Wednesday 5 June
Had to
wait 30 minutes for Enterprise car, an automatic Ford Fiesta. David had not taken out insurance to cover 1000
pound charge for any dent, scratch. (This
worried him for some days before he gave in and paid. He added a scratch to the car but in the
end Enterprise did not charge for it.)
We headed
north to our B&B in the small village of Norham, stopping
at Newbiggin-by-the-Sea for lunch. It
prides itself on the artworks scattered around the town after its badly eroded
beach was redeveloped in 2007.
|
The Couple |
|
Black-headed gulls at Newbiggin |
Not much to see in Norham so we drove to Berwick-on-Tweed where we found much of interest.
|
Sign en route - fishing is a major preoccupation in Scotland |
Went into the Berwick tourist office and they directed us to the circular route around the ramparts.
We walked the path for 30 minutes.
|
Massive earthworks |
|
Barracks 1717 |
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Gunpowder magazine 1750 |
Our host at Abbotsford B & B was very pleasant and helpful with information.
Back to
Norham by 6:30 and did not want to drive any more today, so we ate down the
road at the local pub. It was full of people with large dogs and decorated with very long fishing rods on the ceiling. The food was OK.
Thursday 6 June
Tried
to get to Lindisfarne but ran into a road block due a train breakdown en
route. Warned of a one hour wait so we drove north-east
to the coast, starting with an exploration of Eyemouth.
|
Gunsgreen House was built in 1753 by smuggler, John
Nisbet, who built the house with a tea chute, vast cellars and hidden
spaces to hide his smuggled goods, most often tea. |
|
Herring gull |
|
Cannon on site of fort built in 1547 - no remains to be seen |
|
View of Eyemouth from fort site |
North of
Eyemouth is St Abbs, a popular place for scuba divers with very clear sea. It is also popular with seabirds who roost on
its 90m cliff.
|
St Abbs coastline |
|
Roosting site |
|
I think these are all guillemots |
|
Herring gulls and kelp - non-breeding adult on left |
We
drove to St. Abb's Head National Nature Reserve Visitor Centre
building where we enjoyed
tasty soup for lunch at Old Smiddy café.
This
night we took our host’s advice and drove to Swinton for dinner. The atmosphere and food was distinctly
upmarket and good.
|
Wheatsheaf dining room (from the web) |
|
bar area |
|
Great salmon! |
Friday 7 June
Headed
north-west towards Edinburgh with a slight southerly dip towards Melrose. Before that, we came to the 1865 imposing viaduct
at Leaderfoot, where Leader Water joins the Tweed.
|
This path was enticing but very short |
|
Hawthorn |
Melrose had
two attractions for us – the Abbey which we viewed from outsideand Priorwood
Garden, very pretty and worth the donation we made.
A few of the lovely flowers
|
View en route to Ratho |
Four hours later we reached our Air BnB apartment at Ratho, chosen for public transport access. It was modern, spotless with large bathroom, small bedroom and tiny kitchen/dining area.
Saturday 8 June
Tron Kirk, 1633, is now the focus of
Edinburgh’s World Heritage Sites in Old and New Towns. Inside, visitors are asked to consider the
cost of conservation and restoration and to vote on topical issues such as the
banning of large coaches in Old Town.
We booked
a guided tour of Edinburgh Castle for 2pm.
By then, rain was threatening and drizzle became a constant part of the
tour. Fortunately, our guide, complete
with unicorn, had a great sense of humor, spoke very clearly, gave opinions but
knew the facts.
|
Queen Victoria ordered a grand entrance |
|
The portcullis was the 'real' entrance to the castle |
|
Our excellent guide, Jen, invited us to photograph the guard as he walked past |
|
General Haig born 1861 in Edinburgh |
|
Our group was a hardy lot and Jen was very knowledgeable and entertaining |
|
Oldest Edinburgh building in centre - St Margaret's Chapel, 1132 |
|
Great Hall 1512 (above and below) |
|
Mons Meg 1449 |
|
Cemetery for guards' dogs |
|
Huddled under shelter to watch this! |
|
Preparations for Tattoo - seats in blue area cost 500 pounds! |
|
They had more food than most people |
|
Prisoners' bunks |
|
And it kept raining! Wet farewell to Edinburgh |
Sunday
9 June
Left
Ratho 9:50. No rain!! Walked a little way beside Ullswater en route.
|
Winding road near Windemere |
Detoured to Carnforth to shop at Tesco. Arrived 4pm at our Arnside apartment which
was not easy to find, tucked away in a one-lane road. Sycamore House was rather grand in lovely
wooded grounds with two large ponds.
