Saturday, June 29, 2013

Tyntesfield Gardens

Our next stop was Tyntesfield, a relatively young house, Victorian, and a relatively recent National Trust acquisition, 2002, by way of L20,000,000 two-month public drive that rescued the house and all its contents from public auction. It is a neo-Gothic country house, suberbly done, all of a piece, with four generations of Victorian and later furnishings; plus several hundred acres of park and gardens. We started our visit with a garden and park tour.
A beautiful asian plane tree that caught my attention even before the guide said
it was her favorite tree at Tyntesfield














A giant purple beech, one of several














The interesting thing is, when you stand under a purple
beech, the leaves are green














Waste not, want not...well, that didn't exactly work out for the Gibbs family,
but they did save much, benefiting all the rest of us; these are spiral staircase
parts later used as a planter in one of the gardens














Garden view of the house; a giant monkey puzzle had stood here for years, now
replaced by this youngster














A disused azalea maze that the Trust hopes to rebuild; they have much work to
do here, as elsewhere




















Beautiful green; it's summer now, despite the fact the
temperature has yet to go much above 70




















Out in the building adjoining the walled (kitchen) garden and green-houses;
the green-houses were heated, so some of the servants slept out here, in the
little bunk cabins, to keep the fires going














Cherry tree on the kitchen garden wall
















A chef's "chop and chat" out in the garden; wonderful free samples of breads,
strawberries, fruit drinks, etc.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Dyrham Park House

The house, with its large orangery to the left (conceals servants' block)















One of two bookcases designed by Blathwayt friend, diarist
Samuel Pepys; the other is in the V&A




















Marrow spoons; we've just got to get some for our camping kit














Murillos' boy teasing a woman eating porridge


















Staircase, as seen in...














An episode of Dr. Who filmed at Dyrham














Flower vase, reflecting the Dutch thing... there were several
more



















Inside the door is A View Down a Corridor, by Samuel van Hoogstrattaen















Royal bed--just in case the monarch dropped by--never
did, never slept in



















Figurine collection


















During WWII, Dyrham was home to babies and toddlers moved away from the
areas being bombed by the Germans; a photo from the garden
















"You rang, sir?" episode #7














Hundreds of antique Delft tiles, once, presumably, from Blathwayt's office, now
adorning the dairy

Dyrham Park Garden

Our next home and garden was Dyrham Park, up very close to the Bristol Channel. There is a great house, 17th century and later, and a large deer park. We chose to walk the deer park first, then do the garden tour, then tour the house. We were in for a surprise.
In the deer park, Hinton Hill, an iron age hill fort, now a bovine stronghold; in
577, seriously, the culminating battle between the Britons and the Anglo/Saxons
was fought near here: the Battle of Dyrham: Cuthwine and Ceawlin slew three
Briton kings, Coinmail, Condidan, and Farinmail and took the cities of
Gloucester, Cirecester, and Bath; sadly, I can never hear nor read the word
"Briton" without remembering... "'Ooare the Britons?" "Well we all are! We are
all Britons. And I amyour king" "I didn't know we had a king! I thought we were
an autonomous collective" "You're fooling yourself! We're living in a dictatorship!
A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes--" "There you go,
bringing class into it again" ... sadly
























In the deer park, a menage a trois of deer














A deer nursery














Looking down to the house; we have already walked downhill a good bit; this
house is in a hole!















And at the top of the hill, a statue of Neptune; what is going
on here?



















It wasn't until the garden tour that we discovered what was going on...Dyrham
was most importantly the property of one William Blathwayt, a businessman
and civil servant who happened to be fluent in Dutch at just the right time, the
arrival of William and Mary; Blathwayt served as the king's secretary of state
for a decade and was by that time wealthy enough to build himself a country
estate with a Dutch water garden (think Versailles, smaller scale); ponds and
watercourses and falls and fountains; all this needed a water source higher than
the house and garden, and thus the house was in a hole; alas, within a century--
fashions and fortunes change--his descendants had plowed the whole thing up
and covered it over with more deer park (the map above is the only
representation of the original estate's gardens)


























This rectangular pond is about all that remains of the original water park















But slowly, the Trust is restoring its beauty


















Thus














Very slowly, very carefully; this is what a parterre looks like without the flowers
(taken out for some repairs on the house)















Our day at Dyrham ended in the parking lot, noticing a camper with Washington
state licence plates: and we later met David and Lou, doing pretty much the same
things we are doing...





















St. Cyriac's Parish Church In Lacock Village

St. Cyriac's is a beautiful little parish church, Medieval in origin, renovated in the 15th century, with some lovely interior carving and the Renaissance tomb of Lord Sharington, the original owner, after Dissolution, of the Abbey. Outside, looking around the building, however, things get weird; and then weirder...




















































































































Lacock Village

Attached to Lacock Abbey is the scenic little village with its many quite old houses and buildings...
Including the Tithe Barn, which has seen many uses since
abbey times; and new stone roofs, too, presumably















The village gaol, where people were sent to cool off, dry out,
await justice















Interior thereof; looks positively spacious
by our standards



















Pretty, old house














Said to have been one of King John's hunting lodges














Interesting design


















And, always, flowers, everywhere