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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Ferns unfurling and a slug


This posting may be bit dull for some of you dear friends, but I have been fascinated by the ferns in this very green part of the world.  Lots of variety, and they're emerging, unfurling while we're here.  The ferns each open uniquely, and the fractal elements of nature are often apparent. Occasionally a fern appears to be opening erratically.  These unfurling fronds are at about 3-4 feet above the ground, and around 6 inches wide, typically.

I haven't seen fiddleheads on menus here, nor have I seen them for sale, so I'm not sure they eat them in these parts.

These were all the same variety of fern, by far the most common:










And some other varieties of ferns:
This one's lower branches unfurled in perfect spirals.


And this one seemed relatively disorganized and prickly.  

This was so straightforwardly doing its upward job.


These were fuzzy and saxophone-y.  

Looked sort of  like a cobra. 
and a seahorse.


















And we saw several of these slugs - lovely markings on the back half -- about 4 inches long.
They looked like sheep poop when  not elongated -- clever camouflage in this region.


Sunday, June 16, 2013

A day in the British countryside

Tarnhows view, Hawkshead, Cumbria.
We're in the midst of the serendipitous section of our travels, with loose plans and usually no overnight reservations.  It's quite different from our planning and booking ahead norm that has us in a place for a few days to a week to get to know an area and to live a normal sort of life.  This serendipitous part isn't that. This was our day three days ago:



Arise to a full-on English breakfast in the B&B (pictured, left, in Hawkshead, Cumbria) with, as desired:  cereal, fruit, yogurt, juice, eggs, bacon (we'd call it ham), sausage (again, different), potatoes, tomatoes, mushrooms, toast (brown or white), coffee, tea.  Followed by "Can I get you anything else, love?"  Only tourists eat like this, we've been assured.

We waddle back to our room, check email, pack our little suitcases (the big ones live in the car boot) and hit the road.  The driving's become pretty easy, even on the tiny, winding roads, which is the norm around here.  But we average only about 25 miles in an hour, and they're a little fraught for the navigator.

Cumbria is also known as the Lake District, and it's sibling towns (they all have them!) are in the Alps and Italy's lake district -- because that's kind of how it looks here.  It used to be that steam ships operated as pleasure boats in the area in the 1800s, and there's one remaining that's recently been restored.  Modeled after a gondola, it's weird, and steams around the fairly large flat lake.  


Its fancy masthead.
School kids in the lake learning to kayak.  

Inside, pretty fancy.
When we got off the boat, we found mallard ducklings, about a dozen in all,
napping in two little fuzzy piles, with 2 moms nearby.   I'd never seen this before.





We realized that we'd picked up a passenger snail on our car during the night.  We later delivered it to a damp tree trunk.
 We'd had trouble finding local information on Grizedale Forest and its environmental sculpture (a LP recommendation), but we eventually found it.  Once there we decided not to rent bikes for it (great decision) and not to get a map of the sculpture park, not a great decision.   We took off thinking the trails were well-marked.  Our first sculpture was one of my favorites -- a monkey puzzle tree, with faces on its trunk (okay, not actually a sculpture, but a gorgeous work of nature).





Environmental sculptures are often tricky to spot, because the artists enjoy the hide and the surrounds so much.  But it's especially tricky in a real forest.  I have no idea how many we missed, but we found this one on the left -- a big piece of a tree with coin like objects nailed into it in lines.  Unsettling, odd.  And we couldn't help but notice the wind up possibilities with the trees below.  They wound, but nothing else.

A concrete sculpture, playing on the idea of the many stiles that allow folks
to cross fences along the public footpaths (more later). 

This giant fern was hiding behind a copse of trees.

We ended up hiking for several hours and getting pretty lost.  We finally found our way back, pretty tired.  We didn't find the Andy Goldsworthy that was supposed to be there, although we found another in a different sculpture park the next day.  

On the way out of the forest, we saw this field of sheep and odd little brush plants.
We still had time before sunset (the sky lightens here at about 3:30A, darkens at about 10:15P), and drove to within about a mile of a lake view we'd heard about and followed a public footpath to it. Public footpaths crisscross/net the country.  They've been around for centuries, and rights of way for the public remain through people's lands, often with grazing sheep, cows, often through backyards, farms, active fields.  Just an accepted way of life, and they're well used by locals, tourists, long-distance hikers.  They are great fun, and it's pretty awesome to be allowed to walk almost anywhere, with permission.  A very civilized, friendly system.

A public footpath "finger post" pointing the way to different public paths.  
The views from Tarnhows were spectacular.  
Steve's the speck on the fell (hill), viewing the lake below and all around.


View down into a section of the lake.  
One of many sheep in the field of the tarnhows.  This one was losing its winter coat naturally.   We hear from farmers that the wool is not of value these days; it costs more to shear them than the wool is worth.  Still, it has to come off, and some do it on their own, as they would in the wild. 
We found a B&B for the night, went to a pub, literally across the street from the B&B, and had supper, then "home" for the night.
Steve's tired.  
These are the standard sauces at a table in a pub.  Lots of lamb here, hence the mint sauce.
Malt vinegar (for fish and chips)  is in its own little bottle.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Piety, chimney pots and a boot sale

An historic home in Worcestershire displayed the children's game Snakes and Ladders.  At first glance  it seemed a reptilian precursor to the fun/frustrating game of chutes and ladders.  But this Victorian board was much more -- a morality game, with clear directives as to the sort of behavior that leads to Heaven or Hell.  Among the Hell routes:  depravity, avarice, covetousness, unpunctuality, quarrelsomeness, vanity, "going to the theatre every evening" (what?), and many more.  Routes to heaven:  forgiveness, pity, faith, virtuousness, kindness, piety, self-denial.  It's a game of roll-the-dice chance, with waay more ways to go to Hell than Heaven.  Hmm.  




There've been great chimney pots all over the UK.  

There's apparently not much rhyme or reason, no structure to their variation.  Most of the homes -- semi-attached and attached -- are individually owned, and when a new chimney pot is needed the chimney owner or workman makes the decision.  And the pots can last for decades, centuries.







We went to an outdoor antique/flea market/boot sale while in the shire of Worcester, with thousands of others.  Biggest flea market I've ever seen.  And this one had lots of stuffed and mounted animals.  There were lots of deer heads, badgers, foxes, squirrels, pheasants -- mostly gentle creatures from the Redwall books.  And the military offerings (WWI and II) was plentiful, too.  The stuff in Britain's attics seems quite exotic to a midwesterner.


Stuffed caimans in a retrofitted caiman holder.