BootsnAll Travel Network



Archive for the 'housing' Category

« Home

vision

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

by a dreamer
Helmsley, England

In my imagination in the middle of sheep covered hills there is a town set around a market square. The market square has little shops – butcher, baker, cheese seller, cloth merchant, wool shop, tailor, candlemaker, household wares (or in this particular case, antique shop), barber, bookshop, fruit and vegetable sellers, clean public toilets and a picnic spot under some trees…..all within walking distance of each other and the village houses, each of which has its own abundant vegetable garden out the back.

We have found the village, the very one.

What I didn’t know, is it has a stream running through with stone bridges, and actually, speaking of stone – that’s the material all the buildings are made of (in my dream village, all structures were of natural renewable long-lasting resources – it just so happens that here that translates to yellow sandstone). There is also a church and a monument and the ruins of a magnificent castle complete with fantastic audio tour, special exhibition exploring the social, domestic and military aspects of the fortress and all sorts of hands-on displays, including a tactile model with braille text and puzzle pieces for littlies to recreate a mosaic floor and keys to turn in locks. Just up the hill is the miller (according to the sign on the side of the road), and on the outskirts of town (but still well within walking distance) is a carpark for tourists’ and locals’ cars and coaches and a well-patronised recycling station. In my village I wouldn’t erect a sign forbidding sleeping overnight in the carpark, but the parking warden assured us he would not be checking after he’d gone off duty and we could stay, so that is almost as good!

We are in Helmsley.


yes, we snaffled up some treasures in here
(including three *Just Williams*)

 

Best of all, is the knowledge that my idealistic dreams ARE actually a reality here, meaning “dreamer” is not necessarily a derogatory term! 
I will continue to dream…..and pursue……

You can take a squiz at the castle if you like – we parked right next to it for the night. Sorry you can’t hear the audio commentary – it really was superb, and such an alive way to learn a whole heap of history.

Question: can someone enlighten us? I know what different grains look like once they’re off the plant and ready to be milled into flour, but not when they are still in the ground!What is this? Is it wheat? Rye? Barley? How can you tell the difference? And what about when it’s still green? We’d be most obliged to anyone who knows these things.

Time on the road: need to check Jboy13’s record!
Distance covered: 13km

**DETOUR**

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

by Rachael
Stratford-Upon-Avon, England

I wonder how many of our blog readers think we are exaggerating when we say we have at least one detour every day! Today we had three; two due to wrong turnings on our part and here’s the other:

The police told us the road had been closed for a couple of hours and helpfully suggested an alternative route to our destination. Only thing is, everyone else must have been going to the same place and very quickly we found ourselves sitting on a little lane going nowhere. Visions of the Seven Hour Traffic Jam Around Antwerp replayed and it did not take long for us to decide to find our own way to Chippenham. Our smarty-pants route included one of the wrong turn detours, but I still think we arrived sooner than if we had stayed in Da Jam.

When time is at such a premium, why were we so set on going to Chippenham? It’s not exactly a tourist sort of town. There are no big famous anythings. That could be why it was a good place to evacuate young boys to during the war. Today we wanted to find the street, nay the very house, that Grandpa was sent to with Cousin M from Alton, who we met last week. Actually it was not just them – there were three families and a boarder and a few others as well all squeezed in to this semi-detached two-storey home. And when one of the fathers came to visit it tipped the already fragile equilibrium, and so Grandpa and his brother would be sent to sleep next door, something they never complained about as the beds were big and comfortable and there was a BATH. This is the house that had a ledge just below the second storey window, from which Grandpa and the same brother used to jump onto the back lawn when their mother went out. They had read that jumping from eight feet was good preparation for learning to parachute, so this ledge seemed a gift to young boys – how obvious a place to practise! This was also the house from which they pushed Baby Cousin C in a pram – sometimes at the park at the end of the street, sometimes in a nearby woods, usually on a Sunday morning, always far faster than Baby C’s mother would have approved of. Baby C survived, moved to America and now has grown children of her own.

So the stories started flowing again.
Jgirl14 observed eagerly, gathering information for the story she is writing based on Grandpa’s World War Two experiences. Grandpa is collaborating with her, having drawn some illustrations for the story (will it perhaps even be a book?) and so we took a mug shot of the two of them together to go on the back cover one day. You can read the first draft of the first chapter HERE if you wish.

 

But Chippenham was not the final destination for the day. We still needed to take another wrong turning and head towards Stratford-Upon-Avon. I had high expectations for this town, having heard how wonderfully beautiful it is, but it was already late by the time we arrived and so I cooked dinner while the others walked. Look at what they saw:

Tomorrow Aunty and Grandpa hire a car and take off solo for a quick stint further north; we’ll have time to savour Stratford. We might even do it without a detour!
(Postscript: pouring rain tomorrow means Rob will deliver Aunty and Grandpa to their rental car while the rest of us blob in the Bear Cave….they will pull out of our lane and choose the wrong one of two possible turnings….moments later they will return somewhat sheepishly andproceed on the correct road!!!! I told you we have to detour every day.)

Time on the road: need to check Jboy13’s record!
Distance covered: 160km

what else could we fit in today?

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
by Rachael Bath, England Last night Rob crashed on the none-too-comfortable certainly-not-big-enough-for-him seat at the back of the Bear Cave…..and did not move for half an hour. Eventually he mentioned to no-one in particular, “I can’t keep this up!” Our preferred pattern ... [Continue reading this entry]

Salisbury, Stonehenge and Somewhere Special

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
by Rachael Looe, England There’s a famous cathedral in Salisbury, and while we could see the spire from our Parking Spot For The Night, we thought it would be nice to see it in its entirety. Usually we would have walked ... [Continue reading this entry]

Thank You Cousin innit M

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009
by Rachael Salisbury, England via Winchester They thought they hadn’t been good enough hosts yesterday and so Cousin M and his wife called the manor, where we had slept so soundly we had not heard the foxes barking, with an offer ... [Continue reading this entry]

Canterbury Tales

Sunday, June 21st, 2009
by Rachael Canterbury, England This whole trip started with Rob’s desire to travel around England with his Dad, seeing where Grandpa had grown up (apart from his years in India), gathering family stories, meeting as-yet-unmet family. Moving on from being a mere ... [Continue reading this entry]

time marches on

Sunday, June 14th, 2009
by Rachael Vianen, Holland She peeked out that window. She saw Jews walking along the street and felt guilty, as if she had betrayed them by hiding. She agonised about fresh air. She felt trapped. She felt proud to be a ... [Continue reading this entry]

amsterdam antics

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
by a Mama, whose knee will not get better – still swollen and wound filled with pus Amsterdam, Holland THE MORNING: driving to Amsterdam flat flat flat

windmills windmills windmills

 

[Continue reading this entry]

*glimpses*

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009
by a girl, who was overly protective of her knee today (with good cause) Burgum, Holland With over 200km to travel we knew we should get away early. But there were photos to be taken of street signs – one street, two ... [Continue reading this entry]

Good-bye Germany, Hallo Holland

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009
by an aching, throbbing Rach Dinxperlo, Holland Dinxperlo Doesn’t that just have a ring about it? Choosing our route northwards, this sounded as good a place as any a delightful place to make the border crossing. Dinxperlo. And so we found ourselves in ... [Continue reading this entry]