Friday 19 February 2016

London baby!

It's half term so teenager and I have escaped the Island and gone to visit family in London. I woke up this morning to glorious February sunshine so went for a brisk walk round the block admiring the architecture. Later on, when the groceries had been delivered, big sister and I went for a stomp around Ruskin Park; this is a lovely green space near Denmark Hill station, with trees, a bandstand, a community vegetable garden, playground, tennis courts, and paddling pool (now empty due to funding cuts). The park was ablaze with crocuses, daffodils, early flowering cherries and a huge magnolia about to burst into bloom. From the park we followed the road round heading vaguely towards Champion Hill, then picked up a cycle path that led towards Dulwich. This led towards another park, and one could have believed you were in the countryside rather than a city. We didn't go as far as Dulwich, instead turning left by the football club and going to Sainsbury's. Here I gloried in the range of World Foods available, and was over enthusiastic at the till! We headed back up the hill to home then.

In the evening my sister and I headed for ITV studios to watch the making of episode 6 of the BBC comedy series 'Upstart Crow'; this was written by Ben Elton, and was about the life of William Shakespeare before he was famous. It starred David Mitchell as Shakespeare, Liza Trabuco as his wife, and Harry Enfield as his father. There were many other well-known faces, whose names escape me, and it was a very good production. We both laughed our way through all the scenes. This was a fascinating look at how TV dramas are produced, with three sets on stage, cameras, lights, microphones and behind the scenes people everywhere. The costumes were magnificent and the actors were very professional. It was interesting that a half hour show took at least three hours to film. Seeing Ben Elton and Harry Enfield in the flesh made us feel rather old, as they were high on the comedy scene when we were growing up thirty years ago, and they were in their twenties or early thirties. However, they were still just as funny luckily. I shall look forward to watching the finished series.

Day 2 and we got a little touristy. We all hopped on the 176 bus and rode to Cambridge Circus. From here we headed to Forbidden Planet to absorb all things comic book and geeky (not my kind of thing really but the teenagers enjoyed it). We then went to a branch of Pret a Manger and had lunch. We were hoping for an independent café, but couldn't find a cheap one and we were all hungry. However, Pret has good credentials. I had a delicious vegetable, falafel and feta wrap and a strong coffee. After lunch we went to Foyles, and gave ourselves a time limit otherwise we would have spent the whole day there and spent all the rent money! This was my first visit to the main branch and I was most impressed. It is a good job we don't live nearby! After this, my nephew abandoned us and us girls headed for Choccywoccydoodah (impressive), Liberty (impressive and expensive), and then John Lewis, where we got carried away in the kitchen department. We also stopped for tea and a snack here. Nice. We caught the number 12 bus home, driving along Regent Street, through Piccadilly Circus and saw a nice view of Buckingham Palace along the Mall, along Whitehall, passing the cenotaph and Downing Street, past Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament, then over the bridge and, eventually, home. Pleasant day.

Day 3 involved a lazy morning then a trip to Bromley for me and the teenager to check out charity shops and the market. Pleasant afternoon out, and we returned home for a vegan curry feast (yummy!) and extremely chocolaty birthday cake. Nom nom nom! On day 4 we returned to the Island by a slightly roundabout route as there were problems with trains at Woking. A lovely few days away.


Flowers in Ruskin Park



a
Plane Tree,  Denmark Hill
William Booth College, Denmark Hill

Sunday 14 February 2016

Carisbrooke and Froglands

A solo squelch today, as the teenager was at the pictures. I parked at Carisbrooke Castle, and headed off down the lane at the corner of the car park. This headed steeply downhill until it met Miller's Lane and Clatterford Shute. Here I turned left and followed the road round, through a ford (pedestrian walkway provided) and up to the junction with Frogland's Farm.
The footpath began here and led past the farm, before quickly turning between hedges. At this point I met a couple of horses and their riders coming the other way; the horses were covered in mud up to their bellies, and I should have taken heed. Ah well. The path was extremely wet and muddy, and after a while became impassable as it was flooded from sheer bank to sheer bank. Luckily, I could scramble up the bank to the field above and found a slightly less squelch route along, dropping back to the official footpath at the earliest opportunity. After a while the path turned sharply right and began to descend. The mud decreased for a little while, and bedrock was seen.
This footpath met with another which followed the route of Lukely Brook. I had the choice of continuing on to the main road, or following the brook. I chose the latter. Obviously. Because walking next to a brook when the higher ground is sodden seemed like the wise and sensible thing to do. Well, I continued, hopping from tufts of sedge to slightly more solid ground where possible, and sinking to over my ankles in mud where it wasn't. There was the occasional piece of pallet to provide a solid path, but on the whole it was squelch and be damned. However, the brook was pretty in the February sunshine, making pleasing noises, and the green growth of approaching spring was becoming apparent. I saw a buzzard circling above, and a rabbit running for cover!
The path led onwards to Clatterford Shute, where I hopped onto solid ground and was able to rinse some of the mud off in another ford. I turned right and headed back to the path that led back to the Castle, then went for a slither around the moat, churned to mud by countless dog walkers.  This was a lovely walk, and one that I will repeat, but probably not until high summer after a long drought.
Distance: 2.6 miles
Footpaths: N88, N101, N104
Ford number 1

Muddy footpath


Boots before rinsing

Lukely Brook 

Entrance to Carisbrooke Castle

Sunday 7 February 2016

Wootton Circular Walk

Yet another windy February Day on the lovely Isle of Wight, so we headed for Wootton with two teenagers. As my friend had new boots we decided to do a short walk to break them in. The Ramblers had written a route of three miles so we decided to follow that.

We parked the car in Brannon Way, and headed off up the road via Mary Rose Avenue until we got to Station Road. Here we turned left, and then left again into Packsfield Lane, following it as far as the railway track for Isle of Wight Steam Railway. We crossed over and followed the pathways through extremely muddy fields full of sheep, and some damp but less muddy woodland; as we entered the field we watched a farmer rounding up his sheep with an apparently incompetent sheep dog in the neighbouring field, who were being watched in turn by a flock of geese. After a while we came to another railway crossing. On the other side of the crossing was a solid path leading through woodland and past fields, covered in leaf mould and little rivulets of water all the way back to Wootton Bridge. We stopped on the way to inspect an ice house that belonged to the Fernhill Estate, the house of which burned down in the 1930s. We also paused to watch three buzzards circling overhead in the strong updrafts that were preceding the coming storm.

This was a lovely walk, with signs of spring approaching - daffodils and catkins mostly, and some lovely winter-flowering cherry blossom. On the final stretch was woodland and a wildlife reserve that need further exploring on a less stormy day. On the way back we stopped for another cup of tea at Briddlesford Farm's Bluebell's Café. Cos we could. Oh yes, we DID NOT GET LOST. Not even once. Whoop whoop!

Route: http://gb.mapometer.com/walking/route_4243651.html
Distance: 3 miles

Isle of Wight Steam Railway

Isle of Wight Steam Railway

Ice House Information

Mud glorious mud!