England Plaxtol

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
  • Day 41

    Trip to Brooklands

    April 11, 2024 in England ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Trundled an hour round the M25 to Brooklands which is probably the birthplace of world motorsport and also had a facility there that developed aircraft including the Concorde. The attraction for me is the motor museum and a small aircraft museum.
    Wound up parking on the old circuit. It's a shame but the old banked corners seem to have gone.
    Was some very nice cars and bikes there. Angela was drooling over an old Bentley. Not a supercharged job but so fast it had brakes on all 4 wheels!
    For me the big attraction was the Concorde in the air museum. I have seen them flying but never up close. Although it is considered small by passenger numbers it's way bigger than I imagined. Close up it is more beautiful than from a distance. Shame there are no SSTs flying today.
    There was an option to see inside but it was all booked out. Much sadness. I would have loved to see the interior and sit in one of the seats.
    Not planning on going anywhere tomorrow. Out in the evening for a curry. Mmmmmm :)
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  • Day 3

    Last day🥺

    December 24, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Tristezza infinita dell'ultimo giorno... un giro obbligatorio al Tower bridge e alla Tower of London per salutare questa città magica che ci è rimasta nel cuore e che sicuramente ci rivedrà molto presto❤️Read more

  • Day 2

    Second day

    December 23, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Secondo giorno siamo partiti da Trafalgar square per poi visitare tutti i principali mercati coperti londinesi. Ci siamo spostati poi a Buckingam Palace dove io speravo di vedere i cavalli della guardia reale... ovviamente tentativo fallito. In compenso non sono mancati i tenerissimi scoiattoli 🐿😍.
    Tappa al museo naturale e per concludere giretto un pò a caso, per scaldarci essenzialmente, da Harrods✨️
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  • Day 11–12

    England!

    November 3, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    Så var resan tvärsöver från Österrike till England avklarad! 7 tåg på 28 timmar blev det. Det jobbigaste var lång bytestid i München, där det hällregnade - och att sova på tåget från midnatt till 06.00, med sittplats, trots ögonbindel. I synnerhet som jag blev väckt av en kvinna 30 minuter in i sömnen med att *hon* hade bokat sittplatsen jag satt på - hon också. Och så var det. Men jag hade bokat min sittplats efter hennes bokning, och då kan hon ha avbokat sin sittplats i mellantiden, ansåg konduktören.
    Kanaltåget fungerade bra, även om jag inte var så förtjust i stationen Bryssel Midi - dåligt skyltat. Desto trevligare att få åka Underground i London, om så bara 4 stationer, innan tåget till Bexhill där jag blev bjuden på fish'n'chips innan resan gick vidare med bil till Tonbridge där Åsa redan varit en vecka. Nu blir det två dagar utan tåg men (troligen) med mycket regn innan hemresan.
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  • Day 15

    Browsing Charity Shops

    October 23, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Sevenoaks hat einige interessante Charity Shops verschiedener Wohltätigkeitsorganisationen zu bieten. Der größte am Ort gehört zu "Hospice in the Weald". "Weald" ist ein altenglischen Wort für Wald und bezeichnet in diesem Kontext ein historisches Waldgebiet zwischen der Themse und dem English Channel, wo die Organisation in vielen Orten tätig ist.
    Sevenoaks ist ein guter Ort für second hand Einkäufe, gilt er doch als Stadt mit der höchsten Lebensqualität in Kent.
    Ich gehe mit Cherry einkaufen, und wir finden beide ein paar schöne - vor allem Wärme - Kleidungsstücke. Besonders freue ich mich über einen flauschigen, woll-weißen Pullover und einen großen, hellblauen Kaschmir-Schal, der auf den meisten zukünftigen Freiluftfotos von mir zu sehen sein wird.
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  • Day 10

    At Roy's

    October 18, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

    Deutschen Text findest du unten!

    Anthony, Laurence, Marisa, Henry, Lukas, Roy and Cherry were at the house, when we arrived.
    Laurence guided us into the front garden of his neighbours who are on vacation. Roy came along and we had a quiet chat in the car before we met everybody else. We left the dogs in the Camper and went across the road to Roy's, where Antony was busy cooking Ackee for the next day. We met Marisa, Laurence's wife, and their boys Henry and Lukas. A simple dinner of chops and baked potatoes was served, and we finally had Claudias Lasagne that she bought in Enschede two weeks ago. It was still good and tasted nice.
    There was a choice of Jamaican Red Stripe Beer, Ginger Beer and red wine, and after a while of making friends and enjoying food and drinks, we went home. In bed we listened to the noise of wind and rain around us and fast fell asleep.
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  • Day 2