Our
part was above the double garage with own steep access. The rooms were spacious, modern, very
tastefully decorated.
|
Guardian on neighboring home |
Put
on a load of washing but later found that the cycle, including drying, was very
long. Clothes were so wrinkled that I
had to iron everything.
|
Railway viaduct on Kent Estuary |
We
walked down to the estuary before dinner, quite close, very flat, tide out.
|
Local farm |
Using
the induction cooktop involved a battle – much more complicated than ours.
Monday
10 June
Walked
down to Arnside Promenade to buy toothpaste and check out the town. The small supermarket, Londis, was quite
competitive with Tesco.
|
We never went into this local pub. |
Tide was
very low. Weather overcast but no rain.
After
lunch we drove to nearby Silverdale and walked up to The Knott. Overcast so views not great.
Tuesday
11 June
Drove to
Kendal to walk Scout Scar on Underbarrow Road.
4km in very windy 11° but good views and easy walking.
Then we
went to Grange-on-Sands, the town on the opposite bank of Kent Estuary. Bigger, more prosperous, more tourists BUT
20p dirty toilets. Parked for free near
smelly large duck pond to eat our sandwiches.
Moved further into town and refused to pay GBP 1.2 to park near The
Promenade, which we couldn’t see.
Glad to
return to Arnside, park for free, buy wine and retreat ‘home’ for coffee and
Bakewell tart. I worked
hard on Berlin blog but instead of Publish, I touched something else and lost
the lot. Boo hoo!!
Our host,
Mike, a lovely chap, came up to show us how to get on to Netflix and we watched
Dark Mirror. Put
washing on a 30 min cycle which didn’t finish for 2 hours…
Wednesday
12 June
Overcast.
Lazy morning blogging while David dealt with QNC business.
Drove to
Beetham, looking for a path to Fairy Steps.
Parked outside a block of flats and were told on our return that parking
was just for residents – we hadn’t noticed the sign. Finding a place to park outside posted P
areas became a big problem everywhere in UK.
We found
a path (probably not THE path) which was obviously seldom used as it became more overgrown until we reached a field.
Walked across
farmlands and pastures, bordered by oak woodland. Cool weather but better than
yesterday as not windy.
Came across a
complex of barn, turbine and mill, only open to the public Thurs - Sunday.
|
As the Jeep arrived, sheep came running |
We gave up on finding the way to Fairy Steps!
Thursday
13 June
Bad
weather so we stayed at home.
Friday
14 June
Drove to Trowbarrow
nature reserve and disused quarry – lucky find as it was only mentioned in one
book our hosts lent us and we just had a long road address, so had to look very
carefully to find it. Quite a small
area, only about 2.5km walk but very pretty.
Time for
some social history so we visited the nearest place, Holbeck House, and were
very pleased we did. It is owned by the
Duke of Devonshire who lives at Chatsworth but a female relative now lives
there and runs it (as well as 17 tenanted farms, the local racecourse, a quarry,
a caravan park and …). The guest wing is
the only part open to the public and the rooms were beautiful.
|
Entrance to the Guest Wing |
|
Leadlights upstairs |
|
Small section of grounds |
|
Tasty soup for lunch at Holbeck House cafe |
Saturday
15 June
David drove
for 6 hours on the excellent motorways, stopping twice for a break. Arrived at Boots Cottage in
Bude at 3:15 after slow progress in rain on M5.
Very pleased with our small annex and greeted with warm scones, jam,
cream, coffee.
|
Cars belong to owners' son - both in working order |
Feeling fresh, so we walked down the back garden to the canal,
complete with waterlilies, and then up a very steep hill to Marhamchurch (which
features an old church – we found a 1616 gravestone). Signpost said 1.5 miles to Bude and road was quite steep so we turned
back home.
|
Canal at back of Boots Cottage |
|
Marhamchurch - mostly 14th C |
Sunday
16 June
Fathers’
Day in UK. Drove into Bude in rainy
conditions and found it packed with people, even those in rain gear carrying
boogie boards to the beach. They’re a
hardy lot! There’s a rack of wetsuits in
the local big supermarket and our cottage has a notice asking guests not to wash
sandy wetsuits in the shower.
