Showing posts with label tea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tea. Show all posts

Monday, 30 July 2018

My Week in Review to the 29th July

I am linking up with The Sunday Post hosted by Kimberly at The Caffeinated Reviewer.

So last Monday, a week ago today, we spent practically all day driving from Sussex to Devon, then returning our trailer tent to its storage facility before finally getting to our Torquay flat at about 7pm. I was so exhausted I nearly caused a minor bump outside the Co-Op. If the other (fortunately alert) driver is reading this, I'm sorry!

Tuesday was a relaxing day where the washing machine did most of the work and I caught up with a good chunk of commenting and blog visiting. So my week started properly on Wednesday morning with a lovely surprise tweet from Weidenfeld and Nicolson. I've won their Bastille Day giveaway! All the lovely books pictured at the top of this post are heading my way! We're obviously supposed to be clearing from our flat right now, not adding to its contents - Dave will be so thrilled!!

Is everyone coping ok with the heatwave resurgence? I'm kinda happy we're back in the flat through August because the lounge at least is shady and cool for most of the day. That FurnaceFriday completely failed to materialise here in Torquay - it actually felt a bit nippy here with the cloud and breeze - and we didn't get to see the blood moon either! Still, I'm getting through a lot of tea to stay hydrated, especially flavours I can leave to go cold. My favourites are Twinings Buttermint which tastes like drinking Murray Mints if you're old enough to remember them! (Are they still made?) I recently cashed in my Maximiles points for a Spice Kitchen loose tea selection pack which arrived this week. Unfortunately each tea is packaged in little self-seal plastic bags which isn't very #PlasticFreeJuly, but they are delicious. If you haven't drunk their Strawberries And Cream Tea blend, you're missing one of my summer highlights!


Huge congratulations to Sheri who's won the bakerdays Letterbox Cake giveaway that closed on Saturday night! This was my second most popular giveaway ever with over 240 entrants - thank you all! If you're not Sheri, don't despair! There's lots more giveaways and freebies listed in Stephanie Jane's Giveaway Linkup and here are the ones you need to get your skates on to enter:

Giveaways closing soon:
30th July
Win PBs of Death In Dulwich and The Girl In The Gallery, both by Alice Castle

31st July
Authors wanting to Win a free Spotlight Post, make sure your book is added to the Spotlight Giveaway Linkup
Bloggers, let me know if you want me to check out your blog for potential nomination for the Versatile Blogger Award
Win a signed PB of The Invisible Case by Isabella Muir

1st August
Win a PB of Blood In The Woods by J P Willie plus your choice of HellBounds books PB

4th August
Win ebooks of On The Fault or Love Beneath The Mighty Dome, both by Ronald J Wichers

Posts on my blogs this week were:
The Versatile Blogger Award
My Week in Review to the 22nd July
Artisan Rainbow - Bracelets
Books From The Backlog - The Wrath And The Dawn by Renee Ahdieh
50/50 Friday - Best/Worst Book From the First Half of the Year

Letting Go of Gravity by Meg Leder + #Giveaway + Guest Post
May We Be Forgiven by A M Homes
He Kills Coppers by Jake Arnott
Lightness by Catherine Meurisse graphic novel
The Girl In The Gallery by Alice Castle + #Giveaway
Identity Unknown by Karolina Wojciak
The Invisible Case by Isabella Muir + #Giveaway + Excerpt

Around the blogosphere:
I love Kristen's Top Ten Heart Covers at Metaphors And Moonlight, especially the designs for Paper Valentine and Risen.
Joe Congel talks about his journey From Cartoonist To Writer
Danielle at Books Vertigo And Tea discusses why she Appreciates A Negative Review

Have a great week :-)

Artisan Rainbow - Bracelets 

Monday, 23 July 2018

My Week in Review to the 22nd July

I am linking up with The Sunday Post hosted by Kimberly at The Caffeinated Reviewer.

I'm got a GoFundMe appeal today which I hope might twang your purse strings or at least get you to click through and hit a share button or two. It's not actually Me being GoFunded (is that a word?) but my sister's friends, talented actresses and playwrights Alexandra and Kate Donnachie, who are taking their play 3 Years, 1 Week And A Lemon Drizzle to Edinburgh! They've got pretty much everything sorted except their own accommodation which is the purpose of this appeal. If you can help out at all, I know it would be very much appreciated. The play explores the true experiences of the sisters in coping when Alexandra developed an eating disorder. There's lots more information Through This Link or you can Buy Your Edinburgh Tickets here. Thank you!


