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A Suffolk Lane

~ A diary of my life in rural north Suffolk.

A Suffolk Lane

Monthly Archives: Oct 2014

Peak District Holiday 1st to 9th July. Day 4 Part 3

22 Wed Oct 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Rural Diary, Uncategorized

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

cable cars, Heights of Abraham, Matlock Bath, petrifying well, River Derwent, thermal springs

Before I begin this post I must say thank-you to all those who made such kind remarks about my previous post.  I am sure you were all crossing your fingers behind your backs while you typed those compliments with the other hand!  I am nevertheless very grateful to you all.  (This post is much shorter you will be pleased to hear).

145Matlock Bath (640x480)

Matlock Bath village

After our walk around Haddon Hall R and I had a hot drink and a little something to eat in the cafe situated in the old stables.  We then drove to Matlock Bath – somewhere we had never visited before.

146Matlock Bath (640x480)

Matlock Bath village

We found somewhere to park along the main road through the village and then wandered about looking at what there was to see.  We both thought it had the same atmosphere as many of our seaside towns – a sort of faded elegance and we felt almost as though we had gone back in time.  The amusements on offer were very similar to those available to tourists 150 years ago.  In fact, Matlock Bath was developed as one of the country’s first tourist destinations in the late 17th century when the spa waters were discovered.  The village is situated in the gorge of the River Derwent and is surrounded by rocky crags and wooded hillsides.  The poet Lord Byron described it as ‘Little Switzerland’.  There are the ‘Riverside Gardens’ to visit and ‘Lover’s Walks’ to stroll along.

We discovered The Matlock Bath Aquarium and Exhibitions building – a virtually un-modernised Victorian hall with grand doors and a little toll-booth at the entry.  We paid our entrance fee and ascended a wide staircase at the top of which were display cabinets full of curios.

134Dinosaur eggs (640x480)

A nest of dinosaur eggs

135Sand roses (640x480)

Sand Roses

These are crystal clusters of gypsum or baryte which include abundant sand grains (Wikipedia)

There was an enormous exhibition of holograms (one of the largest displays in Europe), an aquarium and a room full of Goss and Crested China.  It seemed as if we were at an old-fashioned fairground attraction – so strange.

137Hydro (480x640)

Thermal Pool

136Hydro (640x480)

Thermal Pool

The old thermal pool is now home to a large carp collection.

There was a ‘Past Times in Matlock Bath’ exhibition.

139Old Advert (480x640)

Hotel flyer

138Old advert (480x640)

Hotel flyer

I could imagine a character from one of HG Wells novels staying at this boarding house.

This place is the site of the only ‘Petrifying Well’ in Matlock Bath.

129Petrified objects (480x640)

Petrified objects.

I can see lots of bottles, a teapot, a jug, a shuttlecock, a basket of bread-rolls, boiled eggs in an egg holder, a telephone and a hot water-bottle.  The thermal spring is said to be about 2000 feet in depth and comes to the surface 100 feet above river level.  The temperature is a constant 68 degrees Fahrenheit/20 degrees Centigrade and the spring has a daily output of 600,000 gallons.

130Hot spring (480x640)

A rather dark photo of the hot spring.

This passage was built during the 1780’s to carry the thermal water from its source to the bathing pool of the fountain bath which occupied this site from 1786 until 1883.  It was then replaced by the Matlock Bath hydro and the existing thermal pool.  This area was then made into the ‘Petrifying Well’.

133Info (480x640)

Information board.

R and I know all about this process.  Our tap-water at home is very ‘hard’ and we spend a lot of time and money on different products trying to get rid of lime-scale.

We walked through the Riverside Gardens.

149R Derwent (640x480)

River Derwent

147Matlock Bath (640x480)

A very attractive shelter to sit in

148War Memorial (480x640)

The War Memorial

We walked up towards the railway station and strolled a little way along one of the Lover’s Walks.

142Railway bridge (640x480)

Railway bridge

We walked to the cable-car station but as it was getting late in the afternoon we decided not to go up to ‘The Heights of Abraham’.  This is a wooded country park on the top of the peak which is crowned with the Victoria Prospect Tower.  Former lead mines have been adapted as show caves and the Grand Pavillion now houses a Tourist Point and the Peak District Mining Museum.  There is also a Theme Park for young people up there.

144Cable cars (480x640)

Cable cars

141Cable cars (640x480)

Cable cars

140Cable cars (640x480)

Cable cars

We decided it was time to return to our caravan and buy some groceries on the way.  We timed this very well as the heavens opened while we were in the supermarket.  We were very pleased to have avoided a soaking!

As I was typing this post this evening R decided to watch a favourite television programme – Great British Railway Journeys – and by coincidence Matlock Bath was visited and Haddon Hall was mentioned.  All the people questioned in Matlock Bath said the village had a seaside feel to it and Byron was quoted!  It is so good to know that I am full of original thoughts!

