Dancing on the point of a pin

Blog EntryWhat we did on our holidays, part 2Nov 23, '06 3:20 PM
for everyone

As previously revealed, we took our usual jaunt to Cornwall, via the Tamar Bridge. Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge, looking like the Loch Ness Monster, can be seen to the left. It was built in 1859 to carry the Great Western Railway, and was Brunel's last project. The road bridge was added in 1961 and originally led into Saltash, but now it goes through a tunnel under the town.

 

 

 


We managed to catch up with most of our friends on the first evening; we had a pretty good idea where they would be (the Red Lion or the Blue Anchor, not necessarily in that order), then on Monday we went to Trengwainton, a National Trust garden.

In common with many estates of the period, it has a ha-ha (or a-ha). This is basically a trench between the manicured lawn and the pasture so that grazing animals can't get onto the lawn but there's no fence to break the vista. It can just be seen about a third of the way up this shot.

A stream runs down the garden, via a pool and several little cascades. There's not much colour left at this time of year; mainly hydrangeas fading to strange shades of blue, violet, white and green.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

St Ives offered plenty of opportunities for arty-type photography; as arty as I get, anyway.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We always call at Trevarno Garden at least once, to stock up on honey (from their own hives) and soap (hand-made on site, from mainly home-grown ingredients). They keep peafowl and have recently added some ornamental pheasant (the 'strange birds' that Henry saw at Kew).

 

Lanhydrock was the destination on Tuesday (National Trust again). The gatehouse is 17th century

but the main house was largely rebuilt after a fire in 1881.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After a pub lunch, we called at the Eden Project, which is not to be missed. I have many more photographs taken inside the biomes, which I may post separately.

 

 

On Wednesday we drove down to Lizard Town and walked to the Point, the most southerly part of the British mainland. Great views, and some arty-farty photo-opportunities again.

 

Thursday we basically lazed around; lunch at our friend Annette's pub, including one of Zia's pasties.

Friday we went to Trelissick which has great views (courtesy of another ha-ha) over the River Fal.

 

Saturday was a shopping day; I bought another guitar (bad Ian!) and a cello for my wife's Christmas present (not a surprise), then we headed back home on Sunday.

 


dentworth wrote on Nov 23, '06
Very nice shots. love the birds.
zentom wrote on Nov 24, '06
Looking forward to more on the Eden project - I'd really like to spend some time down there at what sounds like a really interesting place.
dentworth wrote on Nov 24, '06
Ian, doll, if you publish these photos in the photo page we can comment on them each, separately.
About the Eden project, giant bubble wrap? I just want to pop it.
petersealy wrote on Nov 24, '06, edited on Nov 24, '06
Pretty boids!

I always wanted to go to St. Ives, but haven't made it there yet.
charlk wrote on Nov 24, '06
That is such beautiful countyside and architecture. I also like your, "artsy," photos and the Monet-esque photo.
zentom wrote on Nov 24, '06
I remember seeing a ha-ha somewhere in Enniskillen, my friend Mike explained that the English Lord of the manor would use it to keep out the local peasantry (who would toil in his fields) and along which he could walk, pointing at them and going "ha-ha!" and all without obscuring the view from his estate.
ianbennett wrote on Nov 24, '06, edited on Nov 24, '06
Debbie - we followed that particular bird (the pheasant) for twenty minutes; he looked as though he was organising a jail-break (there were a lot of other birds in quarantine cages, and he was marching from one to another, clambering through the electric fences and checking out the other birds). The photo page doesn't allow continuous narrative, but the journal doesn't allow individual comment (plus I can't figure out how Multiply arranges text flow); next time, I'm all over the photo page.

Tom - Eden is really spectacular, especially the first time you see it; it's just so big! Then when you get into the biomes, particularly the humid one, it's an amazing experience. I hadn't heard that about the ha-ha; I just assumed it was the "Oh, that's how it's done" aspect of it.

Peter - St Ives is worth seeing if only for the light; I thought it was BS when the artists enthused about the light there, but it's true.

Charl - it is a bit like Argenteuil (only much damper - this was England in October). And of course the bridge is a copy of Argenteuil.
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