My week has been pretty chaotic and has mainly consisted of zooming between different friends, hours of great chats, and far too much good food. I'm not complaining about the food you understand?! The pace doesn't let up until we drive back to Torquay today and I haven't even really got time to write this post. Apologies for any bizarre typos! And remember my pride last week at having caught up with all my commenting? Yeah, that didn't last long did it. Oops!

In lieu of a 'proper' post, here's a quartet of this week's good eateries that I'm happy to recommend if you're ever thereabouts:

In Cheam, London, Tasha's Tearoom  has a lovely atmosphere with elegant decor. The Banana And Pomegranate Cake is lush - and generously sliced!
In Herstmonceux, Sussex, Indian restaurant Eastern Promise is well worth a try. We'd been here before and were happy to return. My Vegetable Balti was rich and delicious.
In Eastbourne, Sussex, traditional fish and chips doesn't get better than that served at The Holiday Inn. This restaurant has been a favourite of ours for over a decade. We only get to visit annually now and it's a keenly anticipated treat.
Ganapati South Indian Kitchen in Peckham, London, is another superb Indian restaurant with delicious vegetarian thalis.


Posts on my blogs this week were:
Stephanie Jane's #Giveaway and #FreeBook Linkup
My Week in Review to the 15th July
Artisan Rainbow - Coasters

Wilderness Tips by Margaret Atwood
Liberty Landing by Gail Vida Hamburg + #Giveaway
Dortmund Hibernate by C J Sutton + Excerpt
Blood In The Woods by J P Willie + #Giveaway + #FreeBook
Notes From A Big Country by Bill Bryson
The Collision Of Grief And Gratitude by Rosanne Liesveld + #Giveaway
Hold by Michael Donkor

Around the blogosphere:
I'll get back to this!


Have a great week :-)

Artisan Rainbow - Coasters 

Sunday, 14 January 2018

My Week in Review to the 14th January

This week has mostly been about the walking. We returned to the coastal town of Bolnuevo, very near to our Isla Plana campsite and also the site of our first Spanish trip some eight years ago now. We parked up by these eerie eroded rocks which are the iconic sight in Bolnuevo. Both of us thought they had eroded much more since our last visit. Our walk took us out from the end of town which has extended further into the countryside, but still isn't too drastically developed. We went off into the hills a little way before turning back seawards and eating our picnic lunch on a secluded pebble beach. We then popped into the Oasis Bar which used to be a ramshackle place at the very end of the seafront. It's now more hemmed in by villas and apartments and has seriously smartened up. We can both recommend their Baileys coffee with leche condensada (condensed milk). It's a drinkable dessert!

On another day, we wandered the streets of Mazarron. Whereas Bolnuevo and Puerto De Mazarron are all about the seaside and leisure, Mazarron itself is a working town with bizarre juxtapositions of expensive looking houses and business premises occupying the same streets as apparently derelict buildings or waste ground plots. It's like there has been a big influx of regeneration cash, but spent in a very haphazard way! We admired some of the older architecture, especially impressively huge wooden doors, before seating ourselves in the place which was the real purpose of our trip: Calle Delicias! After having sampled an Austrian coffee shop in Xabia, we treated ourselves to this Belgian teashop in Mazarron. I liked the Almond and Cinnamon Tea although Dave was underwhelmed by his Peach blend. He struck lucky with his cake though - the last slice of Galete Du Roi which is a special almond confection traditionally made in Belgium for Three Kings Day on the 6th of January. Delicious!

Friday was bright and sunny so we decided a hill walk was a good option. Suitably equipped with water and a picnic lunch, we expected to be out about two hours or so. The hike ended up being the best part of four hours! The PR-MU-6 is a recognised local circular route which starts only about a ten minute drive from Los Madriles campsite. It's an uphill slog for the first half an hour, but with spectacular views from the top. We also discovered shafts and tunnel entrances to long abandoned mines. The dark purple rock colours in the slag heaps were eye-catching in the sunshine. We didn't venture into any of the tunnels although there was nothing to stop us. Mining various minerals has been important to the economy of this area since pre-Roman times. I think this mine was probably for iron. 


