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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: days out, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Hay-on-Wye - Book Heaven!

It’s always a delight to visit the Hay-on-Wye book town. Its position on the border between England and Wales makes it the perfect place to set out on an exploration of the beautiful border country

A mug of tea and a quick study of the map is always first on the agenda. I know where the shops are, but it doesn't hurt to be prepared!

The main attraction for me is, of course, the numerous bookshops. We were only in the town for half a day, but I've been before so made straight for my favourites, one of which is Backfold Books & Bygones, an interesting mix of general & children's books, plus postcards & ephemera. 

Backfold Books & Bygones (Oxford Road)

Someone at The Addyman Annexe (27 Castle Street) has a fine sense of humour!
Kindles are banned from The Kingdom of Hay – Amen!

I noticed the ‘No Parking Sign’ on the side of the building when I took the previous ‘photo but what I didn't notice until later was the message chalked above it.
Buy a Book - At any time.  

If you like your bookshops big, be sure to visit The Hay Cinema Bookshop 
From the Guardian Independent Bookshop Directory... A cathedral of books, an enormous building, stuffed to the rafters with second-hand books on old library shelving.  

I could happily spend a week browsing the shelves but my husband doesn't enjoy book shopping, so I made a beeline for the children's section and avoid the rest. 
A tiny corner of the Hay Cinema Bookshop. 


We picked a perfect July day for our visit.

If books are not your thing, you will find plenty of other distractions.

Quirky vintage shops, 




delightful flowers


and charming streets to explore. 



I didn't get much time in this interesting shop and am kicking myself because I can’t remember the name. I do remember the owner saying it was named after one of his dogs. Looking at the map, I think it might be Belle Books on Broad Street?


From Hay-On-Wye it was on to Stella Books at Tintern in the beautiful Wye Valley.

With around 30,000 out-of-print books this is one shop you can’t afford to miss. 

The river with Stella Books in the distance.


After a good sleep and a delicious breakfast at this fantastic b&b, we were ready for more adventures.

We weren't intending to visit Hay this year hence the shortness of our trip. We were en route to Buckinghamshire, but it was raining there so we went to Hay first. If you are thinking of going, you really need to allow more time to visit all the shops. A week should just about do it!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Just before I close I want to share this beautiful gift received in the post last week.

Thank you very, very much Nicole I was so excited when the postman called, and I love every single thing.

For those of you who haven’t met Nicole, she is a very talented author and illustrator living and working in Holland; See more here 

Nicole and I have not met, but we have corresponded over a number of years, and I count myself very lucky to have her as a friend.
  

I am also grateful for all my blogging friends, thank you for visiting.

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2. Just A Perfect Day

Please listen to the music – it goes with the pictures.

A perfect day in June - 

a walk in the park, 






books, 



and lunch in a country pub 

with
Terry and I spent our perfect day at the beautiful Stourhead Estate in Wiltshire. We enjoyed a delicious lunch at the Spread Eagle Inn and a perusal of the books on offer at the Memorial Hall. The Spread Eagle Inn and Memorial Hall are both situated on the estate which also features a Palladian mansion and world-famous landscape lake & garden.

Our wedding day 44 years ago today - how young we look!


So that was our perfect day – how would you spend yours?

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3. A visit to the Sherborne Castle Country Fair on Bank Holiday Monday

This really is a spectacular event in a truly lovely spot. The fair celebrates all things rural, with dog shows, rare breads, vintage vehicles, and lots of demonstrations from highly skilled crafts people. As if that was not enough we were also able to enjoy dragon boat racing on the lake, a circus and all kinds of displays in the main ring. Other favourites included the varied stalls and a silent auction.

Sherborne Castle home page

I loved watching the Terrier racing.  Half the time the dogs were chasing each other rather than the lure (a piece of cloth), but the spectators loved it.

I adored everything on the Dogs & Roses stall. Tracy, the stallholder was incredibly friendly and happy for me to photographer her designs. She has a soft spot for dogs, so much so they have become the inspiration for her interior design business, and most recently her fundraising for a variety of dog charities.
Read more here

Aquilegia, Lupins and Foxgloves

These ladies were cooking up a storm!

Such a beautiful creature

Dragon boat racing on the lake

Plant stalls with the perfect backdrop

I loved this mix of vintage things

Eliza James Flowers 

View of the castle and lawns with ‘willow deer’ in the foreground

The Silent Auction 

This looked like so much fun!

Mother and her camera shy baby

I almost got Terry one of these signs, but I wasn't sure he would appreciate it!

No day out is complete without buying at least one book! This is Steve Burnside the author of Fergus and Friends signing books for our two little granddaughters.

Furgus the tractor books waiting to be packed and sent to Australiatogether with two dolls also bought at the fair. Each Rebecca Stidson rag doll is personalised with a hand-painted name. Rebecca has lots of ready painted names and was able to supply one for Zoe, but the one for Lilly is coming in the post.  I chose the doll and just have to wait a few days for the name to arrive.

Zoe in her ballet outfit (now you can see why I chose that particular doll)

Lilly was two last week, here she is pouring tea on the morning of her birthday.

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4. A visit to Lacock: Walking in the footsteps of Elizabeth Bennett and Harry Potter!

Lacock in Wiltshire owned almost in its entirety by the National Trust is a village full of picturesque streets and historic cottages. It is also home to the beautiful Lacock Abbey and the Fox Talbot photography museum.