 

 

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Peak District Holiday 1st to 9th July. Day 4 Part 2

19 Sun Oct 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in churches, Rural Diary, Uncategorized

≈ 19 Comments

Tags

ante-room, Bakewell, banqueting hall, chapel, courtyard, Earl's bedroom, fresco seccoes, gardens, great chamber, Haddon Hall, Jane Eyre film-set, kitchen, long gallery, Manners family, Medieval hall, parlour, Renaissance, state bedroom, Tudor hall, Vernon family

022Haddon Hall (640x480)

Haddon Hall

Haddon Hall is about two miles from Bakewell and we were visiting it for the second time.  It is a fortified manor house with Medieval and Tudor architecture and is quite special in that the last building and improvements made to it were done at the end of the 16th century.  The family moved to Belvoir Castle (pronounced ‘beaver’) in Grantham, Leicestershire in 1703, the main home of the Manners family, and left Haddon Hall empty for 200 years.  The 9th Duke and Duchess of Rutland decided at the start of the 20th century to restore the Hall and this work is continuing to this day.  It is now the home of Lord Edward Manners who is the younger brother of the current Duke of Rutland.  He lives in a part of the Hall which is not open to the public.

025H H from bridge over R Wye (640x480)

Haddon Hall from the bridge over the R. Wye

026Parapet passing place on bridge (640x480)

A view of the R. Wye from the bridge. These little triangular areas at the side of the bridge are safe places to stand when there is traffic on the bridge. If you look at Bakewell Bridge in my previous post you’ll see the same thing there.

The Hall has been used many times by film companies so some of you will have seen it already.  A couple of the most famous films in which it is featured are ‘Jane Eyre’ with Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender (2011) and Franco Zefferelli’s version of ‘Jane Eyre’ with Charlotte Gainsbourg and William Hurt (1994).  It had a cameo role in ‘Pride and Prejudice’ with Keira Knightley (2004) and also ‘Elizabeth’ with Cate Blanchett (1998).  The BBC’s most recent version of ‘Jane Eyre’ with Ruth Wilson and Toby Stephens (2006) was also filmed here.

128R Wye (640x480)

The River Wye

023Gate house (640x480)

Looking back at the Gate House through which we had just passed

024Wildflower meadow (640x499)

A wildflower meadow on the approach to the Hall

Topiary in the garden next to the old stables
More topiary

These topiary yew trees are clipped into the shapes of a boar’s head and a peacock, the arms of the Vernon and Manners families to whom the Hall still belongs.  The Hall passed to the Manners family in the 16th century as the heir to the estate, Dorothy Vernon, had married Sir John Manners.  There is a story that Dorothy and John eloped in 1563 which may be true but Sir John Manners came of a rich and noble local family and I cannot think that Dorothy’s father would have objected to him.

027NW tower (480x640)

The North-West Tower

The path ascends to the North-West Tower which became the main entrance to the hall in the 16th century.  Going through the entrance we found ourselves in the Lower Courtyard.

Looking back to the entrance through the NW Tower
Rooms off the Courtyard
Octagonal bell tower next to the chapel

Stairs up to the oldest part of the Hall – King John’s Wall
Rooms off the Courtyard
Entrance to the Hall from the Courtyard

Richard de Vernon, in 1193, was granted a licence to build a wall of not more than 12 feet in height to enclose the Chapel, the Watch Tower and some timber buildings.  12 foot walls were only sufficient to deter marauders and would have proved no barrier to a full-blown attack.  The man granting the licence was John, Count of Mortain who was to become King John four years later on the death of his brother, Richard I ‘the Lionheart’.  This wall is still standing and has been incorporated into the Hall buildings.

17th century doorway
Gargoyle and lead drain pipes

Gargoyle and lead drain pipes
Battlements were only for show and added in the 14th century

The Courtyard slopes upwards, from the entrance under the tower, to the main buildings.  The Hall evolved over a few hundred years with little or no planning but as it is all built using the same type of material, grey limestone and yellow gritstone, it somehow looks just right.

029Entrance to chapel (480x640)

Entrance to the Chapel

The Chapel was one of the first parts of the Hall to be built.  It is dedicated to St Nicholas and is decorated inside with fresco seccoes depicting the life of St Nicholas and of St Anne.  There is a large image of St Christopher the patron saint of travellers and also a picture of three skeletons which were part of a larger painting illustrating a medieval Morality of earthly vanity.

Fresco secco
Fresco secco

St Christopher
Three Skeletons

The frescoes were probably commissioned in the early 15th century when other changes were being carried out.  Fresco seccoes do not last as long as buon frescoes as they are painted onto dry plaster not wet.  They were also damaged during the Reformation.

Stained glass window
Stained glass window

As I mentioned, the Hall was left empty for 200 years and in 1828 the faces of the saints in the glass were stolen.  A reward of one hundred guineas was offered for their return but to no avail.