Initially the PR route was not obviously marked although there wasn't much opportunity to deviate from the obvious path anyway. Once past the main mine entrance, a reinforced path - possibly a donkey route to take out the ore? - wound its way around the hillsides until we were level with our start point and could just identify our car on the roadside way below. We spotted several more small mine tunnels, all beautifully carved out of the rock. The whole route is a loop and our turn back was marked with small cairns and, suddenly, a profusion of yellow and white stripe markers. We began to descend on a scree surface which was a little tricky, but nothing compared to the problem we encountered when our path unexpectedly petered out a while later! We hardly had any of the circuit left to walk, but what we did have was a hundred yards or so of steep scrub slope down to the road. What on earth?! Gaps between the scrub gave the impression of maybe a continuing path so we started to scramble down, although with hindsight it would have been far safer to turn around and walk all the way back around. As it was, we did both safely reach the bottom with no more than scratches and a small tear in my trousers after probably half an hour of tense scrambling and sliding. Phew! I'm a bit off hill walking again in the near future. If only we could do the ridge walks with their views, but without the corresponding up and down climbs and scrambles!




 

Artisan Rainbow

Literary Flits

M
O
N
D
A
Y
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
W
E
D
N
E
S
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
F
R
I
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
S
U
N
D
A
Y


Currently reading

Waiting for the Barbarians
tagged: currently-reading, fiction-africa, and charity-shop-find

goodreads.com

Tuesday, 1 August 2017

#PlasticFreeJuly wrap-up - 10 habits I hope will stick

I loved being involved in this year's global Plastic Free July Challenge. It got me thinking a lot more about how I shop, the products I buy and how much I packaging I carry home just to throw straight into the bin! That's madness! At the beginning of July we threw out one full 15 litre rubbish bag to landfill about every fortnight and our recycling box was usually half to two-thirds full every week. I'm hoping to have at least halved our landfill waste by the end of October and maybe reduced our recycling too.

We had already taken a few small steps which fitted perfectly with this Challenge so I was inspired to continue these plus I now have new habits to try and make stick too. This post is a ideas round-up and I have scheduled another review post for three months' time to judge my success. Here's my ten Plastic Free July changes:

1. Store food in glass jars
I saw many beautiful Instagram and Pinterest pantry shelves on the #PlasticFreeJuly hashtags, all with rows of matching Kilner jars for pulses, pastas and spices. I don't have that kind of budget though so decided to keep the jars we empty - jam, honey, mayonnaise, etc - and gradually transfer everything in our cupboards from plastic tubs to glass jars. I even thought to label the less visually identifiable ones! I learned that toxic chemicals leach from plastic into food over time so I feel much happier with glass storage. This photo shows July's jar collection (including three pinched from downstairs' recycling!). Freeing up locktite tubs made 2. super easy.

2. Ditch the clingfilm
As Dave will verify I am a tad paranoid about leaving food uncovered in the fridge. I hate when it starts drying out. I used to automatically reach for the clingfilm roll, use a big square for maybe a day, then screw that up and throw it away. Now I can either use tubs freed up from 1. or reverting to old-fashioned solutions like upturning a bowl over a plate (or vice versa) for leftovers. I recently received a trio of BeeBeeWraps too and I absolutely love these for food storage. They are easy to use and work perfectly. (Full BeeBeeWraps review to follow!)

3. Make my own dairy-free milk
Cheaper, healthier and with far less packaging than cow's milk, making up my own Sunflower Seed Milk is much easier than I thought it would be (click here for the original post). I prefer its taste and texture in our daily porridge too. We used to get through 5-6 tetrapaks of milk each week, now there are usually three or fewer in the recycling and we pay pennies a litre for Sunflower Seed Milk rather than close to £1 a litre for the dairy equivalent. I did still have plastic to throw out because Holland and Barrett's package seeds and dates in plastic, but I bought the largest bags of each I could in order to proportionally cut down this as much as possible. My first visit to Earth Food Love in Totnes (click here for the original post) showed I can get packaging-free ingredients from there. I just need to work out how to economically make the journey!

