Monday, July 7, 2008
Wonders in Wales
Enys has asked me to write something for a local Welsh newspaper, so here it is. It is time I got back into the swing of writing again!
This last week I have been visiting le Pays de Galles, spending four days in Tenby in South Wales and four in Denbigh in the north.
My friends surprised me with visits to two outstanding indoor attractions.
Both were developed by people passionate about their interests, who have
managed to turn those interests into businesses, allowing others to share
their passion. A bit like Barry Brickell and the Driving Creek Railway.
Silent World in Tenby is much more than just an aquarium.
Ginny and Russ are collectors and conservationists, whose passion is
the life in the seas and rivers around Wales.
Silent World is in a stone chapel, tucked away in suburban Tenby.
So unexpected and so intriguing, it took us a whole morning to explore what is really a very small aquarium, but which houses so much of interest.
The "thinking person's" Aquarium and Reptile Collection offers a fascinating
view of all sorts of aquatic creatures as well as reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates.
The owners have made sure each tank has full and informative notes, making
a visit so much more interesting.
I loved the pair of pot bellied sea horses, which obliged me by posing for
a photo at the front of the tank, the pregnant male's swollen belly so
stretched and white, it looked like it would burst.
The baby chameleons upstairs in the reptile section were fascinating, their
bodies a beautiful shade of green, scrambling over each other with their skinny white legs thrashing.
The little shop is stuffed with marine and reptilian paraphanalia, useful,
educational or just plain fun, and parents can relax with a cup of very
good coffee, while the children explore. It was so homely and friendly and
Ginny and Russ have just got the right touch to avoid it being "just
another attraction."
They have turned the 19th century chapel into a special place, which is
also the centre for the South West Wales Reptile &
Amphibian group(SWWRAG), giving help and advice, as well as selling home
breed stock.
The comments in the visitors book, "it managed to keep a two-year old
occupied and that's got to be good news," and, "well worth giving up a few hours on the beach for," were spot on.
I was a child in the fifties and my home was built in 1953 so I have a
special interest in that era. When my friends suggested visiting The
Fifties Museum I was very keen. Just outside Denbigh, hidden away down a
country drive in a jumble of old sheds and outhouses, Cae Dai was another
unexpected treat.
Sparrow Harrison is a passionate collector of fifties and sixties
memorabilia and one of Denbigh's more colourful characters.
He invites visitors to, "Experience the 1950's Era - when sex was forbidden
and smoking was chic!"
As we drove into the yard of what is still a working farm, the first thing
I spotted was an old Standard car. My mother had a Standard Eight when I was
a child in Australia and later I had my own Standard Ten, in which my
daughter Jennie and I travelled all over the North Island. I hadn't seen
one for years.
Inside we had a guided tour of the maze of 1950's rooms, displays of show
biz and sports memorabilia, classic cars, and in the crime area, the actual
lorry used in the Great Train Robbery and the police car, a much loved
Anglia, used in Heartbeat. This was a very popular series in New Zealand
and I couldn't resist putting on the policeman's hat and posing for a
photo.
It is a very hands on museum. The displays of everyday life, not unlike life in the
colonies, brought back many memories. I loved the 1950's kitchens and
sitting rooms. I couldn't stop smiling.
"From Drab to Fab," the visit was a delight. I could have spent all day
exploring.
http://www.silentworld.org.uk/sw%20frame.html
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
At home in Leeds again
I arrived here safely after enjoying the train journey from Shrewsbury through the beautiful English countryside. I am trying to work out why people say it is so beautiful in New Zealand, when it is just as lovely here. In a different way of course. I think our scenery changes more dramatically and frequently as you travel through it.
But I love the green rolling farmland, with its patchwork of wheat fields, hedges and deciduous trees, and cows grazing peacefully. The old brick, or stone farm buildings and the occasional glimpse of a stately home through the trees. It all has that look about it which is unique, quite unlike the countryside in France.
