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  • Westward ho

    April 30, 2021 in England ⋅ 🌙 4 °C

    We’re out and it’s down the A303 !
    We pass Stonehenge and then it’s a pooch stop !

    So it’s nature , oddities , and the odd architectural gem or folly !

    Wyndham’s Oak is also known as the Silton Oak or stumpy Silton.
    The oak tree is about 1,000 years old and the oldest tree in Dorset - trunk measured 38 feet (12 m) in circumference! It’s named after Sir Hugh Wyndham, a Judge of the Common Pleas who used to sit in its shade while contemplating cases, and reputedly used as a gallows to hang rebels convicted of roles in the Monmouth rebellion! Whilst not yet in full bloom it’s impressive with limbs shooting in all directions !
    The church next door is also worth a look at its interesting gargoyles and porch roof !

    Onward to Camelot and Cadbury Castle , formerly known as Camalet!
    It has been associated with King Arthur's legendary court at Camelot and has been a military stronghold for over 4000 years and the first earthen ramparts were raised in the Stone Age. During the Iron Age the fort was occupied and locals made their stand against the Romans. They were defeated in AD 70, and the successful Roman aggressors went on to burn down the fort and surrounding village! By AD 500 the fort was again standing and extended by Ethelred the Unready in AD 1000. In the 16th century it was suggested that this site was the stronghold of King Arthur during the 6th century! However Merlin has either used a magic spell or it was again destroyed as there’s no castle and all that’s left is a big green hill with impressive views all round !

    Back on the road we head to Yeovil to revisit the famous follies of Barwick Park !

    Jack the Treacle Eater was built possibly in the 1820s and comprises an arch of rough stonework supporting a sort of spire with a door on the left-hand end ! It is topped by a statue of Hermes, the Greek messenger, representing Jack. The story goes that the Messiter family employed a messenger boy called Jack, who ate treacle to give him the energy to run to London. The turret has an inaccessible door leading to a single small room.
    The Fish Tower got its name from the fish weather vane, which was attached to the top of it. This had disappeared by 1950s. The Fish Tower is a cylindrical tower made of rubble and is about 15 m high. The cap is made of ham stone with decorative markings on it.
    The Cone is 22m high and the cone part is set on a cylindrical base, which is dissected by three arches. The cone has seven levels of pigeon holes in it and is crowned by a ball finial.
    Weird weird weird !

    The day draws in and we head off through very narrow hollow path roads , bounded by sandstone and over hanging tree branches that form an ancient cylindrical pathway !

    To Chideock!
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  • The Lonely Sea and the Sky

    May 1, 2021 in England ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    Saturday morning and it’s the beach and the sea for the pooch !
    A good walk down to Seatown where recently the cliffs collapsed between here and Eype!
    It’s a sunny morning here and pup attempts swimming ...not! ...but the sun is out and some brave souls are in the water! Luna is having none of it as we walk down towards the land slip! It’s also too pebbled for her feet! The sea is as flat as the proverbial millpond !

    A quiet lunch in the sun before a bit of drizzle and a trip to an old tithe barn and farm shop in Symondsbury just in the shadow of the impressive Colmer’s Hill behind Chideock !

    Bridport has seen better days but it’s surprisingly busy . Charles II has still escaped from the battle of Worcester ,
    impressive buildings in South Street, 13th C St. Mary's parish church, chantry and 16th C Bridport Museum
    and the local Palmers brewery looks inviting !

    Down on the coast is West Bay which has is one end of the “Jurassic coast “ cliffs path and it has more sand for the dog !

    At the other end is Hive Beach abc it’s famous cafe for fish and crabs! The sun is out again but Luna is still not trying the sea!
    A good days dog walking !
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  • The Downhill Lie and family

    May 2, 2021 in England ⋅ 🌧 10 °C

    An early start and a golf day out with Cal at Dudsbury - there appears to be a lot of water here too! What could go wrong ?

    That was fun - sun and my irons and driver worked but greens a nightmare! 92 so 21 over par and last but first on stableford!

