We have always maintained that the best time to visit
England is late summer/early autumn when the weather is at its best, the kids
are back at school and the trees are beginning to change colour. Quieter (for England!) roads,
warmish and mostly dry days and the gardens are still lovely. Mind you, traffic
is never far away, even when driving down narrow country roads bordered by high
hedges.
We have traveled all over the UK this trip and never cease to be delighted by the beautiful cottages and villages and green and leafy vistas we have seen on the way. The place names are so descriptive like Upper and Lower Slaughter near Bourton on the Water, the Puddles - Allpuddle, Tolpuddle (of Martyr fame) and more.
While in Devon, we made the trip to Cornwall to see the Eden Project, where a disused quarry has been brilliantly coaxed
back into life as an educational and participatory experiment with plants from
throughout the tropics and the Mediterranean growing in huge biomes with the
rest of the space planted out in vegetables, British trees and shrubs. We
did find a few Kangaroo Paws and
Everlastings which were tucked into the South African display – they
obviously haven’t
heard about the thousands of amazing wildflowers we have in Western Australia!
We joined the Australian National Trust
before we left which gives you free entry into National Trust and English Heritage properties in the UK too. Great value as the cost is more than
recouped by just a couple of free visits to NT UK properties on your travels
and you can get involved in the NT when you get back too!
Over a couple of weeks of travelling through the south of
England on our way to visit friends and relations, we visited a varied
assortment of properties filled with all manner of furniture, collected knick
knacks and paintings and some marvellous formal & informal gardens including
Arlington Court in Devon ;
Westbury Court Garden and Tyntesfield in North Somerset;
Snowshill near Gloucester; Wimpole near Cambridge, with the final visit yesterday to Winston Churchill’s home at Chartwell.
Yet another highlight
– a family trip to Iceland!
Rugged up for an Iceland autumn! |
In order to sample this wonderful scenery you need to travel
long distances. You can take bus tours
but we chose to hire a jeep which would fit the six of us. The roads are pretty
good and weren’t busy.
Solheimajokull glacier, part of http://www.icelandontheweb.com/articles-on-iceland/nature/glaciers/myrdalsjokull/ |
Pingvellir rift in the fissure zone |
With a geologist
amongst us, we learned about the different sorts of lava which cover the
landscape – the main landscape colours being green and black – black lava/rock
and sand. At Pingvellir we saw the rift in the fissure
zone which runs through Iceland, being situated on the tectonic plate
boundaries of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Then
on the south coast, the bridge between the Eurasian and North American plates on
Reykjanes Island. All this and shots of steam from hot pools
and geysers everywhere. Iceland is self-sufficient
in renewable energy with geothermal power stations dotted around the
landscape.
With one final visit to the New Forest, our stay in the UK
is over for another few years and we are now on the boat steaming past wind
turbines in the channel on a flat and misty sea towards the Hook of Holland! Just one thought to leave you with from Sculptures by the Lake
No comments:
Post a Comment
Look forward to your comments