While in Much Wenlock I was able to attend a Big Band practice with Lesley and David. Lesley conducts the band and David plays guitar. Lesley also plays in a saxophone quartet and on the Sunday we went to the back of beyond, somewhere south of Ludlow, for a performance. The group played the lunchtime gig as background music for people on a cross country walk, part of the Ludlow festival of food and wine. The 400 walkers stopped off at this beautiful reception lounge,(not all at once), in the depth of the countryside, for a spot of lunch; a dollop of stew, a bread roll and a half pint of ale! They each carried a beer mug on a yellow ribbon around their necks. I would have loved to have joined in the walk as it looked like a lot of fun. I just sat and enjoyed the music, providing the audience applause and reminding the walkers to show their appreciation.
We also went to a concert by the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, at a huge, old church in Ludlow, also part of the festival. The concert was one of the highlights of my trip, which I had been looking forward to very much. I was not disappointed.
We all thoroughly enjoyed the music and their humour. What an incredibly professional and talented group! They are touring Britain at the moment and if you get a chance to go to a concert grab it. I can't imagine anyone not enjoying it.
Of course I have a particluar interest in the ukulele but even David (who is not easily impressed) was going off to a music shop the next day, to investigate ukuleles. I was very inspired. I can't wait to get home to start playing again. The following day on Radio Four there was an interview with the orchestra which was very interesting and filled in a lot of the history of the group.
Today, a brilliantly sunny day, I am off to explore Leeds to see what has changed since I was last here.
When I arrived, Daphne's mum Joan took me for a walk around Roundhay Park which is as lovely as ever. We used to live just down the road, at Bayswater Place, in a back-to-back terraced house and visited the park frequently. Lesley and David and I all lived there together at one stage. There is a new visitor centre which is very interesting and worth a visit.
Thank you to Jennie and Owen at Foxhole Rigg and Lesley and David at Foxglove Cottage for a really enjoyable and relaxing couple of weeks.
I loved their homes and gardens, both in beautiful settings. It was fun to share their lives again for a short time, and remember good times we shared in the past too. Altogether very inspiring.
This weekend I am hoping to go to Bradmore in Nottinghamshire and from there on to Tenby in Wales for a few days at the seaside, with Daphne and Stephen and family. It is a long way to go but I have to use up the rail pass anyway and the country side between here and there is lovely too.
I love the Pembrokeshire coast. I may be able to walk a bit further along the coastal pathway this time. Last time I visited Manorbier Castle, where The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe was filmed. A stunning spot.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Oh to be in England
I'm not quite in the Lake District but in the Howgills area of Cumbria. Jennie and Owen moved here from Grange-Over-Sands last year. It is an opportunity for me to explore yet another beautiful and new-to-me corner of England. Foxhill Rigg is a lovely old stone farmhouse a few miles up the road from Sedbergh, near Cautley.
We went out on Friday night to a celidh (or however one spells it.It took me
back to the good old days with Lesley and David and the monthly Phoenix Barn dances in Leeds. Over dinner with some friends beforehand, we got out the old photos of the
Colony Holiday at Ballacloan on the Isle of Man where I met Jennie!
Much to the delight of the men I had a photo of Jennie (in about 1972,) in a bikini, dipping her toes into the North Sea, and she had one in her album, coming out of the water on the same occasion.
It was a struggle to get dressed and go out after that, as all I really wanted to do was to go to bed. However I survived the evening and even managed a few dances. I tried to pick the less strenuous ones but the caller didn't really give us much warning.
It is cool and fresh but the sun is trying to shine.
It is beautiful here in Sedbergh, with fields of wildflowers and stone walls surrounding the farmhouse and the hills and moorland just across the valley.
Jennie is developing a cottage garden around the house and the chooks and
Meg the dog, hang out in the farm yard. The only sounds are the birds, a pheasant calling in the field next door and the lambs calling to their mothers on the hillsides. Occasionally a jet fighter screams across the valley but presumably they don't do that at the weekends, so all is peaceful.
The only other sound is the squeaking of Meg's purple rugby ball or her hot dog as she tries to get me to throw it for her. She has adopted me as her new friend, as I talk to her and occasionally do oblige by throwing something.