|
GCHQ Bude, an international eavesdropping centre |
Couldn’t
park anywhere tempting so returned, had lunch and set out on a walk towards
Widemouth Bay, starting nearby at The Weir (big pond of ducks and geese,
upmarket restaurant with kids’playground, petting zoo).
|
Canada goose and mallards |
Walked uphill through a sheep paddock trying
to avoid large black poos and up another hill – then rain poured down. Hasty retreat. Back at The Weir, sun came out, rain stopped,
so we retraced our steps and finally walked to Salt House, along coastal path
for a while and then back by an easy track.
|
Widemouth Bay below fields of spinach |
|
solar farm |
Monday
17 June
Dry
weather forecast so I hung the washing out and we set forth for Bodmin Moor
which seemed to have several walking trails and historic attractions. Google Maps
persisted in its attempts to make us take the shortest routes and put us on one-lane very slow roads. Very
frustrating! We eventually found
ourselves at Goliathe (sic) Falls and enjoyed a very pretty, slow walk beside
the River Fowey.
|
Goliathe Falls |
Quite a few people
there, all with dogs having a lovely time.
I sent us
the wrong way to Minions, an historic area, and we endured even worse road
conditions. A helpful gardener seen en
route gave us the right directions and we did get there. However, Neolithic standing stones are just
that and the other ruins were industrial 19th C.
|
Steering a bull after feeding it an icecream at Minions |
So we
then headed for the coast and Tintagel of wrongful King Arthur claims, though
an ancient castle in ruins still exists.
BUT access is not possible now as a new bridge to the castle island is a
work in progress. On the bright side, we
didn’t have to pay except for parking and got lots of exercise walking up and
down a very steep road to view the island and its cove protected from Atlantic
swells.
|
Tintagel |
|
Walk down to Info Centre and cove |
Ignored Google maps enroute and home, sticking to 2 lane roads.
Tuesday
18 June
|
Doc Martin's house and surgery 4th from right |
Port
Isaac of Doc Martin fame was our first stop and we got there early before the
crowds. Very cute as the TV show suggests and people were filming when we
arrived.
|
used as pharmacy in TV show |
|
spoiled by smudge on lens |
Drove
much further south to Penzance which is another old town, much bigger than a
village, with old pubs reputed to be
smugglers’ haunts having secret tunnels down to the harbour.
Built in
1233, the Turks Head is the oldest pub in Penzance, as well as one of the
oldest in Cornwall and all of the UK.
Its name
has a fairly bloodthirsty origin, named for when the Turks invaded the city
during the Crusades. You can use your imagination to figure what the locals’
preferred way of dealing with them was.
Unfortunately,
much of the pub burnt down in the 16th century and was rebuilt. However, there
are still some fascinating glimpses of the past which can be found in the
cellar.
My
favourite part of the Turks Head is the smuggling passage that can be found
between the pub and the harbour. Well, they didn’t call it the Pirates of
Penzance for nothing.
Interestingly,
the Turks Head has some more modern claims to fame. In the 19th century, a
young boy named Thomas Holloway grew up in the pub. He would go on to be a
pioneer of women’s education, opening a university college for women to study
courses previously unavailable to them, such as medicine. (Journey with Georgie.com)
|
16th C The Dolphin Tavern |
|
17th C Admiral Benbow |
Finally,
we tried to see the harbour at St Ives but the crowds made it impossible to
decide whether it was worth the trouble, so we went home.
Wednesday
19 June
Drove out
trying to find a parking spot near the Coastal Path and ended up in a similar
spot to that on Sunday. Easy pleasant
walk. After lunch, we parked in Bude and
walked the Maer Cliff trail, just 3.4 km but very enjoyable.
|
Walk down to Bude from Maer Cliff |
|
Bude sea pool and beach |
Thursday
20 June
Enjoyed
our 3 hours at Tamar Otter & Wildlife Centre. Only light rain this day. Saw many otters and watched them being fed.
