostly vegetarian dishes. Sis and I had a vegetable curry each, which contained some surprising ingredients such as mashed potato and lots of cauliflower, whilst TBH stuck to a more traditional meal.
The day was warm and we wandered along to visit the local manor house which had been recently refurbished whilst being featured on a TV programme following the work, entitled The Manor Reborn. This was not open, we were a day too early, but we looked at the outside and then wandered off again.
Locked out |
One of the buildings in Avebury village inside the stone circle |
The next day we went to visit our Mother’s grave and gave it a tidy up. She is buried in a small Wiltshire village in an area where once several members of our family lived but which now is almost completely devoid of any known relative.
On the way down we stopped at a garden centre to buy some new plants and have lunch. This particular garden centre is close to the small town of Lackock, scene of many a period drama such as the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice and the series based around Elizabeth Gaskell’s Cranford. Rather a long way from the town of Knutsford which is supposed to be the place Mrs Gaskell used as a basis of her Cranford novels, Lacock is still very 18th century in appearance, which makes it ideal for these kind of dramas. One of the houses also featured in two of the Harry Potter movies.
We were able to tidy up Mum’s grave and I decided to take a couple of pictures of the grave in order for my two sons to be able to locate it if they ever felt the need to visit it after I have gone and can no longer show them where it is in a, by then, much more crowded graveyard.
Sis had to return by Thursday to rescue her cat, or rather her cat sitter, so we had a day to ourselves until the next two visitors arrived, this time The God Daughter and her Daughter (TGD&D. My second and respectively, whatever comes next, cousins.
It is a shame, but due to feeble excuses such as having to go back to work and in the case of D, continue to study for A levels, they only were only able to stay with us for the weekend. They would have liked to visit Avebury, but having been to Avebury only a few days before, I rather selfishly suggested that we visit somewhere else and we ended up spending a day in Bourton on the Water, somewhere they had not been to before. This is an attractive Cotswold town with the river Windrush flowing through the middle of it.
The Windrush plus day trippers |
A local business office |
Soon to be more vine than cottage |
Looking across the Windrush |
The local ducks were out in force and feeling a little frisky.
The avian Pepe le Pugh |
His subtle approach does not seem to be doing anything for her |
This time of year fascinates me because whenever driving down an English country lane, it is the time that you can see where people have dumped their garden waste. Any house or cottage which has no houses on the opposite side of the road will often have daffodils, either growing on the grass verge, or sometimes in any ditch opposite. This happens because when people dig over their gardens, a small number of daffodil bulbs are dug up and end up in the garden waste. This is then furtively wheel barrowed across the road and tipped on the grass verge opposite. An easy way of minimising the rubbish you have to dispose of after gardening. In a year or so, these bulbs will grow and so you see a small collection of daffodils at the side of the road.
Roadside Daffodills |
As a result of this, a long way from any nearby habitation, you will come across small clusters of daffodils and other garden plants on the grass verges in a minor country B road. These little clumps of lonely flowers act as a kind of rural archaeology, because at this time of year you can see where these lost cottages once stood.
So what happened to spring? At the time of starting to write this blog, it had gone away again and parts of the country were under snow again. So the timing of our visitors was perfect because we had pretty near perfect weather for our days out.
Easter
For a change this Easter we went to visit the Daughter and Son in Law and the Granddaughter (D, SL and TG) in Cumbria instead of them visiting us. Where they live is in a part of the country that is close to the Lake District. On the way it was very dull and cloudy and we thought we were heading into some snowy weather, but realised what looked like snow was in fact a mass of tiny white flowers growing down the centre of the motorway.
Whilst the journey was wet and dull, for a change, the weather became very bright and cheerful, if a little cold on the Thursday and we went off to Ulverston, a small market town on the Furness peninsula.
For a change this Easter we went to visit the Daughter and Son in Law and the Granddaughter (D, SL and TG) in Cumbria instead of them visiting us. Where they live is in a part of the country that is close to the Lake District. On the way it was very dull and cloudy and we thought we were heading into some snowy weather, but realised what looked like snow was in fact a mass of tiny white flowers growing down the centre of the motorway.
White flowers imitating a light snowfall |
This town’s claim to fame is that George Fox the founder of the Quaker movement lived here and also Stan Laurel was born in Argyle Street. Although George Fox is noted, the town boasts a much more high profile museum dedicated to Laurel and Hardy because of the link with Stan Laurel.
I have not visited the museum for many years and when I did I was a bit disappointed in the lack of organisation I found there. Since it is still open, I can only assume and hope, it has become more visitor friendly.