The chapel is filled with wonderful things – a musician’s gallery, lots of box-pews, a beautiful marble effigy of the 9 year old Lord Haddon who died in 1894, an alabaster reredos.  I found it difficult to photograph the chapel as a whole with my small camera as it was so full of furniture.   There were also a number of people like us wandering about and admiring and they always seemed to be standing in the wrong place!

Alabaster reredos
Stairs to musician’s gallery

Six sided pulpit with box pew in front
Box pew with effigy to Lord Haddon in front

We then crossed the Courtyard and entered through the porch to the Banqueting Hall.

125Roman altar (640x480)

A Roman altar found in the fields of the estate is displayed just inside the porch.

060Passage (480x640)

Passageway to kitchen

The Kitchen is a fine example of a Tudor kitchen.  Originally it was a separate building to reduce the risk of fire spreading to the main house and the passageway was added much later.  The kitchen is in fact a set of rooms all with different uses.  The main room has a fire heated water boiler and a stone trough fed by the one and only water system to the Hall.   The trough is divided into three to hold water of varying degrees of cleanliness.

064Stone trough (640x480)

Stone trough

074Fire place (640x480)

Kitchen fireplace with a log box on the left and in front of that is a wood block for chopping firewood

062Kitchen (480x640)

Looking through to the bakery from the kitchen

063Bakery (480x640)

Bakery

070Paddles (480x640)

A collection of paddles used for putting bread etc into the ovens

071Pastry ovens (480x640)

Pastry ovens

065Carving table (640x480)

Carving table

067Food preparation table (640x480)

Food preparation table

076Carving table (640x480)

Another carving table

069Butchery (640x480)

Butchery. The odd object in the foreground is a 15th century oak block on three short legs that was used for jointing meat. The object behind is a salting trough.

068Dole cupboards (640x480)

A collection of ‘dole’ cupboards and hutches or meal arks are in the original Milk Larder

‘Dole’ cupboards were put outside houses like Haddon Hall for passing traders or Estate workers and filled with food and left-overs from the kitchen.  Most ‘dole’ cupboards haven’t survived as they were exposed to the elements so these are very rare.  The ‘dole’ cupboards have ornate panels in their doors.  Hutches or meal arks were used for the storage of grain or bread.  These are the smaller chest-shaped boxes.  The table (centre back) is a 15th century oak side-table or buffet.

072Scorch marks (480x640)

Scorch marks on the timber of the wall show where candles were placed for illumination.

055High table bench & tapestry (640x480)

The high table and bench in the Banqueting Hall.

When the hall was built in the 14th century this room would have been the communal living space with a central hearth and vents in the roof to let the smoke out.  It was then known as the Great Hall.  By the beginning of the next century the family would have started to eat, sleep and spend leisure time in their private apartments so the Great Hall became a place for entertaining guests and was re-named the Banqueting Hall.  The walls are panelled which not only helped to insulate the room but was also a status symbol too.  The long table has a top made of two elm planks resting on three square pillars with splayed feet.  The bench is the same age as the table (c.1400) and is one plank on square legs.  The table top is not attached to the base which meant that it could be turned over and both sides used.  The bench and table are on a raised platform at one end of the room.  The tapestry behind the table is French and was made during King Edward IV’s reign (1461-1483).  It shows the Royal Arms of England and is supposed to have been presented to the Vernon family by King Henry VIII whose older brother Prince Arthur spent some time at Haddon Hall.

053Fireplace (640x480)

The fireplace. The chimney was added in the mid 15th century.

On entering the Hall you can smell wood smoke even when there is no fire.

058Minstrel's gallery (640x480)

The Minstrel’s Gallery is opposite the High Table

The screen which can be seen at the bottom of the photo is 14th century and is a fine example of Gothic tracery.  Attached to the screen is an iron manacle and lock.  If a guest ‘did not drink fayre’ – either too little or too much – he was punished by having his wrist locked in the manacle and the rest of his drink poured down his sleeve.   The antlers are mid 17th century and the tapestry which hangs above the Minstrel’s Gallery was produced at the beginning of the 17th century.

056Stairs (480x640)

Steps to the upper floor

077Stairs (640x480)

Steps showing the 17th century dog gates.

We then went through a door off the Banqueting Hall and entered the Parlour or Dining Room.  This was the room the family used as private quarters and it is still used as a dining room.

122Wood panelling (640x480)

Carved oaken panelling. This is just a part of a frieze around the room showing the armorial shields of the Vernons and the families with whom they had intermarried.

117Carved figures (640x480)

I apologise for the poor quality of this photo but I didn’t wish to leave it out. It is believed that these two figures are those of King Henry VII and his wife Queen Elizabeth of York

118Carving (640x480)

This carving over the fireplace says ‘Drede God and Honour the Kyng’. The text is based on Wycliffe’s translation of the Bible (c.1395) of 1 Peter 2 v.17.

