Saturday, June 6, 2026

Sherston

In need of a break on the drive back from Avebury, we stopped at Sherston, another pretty little Cotswold village. So the guidebook said. 

Church of the Holy Cross

Interesting figures on the porch





Alas, the ceiling was falling in...





One of our shorter church visits



But we did learn this one thing...when the Protestants came
to visit a town, such as Sherston, among other mischief,
they'd cut a hole in fonts such as this, so they would never
hold Holy Water again

Moving right along, we walked the main drag



Mostly a large parking lot where, apparently, the village green used to be?



The main sight being the pub, commemorating a local
hero in the Welsh wars, 1062 or so; the pub is noted for its
turnip tossing competitions; seriously; we proceeded on...


Avebury, 2026: The Church

The Avebury parish church is nearby, and, although perhaps not in Jenkins' 1,000 Best British Parish Churches, is well worth a look.

En route
A pied...




Note variety of stones in the porch

The zig-zaggy stuff is all over megalithic monuments
from Spain and Portugal to Ireland and England...apparently
in their genes even unto the 13th century CE...

Very old font




Not one of the great churches, I guess, but certainly 
among the best documented for visitors such as we



A bit of sculpture

A bit of glass...St. James, like so many others, was
originally built in an age where churches had to be
defensible...

More excellent documentation


Moving right along, but still religion, the great megalithic gift 
shoppe at Avebury is the Henge Shop, not to be missed, especially 
for its several rooms of New Age-y hocus-pocus inventory
















































Can't visit Avebury without connecting with the Crystal Beings



Avebury, 2026: The Manor House

We never miss a National Trust house, great or not-terribly-great, and, upon entering this one, we had to ask ourselves, having visited Avebury so often in the past 46 years, how did we miss it? Turns out the house was acquired by the Trust only "fairly recently" and was not open to the public until just the last decade or so. There was also a major flood that closed it down for a couple years. It's not one of the great great houses, but it's in a special place and of interest because of that.

As with all houses of its age, it started off more modestly and got 
added onto again and again and again as the centuries passed

Approaching through the garden
























Another Laburnum tease

National Trust house decor is usually carefully chosen,
either to the appropriate site or age...not sure this art deco
sconce was quite right for Avebury...

On the other hand, I had to look up the word "sconce" 
just to be sure, so maybe I'll let the rest of the pix speak
for themselves...

The house has been here for a while...click

























We have one like this...






















So if your village or dwelling is enveloped by a ring of stones placed
there by Satan, you might be a bit superstitious and want to surround
yourself with all manner of preventative paraphernalia...

Thus

And thus

More history

More recent

Interesting place; glad we finally made it