4. Don't buy if I can bake
Making two batches of milk each week left me with lots of sunflower seed pulp which it seemed far too wasteful to compost. I googled recipes and ended up baking Oat And Date Cookies (click here for the original post) which are scarily healthy and, even with all those chopped dates, considerably cheaper than their equivalent in packaged biscuits. There's obviously no packaging to dispose of either.
Making my own crackers wasn't as successful - more practice is needed. However I enjoyed baking my own wholemeal bread again (click here for the original post). It's tastier than plastic-bagged commercial loaves and cheaper than artisan baked! I remembered why I stopped though - the loaf isn't great after the second day if we don't eat it all fast enough - so I am now baking the batch as six rolls, freezing them in pairs to defrost as we need them. They still fit in the slow cooker.

5. Drink loose leaf tea
Did you know most tea bags contain plastic? I was shocked to find out (on Treading My Own Path here)! The plastic apparently strengthens the paper tea bags and even super-ethical brands like Clipper use it. I'm not comfortable with the idea of soaking plastic in hot water every time I make tea so looked for loose leaf. In Babbacombe, the Royal Windsor tea room stocks bags of Devon Tea Company tea. I love the Citrus Grey which is so delicious with just a dab of honey that I don't even need to add milk. Unfortunately its paper bag does have an inner cellophane liner, but this is the equivalent of the more usual outer cellophane on a box of tea bags so overall I am left with less rubbish. I think pricewise the loose tea will be comparable with brands like Twinings and I am glad to be getting lots of use out of my seaside teapot at last.

6. Ditch individually wrapped sweets.
This was a surprise Plastic Free benefit! I walk a lot in town rather than taking the car, but always found it hard to resist treating myself on the way. I've got to climb that steep hill, let's have a mini Thornton's bag to help! However, it turns my plastic-refusing willpower is 100 times stronger than my sugar-refusing willpower. I have stopped buying random treats, plastic-wrapped or not, thereby saving money and helping my health. The only exception is our boiled sweets stash for car journeys. I now choose loose sweets which are not individually wrapped and discovered the American Delights Candy Shop at the top of Union Street in Torquay are happy to pour straight from the scale to my own container. No throwaway packaging at all.

7. Make my own laundry powder
We started this back in September last year (click here for the original post). The soap bars and soda were wrapped in plastic outers, but I am still using that first £2 batch of ingredients! It will easily last through September this year so that will be over a year's worth of clean laundry for £2. I don't need to add additional fabric softener and the powder is good for both machine and hand washing of clothes. I store the mixed powder in a airtight plastic tub which I already owned. It will probably last for years.

8. Mix my own toothpaste
This was a completely new experiment for Plastic Free July and I am thrilled with its success (click here for the original post). It does slowly separate to leave a glycerine layer on the top so needs a stir up a couple of times a week. Otherwise I am very happy with how it cleans my teeth, my gums are no longer red and there is no more bleeding when I brush. Now I just need to replace my plastic toothbrush with a bamboo one.

9. Buy unpackaged whenever possible
I left this seemingly obvious point until near the end because it is actually the most difficult to consider. Where should I draw my line? I crocheted cotton produce bags and now try to avoid plastic-packed fruit and veg even to the point of substitutions or walking to a different shop if necessary. I can buy soaps and bar shampoos unpackaged from Fresh Soap on Fleet Street in Torquay. I now have a reusable cotton sanitary pad to back up my Mooncup so don't need plastic-packed disposables any more. I made my own Lentil 'Pate' and Chickpea Tofu, both thereby avoiding their equivalents' plastic packets.
However I could not find entirely plastic-free meat, fish or cheese in Torquay. The butcher will put my purchases into my own containers, but uses disposable plastic sheets to do so. The fishmonger wraps in paper, but the fish must be in a plastic bag first. I can avoid rigid plastic packs by visiting Waitrose counters instead of just picking from the fridges, but food is still bagged so not completely plastic free. My dilemma is whether to settle for the plastic reduction I can get or avoid these foods altogether - effectively becoming mostly vegan. Food for thought.