119Window (640x480)

Attractive window in the Parlour

120Ceiling (640x480)

Plaster ceiling installed in the early 1500s. This is a Tudor rose.

121Ceiling (640x480)

And this is a Talbot dog. Sir Henry Vernon (who installed the ceiling) married Anne Talbot daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury

We then went up the stairs to the first floor and entered the Great Chamber.  This was re-roofed and remodelled at the same time as the Parlour below.

078Fireplace (480x640)

The fireplace. The 17th century oak panelling shows traces of gold and green paint. It must have been beautifully decorated when new.

079Furniture (640x480)

Some of the furniture in the room

083Frieze (640x480)

This plaster frieze around the room is beautiful and an early example of 17th century English Renaissance decoration

080Bay window (480x640)

The plaster ceiling in this oriel bay window is also of the same date and quality.

084Window (480x640)

Windows at the opposite end of the room. This room would have originally been the Solar – the private quarters of the family – and Solars were always well provided with windows to make the most of natural light

085Chair (480x640)

I loved this chair. The teasel is to stop people from sitting on it. I don’t think it would take the weight of many modern-day adults!

082Pew end (480x640)

This is a 14th century pew end that is displayed in the room. The carving is satirical and depicts the rapacity of the clergy!

081Tapestry (640x480)

One of the tapestries that hang in the room. They were thought to be Flemish but are now thought to be French and woven in Paris sometime before 1650.

We passed through a small ante-chamber which was once used as a dressing room and entered the Earl’s Apartment.  This was originally two chambers and there are stairs leading to the Chapel below so maybe one of the rooms was used by the clergy.  There are two fireplaces in this room as well.  After the partition was removed it was used as a gallery at first and then when a larger gallery was built the room was used as a bedchamber.

087Mirror (480x640)

A Charles II tortoiseshell looking-glass

086Signatures (640x480)

Above the smaller fireplace are signatures in the plaster of visiting members of the Royal Family.  Can you spot Prince Charles’, Princess Anne’s and George V’s signatures?

089Spinning chair (480x640)

An English early 17th century spinning chair.

090Long gallery (480x640)

The Long Gallery

On the opposite side of the landing to the Great Chamber is the Long Gallery.  It is 110 feet long and 17 feet wide.  The entrance to the gallery is up some semi-circular steps said to have been cut from the roots of a single oak.

092Steps (640x480)

Looking down at the steps from inside the Long Gallery

094Long gallery (480x640)

The Long Gallery

The room is full of light and space.

096Long gallery (640x480)

One of the window embrasures. They face south to make the most of the sunlight.

Long Galleries were used as indoor promenades so that the family could take exercise if the weather was too bad to go outside.  There are wonderful views of the gardens and surrounding countryside from the windows.

095Glass (480x640)

The diamond-shaped panes are set at different angles which also maximises the use of daylight. It is also very attractive.

098Carved door frame (480x640)

A doorway surmounted by the Manners’ family crest.

Th panelling is made of oak which was probably originally sized by being lime-washed.  It was then painted with designs in a foxy-red colour.

102Carving (640x480)

Oak panelling

103Ceiling (640x480)

Ornate plaster ceiling

The State Bedroom leads off the Long Gallery.  There is no bed in it because when the Hall was being restored the state bed was moved to Belvoir Castle where it still remains.

104Orpheus taming the animals (640x480)

Plaster relief above the fireplace shows Orpheus taming the animals. This dates from the mid 1500s and there is no attempt at realism in the sizes of the animals. There is a very small elephant at the bottom left of the relief.

106Tapestry (640x480)

Tapestry in the State Bedroom

 

The final room is the Ante-room in which there is one of the earliest racing pictures in existence.

108Early racing picture (640x480)

This painting depicts a pre-Arabian English bay racehorse with his jockey in a landscape. It is attributed to the German-born painter John Baptist Closterman (died 1713).

107Tapestry (640x480)

Tapestry in the Ante-room.

There is a flight of worn steps from the Ante-room to the garden but we didn’t go that way but back through the house.

109Gardens (640x480)
110Gardens (640x480)
View of the Hall from the garden
View of the Hall from the garden
The windows of the Long Gallery
The windows of the Long Gallery
116Garden (640x480)

The main structure of the garden was laid out in the middle of the 17th century.  It has a series of descending terraces – the topmost and the lower garden are closed to the public.  It is a fine example of an English Renaissance garden and avoided being made-over in the 18th century because no-one was living there at the time.

I must apologise for the length of this post and the amount of photographs in it.  I have spent some considerable time trying to shorten it and to delete most of the photos but I find I can’t do either.  I love this Hall very much – I think it is the most beautiful place I know and I wished to have a record of my visit for myself as much as wishing to share it with you.  Thank-you for your patience.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Peak District Holiday 1st to 9th July. Day 4 Part 1.

