United Kingdom
Blickling Hall

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    • Blickling Hall, Gardens, and Estate

      February 27 in England ⋅ ☁️ 5 °C

      After a visit to Cromer yesterday, as part of a circular walk from the hotel, we are now on our way home and visit Blickling Hall en-route (this is also a National Trust property).

      Blickling Hall is a Jacobean stately home built on the ruins of a Tudor house; this is believed to have been the birthplace of Anne Boleyn, one of the future six wives of King Henry VIII.  During the Second World War, RAF air crew were billeted here while its owner, Lord Lothian, influenced Winston Churchill’s actions; the Hall was the Officer's mess, whereas service men where in Nissen huts. Blickling Hall is very large and really beautiful, a jewel in the NT crown; we are able to walk round parts of the ground and first floors (see captions on photos) - the Long Gallery, now the library, has 12,500 books and is the largest book collection cared for by the NT.  

      We visit the Gardens - seeing the parterre garden, the Doric Temple and the Orangery - before setting off on an Estate Walk (excellent maps are provided by the NT).  We walk up past the lake behind Blickling Hall and across to the Great Wood, seeing The Mausoleum; this large pyramid was built in 1794 for John Hobart, the second Earl of Buckinghamshire.  Then it's across to The Tower; this was built in the 18th century as a grandstand for the steeplechase racecourse that occupied what is now Tower Park (now a grazing area).  Then it is through Plantation Wood and via Pond Meadow to Blickling to pass the Church of St Andrew on our way back to Blickling Hall. It has been another excellent walk; this is followed by a quick lunch and the journey back home to reality!
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    • Day 14

      Blinkling Estate Gardens

      August 14, 2018 in England ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      A short 4 kilometre walk around the gardens.
      What’s not to like.
      Enormous walk, walled garden, English young folk frolicking including an 18mth dragging a croquet mallet, a Temple at the end of a walk and 4 painters doing up the Orangery and laughing outrageously.
      Also has a 400 set of yew hegdes that are a joy so long as you don't have to trim them.
      The cuttings go to makeTomoxifil the anti breast cancer drug. Amazing.
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    • Day 14

      Blinkling House

      August 14, 2018 in England ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      Anne Boleyn could have been born here. It's that sort of story. The original house did belong to her family.

      A very, very rich lawyer Henry Hobart bought it, tore it done and built himself a Jacobean country house.

      It’s had a few owners before ending up with the National Trust in 1940, opened to visitors in 1960.

      It was leased to someone during that period. What sort of person leases an enormous, old, old house with a garden that needs a morning to see.

      Would you like to see the attics they asked, what could you say but yes. Mark’s Fitbit says that we climbed the equivalent of 19 stories but who counts these things. Great house with the biggest Library eat of the Pennines.

      They were having an art installation around the risk to books in the 21 century, quite interesting in parts. Better than the “Surrealism Experience” at Peckover House we did not discuss with you.

      Many K’s walk, much gawking and good time had by all.

      Bernadette had a wasp incident in the courtyard but a true tourist takes these things in their stride.
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