10. Don't slide back
Several of the above habits are more long-winded than their plastic covered alternatives or they require preparation so I think the toughest part of Plastic Free July for me is actually going to be August! In the same way as I automatically carry a cotton shopping bag rolled up in my handbag because I don't want to pay 5p for a plastic carrier, I now need to keep reinforcing these plastic free habits until they are ingrained. Fortunately I enjoy making and baking so setting aside time to knead dough isn't a problem, but remembering that I need to do so at least three hours before I want to eat the bread will require organisation! Getting enough empty jars and tubs together at the same time to justify an Earth Food Love visit could also be tricky.

At the moment I am feeling very positive about my Plastic Free July achievements. Fingers crossed I'll be doing even more come October's post!

Thursday, 11 May 2017

Exploring Cockington Country Park, Torquay

Dave found us a beautiful walk yesterday and I am glad we went straight out in the sunshine rather than leaving it until today when the rain would have put us off and the mist obscured all our views. We began at Nut Bush Lane which is right on the edge of Torquay and so always reminds me of the Tina Turner song Nutbush City Limits. An influence on the town planners? There is space to park three or four cars and we got lucky.

Our path led away behind the red dog waste bin which seemed sadly redundant as I noticed a couple of instances of dog walkers preferring to bag their animal's crap and then hang the bags from trees. Seriously - what is the point of that? Especially less than fifty yards from a bin. Sometimes I despair of people!

Fortunately such ugliness wasn't typical of our afternoon and we were soon walking through pretty green woodland and emerging onto open downland from where we had gorgeous views across valleys and out to sea. The existence of Cockington Country Park protects the agricultural and natural environment from house building - for the time being at least - and we felt lucky to have this expansive green space so close to our home. We intended to follow the John Musgrave Trail into Cockington village, but it is only sporadically signposted so we don't know if we were exactly on course all the time. There is a bewildering choice of footpaths, cycle routes and bridlepaths converging on Cockington. Does anyone know if a definitive map is available? The John Musgrave Trail was created by the Torbay Coast and Countryside Trust in partnership with the Ramblers Association, from a legacy left by John Musgrove who was a keen walker. It opened in 2006 and extends some thirty-five miles around Torbay. We have a lot more of it still to discover!

Instead of continuing across Torbay, our furthest outward point was around Scadson Woods which I think, at the moment, must be the best destination for wild garlic. The woods had their fair share of bluebells too, but the white garlic flowers stole the show. Their scent was incredible as well.

I was pleased to see that all the paths we walked were well-trodden, cycled and ridden. The more people who use an area such as this, the more likely it is to preserved for the purpose. The paths closest to Cockington Craft Centre and the village would be the easiest for disabled access, but even further afield I think they would be acceptable for pushchairs and Tramper mobility scooters as long as the frequent short-but-steep gradients could be overcome.

I knew we were close to the estate's centre when we began to spot rhododendrons through the trees and then saw the restored Gamekeeper's Cottage. We had visited here last summer so made our way directly to the Cafe for a cup of tea and generous slice of Red Velvet cake. It was getting late in the afternoon so we didn't linger long before continuing our circuit back towards Nut Bush Lane. I did notice a couple of artworks outside the Cafe that are part of a Sculpture Trail. The works are there until the 10th of September and I intend to return to see the whole Trail. I am also tempted by the monthly Food And Craft Market which takes place on the last Sunday of each month and features locally farmed foods and unique handmade crafts. The next Market is on the 28th of May.

Monday, 1 August 2016

SmallSteps week 5 roundup & can we BuyBritish furniture

If you're new to this theme, I am blogging a series of Monday posts about SmallSteps lifestyle changes I think might help our disUnited Kingdom communities to get through the post-Brexit turmoil ahead. You can read the first post here. Let's at least keep our towns and communities afloat and vibrant whatever the politicians decide for the country as a whole.

I've decided to keep a track of my attempts to practice what I preach! My four SmallSteps are:

1) to CheckTheLabel and BuyBritish whenever possible
2) to ShopLocal and spend at least £5 each week in independent local shops
3) to eat healthily and walk or cycle short distances
4) Not to use self-service checkouts or Pay At Pump.

So how did I do this week?

