...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Wakehurst Place
After Bateman's we set course for Wakehurst Place, another home and garden--mostly garden--and wound up spending the night in the caravan section of the cattle and sheep division of the South of England Show. Sort of a state fair. Really big. It's a long story. Anyhow, next morning we visited Wakehurst Place, which is the "country" site of Kew Gardens, the Royal Botanic Gardens. I think I'll let the pix narrate themselves. It is a gorgeous place, and on a Sunday morning, there were few people with whom to share it.
Mill At Bateman's
Kipling harnessed the river Dudwell for use generating electricity, but the 17th century mill on the property has been restored now to its original use. It was in full operation when we visited on a beautiful Saturday afternoon. I have never seen a working mill and enjoyed this one so much I even did a brief video for Penelope.
It's quite simple, really; water stored in the pond is diverted to turn the really big wheel |
Which, through a succession of wheels and gears (all of them of wood)(and not very simple, really) turns the millstones |
The unground grain goes in here |
And, of course, there were blooming rhodos all over the place, this on the path from the mill back to the house |
Bateman's
Deep in the Sussex Weald lies Bateman's, a 1634 Jacobean house whose chief claim to fame was its ownership by Rudyard Kipling from 1902 to 1936, when he died. The house stayed in the family for some more years. Kipling and his wife made many improvements to the house and grounds, of course, but its chief interest lies simply in its association with him.
Bateman's; beautiful sandstone |
Looking from the pond--which Kipling created using some of his Nobel Prize money--to the side of the house |
Obligatory wisteria |
Drawing room |
Lots of India stuff, as one might expect |
Thus (done by K's father) |
And thus |
Painting of Kipling in the stairway to the 2nd floor |
His study; the desk left pretty much as he outfitted it; crumpled drafts in bin |
Vicki and one of the docents in the study |
More India |
1907 Nobel Prize for Literature |
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Scotney Castle 2013
Scotney's a bargain...you've got your great house, 19th century, your gardens, and then your folly, which is actually a 15th century fortified residence that has been wrecked in order to create a "folly." The residences are nice, but it's the garden--a forest of rhododendrons and more--that most impresses. And we were there at just the height of the bloom.
Scotney, frontal view of the "new" house |
Other side |
The usual comforts |
Thus |
And up those stairs is the apartment Margaret Thatcher used as a quiet "get-away" during her years as PM |
But the real glory of the place is the folly, the moated 15th century residence below, and the gardens around it |
Me in the "holloway," the Old Bayham Track, the ancient road dug through the estate by centuries of travel, mostly by pigs going to market...the signage said "This little piggy went to market" |
It was at this point we figured out we were not arriving in England too late to see the rhododendrons and the azaleas |
"Rhodo Riot" I began calling it; everywhere; and as we moved from Kent to Sussex, it got better, much better |
Thus; and a sprinkling of azaleas too |
Along the moat surrounding the old castle |
Thus; in the 19th century, the family had the old structure partially torn down in order to create a "folly" (look it up) for the gardens |
Us, on the moat, the old castle--aka the folly--and the new residence in the distance; it was our 45th wedding anniversary |
More rhodos |
New residence from the old |
On the moat again; was this what Monet was aiming for? |
The folly's tower |
And more rhodos... |
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