We went into the Lake District last night, where Owen conducted a concert of choral music in a very old stone church, up a hidden valley at Kentmere. The man explained that the graveyard around the church was not mown because of the profusion of wild flowers and that it wouldn't be mown until the flowers set their seed in July. It was a breathtaking spot. Supper and a glass of wine were served in the interval. All very civilised.
The Allegri Singers and Players are an amateur group directed by Owen. The music was by Schulz, Marini, Biber, Bach and Vaughan Williams. Not quite my cup of tea but in such a magical setting, on a chilly but sunny evening and against the view through a picture window, of farm and moorland lit by the setting sun, it was most enjoyable. I especially liked the string intstruments accompanying the singers.
The Vaughan Williams Benedicite was powerful and very appropriate given the setting.
As we came home through Sedbergh at dusk last night, a couple were still playing tennis and it was 10:30pm! The light on the patchwork of mown fields and the distant hills was amazing.
Today we are off up into the hills to a Quaker meeting and 30 minute silence on the fells. It sounds different and a good chance again to mix with the locals! It must have something to do with this week being the longest day of the year.
We went out on Friday night to a celidh (or however one spells it.It took me
back to the good old days with Lesley and David and the monthly Phoenix Barn dances in Leeds. Over dinner with some friends beforehand, we got out the old photos of the
Colony Holiday at Ballacloan on the Isle of Man where I met Jennie!
Much to the delight of the men I had a photo of Jennie (in about 1972,) in a bikini, dipping her toes into the North Sea, and she had one in her album, coming out of the water on the same occasion.
It was a struggle to get dressed and go out after that, as all I really wanted to do was to go to bed. However I survived the evening and even managed a few dances. I tried to pick the less strenuous ones but the caller didn't really give us much warning.
It is cool and fresh but the sun is trying to shine.
It is beautiful here in Sedbergh, with fields of wildflowers and stone walls surrounding the farmhouse and the hills and moorland just across the valley.
Jennie is developing a cottage garden around the house and the chooks and
Meg the dog, hang out in the farm yard. The only sounds are the birds, a pheasant calling in the field next door and the lambs calling to their mothers on the hillsides. Occasionally a jet fighter screams across the valley but presumably they don't do that at the weekends, so all is peaceful.
The only other sound is the squeaking of Meg's purple rugby ball or her hot dog as she tries to get me to throw it for her. She has adopted me as her new friend, as I talk to her and occasionally do oblige by throwing something.
We went into the Lake District last night, where Owen conducted a concert of choral music in a very old stone church, up a hidden valley at Kentmere. The man explained that the graveyard around the church was not mown because of the profusion of wild flowers and that it wouldn't be mown until the flowers set their seed in July. It was a breathtaking spot. Supper and a glass of wine were served in the interval. All very civilised.
The Allegri Singers and Players are an amateur group directed by Owen. The music was by Schulz, Marini, Biber, Bach and Vaughan Williams. Not quite my cup of tea but in such a magical setting, on a chilly but sunny evening and against the view through a picture window, of farm and moorland lit by the setting sun, it was most enjoyable. I especially liked the string intstruments accompanying the singers.
The Vaughan Williams Benedicite was powerful and very appropriate given the setting.
As we came home through Sedbergh at dusk last night, a couple were still playing tennis and it was 10:30pm! The light on the patchwork of mown fields and the distant hills was amazing.
Today we are off up into the hills to a Quaker meeting and 30 minute silence on the fells. It sounds different and a good chance again to mix with the locals! It must have something to do with this week being the longest day of the year.
Monday, June 9, 2008
It's summer and I arrive in London
Monday morning, in London at Lynda’s flat in Westminster. I don’t have to think in French anymore!
I slept for about 12 hours last night. The trip from Paris was rather eventful. Yvette deposited me at the Gare du Nord station in plenty of time, but as we arrived, the Eusrostar terminal was being closed down as a bomb had been found in somone’s luggage!
Some people waited inside, while I beat a hasty retreat to the edge of the pavement outside. We waited an hour and I must say everyone was very calm and resigned. Thank goodness they found it. Someone was trying to board the train prior to mine, with a grenade! Finally they opened the station again and we left one hour late, not bad considering the magnitude of the event.