The Soap Stall, Torquay Indoor Market 
My ShopLocal spend this week is a truly amazing £1028.75 because we have been scouring local furniture and charity shops for our new flat. Other than furniture though, I managed to find The Soap Stall in Torquay's Indoor Market (mentioned last week) and met Lee who runs the business. I bought two soaps here and will be returning regularly as Lee stocks such a tempting range of natural soaps and other bath products. One soap I bought was made very locally in Paignton.
As mentioned in an earlier post, we visited Daisy Cakes cafe. I also bought boiled sweets at The Bon Bon Shop on Torquay harbour (but they didn't have Chocolate Limes) and I got a refreshing Boosting Bomb Iced Tea takeout from Calypso when I went for a two hour walk exploring and forgot to carry a bottle of water (again!). I also liked Marshfield Farm ice cream which I tried at Meadfoot Beach Cafe. The blackcurrant flavour is divine and the cafe also has a box of books for sale in aid of Rowcroft Hospice. (Yes, I bought a book too!)

As well as that long walk, we walked to the Wellswood shops once to buy envelopes and I've walked to the nearby Co-Op for a loaf of bread which means all our journeys under about five miles this week were car free. I am yet to attempt cycling Torquay's hills though! And we didn't use automatic checkouts at Sainsburys or when buying diesel.


New dining set from Super Seconds 
I am hoping to get as much of the furniture we need for our new flat according to my SmallSteps principles and am pleased with how we are doing so far. Half Price Bedz of Paignton are an independent ShopLocal business and swiftly delivered our BuyBritish Dreamlands mattresses. The beds to put under them should arrive in just over a week from the same place. In the meantime we are being all studenty - sleeping on a mattress on the floor! We spotted this lovely dining set at Super Seconds, also in Paignton, and it was delivered the day after our purchase - great service. I have no idea who had the table and chairs before us, but they were painted up at Super Seconds so I am counting them as ShopLocal and Upcycled. We nearly couldn't have the table though - it only just fitted along the narrow corridor to our flat! Last and least - least expensive anyway - Paignton YMCA charity shop came up trumps with a neat little computer desk for Dave for just a tenner.

We are still on the lookout for a comfortable armchair and small sofa so I am keeping an eye on Preloved and eBay amongst other sites. There are a couple of second-hand shops in Torquay we can wander around before re-running the Newton Abbot and Paignton routes again. Maybe we will get lucky? Maybe our camping chairs will need to do us a few more weeks?!


Please do feel welcome to shout out your favourite / your own BuyBritish and ShopLocal businesses in the Comments. Make sure to say in which town they are so other nearby folks will know to look out for them!

Finally I have made a blog badge from my SmallSteps logo image. If you would like to join in this Monday (or any day) blog theme, feel welcome to display the badge and let me know about your post so we can link up.




Instructions: Select all code above, copy it and paste it inside your blog post as HTML

Saturday, 19 September 2015

Exploring Exeter makes for a great day out

One of our major reasons for choosing our present campsite,
Alexandro Farto mural in Exeter 
Huntisbeare, is its proximity to Exeter, a city that we both wanted to visit. Our first port of call was the Park and Ride. We are definitely getting the hang of these and Exeter's is particularly good. My return fare was just £2.50 and Dave got a freebie with his bus pass. The seats were super comfortable too and it felt more like travelling on a coach than an everyday bus. There are several stops in the town centre and we jumped off near to a John Lewis on the High Street. Also on the High Street, but several minutes walk away is a Whittards where I stocked up on our new favourite drink: Creme Brulee flavour White Hot Chocolate. It's basically pudding in a mug! I also bought a tub of Dreamtime Instant Tea which I used to drink in my A level days -a good twenty years ago (eeek!). Getting to sleep has been difficult for me recently - probably because I am getting up too late - so I impulse bought the Dreamtime Tea to see if it might help. Nearby, the superb mural pictured above was created by Portuguese artist Alexandro Farto who drew the image onto the wall's plain render and then chipped it away to produce the striking monochrome effect. I haven't been able to find out who the woman is though. Someone local?

We tore ourselves away from the shops, but not before admiring the
Interesting architecture in Exeter 
architecture of some of the old buildings. The upper stories of Lakeland and its neighbour are particularly enchanting and I was disappointed that I couldn't get a good enough photo for you. The street is too narrow to step far enough back. Instead, these two great buildings, which really do sit so closely together, are near to the Cathedral. The red sandstone church on the left is St Martin's, one of the oldest churches in the city which was originally consecrated in 1065 and does still contain some Anglo Saxon stone from this time. There is an amazing variance in architectural styles and periods all around Exeter and especially in the Cathedral area. We saw a fantastic heavily carved wooden door that is about 500 years old and the Exeter Memories website has interesting information about the rest of Cathedral Close.

