It's that time again!
Monday, 30 October 2017
Tuesday, 3 October 2017
South West holiday - the Villages
Got up and checked out early to give Jenna, another guest, a lift to Moretonhampstead where she was catching a bus. It was a drivingly wet day on the high roads, and persistently drizzly as we came down, so I was glad I'd chosen today to see some of the villages. I was heading North East to my sister's in Bristol, and there were a couple of stops I wanted to make on the way...
South West holiday - the Tors
I ad a little lie in this morning while the others showered, but I still managed to be on the road by 9am. I drove through the picturesque little village of Widdecombe-in-the-Moor, slowing down for ponies on the verges and cattle being herded down the road by a farmer on a quadbike.
Saturday, 30 September 2017
South West holiday - the Moor
Up around 8am today, breakfast, and then off for the first walk of the day, up Bellever Tor which is just outside the hostel.
Labels:
Dartmoor,
Exploration,
Holiday,
Nature,
Outdoors,
Walking,
Weird and Wonderful Wood
South West holiday - the Guide
Drove to Dartmoor - a harder task than it looked! It was a drizzly morning in Dorset, but as I got into Devon everything went very grey and saturated and 'orrible. I was driving through quite a thick fog bank at one point, and getting rather worried! However as I got towards Exeter it ended up as just a bit spitty and even a little blue sky.
Getting onto Dartmoor is a mini challenge in itself. Once you turn off the big roads suddenly it's all steep climbs and sudden turns, much like the Peak District, and then you pop out the top onto an expanse of moor like entering another world. There are vast spaces, Tors everywhere you look, moor ponies (shaggier and rougher than their New Forest counterparts) and the heights were hidden in clouds. As was Princetown, where I was meeting my walking guide Simon Dell.
Getting onto Dartmoor is a mini challenge in itself. Once you turn off the big roads suddenly it's all steep climbs and sudden turns, much like the Peak District, and then you pop out the top onto an expanse of moor like entering another world. There are vast spaces, Tors everywhere you look, moor ponies (shaggier and rougher than their New Forest counterparts) and the heights were hidden in clouds. As was Princetown, where I was meeting my walking guide Simon Dell.
Friday, 29 September 2017
South West holiday - The Sea
Today the cheap holiday was briefly derailed so I could go buy a new raincoat, the old one having finally succumbed after years of hard service and The Kinderscout Incident, after which it has never been the same. I like the new one though, and it's a little bit smarter so it will do for work as well.
That done, I let the sat nav drive me to Burley by any number of tiny back roads. Some lovely scenery though, and it gave the day time to turn from a misty cool morning into a day of cloud breaks, sudden sunbursts and, dare I say it, warmth. I stripped right back down to my Tshirt.
That done, I let the sat nav drive me to Burley by any number of tiny back roads. Some lovely scenery though, and it gave the day time to turn from a misty cool morning into a day of cloud breaks, sudden sunbursts and, dare I say it, warmth. I stripped right back down to my Tshirt.
Labels:
Exploration,
Holiday,
New Forest,
Outdoors,
Walking
South West holiday - The Forest
Sunday today, and it has been raining quietly but insistently all day. Had a slow breakfast and chat with Grandad, who was doing Bible study before the morning church service. He was full of rejoicing over the subject, as he usually is. I was mainly full of tea and chocolate croissants.
Around 9.30, slightly later than planned, I headed off to Lyndhurst. It seemed sensible to try that far side of the New Forest today, partly in case the rain was less there (it wasn't) and also to see if the visitor centre was open (it was).
Around 9.30, slightly later than planned, I headed off to Lyndhurst. It seemed sensible to try that far side of the New Forest today, partly in case the rain was less there (it wasn't) and also to see if the visitor centre was open (it was).
South West holiday - The Boat
This blog is fast turning into a travel journal! I think it's because I'm doing so much paid work that the 'Fun Things I've Made' aspect of this blog isn't really needed at the moment. I'm sure it'll pop back up soon.
At the end of the summer, in the first week of September, I took myself off on a much needed holiday. I'm trying to buy a house at the moment, so I knew it had to be as cheap as possible. I emptied the contents of my kitchen cupboard into a cool bag, and brought along a sandwich box. No lunches out for me! This was also the least planned holiday I'd done in a while. I'd had no time to look up any activities, other than where I'd be sleeping. Instead the idea was to turn up at a location, talk to people, get hold of a map, and figure it out as I went. In some ways this took a lot of the pressure off.
I also knew that that I'd be travelling alone. Given that I've been very out-of-sorts lately, I wasn't sure if I'd be in the right headspace for this, so I decided to go visiting. The week-long trip would connect me with friends and family I don't often get to spend time with (with the bonus of being able to sleep on their spare beds and couches, saving money on accommodation). Although in the end it turned out that my favourite location was the one where I was completely alone after all...
My first stop was in West London, where I joined my friends Matt and Eloise on their narrow boat, the Tittlemouse, travelling from Hayes to Brentford...