    The Castle Hotel Eynsford

    October 1, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    Chilean Anuela Sauvignon Blanc served warm!
    Much needed after driving all over the planet to get here.
    Rebecca's bus was cancelled, so I dropped her at Luton train station. Ended up driving The North Circular at least 4 times. Went via Isle of Dogs, Rotherhithe tunnel, A12, A13 M11, finally A2 to A20. Took me 4.5 hours to do a 1.5-hour trip 😴. Bright side Automatic Mini Cooper. They gave me a Tom-tom that kept losing satellite at crucial points.Read more

  • Day 13

    Off the ship, bus ride to London

    August 20, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

    We woke up to the beauty of Dover, and a long sigh, because it is debarkation day and this lovely adventure is almost at an end🥺. We have one more bus ride, one more night in a hotel and it is time to fly home. I will never for get this trip/cruise, it was a bucket list dream come true! It was even sweeter because I shared it with my sister🩷Read more

  • Day 9

    Hever Castle 🏰

    July 30, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌧 18 °C

    Die heutige Nacht verbringen wir in einem speziellen Hotel, im B&B Hever Castle. Doch bevor es ins Hotel ging besuchten wir das Schloss 🏰 und den Garten 🌳. Das kleine Schloss wird als Geburtsort vom Anne Boleyn betrachtet, sie war die 2. von sechs Ehefrauen von Heinrich dem VIII. Damit war sie 1533-1536 Königin 👑 von England. Berühmtheit erlangte sie durch die vom König angeordnete Köpfung im Tower of London. Sie ist auch die Mutter der späteren Königin Elisabeth I. Im Schloss gab es zur Geschichte Heinrichs und seinen Frauen eine Ausstellung. Als Hotelgast war der Eintritt inbegriffen. Besonders ist auch, dass wir als Hotelgäste den Park auch nach Türschliessung frei betreten durften. Also hatten wir am Abend den ganzen Garten für uns alleine und konnten in Ruhe spazieren gehen. Wirklich schön. Das B&B ist im englischen Fachwerkstil erbaut. Die Zimmer sind topmodern eingerichtet, die Dusche 🚿 war ein echter Hingucker. Schade war nur dass es am Abend keine Bar gab. Am Morgen probieren wir dann eine neue Frühstücksspezialität, die Egg Benedict. Das sind pochierte Eier 🍳 mit Schinken 🥓 auf Brot 🍞 mit Hollandaise übergossen. Lecker, aber bestimmt kein Diätmenu 😂.Read more

  • Day 1

    Oast House

    July 29, 2023 in England ⋅ 🌬 22 °C

    An oast, oast house or hop kiln is a building designed for kilning (drying) hops as part of the brewing process. They can be found in most hop-growing (and former hop-growing) areas and are often good examples of vernacular architecture. Many redundant oasts have been converted into houses. The names oast and oast house are used interchangeably in Kent and Sussex. In Surrey, Hampshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire they are called hop kilns.

    They consist of a rectangular one- or two-storey building (the "stowage") and one or more kilns in which the hops were spread out to be dried by hot air rising from a wood or charcoal fire below. The drying floors were thin and perforated to permit the heat to pass through and escape through a cowl in the roof which turned with the wind. The freshly picked hops from the fields were raked in to dry and then raked out to cool before being bagged up and sent to the brewery.
    The purpose of an oast is to dry hops. This is achieved by the use of a flow of heated air through the kiln, rather than a firing process.

    Hops were picked in the hop gardens by gangs of pickers, who worked on a piece work basis and earned a fixed rate per bushel. The green hops were put into large hessian sacks called pokes (in Kent) or green sacks (West Midlands). These would be taken to the oast and brought into the stowage at first floor level. Some oasts had a man-powered hoist for this purpose, consisting of a pulley of some 5 feet (1.52 m) diameter on an axle to which a rope or chain was attached.

    The green hops when freshly picked had a moisture content of approximately 80%. This needed to be reduced to 6%, although the moisture content would subsequently rise to 10% during storage.

    The green hops were spread out in the kilns. The floors were generally of 1+1⁄4-inch (32 mm) square battens nailed at right angles across the joists, placed so that there was a similar gap between each batten, and covered with a horsehair cloth. The hops would be spread some 12 inches (300 mm) deep, the kiln doors closed and the furnace lit. When the hops were judged to be dried, the furnace would be extinguished and the hops removed from the kiln using a scuppet, which was a large wooden framed shovel with a hessian base. The hops would be spread out on the stowage floor to cool, and would then be pressed into large jute sacks called pockets with a hop press. Each pocket contained the produce of about 150 imperial bushels (5,500 L) of green hops. It weighed a hundredweight and a quarter (140 pounds (64 kg)) and was marked with the grower's details, this being required under The Hop (Prevention of Fraud) Act, 1866.

    The pockets were then sent to market, where the brewers would buy them and use the dried hops in the beer-making process to add flavour and act as a preservative.
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