Wednesday, 30 April 2014

30 April 2014 – Trip: Greenway (NT), Torbay

Synopsis: A day trip out to Greenway (National Trust) for myself. An easy and relaxing trip with just a small amount of walking between Broadsands and Greenway. Viewed the gardens but not the house.

 
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(selection of photos from Flickr photo set – use link above to view album)

Just a day trip to Greenway as I would be playing badminton later, and therefore must save some strength for what would be my last badminton outing of the season. My summer holiday from badminton was about to begin, having somehow survived, fun though it has bee, the rigours of another season of the game. I shall make this a short blog post, as words aren’t really necessary to describe a day out such as this.

The bus dropped me in Broadsands from where I set out on foot towards the tiny village of Galmpton. I passed The Chapel of the Good Shepherd, the name of which always makes me smile. So, what about The Chapel of the Rogue Shepherd? I feel myself wanting to ask? A little further on my way I was able to view the course of the Dartmouth Steam Railway, which since my last trip this way, has acquired a new stop, Greenway Halt.

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Greenway (NT) - I've likened this plant to a Triffid in the past

After passing through a busy reception I headed for the high far corner of the garden where I found a quiet bench on which to sit and eat my picnic lunch. There is an amazing looking plant near to where I sat, which I’ve in the past referred to as The Triffid. At this time of year it flowers and looks at its best. I believe it is possibly a New Zealand Flax. I’m pleased to report it didn’t attack me during lunch.

 

 

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Greenway (NT) - the boat house

 

I was keen to take a close look around the boat house at Greenway, as it featured in the last outing of David Suchet as Poirot. The story was called Dead Man’s Folly (Wikipedia), which was broadcast in 2013. A significant amount of filming took place at Greenway. The murdered body of Marlene Tucker, granddaughter of the boatman, is found in the boathouse. Without doubt a murder most foul. Take a read of Dead Man’s Folly to put you in the murder-mystery mood for Greenway.

Today’s trip was very quiet and relaxing. Unfortunately I hadn’t time to also visit the house as I was travelling by bus and time was not in my favour. A charming day-out all the same.

Thursday, 24 April 2014

24 April 2014 - Cycle: Exe Valley churches (22.8 Miles)

Synopsis: Six Exe Valley churches in one afternoon, by bicycle. A lovely ride, and well within reach of Exeter. It was a treat to escape the city for an afternoon in the peace and tranquillity of the countryside.

GPS Tracklog Download (.gpx) Microsoft OneDrive -:- Google Drive
 
 
 
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(selection of photos from Flickr photo set – use link above to view album)

I recently walked in the area just north of Exeter and realised that there was the possibility of doing some enjoyable cycling thereabouts. I packed some food and drink, dropped my GPS and tablet computer into in my pannier, and set off for Eastern Fields with no great plan in mind.

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Eastern Fields park

I like the name Easter Fields. It’s suggestive, to me at least, of Oriental flavour, possibly a hint of Eastern Promise. Ok, so how many of you remember that phrase? Remember it, but can’t place it? If I remember correctly, I think it was Fry’s Turkish Delight used it in their television commercial for their product. The main theme I seem to recall was the display of exotic dancers from the east. Eastern Fields may not offer this, but it does provide a number of conveniently situated benches, one of which, as pictured here, I chose for my lunch stop.

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Path leading towards Pinhole church

Eating lunch gave me the time I needed to mull over just where I was going to cycle. I hit upon the idea of making it a church circuit. On my recent walk I’d passed 3 churches: Pinhoe, Poltimore and Huxham, so I knew I could include these, and possibly a few more. So as soon as I’d consumed my lunch I cycled (and pushed) up a newly laid path to Pinhoe parish church. By the time I’d reached it the clouds had dispersed and the day was gorgeous.

 

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Pinhoe Parish Church

 

Pinhoe church was locked (as were all churches I visited today), so after a brief stop, I gave some thought to how to get to Poltimore. The advantage of having my recently acquired tablet is I can connect to the Internet and look up maps on it. I soon had my route to Poltimore in my head, and so off I cycled. There was this fantastic view out over the valley as I began to drop towards Poltimore.