11 Sat Oct 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in fish, Rural Diary, Uncategorized, wild birds

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

Bakewell, Bakewell Bridge, Bakewell Pudding, Bakewell Pudding Shop, Black-headed Seagull, Canada Goose, Coot, Mallard, moorhen, Peak District National Park, River Wye, Trout, Tufted Duck

After our long walk the day before we decided to do a little gentle sight-seeing on our fourth day, revisiting a couple of favourite places and then going on to somewhere new.  Our first port of call was the town of Bakewell in Derbyshire which is very attractive but always very crowded.  We surprised ourselves by finding somewhere to park quite quickly and walked to the Bakewell Pudding Shop.

002Bakewell Pudding shop (640x474)

The Old Original Bakewell Pudding Shop

Bakewell is the only market town in the whole of the Peak District National Park.  As with many places in the Peak District, mineral springs are found there and it nearly became a spa town.  The name ‘Bakewell’ comes from ‘Badeca’s Well’ and is nothing to do with baking.  A Bath House was built by the Duke of Rutland in 1697 and it still has the 16′ x 33′ bath in the cellar.  The reason it wasn’t a success as a spa was the temperature of the water which is only 11 degrees Centigrade/52 degrees Fahrenheit – a little chilly!  This is less than half the temperature of the Buxton waters.

R and I wanted to buy a pudding as we love them and hadn’t had one for a couple of years.  We also purchased some bread and a teacloth with the recipe of the pudding printed on it and then went through to their coffee shop and had a pleasant drink while sitting in a sheltered courtyard.


Rather an unprepossessing looking pudding but really very tasty.  It can be eaten hot or cold and with or without cream or custard.  It is made with puff pastry, then a layer of jam (usually raspberry) and then covered with a mixture made of ground almonds, sugar, butter, eggs and almond essence.  This is then baked until the mixture sets.  This confection was made by mistake.  During the 19th century a cook at the Rutland Arms was baking a jam tart but somehow misunderstood the recipe and the result was this pudding.  It was an instant success, though I don’t know how anyone let alone a cook can make a mistake when making a jam tart!

We then walked a little through the town and ended up at our favourite place – the riverside.  There is a wide promenade next to the River Wye and benches to sit on at intervals.  There is a very attractive bridge over the river which flows at a good pace.

008Bridge over R Wye (640x480)

Bakewell Bridge

The river is full of trout and has a couple of little weirs.  There are lots of water-birds to admire and also lots of Black-headed Seagulls too.

020Trout (640x480)

A beautiful speckled trout

014Tufted ducks (640x480)

Tufted Ducks

012Canada goose (640x480)

Canada Goose

019Canada goose (640x480)

Canada Goose

018Coot and moorhen with chicks (640x480)

Coot and Moorhen with chicks

I was fascinated by the behaviour of both the moorhen and the coot.  These birds are not often seen together although very closely related.  I find their chicks indistinguishable and am not sure if these chicks belonged to the coot or moorhen.  Coots have a pure white forehead and bill and are usually found on open water like lakes and moorhens with red bills that have a yellow tip are found on streams and ponds.  Both birds obviously felt threatened by each other and though it isn’t clear in the photo above the coot had lowered its head and had fluffed up all its feathers until it looked enormous.  It was moving very slowly too.

016Coot nest (640x480)

A Coot nest

006Mallards, tufted duck & black-headed seagulls (640x480)

Mallards, Tufted Duck and a Black-headed Seagull which decided it wanted to be photographed too

After sitting by the river for a while, R and I decided we would go on to Haddon Hall which is just a few miles from Bakewell.  I will talk about that in my next post.

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Wild Flowers in my Garden

09 Thu Oct 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Gardening, plants, Rural Diary, trees

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Bittersweet, Black Horehound, cat's-ear, Common Field-speedwell, Common Mallow, Common Spotted-orchid, Dog-rose, dogwood, Elder, fern, Field Forget-me-not, Field Penny-cress, Field Rose, Fox-and-cubs, Lesser Stitchwort, Midland Hawthorn, Oxeye Daisy, Rough Chervil, scentless mayweed, Selfheal, Smooth Sow-thistle, Smooth Tare, Soft Rush, Suffolk, summer, Water Mint, weeds, White Clover, wild flowers

I will be publishing a short series of posts this autumn in which I will show you some of the wild flowers I have seen in my garden this summer.  The photographs will be ones I haven’t used before.

Many of you will wonder why we have so many weeds in our garden.  Well, er, I like weeds/wild flowers!  We have decided that the part of the garden around the big pond should be a wild garden and this is the place where I have found most of my plants to photograph.  We do try to control the worst of the brambles and nettles and my husband mows and hacks his way through it all regularly.  When we have time we will manage the area a little better.