Essentially unchanged for centuries and with the absence of TV aerials and satellite dishes, the village has become a favourite location for film makers.  A few lorry loads of soil over the tarmac, and a farm animal or two is all that’s required to transform the scene.

Lacock during the filming of Cranford via

The Sign of the AngelHotel was used as Cranford’s pub and the Red Lion Inn became the village shop. Other Classic dramas filmed here include Pride and Prejudice and Emma.


In the 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, Lacock was used to portray the village of Meryton while the Abbey was chosen for some of the Pemberley interior scenes.  

This is how Jane Austen describes Meryton at the beginning of Pride and Prejudice;  

The village of Longbourn was only one mile from Meryton; a most convenient distance for the young ladies, who were usually tempted thither three or four times a week, to pay their duty to their aunt and to a milliner's shop just over the way. The two youngest of the family, Catherine and Lydia, were particularly frequent in these attentions; their minds were more vacant than their sisters, and when nothing better offered, a walk to Meryton was necessary to amuse their morning hours and furnish conversation for the evening; and however, bare of news the country in general might be, they always contrived to learn some from their aunt. At present, indeed, they were well supplied both with news and happiness by the recent arrival of a militia regiment in the neighbourhood; it was to remain the whole winter, and Meryton was the headquarters.


Lacock has been used in several other productions, including Moll Flanders, Tom Brown's Schooldays, The Lady in Black, Randall & Hopkirk, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, The Other Boleyn Girl, The Wolf Man and Lark Rise to Candleford.


Several locations around the village were also used in the Harry Potter films. The Abbey cloisters were the setting for the Mirror of Erised, and for the scene where Harry frees the house elf Dobby. Rooms off the cloisters became classrooms, particularly for Professor Snape’s potions lessons. Some of the outdoor scenes in the half-blood prince were also filmed in the village.


We couldn't have picked a nicer day to visit. According to the Met Office September the 5th was one of the warmest September days for seven years. A few wispy clouds were the only things to disturb the beautiful blue sky. My lasting memories will be of friendly people, period buildings and masses of flowers. 


We spoilt ourselves with lunch in a pub and afternoon tea in the gardens of King John's Hunting Lodge. The scones, clotted cream (the cream specially produced for the tea room from a Jersey herd near Frome) and quince jelly were a delight! King John’s Hunting Lodge is the oldest house in the village, with the main part dating back to the 13th century. Further details here


If you are thinking of visiting Lacock now is a good time. The National Trust is hosting ‘Regency at Lacock’ a celebration of Jane Austen's much-loved novel Pride and Prejudice in the year of its 200th anniversary.  Further information here 


Yet more beautiful flowers this time in the Abbey court yard. This is where you will find a second-hand book shop, with a range of lovely things to buy. Any trip to a National Trust property is enhanced by the added attraction of a book shop!


Church Streetwith the ‘Sign of the Angel’ Inn at the far end. An exceptionally fine late 15th century house, said to have been built in 1480. Alterations in the 16th and 17th centuries saw the Angel converted to a wool merchant’s house. Today the Angel has returned to its origins as an inn. The name, ‘the sign of the Angel’ is thought to derive from the gold ‘Angel’ coin that was current at the time. 


Flower and hornet (I think!)  in the Abbey gardens.



Getting a decent shot of this pretty house wasn't easy. It’s situated on a very narrow street but thankfully, parking is for residents only so I didn't have to contend with lots of cars.


I hope this makes you smile.  It looks as though it's been ripped down and put back up a good many times, so perhaps not everyone in Lacock appreciates the funny side! I sympathise with the grandparents, but it still makes me chuckle. Everything in the village looks perfect on the outside but maybe there is more going on than meets the eye!

Thanks for calling in and taking the time to read my post.  

Our 25% off everything sale is still on at March House Books.

42 Comments on A visit to Lacock: Walking in the footsteps of Elizabeth Bennett and Harry Potter!, last added: 9/12/2013
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5. Dunster Castle and Cobbles Bookshop

Could there be a more perfect view? With a bookshop in the foreground and a castle in the air!

The bookshop is situated in the heart of the village in the courtyard of Tessa’s Tearooms.

A good selection of books on Somerset and Exmoor, railways, military, history, art and literature. Not quite so hot on children’s books so sadly nothing for me on this visit, but I'm sure I will be back. 

A castle has existed at Dunster since at least Norman times. It became a lavish country home for the Luttrell family during the 19th Century. Further information at the National Trust Website here

I loved the furniture and light fittings in this beautiful room. 

A cosy corner in the library.

So many beautiful rooms to explore but the gardens were calling us; 

When I took this, I didn't notice the colours in the top right-hand corner. Terry insists it’s a sun spot on the lens, but I prefer to believe it’s my guardian angel leading me forward.

As if to prove spring has really arrived a clump of perfect bluebells.

Detail from a headstone in the pet cemetery. 

One of several Magnolia trees flowering in the castle gardens. 


We picked a perfect April day for our visit to Dunster. Situated on the north edge of Exmoorand close to the sea, Dunster is a small slice of heaven. Pretty cottages, teashops, a second-hand bookshop and a castle make for a thoroughly enjoyable day. Lots more information on the Dunster Village Website here

35 Comments on Dunster Castle and Cobbles Bookshop, last added: 5/17/2013
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