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Poltimore Parish Church - ornate gate and gate piers


I really hoped to look inside Poltimore church, as it’s one of my favourite Devon churches, but it was locked on this occasion, so had to satisfy myself with a brief wander around the churchyard. If you’d like to see some photos of mine of Poltimore church taken on a previous visit, see my photo album on Flickr: 81 Broadclyst & Killerton. During my wander around the churchyard I came across this wonderfully ornate gate and gate piers.

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Huxham parish church


Back on my bicycle I headed off towards my next church which was to be found at Huxham. Huxham is a tiny hamlet which on first sight hardly seems deserving of a church, but I’m coming round to believing these churches, which seem to have too small a community, actually draw from quite a far flung community of farms across the neighbouring countryside. This little hamlet sits right on the edge of Stoke Woods which rise quite steeply in front of it.

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Stoke Canon Parish Church


Cycle clips at the ready I ask my GPS to get me to Stoke Cannon where I’ll find my next church, and find that it’s only a short hop down the lane. I’d driven past this church on many an occasion and often thought I must stop to take a look at it some day. Well, that day was to be today.

 

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Netherexe Parish Church - sitting isolated in the middle of fields

 

I sat on a bench near the door and checked my tablet PC for the location of my next church. Someone had mentioned this church to me before, as being beautifully situated right in the middle of fields, seemingly miles from anywhere. I only knew it was in this approximate location and therefore had to scan the map for a PW (Place of Worship) stuck in the middle of a field. It was easy to make out on the map, so off I set a pedalling once again.

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Netherexe Parish Church - with a grand old yew to ward off evil spirits

The church in question is Netherexe Church, dedicated to St. John the Baptist. I caught my first sight of this church across fields as I bumped my way on my bicycle along a dirt track. And yes, there it stood, in the middle of fields, with no other property in sight. I parked by bike against a stile and crossed a field on foot to reach the church. The size of the yew trees in the churchyard suggested a church had been here for some time, and I’ve since read that the first mention of a church was recorded in the Domesday Book. It was a beautiful place to be this warm and sunny evening.

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River Exe on the approach to Brampford Speke


I had one final church to visit on this my church cycle circuit, and that was to be the church at Brampford Speke. A quick check of my online map indicated that after backtracking a short distance I could then pick up a path along the banks of the River Exe that would take me to a footbridge over the river into the village. Following this route I was soon in the picturesque village of Brampford Speke.

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Brampford Speke Parish Church


This final, and sixth church on my circuit, was a little hemmed in, so getting a photograph wasn’t easy. I had to resort to a panoramic shot stitched together ‘post production’. Hopefully you’ll not detect the joins. By now the evening was well upon me and the acute rays of the sun provided an atmospheric light in which to view the church.

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Upton Pyne village with the tower of the parish church just visible

 

 

Nothing more to do but cycle home at this point. I opted to make for a route along the course of the River Exe to avoid hills. As I went I did actually catch a glimpse of one final church, which at the time I didn’t know which it was. Checking a map later I discovered it was the church at Upton Pyne.


Impromptu today’s cycle ride may have been, but it was none the worse for that. Yes, it was disappointing that all six churches I visited today were locked, but sadly that is probably a sign of the times. Nevertheless, it had been a splendid day in the saddle.

For further reading on the churches I visited today, I recommend examining the description from each church’s listing:

1. Pinhoe Church (Church of St Michael and all Angels (Listed Grade II*))
2. Poltimore Church (The Parish Church of St Mary (Listed Grade I))
3. Huxham Church (Church of St John the Baptist (Listed Grade II*))
4. Stoke Canon Church (The Parish Church of St Mary Magdalene (Listed Grade I))
5. Netherexe Church (Netherexe Parish Church (Listed Grade I))
6. Brampford Speke Church (The Parish Church of St Peter (Listed Grade I))

Cycle Statistics:

Total Distance: 22.8 miles
Moving Time: 4hrs 02min
Stopped Time: 2hrs 05min
Total Ascent: 532 metres
Maximum Elevation: 119 metres

Buses: (none)

Monday, 21 April 2014

21 April 2014 - Walk: Exminster and part of the Exeter Ship Canal (12.8 Miles)

Synopsis: Following a day of solid rain good to get out. Lunch on a bench in the graveyard of St Martin’s Church, Exminster. A walk around my old school, and past where my childhood home once stood.