At the end of the summer, in the first week of September, I took myself off on a much needed holiday. I'm trying to buy a house at the moment, so I knew it had to be as cheap as possible. I emptied the contents of my kitchen cupboard into a cool bag, and brought along a sandwich box. No lunches out for me! This was also the least planned holiday I'd done in a while. I'd had no time to look up any activities, other than where I'd be sleeping. Instead the idea was to turn up at a location, talk to people, get hold of a map, and figure it out as I went. In some ways this took a lot of the pressure off.
I also knew that that I'd be travelling alone. Given that I've been very out-of-sorts lately, I wasn't sure if I'd be in the right headspace for this, so I decided to go visiting. The week-long trip would connect me with friends and family I don't often get to spend time with (with the bonus of being able to sleep on their spare beds and couches, saving money on accommodation). Although in the end it turned out that my favourite location was the one where I was completely alone after all...
My first stop was in West London, where I joined my friends Matt and Eloise on their narrow boat, the Tittlemouse, travelling from Hayes to Brentford...
Wednesday, 20 September 2017
To be beside the seaside - North Norfolk Coastal Path part 2
Holkham to Blakeney - 10.9 miles
After Holkham the next stop is Wells-next-the-Sea, which is a small town with more facilities. It's a walk I've done before, along the beach, but this time we struck to the path properly and found ourselves wandering down wooded lanes, behind the tall dark pine trees that this stretch is known for. On another breezy but still sunny day, the shade was nice, and we had company! A relay race was taking place, beginning at Hunstanton and going all the way round to Great Yarmouth over the course of a day or two. We kept moving over to let runners pass, each wielding their barcoded baton. We emerged at the carpark for Wells Beach and followed the sea wall back into the town.
John captains the clinkerbill boat, so called for the Viking-style rivets in its hull.
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Thursday, 10 August 2017
TLDR: I hate Esther (or, the Perils of Privilege)
In the Bible, there are two women with stories significant enough to merit their own books. In a culture where men were the ones writing and women had quite specific roles to fulfil, any named woman in the Bible is worth paying attention to. One is Ruth; the story of a young widow from the wrong country, the wrong religion, speaking the wrong language, who passes up re-marrying to become a benefits scrounger in order to provide for her ageing mother-in law. And yeah it ends well, but that that lady has gumption. I like gumption!
The other is Esther. Whom I hated. For years.
Held up as the model of ideal womanhood, Esther appeared to be your Actual Disney Princess, and I mean that in the most scathing way possible. Plucked from obscurity because of her astounding good looks and apparently nothing else, Esther is made Head Queen of the Xerxes, King of Persia. Tipped off by her uncle, a minister, she saves the king from assassination, earns a spot in his good books, and later uses this to wine and dine him into awarding the Jewish people the right to defend themselves in a society where they are outcasts and refugees. The Jewish festival of Purim celebrates her story, being told much like a pantomime, with cheering and booing and 'he's behind you'.
Beauty Queen, actual queen, national hero, Esther was annoyingly perfect. She was that cute, perky girl from school who managed to be captain of the netball team, head girl, and never without a boyfriend all at the same time.
For teenage me, the moral of this story was that being pretty will get you more or less anywhere. Which is peachy... if you're pretty. Which teen me (and sometimes adult me) was not always convinced of all. Way to make a girl resentful, Bible. Congrats.
Now I am a decade older, a lot more comfortable with myself, and therefore able to be a little less self-interested, I have to admit something. I may have misjudged Esther a tiny wee bit. But not in the way I thought...
Friday, 26 May 2017
To be beside the seaside - North Norfolk Coastal Walk Part 1
My birthday falls in May, conveniently between two bank holidays, and with the weather getting warmer I'm wanting to be outdoors all the time. My mum and I (occasionally accompanied by my dad and youngest sister) have been walking the North Norfolk Coastal Path between Hunstanton and Cromer. We did stretches on it in May and September 2016, and this May did our final section. It's not a massive walk - about 45 miles or so, but that combined with the incessant flatness of my home country it makes for a really manageable hike that's less about clocking up the miles and more about appreciating the scenery of one of the most beautiful places I know...
Although I admit I am heavily biased.
Although I admit I am heavily biased.
The dunes at Holkham |
Thursday, 13 April 2017
Highland Fling! - 2 of 2
Day 5 - CairnGorm and Loch Morlich
You can get the Funicular Railway up the UK's 6th highest mountain, CairnGorm, but for some reason we decided to walk between the two stations along the very aptly named Windy Ridge.
A Highland Fling! - 1 of 2
This year the family had our summer holiday early - we went to the Scottish Highlands! When I was young we had a holiday by Loch Ness, going as far north as Fort William, but it was long enough ago that I only remember bits and pieces of it. On my last solo trip I went to Edinburgh and Aviemore, and had wanted to explore further north again, so this was the perfect choice for a trip away together.
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