We had picked up a Visit Exeter booklet while in Tavistock which
Bosses in Exeter Cathedral 
included a page of discount vouchers. One of these was a two-for-one entry into Exeter Cathedral - a good deal and even more so when we were charged at Dave's concession price, not my standard adult! The Cathedral was very interesting and I loved the painted bosses in the vaulted ceiling. There are more than 400 and they are all carved with Gothic images including plants, animals and coats of arms. The lower of the larger bosses in this photo depicts the murder of St Thomas Beckett. The vaulted ceiling is the longest continuous medieval stone vault in the world and it is breathtakingly beautiful. Some of the tip-up seats in the choir stalls are also medieval and are beautifully carved with elephants, a whale, birds and plants. Tombs date from all periods so we saw representations of knights in full armour and in Elizabethan costume. I was fascinated by the astronomical clock, from 1484, which depicts both the moon and the sun in orbit around the earth. In a a biography of Galileo I have just read I learned about his imprisonment by the Catholic Church for suggesting that the earth was Not the centre of the universe and this clock perfectly illustrates the official Church beliefs of the period.

Astronomical clock in Exeter Cathedral 
Lunch was taken down on the Quayside which has been sympathetically
Exeter quayside 
restored and turned into a leisure area. We had a sharing plate of Chilli Nachos at a little cafe called Mango's and just managed to escape an unexpected downpour by shifting tables to be under their huge umbrella. The coffee is good here. After eating, we took a wander along the arches which now house artisan and craft shops. One had a fantastic light designed by Scott Nelmes. The river was quite busy with canoes and rowers and there were a lot of cyclists about too. We walked as far as the canal basin and I understand that there is a pretty flat cycleway, the Exe Trail, from here to Exmouth and plans to continue it right around the Exe Estuary as far as Dawlish.

Back up the hill again, Dave mentioned visiting the Exeter Phoenix, an
arts centre which is currently hosting a modern art exhibition, The Exeter Contemporary Open. To be honest, much of the work was hit and miss for us although we did like Mimei Thompson's oil paintings and Henny Acloque's acrylic works. I was very taken with a video installation of pendula by McGilvary White entitled Things That Swing. I think the sound effects are perfect! We also got to view a photographic exhibition of Independents Of Exeter, photographed by Vanessa Miles, which highlighted local small businesses and celebrated the inauguration of the Exeter Pound - an initiative to keep local money spent locally.

After all that art and culture, we needed our reviving chai latte and chocolate milkshake at Caffe Espresso which is a cute little place just opposite the castle - well worth the quick walk from the High Street to get there. We did then have some trouble finding the right stop for our bus back and were exhausted by the time we got back home.

Exeter's history in a single mural 

Friday, 21 August 2015

Shrewsbury - new sandals and a superb park

We loved Shrewsbury! We spent yesterday afternoon there mostly
Flower bed in Dingle Gardens 
exclaiming at the varied architecture, doing a spot of shopping and exploring the streets and parks. Probably we should have gotten the historic buildings leaflet from the Tourist Information Office so we had a better idea of what we were seeing, but there are lots of helpful plaques and noticeboards around town too. Shrewsbury is a good hour's drive from our campsite. We had visited a couple of my ancestral villages en route - more about that in another post - so got to the Park And Ride not long before noon. Shrewsbury Park And Ride is superb value! For £2.50 we got our parking and a Group Of Two return bus ticket to the town centre. Friendly driver and clean buses too.

Our first photocall on arrival was this huge Darwin-inspired sculpture
Charles Darwin outside
Shrewsbury library 
(pictured below) down by the riverside. We had spotted it from the bus. Darwin is a huge deal around the town even having a shopping centre named in his honour - I'm not sure if he would be pleased about that! He was born and grew up in the town. The sculpture is entitled Quantum Leap and was erected in 2009 to mark Darwin's bicentenary. I have seen it described as a helix, a spine and even a shell. We also saw a large bronze statue of the man himself which was prominently placed outside the library where we took advantage of the benches to perch and eat our picnic lunch. The historic building used to be Shrewsbury School and has an impressive list of alumni including Michael Palin, Nevil Shute, John Peel and the aforementioned Darwin. There is a Greek inscription on the wall behind the statue which Dave unsuccessfully attempted to decipher (he does know some Greek!).

