Monday, November 16, 2009

Wells Cathedral

Working our way back east, we stopped in Wells, did a
marvelous cathedral tour, walked the town, then headed on
toward Avebury, detouring by Bath in search of an internet
signal. We stopped at a quite decent lay-by about 4 miles
from Avebury. To us, Wells was far more interesting on
the inside than the outside, and I'll have to add another
post to do it justice. If a cathedral can be fun, Wells is a
fun cathedral.












Wells Cathedral is best known for its west
facade, marvelous and pretty much intact
sculpture. Oh yes, there's a bishop's
palace, the old city itself, smallest cathedral
city in England, is beautiful











Interior, looking up at the crossing ceiling, 10 or more
stories above, and organ; I'll have more on the crossing
in the next post...another extraordinary 14th century
cathedral repair job










Apse ceiling










West window










Choir, beautiful textile work, wonderful
misericords









Friday, November 13, 2009

Glastonbury

We spent the night in an enlightened carpark in Tintagel. It actually specified self-contained motorhomes such as us as OK overnight, for a mere 3 pounds. If only there were more.

From Tintagel we drove on the short distance to Glastonbury, a place we have visited many times before. We got diverted into the Clark's (shoes) Village and the outlet stores there, but finally got back on task to take in the celebrated and cheerful weirdness that is Glastonbury. See illustrations.

We finished up too late to find a proper campsite, and wound up in a farm campground near Wells. I misjudged the sogginess of the turf, and promptly got the Grey Wanderer stuck in the camping area. Really stuck. It's mud season here, but then I think probably every season here involves a lot of mud. The farmer happily pulled us out with his tractor--Vicki freaking out, despite his reassurances--noting this was not the first time, and we spent the evening in his (paved, sort of) driveway. 10 lbs; I guess includes the tractor pull. Nice people but not a nice circumstance. I vowed to avoid unpaved areas, especially in England.


Clark's Village, a nice outlet mall, though the
Clark's outlet itself was disappointing








We'd already done the Tor

And the Abbey, more than once, more than
twice, actually











So we concentrated on the high weirdness of High Street; it
reminds me of Haight Ashbury; but then Vicki reminds me
that the weirdness has been going on here for aeons







Steering a middle course between the Ying and the Yang









And hemp (in Avalon)







I swear the Psychic Piglet has been there for 30 years








Not to give an entirely one-sided picture of Glastonbury,
the beautiful George and Pilgrims hotel has been there since
1452; crenellated, too

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Marine Spelunking at Tintagel

There are some huge and fantastic sea caves on the Cornish
coast and particularly at Tintagel
For reasons still unclear to me--except that my life insurance
policy was renewed and paid up recently--Vicki wanted me
to climb down to the "beach" and snap a few pix of the giant
caves

So here I am on the beach, huge waves coming ever nearer;
I happen to know, having read Victor Hugo's Toilers of the
Sea many years ago (I am forever watching out for giant
clams), that the tide can come in very quickly in these parts
(i.e., Brittany, English coast)









Snapping pix, minding my own business, and then I notice
sea foam is blowing back out of the cave opening; lots of it









So I beat a hasty retreat; here is the beach 30 minutes later!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Tintagel


Tom took us the back roads to Tintagel














13th century castle ruins; Earl Richard, Henry III's brother,
who built the castle, had a fine sense of location and view,
but little of defense. Most people regard it as a vanity castle,
an attempt to associate with the Arthur legends. Of course,
there is no real connection between this castle or location
with Arthur. There's nothing much substantive about
Arthur at all, but we won't let that get in the way of a good
story.









Coast looking east














West

Summit, end, of the island

More castle ruins

More violent coast

Vicki at Tintagel


St. Ives

Beach road at St. Ives







Tide's out; it's a beautiful beach but a wild surf








Very wild; actually, we didn't think all that much of the
town, but the Cornish coast is wonderful

Oops! Eden Sculpture

I should have followed the Eden post with this, on the variety
of sculpture at Eden Project, one of its major and most
impressive features; above, Woman, in the Cornwall biome







Giant bee, pollinator, on the terraces









Bacchinalia, the Mediterranean biome










Depiction of all the electronic waste each
person creates












The Seed--a 70 ton Cornish granite monolith,
in the Core












World's largest refrigerator magnet board











Us

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Archeology 101

Half a mile down the road, once you found the marker on
the unnamed road









Intrepid megalith-hunter, hot on the trail...











Of course, most of the megaliths are now in fences, barns,
houses, etc.

Or scratching posts

Tin Age structure

At last! The very famous and very enigmatic Men-am-Tol,
or "101" site







Me, pondering whether to engage in one of the silly rituals
associated with this site








Of course, I did; but Vicki declined being passed through,
naked, nine times, etc.; at least on camera








This is someone else's photo off the web; I really don't think
there's much of an enigma here; sort of a group site, so to
speak...

Lanyon Quoit

Cornwall has scores of megalithic sites; we visited just a major few. Many have been destroyed or re-cycled into fences, fence-posts, houses, barns, scratching posts, etc. Lanyon Quoit is the largest of Cornwall's dolmens, but it is really out there, on an unnamed road between two hamlets, in or very near Bodmin Moor. We finished up so late we wound up "camping" at the intersection (the wide part of a "Y") of two unnamed roads. Fortunately, there is not much traffic in these places, and the morning view of St. Michael's was great.
Lanyon Quoit (dolmen's are called "quoits" here); tall
enough (for me) to walk under
Another view; originally buried, of course







The National Trust is everywhere; but where was the gift
shop and the membership station? and the cafe and the 
garden store? and who gifted Lanyon Quoit to the Trust?
and where's the folly?




























Land's End

We were not the only people there; there were perhaps a dozen others. Land's End is much larger than John O' Groats, but much more cheesy-touristy. Fortunately, almost all the attractions and shops were closed for the season. Unfortunately, and much to our surprise and disappointment, there was no Land's End outlet store. Perhaps we can finally catch the London Fog outlet in London.
Cliffs at Land's End

A rough, wild, but beautiful coastline

The usual sign; took me a long time to figure out what
D ARTFORD was...someplace in France?







Longships lighthouse, a mile and a half out from the
mainland, as a squall approaches