GPS Tracklog Download (.gpx) Microsoft OneDrive -:- Google Drive
 
 
 
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(selection of photos from Flickr photo set – use link above to view album)
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Exeter Ship Canal

Nothing remains the same, I suppose would be the adage for today’s walk. And certainly Exminster is much changed, and fast changing village. The place of my boyhood seems a distant memory of a bygone world. As my father would have said, “You can’t stop that clock going round.”

 

 

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Exeter Ship Canal - gun boat built in the 1960s for Finnish Navy

 


I had made no plans for today so just had to wing it. The day was fine and warm and too good to stay indoors. I quickly packed a picnic lunch and set off for the Exeter Ship Canal. Although there had been some rain on previous days I was hoping the Exminster Marshes wouldn’t be so wet that I couldn’t cross them. As I walked along the canal towpath I saw what I first thought to be an old WWII gun boat, but subsequently discovered it was in fact built in the 1960s for the Finnish Navy. Quite what it’s doing there I do not know.

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Exminster Marshes

 

 

Glancing out at Exminster Marshes, as I neared the motorway bridge over the canal, I could see the way ahead across the marshes was dry enough for me to walk. In the winter this area was completely under water. It’s perhaps surprising how quickly the countryside dries out once the weather improves.

 

I entered Exminster through a housing estate, and approached the parish church of St Martin’s. It was already lunch time so I sought out a bench in the graveyard. I pretty much had the place to myself, well, apart from the usual incumbents, some of which are family. We have seven family members buried in this graveyard, which indicates our families long ties with the village of Exminster. After my picnic lunch I inspected our family graves and then tried the door to the church which I found locked.

I crossed the road from the church and entered what’s left of the village school I once knew. I say this, as the old building, at which my mother and her sister and brother, and me and siblings, all attended, was demolished some time back. There was once a newish building (classroom, canteen and sports hall combined) where the current hotch-potch of a school stands, but circling the present buildings I couldn’t even find this, so I think it too must have gone the way of much of my past.

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Exminster - Exe View - Nos 12 & 13

I couldn’t walk out the lane at the back of the school, since there was a padlocked gate barring my way. Instead I returned to the road and turned right up Deepway Lane, and then right again into Exe View. I passed No. 17 where my aunt and uncle once lived, which I had known quite well. I wished to see Nos 12 and 13, also once occupied by our family. Sadly it’s hard to get a view of these houses since the lovely old village cottages now have whopping great garages at the end of their gardens nearest the road.

 

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Exminster - Garage of S. Challice & Sons

I picked up the path at the bottom of the hill which took me out onto the road again, next to Exminster Garage. I was intrigued to find a large print of an old photograph of the garage how it once looked. The garage is presumed to have been established circa 1920s, and I would also think that about the right date for the photo. The rather lovely shack that housed the old garage has an almost mid-western US’s look about it. Parts of the modern garage are how I remember it, and would suggest a build date in the 1930s, which I think was a boom time in the age of the motorcar.

Sadly the petrol pumps that I remember, slightly more modern than those in the old photo above, are no longer there, for who can compete with the supermarkets these days? I remember Dad would usually buy 4 gallons of petrol, which would give him change from £1. Those were the days to be motoring. Even in my day of times’ past, when a mere youngster, I remember Campbell’s ‘office’ appeared to be a typical, but charming, mechanic’s dark and greasy hovel.