Quantum Leap in Shrewsbury 
Just over the road from the library and along from two fabulous old
Laura's Tower 
buildings is an anonymous paved path which led us unexpectedly to the grounds of Shrewsbury Castle. Exploring without a map is much more fun - especially in a small enough town that even I can't get too lost! The Castle is constructed from a gorgeously coloured sandstone and we thought its gardens were beautifully presented. All of Shrewsbury is decked out in stunning floral displays and, unknown to us at this point, the best was still to come. We were intrigued by a lone tower set above the Castle gardens and away from the main structure. Known as Laura's Tower although I have been unable to find out why, this now marks the site of the original Norman castle that was built in 1070 and lasted until the reign of Edward I. There's a pretty good view from the top of the semicircular steps, but it wasn't possible to actually get to the top of the tower. The Castle itself is now open to the public and is primarily a regimental museum.
Shrewsbury Castle 
Away from the Castle, we plunged back into the maze of fascinating
Grope Lane, Shrewsbury 
streets that make up the centre of Shrewsbury. The town nestles in a bend of the River Severn so is prone to flooding these days, but we didn't see any sign of that. There is a fantastic array of shops and cafes, independents as well as High Street names, with very few units standing empty which was good to see. I overheard a tour guide telling her group that this spot at the top of the brilliantly named Grope Lane is the most photographed view in Shrewsbury. It is a particularly narrow street where the medieval buildings lean in towards each other and was, apparently, named for the economic activity taking place within it i.e. prostitution. Wikipedia has an entertaining article about the history of this once common street name. (Probably best not to click this link if kids are reading over your shoulder!)

In my opinion, Grope Lane should now be famous for the lovely little Quirky Coffee Shop just to the left at its top. I loved the decor and the very comfortable armchairs set in the fireplace! Good coffee, great cake - I had the Red Velvet to match my armchair and Dave had an excellent Poppy Seed and Cherry Cheesecake which, we later discovered, shouldn't actually have been on the menu, but was delicious! The Quirky Coffee Shop also stocks dozens of blends of Morgan's Brew tea. I am happy to recommend the Pembrokeshire Peppermint as the perfect refreshing drink for a hot day! While we are talking tea, Shrewsbury has a
http://tidd.ly/d495f423
Russian Caravan tea at Whittard Of Chelsea 
Whittards into which I rushed to get some of their excellent hot chocolate. I struck lucky with the Summer Sale being on right now and picked up a set of five flavours for £12, reduced from £18, and also a pack of appropriately named Russian Caravan tea, reduced to £3 from £4.25. I love a Sale sticker and, having not bothered to look for new sandals in Jones Bootmaker when we were in Chester because I thought they would be way over budget, I did venture in to the Shrewsbury branch when Dave spotted 'sensible' prices in the window. Amazingly I had a choice of sale sandals in my size (8, never easy to find!) and came away with these super comfortable Birkenstock Gizeh Sandals for just £27. (Jones are running down their summery stocks now and have sold out of the Gizeh, so links here go to the same sandals on Amazon).

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B003AM94SY/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1634&creative=19450&creativeASIN=B003AM94SY&linkCode=as2&tag=theatrieastbo-21
Birkenstock Gizeh sandals 

Our final delight of the day was walking alongside the River Severn on a
Percy Thrower bust 
tranquil wide footpath/cycleway bordered with weeping willows and lime trees. It's a wonderful green space and led us to the massive Quarry Park. The Shrewsbury Flower Show had not long finished and all the marqees were being dismantled so it was pretty hectic until we passed through an unassuming gate and found ourselves in the most beautiful bright garden. A true riot of flowers! Shrewsbury Parks department have certainly outdone themselves! We absolutely loved the flower beds and displays. We learned that Percy Thrower had been the Parks Superintendent here from 1946 until 1974 and was responsible for much of the initial design and creation of these Dingle Gardens in the Quarry Park. There is a bust of him overlooking the immaculate gardens and I am sure all Blue Peter viewers of a certain age will recognise his name.

Dingle Gardens, Shrewsbury 



-->