    Then it’s a family lunch at Lulworth castle at Weld Arms! And Welcome Ella !
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  • The Heart of the Moor & the Blustery day

    May 2, 2021 in England ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Weather looks a bit indifferent and it’s bank holiday so let’s go somewhere quiet ! Dartmoor!

    It’s a rather blustery day ! Luna thinks it’s just a mild spring zephyr ! So it’s out and up in this weather !
    It’s also not raining like it was predicted !

    It’s Tor, Tor, Tor!
    We are blown sideways climbing up Haytor rocks - last visited 40 years ago ! It’s an experience and lots of fresh air !

    We descend for a quiet lunch in Widecombe in the Moor . The church of St Pancras has the nickname of “Cathedral of the Moor" because of its 120-foot tower in such a small village ! The ceiling is decorated with roof bosses . The church was badly damaged in 1638 struck by ball lightning. A service was taking place at the time, and packed with people . Four killed, 60 injured!
    It also has some impressive screed panels and a model of the horse of the Widecombe fair or Tom Pearce song - his horse dies after someone borrows it to travel to the fair with his friends! All on the horse ! Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer, Peter Gurney, Peter Davy, Dan'l Whiddon, Harry Hawke, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all.

    Onward to Buckland in the Moor and another smaller but impressive church and two thatched outbuildings ! It also has some impressive screed screens and odd external clocks with no numbers on them but a message instead ! Dear mother !

    Continuing the Church theme it’s time for another dog walk ! And by now still no rain but we’ve moved onto Geostorm level winds !!!!!
    God is in his heavens and we head up to Buckland Beacon ! Even Luna is slightly concerned by being lifted off the ground ! We reach the summit and find of course the 11 Commandments - yes 11 ! They are etched carefully into the granite ! Where is Charlton Heston when he’s needed!
    This oddity is a famous Dartmoor site !
    Moses did go forth unto the Mount of Buckland and for all to see on Buckland Beacon are two slabs of granite upon which there are inscribed the eleven commandments of God. The guy who commissioned them realised there was a large blank space and suggested that an eleventh commandment was added, this being “John, Chapter 13 Verse 34,” along with the third verse of the hymn, ‘Oh God Our Help in Ages Past’! They gave also been renovated many times due to the weather - yep can believe that today !!!
    Read more on https://www.legendarydartmoor.co.uk/ten_command…

    A few more Tors on the way off Dartmoor passing another site to now hi hi I was dragged to on my first geography field trip - Grimspound ancient settlement and the deserted medieval village - obviously the weather was better years ago !

    And the wind is still blowing ranging from 40 to 60 mph!!!!

    Quieter tomorrow !
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  • Because it’s there!

    May 4, 2021 in England ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

    Well it’s a sunny and not so very windy day ! So let’s try some more hills !

    Lambert's Castle Hill 258 m rises between the villages of Marshwood and Fishpond Bottom -Brits know how name places ! and it qualifies as a HuMPs - Hundred and upwards Metre Prominence! Not a Marilyn nor a Simm! The view takes in Portland , Chesil beach and uplands of Wiltshire and Somerset . Luna loves it ... a gallop through mangled and strangely deformed ancient beeches before the view ! The hill is topped by an Iron Age hill fort that’s 2,500 years old. The hilltop was used as a racecourse at some stage and was also the site of a fair for over 200 years.

    A pit stop / lunch stop in Crewkerne where we have previously stayed on friends’weekends away with the kids over 30 years ago ! The 15th C church is still impressive and reflects wealth of the textile industry ! Thankfully Mr Blobbys village is long gone ! It was a nightmare and worse in the rain ! https://www.dunblobbin.com/blobbyland

    Onward and the sun is shining and there’s a bit of a breeze but that breeze is a bloody gale atop Glastonbury Tor! Another climb for all up the hill but the sun is out and it’s warm ! Glastonbury Tor is a hill near topped by the roofless St Michael's Tower. The Tor is particularly linked to King Arthur myths , and has several other spiritual associations ....and is still full of hippies ! The climb goes well but on the exposed top the wind is pretty ferocious today !