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Exminster - once 10 Holly Bank, where we'd have looked down on what was Farmer Weeks's chicken run

I wandered past the sites of what would have been old family homes on the Holly Bank (or is that Holley Bank?) range of hospital houses. Some ambiguity surrounds the spelling, as on old maps of 1955 it’s spelt Holley, but for myself, and everyone I’ve ever spoken to, it’s always been Holly Bank, and we’ve been around about here an awful long time. I suspect the ‘official’ name Holley simply never got used, but ironically it’s been adopted as a street name on the new estate. Maybe people today are more tractable, and perhaps it might just stick this time round.

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Exminster - Exe Vale Hospital (that was)

 

I followed the modern Reddaway Drive (named after an electrician who worked at the hospital) towards the old hospital buildings. I know today I shouldn’t think of it as a hospital, but it’s hard to shed a lifetime of memory. It’s possible to make out the radial style of the main complex, which was a typical design of this type of institution during Victorian times [Devington Park] (Listed II*). The hospital transferred to the National Health Service in 1948, it was closed (as Exe Vale Hospital) in July 1986. Records are held at the Devon Heritage Centre.

After a little follow-up research on the name Reddaway as associated with Exminster Hospital, I discovered that ‘T.E. Reddaway’ is mentioned in ‘Annual reports for the years 1949 and 1950 : Exminster Hospital, Digby Hospital, Wonford Hospital’ as being ‘Building Foreman’, and is mentioned in ‘Annual report 1954-1955 : Exminster Hospital, Digby Hospital, Wonford House Hospital’ as ‘Group Clerk of Works’. Therefore the memory in our family of Mr. Reddaway as ‘electrician’, although possibly justified to some extent by actual experience, nevertheless probably fails to adequately do justice to the man’s actual position and rank. And, one final thought on the name: ‘Reddaway’ [Forebears] – this is predominantly a Devon name, one that is described as '(English) Dweller at the Red Road [Old English réad + weg]' [‘Redway’ on Forebears]. Since Devon is very much the red clay county of England, it strikes me as a highly appropriate name for a group of Devonians. Incidentally, ‘Reddaway’ [How to pronounce] is typically pronounced, in UK English, with a very soft central ‘da’ that is almost lost when spoken.

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Exeter - Crematorium gardens (opened November 1963)

 

 

I headed out of Exminster for Marsh Barton, then followed a path that led me over the canal and along the mill leat that passes close by the grounds of the Exeter & Devon Crematorium. The maple trees were newly in leaf and all the colours looked incredibly vibrant.

 

 

Old Family Photo - me at Holly Bank, Exminster
Written in photo album: [Holly Bank] 1966

And here is one final photo for this blog post, me at Holly Bank, Exminster, taken just a little while ago.

It was an odd experience, visiting where your home once stood, to find the landscape barely recognisable today. I felt an alien in my own environment, as once this was. I think it’s not just a case of the place looking so different, but the knowledge that times are so different too. The simple pleasures we sought in the countryside, riding around on our bikes, playing in the fields and building dens, seem now to be so out of place in a world of smartphones and SUVs. Could I (purely rhetorical) be getting old?

Sobering thought #697: there is a greater period of time between today and this photo of me as a boy than the time between it and the image from the 1920s of Exminster Garage shown above. Oh dear!

Walk Statistics:

Total Distance: 12.8 miles
Moving Time: 4hrs 37min
Stopped Time: 34min
Total Ascent: 290 metres
Maximum Elevation: 112 metres

Buses: (none)

Wednesday, 16 April 2014

16 April 2014 – Trip: Hardy’s Cottage (NT) & Kingston Lacy (NT)

Synopsis: A day trip with Mum and sister-in-law Christine to a couple of National Properties in Dorset. Set out reasonably early as some distance to cover. Both visits excellent, and a great day out.

 
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(selection of photos from Flickr photo set – use link above to view album)

The idea I had in mind for this trip out was inspired by the forthcoming launch of a new film version of Far From the Madding Crowd, the story by Thomas Hardy. And also prompted by the news that a new Thomas Hardy Visitor Centre opened by Julian Fellowes. This seemed to me like a nice tie-in, and an excuse for a visit to Dorset. Combined with one other aspect, a wish I’d long had to visit Kingston Lacy (NT). Since there was only a drive of about 30 minutes between Hardy’s Cottage and Kingston Lacy, this seemed like a good combination visit. As it was the Easter school holidays, my sister-in-law Christine, also joined Mum and I for this day trip.

