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Tonbridge and Malling District

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    • Day 1

      Anreise

      July 7, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      Lange Anfahrt durch viele Staus in Belgien. Gute Reise im Tunnel, aber warm.
      Maidstone schöne Unterkunft aber gruselige Umgebung. Nach längerer Fahrt dann in Corsham angekommen. Stadt und Geschäfte im Regen angeschaut, hat ohnehin alles geschlossen.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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    • Day 17

      Ightham Mote Garden.

      August 17, 2018 in England ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      Terrific gardens, some walled, big lawn, a million kids running around.
      What’s not to like.

      Stables as crooked as a dogs hind leg.

      A number of ideas for home although the canal doesn’t cut it quite the same way.
      We shall see.
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    • Day 17

      Knole

      August 17, 2018 in England ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

      You drive through a very busy market town. Narrow streets, suicidal pedestrians with phones till you see a very narrow gate down a lane that isn’t opened yet.
      You drive past three times because there is no where to park until the carpark open the gate.
      Then you drive the kilometre to the house. The deer park is at the back of the high street and most of the town. A thousand acres.
      Amazing.
      The house started life as a palace for the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1496, past through a number of hands until it ended up with Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop and Henry XIII supporter.
      Henry collected property like he did wives and suggested he might pass the property to the Crown.
      It’s good to be King.
      Elizabeth I gave it to Lord Dudley, a favourite,who gave it back, her cousin Thomas Sackville ended up with it and there it stayed, Vita Sackville-West is part of the family but that’s a complete story on its own.
      The House is huge, over 3 acres, has 7 courtyards 52 staircases and 365 rooms.
      What a a place, one off the biggest houses in Britain.
      Doing the gutters takes a while.
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    • Day 16

      Wrotham Village

      August 16, 2018 in England ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

      As we’d driven most of the day and sat around the res Bernadette had not walked her 8 kilometres so off went to explore.
      Interesting place, about 2,500 people, 3 pubs, hairdresser and small shop.
      Mixed housing, tiny terraces and big I’ve got money places.
      Excellent church and not one but two cemeteries.

      Only got to 4.67 when good sense prevailed and it was back to lay down.
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    • Day 16

      A Trip around the Truck Parking Lot

      August 16, 2018 in England ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

      We decided to drive down to Kent to start phase 2 of the trip, “THE SOUTH”.

      Only 130 miles, lots of M road (freeways with roundabouts the size of Earlwood), cross the Thames to the east of London, should take 2 and a bit hours.

      Plenty of time to see a manor house in the afternoon.

      Well that was an idea.

      A 3 hour white knuckle drive in torrential rain, no visability except when the trucks overtook and wiped the road of water, queues, delays and many White Vans.

      If you have never been to the UK you need to understand that thousands of White Vans traverse the country on all manner of roads.

      They unfailing drive to fast, pass on blind corners and are driven by excitable P platers.

      Then there was the “if we dont stop to go to the toilet I’m going to explode” incident. This required coming of the M, negotiating a 6 exit roundabout and finding a Services Area as big as Roselands.
      With an unfailing sense of direction Mark ended up in the truck parking area, then the coach parking area, then just any area.

      It would not be accurate to saty that no “words” were exchanged during and after all these travails.
      There was a full debriefing of fails, missed turns, alternative choices and “how could you miss that”.

      Kidney failure was avoided, caffeine levels were restored, the downpour continued and eventually all thought of seeing anything in the rain was abandoned. Luckily the veryy nicepeople at The Bull at Wrotham were able to let the room early.

      The Bull has no straight walls, the doors don’t fit and its been a pub for 600 years. There have been a couple of renovations during that period.

      It’s got a Michelin Rosette for its pub food and as soon as we find out what that means you’ll know as well.

      But it’s dry in side and it’s not moving.

      Mark has refused to drive 4mins for coffee and had opted for beer instead.
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    • Day 124

      Ightham Mote Gardens

      September 2, 2018 in England ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

      The gardens are beautiful; at this time of the year we've been seeing lots of dahlias. There are many water features, such as lakes, ponds, a creek, waterfall, fountains, and of course, the moat! Families love to come to the National Trust properties to spend the day.Read more

    • Day 17

      Ightham Mote

      August 17, 2018 in England ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      Was worth the effort.
      Left Knole full of confidence in Karen the GPS. Our next stop was only 5 miles away. A quick trip and a look at a 14th century moated house.
      Alas, there was a road diversion and complete confusion ensured.
      Having been taken through a housing estate so we could turn around and a dead end with a sigh saying “Your GPS is wrong “ we did finally arrive. Both Karen and Bernadette were a little unhappy at various parts of the trip.

      The house itself sits at a bottom of a valley and was started and extended and renovated and fixed up many times. We counted at least 4 staircases, has its own Chapel (as you do) and some walls that look like a TOMB job.
      Men were boating around the moat fixing the stone work some of which don’t have mortar.
      Obviously an age of optimism.
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    • Day 124

      Mansion Interior

      September 2, 2018 in England ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

      Here are some of the oldest parts of the house:
      -The Great Hall
      -The Drawing Room with its 1600s Jacobean era (after Elizabethan era) fireplace and overmantle
      -The Chapel with its painted ceiling including Tudor roses
      -The Chapel Corridor
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    • Day 124

      Medieval Moated Manor

      September 2, 2018 in England ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F

      This 14th century house was owned by many people over the years: knights, courtiers to Henry VIII, sheriffs, high-society Victorians, members of Parliament, and more. So it is kind of a blog of its history, as it has been added onto and remodeled many times. The last owner was an American businessman, who donated it to the National Trust in 1985.

      The house not only has a moat, but also a courtyard.
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    Tonbridge and Malling District

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