    Homeward bound and another hill - Pilsdon Pen 277m is Dorset’s second-highest point and gives spectacular views south towards the towns of Bridport and Lyme Regis on the Coast and inland to the farmlands and villages! It’s a good climb and the wind is out again ! It’s topped by a huge expansive field / the hill fort ! Luna sniffs and is no doubt smelling the rabbits ! It was used as a medieval rabbit warren and cigar shaped hillocks/ ‘pillow mounds’ still exist ! Another good hike and a might blow !

    Time for home
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  • On Chesil Beach

    May 5, 2021 in England ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    It’s not so windy and the sun is out so some coastal sights!

    Set high on a hilltop overlooking Chesil Beach and the Isle of Portland, St Catherine's is a barrel-vaulted 14th century chapel was built by the monks of the Abbotsbury Abbey as a place of pilgrimage and retreat.

    We walk up the hill and past the abbey ruins and the isolated standing wall of the refectory and huge tithe barn and to get closer to the isolated little chapel. Up top you get fantastic panoramic views over Chesil Beach!

    Time for another trip back to old geography trips and onto Chesil beach or bank .It’s a Shingle beach structure and it’s name comes from Old English ceoselor cisel, meaning gravel or shingle. It runs for 29km or 18 miles from West Bay to the Isle of Portland and is up to 15m high and 200m wide. Great views also behind the beach of the Chapel on the hill .

    Back on the road and up higher you get better views of the Fleet, a shallow tidal lagoon behind the beach

    Time for lunch at a fave spot - The Hive cafe at Burton Bradstock ! Crab sandwiches and a beer !

    Another walk for pooch around the Hardy Monument - a reminder of Nelson’s man from Trafalgar.

    The Weather is changeable so we take a slow drive around Seaton (the rustic Tram has had a lot of money invested into it since we were last here!) Axbridge and Lyme Regis .
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  • The Old Ways

    May 6, 2021 in England ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    It’s a warm sunny morning so a useful time to ascend another hill !

    One of the most recognisable scenes in Dorset is Colmer’s Hill. This iconic conical-shaped hill rises 417 feet above the village of Symondsbury . The hill took its name from 'Colmer Tenement' back in 17thC. During the First World War Caledonian Pine were planted on the hill, and more recently Monterey Pine.
    It’s a short walk to the top and there are great panoramic vistas out to the sea and across the villages and the hills of Dorset. Luna tries to check out the sheep !

    We visit Tolpuddle site of the Tolpuddle Martyrs where six agricultural labourers from the village in 1834, were convicted of swearing a secret oath as members of the Friendly Society of Agricultural Labourers and the beginning of trade unionism !

    The ancient sycamore tree on the village green, known as the Martyrs' Tree, is said to be the place where the Martyrs swore their oath.

    We visit Godmanstone which used to have a pub—The Smiths Arms—which claimed to be the smallest in Britain. The story was that the original licence was granted by King Charles II requested that the village smith serve him a glass of porter. The smith refused because he had no licence, so Charles granted him one on the spot and was served his drink.

    We pass by Athelhampton house on route for Bere Regis and it’s very impressive church ! . It has, among other unusual features, an outstanding roof to the nave, which features carved statues depicting the twelve apostles.

    Then it’s off for a family get together and down to Lulworth cove - geographers heaven- where there is great late afternoon sunshine and Durdle Dor and it’s beach.... and fish and chips for tea with lashings of beer !
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  • Five Go To Demon's Rocks

    May 7, 2021 in England ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    Last day !
    Family outing to Old Harry Rocks - three chalk formations, including a stack and a stump, located at Handfast Point, on the Isle of Purbeck . They mark the most eastern point of the Jurassic Coast

    Old Harry actually refers to the single stack of chalk standing furthest out to sea. Until 1896 there was another stack known as Old Harry’s Wife, but erosion caused her to tumble into the sea, leaving just a stump.

    Old Harry is supposedly named after a smuggler who would sail past that rock every time he left or came back to port.

    It’s sunny and blowing on the walk along the coastal path to peep at Swanage then it’s downhill to some libation at Bankes Arms !
    Then it’s home ! The end !
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