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[Hardy's Cottage (NT)]: Visitor Centre, opened March 2015

It was going to be a fairly long drive from Exeter for us, so we set off quite early, picking up some picnic food at our local Tesco’s en route. We met our objective of arriving at Hardy’s Cottage just as it was about to open at 11:00 am. The car park, by the visitor’s centre, was quite busy even so. We didn’t stop to linger at the centre, merely made use of the facilities it provides, and then set off on the short walk up to Hardy’s Cottage.

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[Hardy's Cottage (NT)]: Garden and cottage

 

 

We bought our ticket from the man in the little garden shed at the bottom of the garden. He seemed very content in his little shed (men love their sheds). And then we caught our first sight of Hardy’s Cottage, as it is known. What immediately struck me was how picturesque it appeared in what was a sublime setting. It’s hard to imagine a more idyllic rustic scene.

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[Hardy's Cottage (NT)]: The main living room of the cottage


We entered the rather cramped confines of the cottage and were greeted by a steward. He told us a little of the history of the cottage and Thomas Hardy’s time there. What struck me was how substantial and forcefully minded Thomas’s mother Jemima was. I suspect she played a significant roll in modelling her son Thomas to become the successful author he was later to be.

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[Hardy's Cottage (NT)]: The kitchen / dining room

 

 

 

The stewards parcelled us into small groups to tread the narrow steps upstairs, as the cottage is very small. It was the fact that the cottage is so small and humble (despite now being two homes knocked into one), and that everything in the house was so plain and simple, that struck me so emphatically. Thomas was definitely a man who inspirationally rose up from very humble beginnings.

 

 

 

After our visit to the cottage, we back-tracked to the car park, and searched out a bench at which we could eat our picnic lunch. Although we did find a bench, this was something I feel the National Trust could have catered (sorry for pun) for a rather better. Still, we were well fed when the time came around for part 2 of our day. There is another National Trust property associated with Hardy, Max Gate (NT), in Dorchester, but we, with limited time, chose to make Kingston Lacy (NT) our next port of call.

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[Kingston Lacy]: Exterior view from the gardens

Having parked our car in the car park at Kingston Lacy we approached the house. The steward at the car park offered to drive us in his electric buggy up to the house, which, since Mum was with us, we decided to take him up on his offer.

 

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[Kingston Lacy]: A room that is lush and elegant

 

 


There are many interesting and beautiful rooms at Kingston Lacy. One has a board of keys, once the keys to Corfe Castle, and have a lovely story to go with them. Another room has a whopping great organ in it. This photo I’ve included here just because it is a fine example of how lush and elegant many of the rooms are.

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[Kingston Lacy]: The main stairway lit by an oculus

The stairway lit by a huge round skylight, a form of oculus (I suppose?), forms an imposing passage to the upper floor, complete with a series of bronze statues. The Tent Room is an amusing oddity, a room that gives the feeling of actually being in a tent. This is very glamorous camping, and probably as close to roughing it as the occupants ever got. 

 

 

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[Kingston Lacy]: Jib door - a hidden secret door

 

 

 

 

I noticed that there was a hidden secret door in one room at Kingston Lacy. I struggled to think of the name for such a door at the time, and then later it came back to me. It’s what is referred to in architectural terms as a Jib door. And yet jib is a complex word with many meanings. And jib can also mean ‘(Of a person) be unwilling to do or accept something’. Whoops, I went off on one there. But truly is a fascinatingly multi-layered word.

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[Kingston Lacy]: "One of Europe's longest avenue of trees at Kingston Lacy"

 

 

After our house visit Christine and I took a brief walk around the grounds. Mum chose to wait for us on a nearby bench.

We then sought out a picnic bench in the grounds where we stopped briefly for a snack prior to our journey home. It had proved a very successful outing, this Hardy inspired day of ours.