The attraction of Ulverston on the day of our visit was the street market which opens there on a Thursday. There were several stalls lining the cobbled streets looking very colourful in the bright sunshine so I took several pictures. It was not until that evening, that I discovered that the memory card in my camera had sprung free when I fitted a fresh battery. As a result you will have to imagine the colourful scenes I photographed with a camera which happily auto-focused and went whir-click each time I took a new scene, showing the preview image before THROWING IT AWAY!
It did actually say, if you looked closely in the top left hand corner of the display, in tiny letters there was no memory card, but it was amongst the usual background of other information in the display and in bright sunlight not very obvious. What annoyed me was that it behaved quite normally each time I took what I fondly believed was a photograph, when to my way of thinking, it should have refused to work altogether with such a major problem. This sort of poorly thought through software control is the bane of modern man and I have lectured on this as a part of my previous work, pointing out that nearly three quarters of ALL software fails to work properly. Finding myself a victim of this kind of thing simply confirms what I already knew, but I thought the makers of my camera were above this kind of shoddy work.
So here is the one and only view of Ulverston I managed to store before the battery needed replacing and my camera let me down.
The weather then went bad for Good Friday and our next trip into the Lakes was a bit wetter and the pictures I took with my now chastised but working camera were much more dismal.
Although the other side of the country took the brunt of the snowfall, there were still a few clumps of snow higher up on the hills that had survived the bright sunshine of the day before and rain of the previous few days. We visited Grasmere and strolled around with the myriads of other tourists admiring this part of the poet Wordsworth’s home ground. We found a small restaurant that had just opened and had a nice light lunch. They were slightly unprepared for the sudden rush of customers but although a little slow, served up a very good selection of light meals. I had a toasted ciabatta with about two schools of tuna fish in it, well a fairly large helping anyway.
The hills above Grasmere still have a few patches of snow |
Kendal is quite a large town for the area and has some antiquity, with sites dating at least as far back as 1090. It later became a wool town which gave it some prosperity in later centuries and it is still a thriving place. It has a shallow river running through it and is very picturesque, with some cobbled yards still remaining. These Kendal yards are open work areas where several small businesses once thrived in the buildings surrounding each yard.
For those across the Atlantic who may be confused here, the term ‘yard’ in the UK is unlike the American use of the term. In the USA, private houses can have a back yard or a front yard, but in the UK a yard is usually paved over and more often than not a work area associated with some kind of industry, like a coal yard where coal would be loaded for distribution. Private houses in the UK with some grounds are said to have a front and back gardens not a yard.
Two street entertainers in Kendal who posed for an action shot |
The sun came out briefly whilst we were there and I persuaded my camera to take a few pictures and store them on the memory card.
On Easter Sunday we did very little apart from the now traditional egg hunt for TG. It usually falls to me to think up the clues and after a bit of brain bashing late on Saturday evening, I came up with both suitable places to hide the small eggs and the clues, leading to the big egg prize, in a form that an eight year old could solve. This event is met with great excitement and enthusiasm by TG and she raced around her house eagerly searching for clues and managed to solve most of them without too much prompting from her mum and dad.
This fence has been there long enough for this mature tree to have grown through it |
I generally try to make the clues rhyme and I feel like I am writing the story line for a Rupert annual, which always has a short verse under each picture as well as a larger written paragraph to tell the story. Again for those unfortunates who grew up in the USA and did not have such things in their obviously deprived childhood, the Rupert stories are a children’s picture strip published daily in one of the national newspapers and then compiled into an annual just prior to Christmas. They have been popular here for over 80 years and still appear every year without fail.
On the main road down the Furness Peninsula, it follows a tidal estuary that comes inland from Morecombe Bay and whenever I have travelled past it, in all the years I have been visiting this area, I have never seen the tide fully in and covering the mud flats and sandbanks. This has become a standing joke amongst my family, who have occasionally threatened to leave me at the shore side whilst they carry on home just so that I can see the tide come in and see it for myself. For the first time in recorded history as we came past this Easter weekend, the water was at high tide. SL was driving and he immediately swung off the road and drove into a parking area so that I could get out and photograph this mythical event.
It is a popular place for fishing as fish come in with the tide to feed.
There is a tide |
Over the last two years, whilst most of the UK has been lacking sufficient rain and now has started rationing water, the North West has been inundated.
Drought? What drought? |
On Monday we set off for home through the monsoons that swept the country, averaging about twenty five miles per hour over a two hundred and fifty mile journey. This poor progress was due to the huge amount of traffic, roadworks and poor visibility.
Finally home I have been able to sit down to the PC and recount a few of my recent activities.