Monday, 31 August 2009

Rutland Water & Oakham

Starting off at the Rutland Cycling centre (Whitwell) we cycled along the trail westwards for around 3 miles




We continued on the trail to Oakham ...



... where we walked around Oakham's Heritage Trail ...



... the Butter Cross and Pump; the five hole stocks are a mystery. Dairy products were sold here at one stage ...




... Dean's Street is a narrow lane which has been recently enhanced ...




... All Saints' Church with a 14th century spire. The Church was restored by G G Scott between 1857-1858 ...



...Oakham Castle - is the great hall of a fortified manor house which was built for Wakelin de Ferrers between 1180-1190.



The castle contains over 200 horseshoes given as forfeits to the Lord of the Manor by peers of the Realm and Royalty passing through Oakham

Oakham School was founded in 1584 by Archdeacon Robert Johnson




We also came across another Beer Festival at the Grainstore Brewery - next door to the railway station. The Grainstore "Cooking" bitter was very palatable. http://www.quaffale.org.uk/php/brewery/86 and http://www.grainstorebrewery.com/ (under construction Aug 2009)

Little Bytham Music & Beer Festival

The date: 29 August 2009

The place: Little Bytham, Lincolnshire (http://homepages.which.net/~rex/bourne/lbytham.htm)

The venue: The Willoughby Arms (http://www.willoughbyarms.co.uk/)

The event: The Bythams Music Festival (including a Beer Festival) (http://www.bythamsmusicfestival.co.uk/index.html)


This was the second Bythams Music Festival, a not-for profit event raising funds for local and regional worthy causes. This year's supported charities are Lincolnshire & Nottinghamshire Air Ambulance; St John's Ambulance; and the local parish churches.


The event showcased up-and-coming local and regional talent. All performers gave their time with no fees attached.

Vince Dean - "the Bard of Uffington" was one of the first performers ...


... followed by Matthew Ord

One of our favourite acts, playing many crowd-pleasing songs, was Ferral & The Tom Cats

The final act was Laughton's Last Stand, a Stamford-based rock 'n' roll band


There was also a hot-air balloon ...


... which set off at quite a pace in the windy conditions ...


... when it returned, it gave short "rides" in the dark (no higher than 6 feet!)


The Willoughby Arms hosted the event and included a variety of ales on tap.
My favourites included Thirst Quencher (Keswick); Honey Fayre (Bagdyb Conwy); Srikes Back (Empire); White Hart (Ufford's)


The local farmer kindly allowed us to stay overnight in his field, next to the pub.


A thoroughly enjoyable event and an excellent Lincolnshire breakfast in the pub on Sunday morning.

Monday, 24 August 2009

David Bellamy and the Birds of Prey

The time: August 22 & 23

The occasion: Southport's Annual Flower Show

The website: http://www.southportflowershow.co.uk/


The Patron: Professor David Bellamy OBE. He is a regular supporter of the Show and takes a keen interest in the children's gardening competition.

The Birds of Prey: awaiting their call to the Arena for their display session











Our home for the weekend - Tristam's Farm, near Halsall

The local pub - serving Banker's Draft from the Wickwar Brewing Company - http://www.wickwarbrewing.co.uk/banker$-draft-launched-in-association-with-charity.html)




The local canal - from Leeds to Liverpool (and back!)



The local Post Office


The local Church


Despite planning not to come home laden with new plants - we did!!!

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

A brief visit to Malvern

On our way home from Wales, we spent one day on a site between Upton-on-Severn and Malvern. Here are a few photos of Malvern and its surrounding area






Edward Elgar












St Fagans

St Fagans is one of Europe's leading open–air museums and Wales's most popular heritage attraction. The Museum tells the stories of the people of Wales; how they lived, worked, and spent their leisure time.

It has been open to the public since 1 November 1948. The museum stands in the grounds of St Fagans Castle and gardens, a late 16th-century manor house donated to the people of Wales by the Earl of Plymouth in 1946.

During the last fifty years over forty original buildings from different historical periods have been re-erected in the 100-acre parkland; these include houses, a farm, a school, a chapel and a Workmen's Institute.

Kennixton Farmhouse is from Gower and has a thatched roof and a striking reddish –orange colour of its walls. Although originally part of a farmstead, it has stood alone at St Fagans, as the farm buildings were still in use, until they too were offered to the Museum in 2007, and where they are currently being re-erected.


The key stones from the buildings being re-erected are marked with a letter and a number ...




... and these are then faithfully re-erected in the correct places



Maestir School from Lampeter, Ceredigion.


Maestir, a small, beautifully restored rural school, is typical of the late Victorian period when elementary education became compulsory for all children in Wales and England. It was originally called St Mary's Board School and was built by Sir Charles Harford, squire of Falcondale, primarily for his workers' children.


Approximately 36 pupils between the ages of 5 and 14 attended the school in 1900 and there was a single teacher in overall charge. A pupil-teacher (usually the brightest senior girl) was given the task of teaching the infants and most pupils spoke Welsh as their first language although lessons were taught in English. The school closed in 1916.


There are a range of shops including this portrait studio and Gwalia General Stores




Gwalia Stores was originally located in the Ogmore Vale near Bridgend, Glamorgan, and closed in 1973. The shop was opened as a grocery business by William Llewellyn in 1880. By 1916, Gwalia Stores comprised a bakery, ironmongery, grocery, gentlemen's outfitter, chemist, and an animal feed store. William Llewellyn died in 1924. The shop is exhibited as it would have appeared in the late 1920s.


The Tollhouse was built in 1771 and re-erected at St Fagans in 1968. It originally guarded the south gate to Aberystwyth, Cardiganshire. It was built of local stone and roofed with Pembrokeshire slates.
The building had just a single room, one end of which was used for the collection of tolls. Because of the poor quality of most rural roads in Wales, in the late 18th century local gentry began to build private or turnpike roads for which tolls were charged. Tollhouses were unpopular with country people, who now had to pay in order to travel and to move their livestock along the turnpike roads. In the 1840s, their dissatisfaction culminated in violent attacks on tollgates and tollhouses known as the Rebecca Riots. This action eventually led to the abolition of turnpike trusts in 1864. Thereafter, county councils took over the responsibility for building and maintaining the roads.



Inside one of the workers' cottages



Stryd Lydan barn - a cruck barn; ie a barn in which a pair of curved timbers form a bowed A-frame which supports the roof independently of the walls - originally stood at Penley, Flintshire. It was built c. 1550 and was re-erected at St Fagans, in 1951.





Esgair Moel woollen mill is an 18th-century mill which originally stood at Llanwrtyd, Breconshire. It was re-erected at St Fagans in the early 1950s.







St Fagans Castle and gardens