The keepers have a great attitude to conservation - breed, then release
where possible. Many otters and birds were brought here as orphans.
|
Two families of Asian short-clawed otters; feeding time below |
|
British otters - 7 yr old male on left, 17 yr old female |
The male was
an orphan in poor condition. He is not yet
mature, is just learning to swim and is given rump steak instead of fish for
more nutrition. Female otters always dominate the bigger males, attacking them as much as needed to get submission.
|
This serval lives with her shy sister |
|
One of 3 Siberian chipmunks, size of a rat |
The bird of prey talk was great – more
informative than many others we’ve seen and anyone had a chance to touch or
hold the birds.
|
European kestrel above and below. She killed a peahen which annoyed her. |
|
Eurasian horned owl |
|
Harris hawk, smartest bird here - untied knots |
Full of red-necked wallabies, roaming freely in the large
enclosure, looking very much at home and healthy. Also Siberian chipmunks, meerkats, a
beautiful serval, deer, Gouldian finches, Japanese
quail … Nice tearoom where we ate
Cornish pasties and watched wild birds come to the feeders outside.
Drove to
nearby Launceston where we walked up a Norman (12th C) tower. Very windy and I didn’t enjoy the climb.
Friday
21 June
At last
we discovered the easy walk to Bude along the canal and it was a fine, sunny
day. Perfect!
|
Lock |
|
Duck down or not |
|
Evil eye on an eel |
We went 8km down to the beach, past the
Friday market, and everywhere we saw schoolkids exercising, mostly in
canoes.
Bude has an
International Adventure School with accommodation where kids from anywhere can
learn to abseil, walk ropes, canoe, surf, kayak… Very impressive.
Lunch at
home. Drove to Boscastle, less than
20km, but held up by roadworks on the main road and having to reverse 100m on a
narrow road to let a ridiculously large tourist bus pass. Once there, we faced the same tourist problem
which sent us back from St Ives – crowds.
I refused to pay for parking when we couldn’t even get close enough to see
the harbour. David had planned a walk
starting out of the town but again no parking space and very steep
country.
Back
home
to pack for moving on tomorrow after a pleasant dinner at The Weir,
which was short-staffed and led to a 45-minute wait for food. Staff
were apologetic.
Saturday
22 June
Drove from
Bude to Ringwood and shopped there before looking for our booked accommodation. This proved very difficult as David relied on
some GPS info to get there. We found
ourselves in Verwood, a round trip of 9.2 miles from Ringwood. A helpful guy who had never heard of Mockbeggar
used his phone to find that it was quite
near Ringwood in another direction. When
we found the street, we still needed help to locate the actual house.
It turned
out to be ‘The Annex’ on a large block including a big modern house and the grandest
tool shed I’d ever seen. Cars there
included a Discovery, Audi and Mercedes.The
owners were very friendly and helpful.
|
Shed in background; The Annex on right |
The Annex
was advertised as a B & B with small kitchen, lounge area … The kitchen had a microwave and benchtop oven
but no cooktop, so I had to ask for a casserole dish to cook the meal I’d
planned.
We walked
in surrounding streets looking for a trail but didn’t find one. The houses were all backed by farm or
woodland, a nice area.
Sunday 23 June
Made
the most of our one full day in New Forest, starting with an 8 km walk at Bolderwood, then a good roast lunch at a pub in
Ringwood, a 4.6 km walk near Linwood and a short 2 km walk near Blashford Bird Hide.
|
Rhododendron |
|
Ringwood shopping area |
|
Ringwood Pub 1703 |
Sunshine
and Sundays lead to family fun in England and we were delighted to find this
area, complete with icecream van.
|
Kids were sliding down this sand dune |
|
|
Pretty!! |
|
Scaup |
|
Juvenile black-headed gulls |
|
Pestering their parent for food |
Monday
24 June
Left
Mockbeggar at 9 and set out for British Wildlife Park, as the best way of
filling in time. Found out that it is
not open on Mondays, in common with many other options. Fixed on Horsham
as a destination, some 30km out of the way, but offering a well reviewed local
museum, free entry. We were very pleased
with the social history displayed, from clothing to archaeology to farm
machinery …
|
Pottery figures showing country crafts - cobbler, wheelwright, potter, trugmaker, saddler. Alan Lanchbury, 1973-74 |
|
|
|
Garden in museum |
|
Alfred Stubbs, a very impressive athlete |
David
took the car back to Gatwick, no charge for a scratch he admitted to. It was 30 minutes from Gainsborough Lodge
but he walked 50 minutes after a wrong turn. However, he was in
good spirits after driving around in difficult conditions for 19 days.
Walked
into Horley to buy dinner but nothing appealed so we returned to have
the last of our snacks and wine in our small comfortable room.
Easy
trip to Gatwick next morning via cheap airport transfer. Uneventful
flight home, though Cathay premium economy seating offers little more
than straight economy and a much longer walk to toilets.
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