Sunday, 11 June 2017

Atcombe Court, Woodchester




Atcombe has 12 acres of grounds around C17 house, with a later added Regency front, in Woodchester. 












 
There are amazing views over the Stroud valley with lakes, mature trees and paddocks. Terraced herbaceous borders, lawns, extensive shrubberies, cutting garden mostly annuals. The long peony border is a palette of colours, bees flit twix poppy and cornflower and there is a woodland walk through beechwood.

 









Monday, 5 June 2017

Murder, Mystery and Flowers



Great night was had by all at the murder mystery evening at Hilton Double Tree @ Cadbury House (just opposite the amazing Cadbury Garden Centre in Somerset)














The Gangsta n Mol themed murder mystery was played out, to a packed dining area, between courses by a really professional amdram group – Murder by Design -  with a well thought out plot - our table got it wrong! The policeman, who was also the writer/director was amazing.














 
The hotel also had a luxurious health spa that we could use gratis (even swam before breckie :)





Returned via Bristol Botanic Gardens, stopping off at a wonderful rustic farm for tea n cake.



The Botanic Garden is situated in Stoke Bishop, a few hundred meters from the edge of Durdham Down and a short walk from Bristol Zoo. In 1882 Bristol University College awarded their Lecturer of Botany, Adolf Leipner, a grant of £15 for the purpose of laying out a botanic garden. Leipner raised a further £89 and the garden was built on waste ground adjacent to the newly opened buildings of University College The resource provides the teaching of plant sciences within the University of Bristol and a resource for local schools.

The University of Bristol Botanic Garden was the first new University botanic garden to be created in the United Kingdom for nearly forty years and contains many exotic species set in inspirational displays against the backdrop of a striking Victorian house.












Tuesday, 30 May 2017

London Weekend





 
Diverse it was. Hot it was :)

Started with a trip to the British Library and back in time to the period of the Russian Revolution.

 




original version of Dr Zhivago















after checking in and resting up it was time to cash in the first of our gift vouchers and join the Sweeney Todd walking tour. The guide was incredibly knowledgable, really done her research. Stories of Sweeney and Mrs Lovett were the thread that ran through an evening stories that touched on Jack the Ripper, The Knights Templar/Hospitaller, Fleet Street printers and St Brides. We wandered back lanes that we hadn't been down before and in good company.


The Temple was an impressive area dating back to the 12th century that was built by the Knights Templar, at the time the richest monastic order in the world, but lost their wealth, position and ended up tortured and executed by the King of France.

They lost the Temple, due to this and how it was inherited by the Knights Hospitaller eventually ending up in the hands of the legal profession today. Temple Bar is the dividing line between the City of London and the City of Westminster where the heads of convicted criminals were displayed in the C18th but the Temple remains outside the jurisdiction of both the City of London and Westminster.
 

kinda sums up the area today 














Onward through alleyways to Fleet Street to the world of books and printing. Newspapers were printed here from 1487-1980s. Dr Johnson compiled the first English dictionary, Charles Dickens, Oliver Goldsmith, Tennyson, Mark Twain all visited or worked here. They often visited one of the oldest pubs surviving today, first built, just after the Great Fire of London -Ye Old Cheshire Cheese in an alley just off Fleet St, where we stopped off to join them in a pint and a lite bite.
 
 


























 
Whilst the story of Sweeney Todd is just that this lane leads to where the shop would have been and through the pavement grill, not easy to photograph, is a lower rear door leading to an underground passage where the remaining body parts were presumed to have been ditched :-0

 



 












 
 
A beautiful sunset highlighted St Pauls and St Brides (the bakers that used to be situated across from St Brides used its tower as a template for the first ever tiered wedding cake :) 

 










 

 
After a nights R&R it was on the train to Watford Junction and the connection to Warner Bros Studion for the Harry Potter Experience - the second of our gift vouchers (thanx Marion :)




What was unique about this exhibition it was not a theme park but a celebration of the art and artistry of everyone involved in film making - scene makers, model makers, animators, wardrobe, wigs, special effects, camera/sound and so much more. The time just flew by (you can spend as much of it as you like there ;)











our favourite - the Knight Bus
you can animate Dobbie and fly on a Nimbus















The white card and dimensional modelling was such perfection.

 




and costumes and props -
 


Too soon it was time to return home just in time to catch the Tall Ships festival in Gloucester Docks - and the traditional Bank Holiday Monday downpour!