012Hawthorn flowers (640x427)

These hawthorn flowers from our hedge have a definite pink tinge to them. I believe this is a Midland Hawthorn (Crataegus laevigata).

As any gardener knows, weeds grow anywhere and everywhere and some of the plants in these posts I will have found in the lawn or in a flowerbed.  We have a country garden and it is surrounded by arable fields and common land.  Weed seeds get blown into our garden on the wind.  We have a hedge round most of our land made up of hawthorn, blackthorn, hazel, ash, elder and dog-rose among others.  We also have ditches almost all the way round our land – our moat to protect us from flooding.  We are visited by many birds and wild animals and all these creatures may have contributed to the flora by bringing seeds in on their coats or feathers or in their droppings.  We have had quite a damp summer following on from a mild and wet winter and the plants, bushes and trees have grown and grown!  This year, we have found many more different types of plant than usual, as well.

This post will be featuring flowers from early summer – mid May until the end of June.

007Sow Thistle (640x480)

Smooth Sow-thistle (Sonchus oleraceus)

The leaves of this plant have been an important dietary supplement for many hundreds of years; they can be boiled like spinach or even taken raw in winter salads.  The plant is thought to be strength-giving and Pliny the Elder says that a dish of smooth sow-thistles was eaten by the legendary Greek hero Theseus before he slew the Minotaur.  The leaves are thought to revive and strengthen animals when they are overcome by heat and its local names of ‘rabbit’s meat’, ‘swine thistle’, ‘dog’s thistle’, ‘hare’s lettuce’ denote this.

010Fern (640x480)

I thought I would include this fern in this post although not a flower. It is growing in the hedge at the front of the house and it is the only fern we have. By the end of May it has usually been swamped by other plants in the hedge and we don’t see it again until the next year.

001Dog rose (640x480)

Dog-rose (Rosa canina)

026Dog Rose bud (640x427)

Dog-rose buds.

I was fortunate when I was a little girl to have a mother who didn’t give me nasty medicine like caster oil and syrup of figs.  I was given ‘Halib-orange’ (which tasted of oranges but also contained fish-oil) and also rosehip syrup to which my mother sometimes added a drop or two of cod-liver oil.  Rosehip syrup is rich in vitamin C and I remember it tasting absolutely glorious!

King Henry VII adopted the Tudor rose as his official emblem and the rose has continued to be a symbol of the British monarchy and of England herself.

004Ox-eye Daisy (640x480)

Oxeye Daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare)

I love Oxeye Daisies – also known as marguerite, moon-daisy and dog-daisy – and when roadsides are carpeted with them I know that summer has arrived.  I remember lying in a field full of them when I was very young and looking through their swaying heads at a clear blue sky – a wonderful memory.

009Elder flowers (640x480)

Elder flowers (Sambucus nigra)

Both the elder’s flowers and berries are edible and it is widespread on land with a high nitrogen content.  Rabbits do not damage it and it benefits from their droppings so is often to be found near warrens.

011Field Pennycress (480x640)

Field Penny-cress (Thlaspi arvense)

017Field Penny-cress (640x480)

Field Penny-cress (Thlaspi arvense)

This plant got its name from the circular shape of its fruit which were thought to resemble a penny.  When crushed the plant has a strong, unpleasant smell and is avoided by herb-eating animals.  The plant was introduced many, many years ago.  Despite efforts to exterminate it the Field Penny-cress still does very well on agricultural land.

019Rough Chervil (640x480)

Rough Chervil (Chaerophyllum temulum)

020Rough Chervil (640x480)

Rough Chervil (Chaerophyllum temulum)

This is another poisonous plant belonging to the parsley family.  The word temulum derives from the latin word for vertigo.  If ingested the effect on human beings is that of drunkenness; staggering incapability and shaking. Most unpleasant.

013Self-heal (640x480)

Selfheal (Prunella vulgaris)

This plant loves our garden.  It is all over the lawn and when we take our eyes off it for a day or two we find it has rushed onto the flowerbeds and made itself at home there.  I read that it likes growing in grassy places (yes, our lawn) and woodland rides, on calcareous and neutral soils. (I do find a lot of chalk in the soil here).  It spreads by putting out runners that root regularly and it produces nutlet fruits as well.  The bees love it and it is a very pretty purple colour.

005Cat's-ear (640x480)

Cat’s-ear (Hypochaeris radicata)

Bees and many other insects, love this flower too.  It is called ‘Cat’s-ear’ because it was thought the little scale-like bracts on the flower stem look like cat’s ears.  Unfortunately I haven’t been able to get a good enough photograph of these bracts to show you.

007Fox-and-cubs (640x480)

Fox-and-cubs (Pilosella aurantiaca)

008Fox-and-cubs (480x640)

Fox-and-cubs ((Pilosella aurantiaca)

Looking at the second photo you can see why it is called Fox-and-cubs.  These photos were not taken in my garden but in the churchyard of St Mary’s in Halesworth but I haven’t found an opportunity better than this for posting these pictures.  This is an introduced plant and has spread quite happily out of people’s gardens and into the countryside.