Most People slept all the way to London, not surprisingly, as we were probably all feeling a little frazzled. I know I heaved a sigh of relief when we finally pulled into St Pancras, just two and a half hours after leaving Paris.
Lynda was waiting for me and she whisked me off to her lovely little flat to get ready for lunch at the Ritz! A birthday treat for my 60th later this year. We sat on the terrace in the sun and had a delicious and rather exotic lunch. My soup was an onion cappuccino, with goats cheese tagliatelli, very creamy and delicious and unlike anything I had ever tasted. I had pigeon for the first time, two tiny but delicious morsels, and then the most amazing dessert I think I have ever had. I am lost for words! I find myself eyeing up pigeons in a different way now.
(Mmmm, you've got a nice plump little breast!)
Summer arrived in London yesterday, and as we walked home through Green Park and St James Park everyone had come out to strip off and sun themselves on the grass.
It really took me back to 1971 when I first arrived in London.
It is another gorgeous morning and Lynda and I are going to Greenwich along the Thames. A great day to find a little pub by the river for lunch.
Paris was magnificent. So much cleaner than I remember and the buildings take your breath away. I overdosed on art museums with my two day museum pass and travelled up and down the Seine on the Batobus on another two day pass. I stayed at the Hotel de Rouen for the first two nights, as recmommended by Chris Stark. It was tiny, clean, basic, friendly and comfy, but most of all central. I could walk to the Louve in five minutes.
Then I stayed in Yvette’s lovely apartment for two nights. Just around the corner from the Place de la Republique and delightful. I joined Yvette for an outing for lunch with the NZ-France assocaiation she belongs to. All a lot of fun and a chance to practise my French. I was very privileged to spend another few days having an authentic French experience.
Thanks to all the lovely hosts I had in France I really enjoyed my time there. Total immersion is definitely the only way.
After I left Michel and Michel and my home away from home in Montpellier, I spent “un bon weekend in Avignon” with Claire and Philippe, their son Francois, and an American student Garrett. We practised our French on each other! It was a very family oriented visit which I really appreciated. Sunday lunch on the terrace under the wisteria with Louis, Claire’s father, was wonderful. It was another very French experience.
Then two days in the countryside at Jonquerette with Ruthilt and Andre. They took me out and about with two American friends on a tour of the Vaucluse area. It was stunning and so Provencal, with all the poppies, olive trees, geraniums in pots, cream, pink and orange buildings,fountains and ancient churches. It was amazing. I really was privileged to have the opportunity to be there with such lovely people.
On to Cumbria later this week to spend a few days with Jennie and Owen. Of course Jennie is my daughters namesake. We were close friends here in London in the swinging seventies and I am looking forward to catching up with them in their “new,” very old farmhouse in Sedbergh. A chance for reflection and cross country walks.
I slept for about 12 hours last night. The trip from Paris was rather eventful. Yvette deposited me at the Gare du Nord station in plenty of time, but as we arrived, the Eusrostar terminal was being closed down as a bomb had been found in somone’s luggage!
Some people waited inside, while I beat a hasty retreat to the edge of the pavement outside. We waited an hour and I must say everyone was very calm and resigned. Thank goodness they found it. Someone was trying to board the train prior to mine, with a grenade! Finally they opened the station again and we left one hour late, not bad considering the magnitude of the event.
Most People slept all the way to London, not surprisingly, as we were probably all feeling a little frazzled. I know I heaved a sigh of relief when we finally pulled into St Pancras, just two and a half hours after leaving Paris.
Lynda was waiting for me and she whisked me off to her lovely little flat to get ready for lunch at the Ritz! A birthday treat for my 60th later this year. We sat on the terrace in the sun and had a delicious and rather exotic lunch. My soup was an onion cappuccino, with goats cheese tagliatelli, very creamy and delicious and unlike anything I had ever tasted. I had pigeon for the first time, two tiny but delicious morsels, and then the most amazing dessert I think I have ever had. I am lost for words! I find myself eyeing up pigeons in a different way now.
(Mmmm, you've got a nice plump little breast!)
Summer arrived in London yesterday, and as we walked home through Green Park and St James Park everyone had come out to strip off and sun themselves on the grass.