020Dogwood flowers (640x480)

Dogwood flowers (Cornus sanguinea)

This is another plant that prefers calcareous soil.  The stems in winter glow with a rich red colour, the birds love the black berries and the leaves turn a wonderful maroon-red in the autumn.

024Woody nightshade in ditch (640x480)

Bittersweet or Woody Nightshade (Solanum dulcamara) which grows all over our garden. This plant was growing in the ditch at the front of the house.

When the flowers first open the petals are spreading or slightly curved.  The older the flower, the more the petals fold themselves back against the stalk.  The berries are green at first, then yellow and finally a bright shiny red.  The berries are poisonous and can cause sickness.  The species name ‘dulcamara’ is derived from two Latin words meaning sweet and bitter.  The toxic alkaloid solanin in the stem, leaves and berries causes them to taste bitter at first and then sweet.

028White rose in lane (640x427)

Field Rose (Rosa arvensis)

Though called Field Rose it is usually found in woodland or hedgerows.  This grows prolifically in the narrow strip of woodland on the opposite side of the lane in front of our house.

030Smooth tare (640x480)

Smooth Tare (Vicia tetrasperma)

It is very easy to miss this little plant.  It is very slender and scrambles about in grass and in hedgerows.  I found it in the grass round our big pond.  The flowers are borne singly or in pairs and are 4-8 mm long.  Another member of the Pea family.

026Forget-me-not (640x480)

Field Forget-me-not (Myosotis arvensis)

A probably legendary tale from medieval Germany tells of a knight walking with his lady by a river.  The knight bent to pick her a bunch of flowers but the weight of his armour caused him to fall in.  As he drowned he threw the flowers to his lady crying: ‘Vergisz mein nicht!’ – ‘forget-me-not’.  Since then this flower has been associated with true love.  I wonder why the knight was wearing armour when not fighting or jousting?  In 1802, Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote a poem based on the story of the knight called ‘The Keepsake’.  ‘That blue and bright-eyed flowerlet of the brook/Hope’s gentle gem, the sweet Forget-me-not!’.

030Mayweed (640x480)

Scentless Mayweed (Tripleurospermum inodorum)

030Common spotted orchid (640x480)

Common Spotted-orchid (Dactylorhiza fuchsii)

This orchid grows very well in our garden.  The leaves are shiny and green with dark spots on them.

036Lesser stitchwort with fly (640x480)

Lesser Stitchwort (Stellaria graminea)

040Lesser stitchwort (480x640)

Lesser Stitchwort (Stellaria graminea)

This plant grows mainly on acid soils – I found it in our lawn.

044White clover (640x480)

White Clover (Trifolium repens)

We have White and Red Clover in our garden.  I have posted photographs of the red before but not the more common white.  This is another plant with creeping stems and we have it in our lawn.  We tolerate it because the bees love it and it keeps the lawn looking green during a drought.

047Common field-speedwell (640x480)

Common Field-speedwell (Veronica persica)

This plant is probably not a native but was introduced at some time in the distant past from Asia.  Its flowers are solitary on a long stalk and the lower petal is usually white.

061Water mint with water lilies (640x480)

Water Mint (Mentha aquatica) growing amongst water lilies

This is the commonest mint of all the species growing in the British Isles and has a very strong mint smell.

The next couple of plants I found on the same day as I found the Fox-and-cubs plant in Halesworth.

022Black Horehound (480x640)

Black Horehound ((Ballota nigra)

025Black Horehound (480x640)

Black Horehound (Ballota nigra)

There is a little alleyway that leads to the supermarket in Halesworth and on one side of it is some waste ground and that is where I found this plant.  Black Horehound smells awful if it is bruised and this has earned it a second name of ‘Stinking Roger’.  Poor old Roger!  It is quite an attractive plant to look at and its smell is its defence mechanism – to stop it being eaten by cattle.  It looks a little like Red Dead-nettle but is larger and coarser.  A third name for the plant is Madwort as it was used in the treatment of bites from mad dogs.  ‘A dressing prepared from the plant’s leaves, mixed with salt, was said to have an anti-spasmodic effect on the patient’ – to quote from the Reader’s Digest Field Guide to the Wild Flowers of Britain.  It could also be used to treat coughs and colds but it was very powerful.  Nicholas Culpeper wrote that ‘it ought only to be administered to gross, phlegmatic people, not to thin, plethoric persons’.

023Common Mallow (480x640)

Common Mallow (Malva sylvestris)

This was also on the waste ground though it can be seen on most road verges all through the summer.  The flowers are very pretty and the plant has long been used for food and medicine.  According to my Field Guide young mallow shoots were being eaten as a vegetable as early as the 8th century BC.  Cicero the orator complained that they gave him indigestion, the poet Martial used Mallow to get rid of hang-overs after orgies and the naturalist Pliny mixed the sap with water to give him day-long relief from aches and pains.  In the Middle Ages it was used as an anti-aphrodisiac, promoting calm, sober conduct.  Mallow leaves have been used to draw out wasp stings and the sap, which is quite viscous was made into poultices and soothing ointment.  The fruits of the Mallow are round flat capsules and some of the names for Mallow refer to them – ‘billy buttons’, ‘pancake plant’ and ‘cheese flower’.

023Soft rushes in the ditch (480x640)

Soft Rushes (Juncus effusus) in the ditch at the front of the house

022Soft rush (640x427)

Soft Rush (Juncus effusus) with flowers

These grow mainly on acid soils and on over-grazed land.  They live in our ditches and sometimes spread into the lawn.  The stems are a pretty pale yellow-green and are shiny and smooth.  The flowers are olive-green in colour.  The name ‘rush’ comes from a Germanic word meaning ‘to bind’ or ‘to plait’.  The spongy white pith in the stems used to be scraped out and made into wicks for candles.  I remember on wet camping holidays when young (and there were many of those) splitting rushes with my fingernail and trying to remove the pith in one piece without breaking it.  This was in the days before Nintendos – simple pleasures!

 

 

 

 

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Harvest Festival

02 Thu Oct 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in churches, Rural Diary, Uncategorized, weather

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

bats, church, church decorations, Evensong, flowers, Harvest, hot-air balloon, Rumburgh, sowing

007Rumburgh church (640x480)

Rumburgh Church

Here is an autumn photograph of my church taken on Sunday as we were on our way to get it ready for the Harvest Evensong service.  R is one of the Churchwardens and so we got there early to make sure all was tidy (no bat poo on the pews) and to turn on the lights and take the plastic covers off everything.  As I have said before, our poor church is damp and has a colony of bats living in it and to protect the furniture etc. we have to cover what we can with bits of plastic sheet.  No money to repair the church, no money to buy proper protective covers, not enough money for anything, unfortunately.  I like bats and am very pleased that we have two resident pipistrelle bats that fly round our house every evening.  However, I am not happy about the bats that live in our church because of the damage their urine and faeces do.  The urine especially is so acidic it etches into all the furniture, pictures and flooring.  We have to be so careful when serving refreshments after service in case food and drinks are contaminated.  Bats are protected and it is virtually impossible to get them moved elsewhere.

Our benefice is made up of eleven parish churches and one redundant church which we use once or twice a year.  We have one over-worked priest who has recently acquired an assistant (actually the priest in the next-door benefice who does holiday and sickness cover which is reciprocated), a couple of retired priests who step in when needed, one reader and two elders who take services without communion.  All of the churches in the benefice like to have their own harvest festivals, so for weeks on end there are one or two harvest services on most Sundays.  Last Sunday was the third consecutive week of harvest and our service was taken by Maurice, one of the Benefice Elders.  Next Sunday and the following one there are no Harvest services but then they start up again and we have another three consecutive weeks of ‘We Plough the Fields and Scatter’ right through until the end of October.

004Flowers on pulpit (480x640)

Decorated pulpit. Our talented flower arrangers make the church look so bright and festive.

Any harvest contributions of food, fruit and vegetables at our church go to Adele House, a nursing home run by the convent at All Hallows.  Other churches in the benefice send their contributions to a local food bank which provides food parcels for the needy.

005Flowers on rood screen (640x480)

Decorated Rood Screen.

008Chancel (640x480)

The Chancel

009The font (480x640)

The Font

017The Altar (640x480)

The Altar

020The porch (640x480)

The Porch

021The porch (640x423)

The Porch. Look at the enormous beetroot!

006Bunches of wheat on pew ends (480x640)

Bunches of wheat tied to the pew ends.



One of these window sills was decorated by me.

022The church (640x480)

The church just before the service started.

Maurice plays the organ so he gets plenty of exercise, walking up and down the aisle from the front of the church to the back where the organ is then back to the front again then up the steps to the pulpit.

We were very lucky to get 23 people at our Evensong service – no children sadly.

Today, I noticed that the field at the back of the house was being worked on again.

002Sowing (640x427)

Sowing the seed. I apologise for the poor quality photo. The sun was setting and it was a little hazy too.

After the coldest August in many, many years we have had a very warm and fairly dry September.  There has been mist and fog in the morning occasionally which has made driving to Norwich difficult.  It is all set to change this weekend with a storm coming in off the Atlantic which will get to us in the East sometime on Saturday.  When it has passed through the temperature will drop considerably, so we are told.  Yesterday evening I noticed a hot-air balloon in the sky – a Virgin sponsored one.  The thermals must have been just right.

009Hot air balloon (640x448)

E used to call them ‘hot hair balloons’.

Thank-you for visiting my blog.

 

 

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