It really took me back to 1971 when I first arrived in London.
It is another gorgeous morning and Lynda and I are going to Greenwich along the Thames. A great day to find a little pub by the river for lunch.
Paris was magnificent. So much cleaner than I remember and the buildings take your breath away. I overdosed on art museums with my two day museum pass and travelled up and down the Seine on the Batobus on another two day pass. I stayed at the Hotel de Rouen for the first two nights, as recmommended by Chris Stark. It was tiny, clean, basic, friendly and comfy, but most of all central. I could walk to the Louve in five minutes.
Then I stayed in Yvette’s lovely apartment for two nights. Just around the corner from the Place de la Republique and delightful. I joined Yvette for an outing for lunch with the NZ-France assocaiation she belongs to. All a lot of fun and a chance to practise my French. I was very privileged to spend another few days having an authentic French experience.
Thanks to all the lovely hosts I had in France I really enjoyed my time there. Total immersion is definitely the only way.
After I left Michel and Michel and my home away from home in Montpellier, I spent “un bon weekend in Avignon” with Claire and Philippe, their son Francois, and an American student Garrett. We practised our French on each other! It was a very family oriented visit which I really appreciated. Sunday lunch on the terrace under the wisteria with Louis, Claire’s father, was wonderful. It was another very French experience.
Then two days in the countryside at Jonquerette with Ruthilt and Andre. They took me out and about with two American friends on a tour of the Vaucluse area. It was stunning and so Provencal, with all the poppies, olive trees, geraniums in pots, cream, pink and orange buildings,fountains and ancient churches. It was amazing. I really was privileged to have the opportunity to be there with such lovely people.
On to Cumbria later this week to spend a few days with Jennie and Owen. Of course Jennie is my daughters namesake. We were close friends here in London in the swinging seventies and I am looking forward to catching up with them in their “new,” very old farmhouse in Sedbergh. A chance for reflection and cross country walks.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
First Visit to Aix-en-Provence
I spent the weekend with a Servas couple near Aix-en-Provence just before I arrived in Montpellier. Philippe and Sylvie live in a lovely renovated maison in the country just outside the town. They were very welcoming. I lost most of the photos of that visit but I did manage to retrieve the ones of their house and garden, and of our breakfast on the last morning. Very French, very Provençal.
Visit to Séte
We visited Séte in the first week but I didn't get around to writing about it. The fishermen of the region around Rochelle, and now the fishermen on the south coast, have been on strike because of the high price of Gaz(oline.) Almost every night there is something in the news and Séte has featured prominently. There is a shortage of fish in the restaurants.
The highlight of our visit was Jean-Paul giving us a demonstration of the how, at the festival in Sète in summer, the Savateurs or competitors battle it out on board traditional boats.
It was quite a sight!
Afternoon in Nimes
With Jean-Paul leading the way, we explored Nimes yesterday afternoon.
It is about half an hour by TER train from Montpellier.
Fortunately the rain had stopped. The Arena was magnificent. It is massive and is still used for bullfighting. The blocks of stone that the Romans used in the original parts are unbelievably huge. The smaller blocks of stone are from the middle ages!
I didn't make it to the very top, as the steps were very high, but I did almost manage it and we were treated to a fight between a couple of gladiators performing for a school group. There weren't many tourists around so it was quite atmospheric.
I am going to send a post card of the arena to Mr Strick, my surgeon to show him what I am managing to achieve. This time last year I was on crutches and waiting to go into hopsital. The anniversary of my operation is June 15. it may be an occason for a celebration!
We scurried along behind Jean Paul to see the rest of the town, but à la Maison Carrée it was "au revoir JP" and I returned to some of the fascinating shops we had rushed past. I am finding it very hard to keep control of my credit card! I do write everything down, but it still has to be paid. I succumbed to some very expensive Provençal fabric which is divine. I am looking forward to making it up!
I also managed to buy two train tickets, one to Avignon on Saturday, then another to Paris on Wednesday next week.
I have two nights in Avignon with a French family then two nights in Jonquerettes outside Avignon, hopefully seeing a bit more Provencal countryside, before heading north.
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