Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Littlehampton – Early November

At the end of the schools  half term we went to Littlehampton Caravan Club site about 70 miles from Ringwood. We’ve been before and we knew that part of it flooded so not much has changed in 5 years.

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Setting up                    Evening walk on the prom

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A trip out to Worthing on the 700 bus

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Worthing beach                     Littlehampton prom

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The longest bench in Britain seats over 300 people on Littlehampton’s promenade. There are some flat bits that you can sit on.

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East Beach Café – the original inspiration for the design was a piece of driftwood

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Another trip on the 700 bus, this time, to Arundel. Some of the house detail.

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Arundel Cathedral
The cathedral's location, construction, design, and dedication owe much to the Howard family, who, as Dukes of Norfolk and Earls of Arundel are the most prominent English Catholic family, and rank first (below the royal family) in the Peerage of England. Since 1102 the seat of the Howards' ancestors has been Arundel Castle.

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Cathedral nave                      Covered shopping area nearby

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Arundel High Street
There are traces of early Roman development in Arundel; however it mainly developed as a Saxon town referred to in the Domesday Book in 1086, by which time Arundel had become a flourishing market town and port, with a population of a few hundred.

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Worthing again – doing a few geocaches on a very windy day.

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Sue with a mega, half pint, hot chocolate Bric-a-brac in the café

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I couldn’t resist getting the shorts out A sunny Sunday afternoon on the prom.

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A couple of chaps were were flying their drones on the prom. There are regulations about flying them close to people, but I don’t think they cared. They were very manoeuvrable. Notice the camera underneath.

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Littlehampton Harbour  We were walking behind some people who's dog, a schnauzer, was following. On passing the fish and chip shop the dog went in unbeknown to the owners. When I told them where their dog was they shot off to get it.

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Littlehampton Harbour in the other direction.

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We went to Shoreham to do some geocaches along the beach. We started at the old fort. This is a view inland.

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Shoreham beach huts.

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Our friends Sally and Pat have just moved to Rustington about 5 minutes away from the caravan site. They came to us for a meal and we were kindly invited back to their new home. It is still a work in progress, but an enormous amount of work has been done to transform the house to what it is now. It should be finished in about 6 months.

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Another sunny day so we went to do a loop of geocaches in some nearby countryside. Halfway around we stopped for a little light refreshment at the World’s End pub. While I went to get the nearby geocache a chap stopped and chatted to Sue and told her that he was born in the pub.

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View of Littlehampton Harbour from the top of the       Look and Sea Visitor Centre.

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Oldie photo – Stuart in the open air swimming pool in Hemel Hempstead doing his canoe training

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Saturday, 1 November 2014

Ringwood - Round and About

We have recently had some visitors.

Neil and Jen came for a couple of nights. Neil and I were going to do 3 bike rides in the forest averaging 20 miles each. Here is Neil mending a puncture in his ‘puncture resistant’ tyres. He had 2 punctures in 3 days! I bought some of these tyres on his recommendation!
This photo was taken near Fritham. Later on in the ride we had some excitement with the last cow of the herd not wanting to pass us on a very narrow road. There was a car ahead of us and a horse rider behind. The cow was being shooed down the road by the farmer, but the cow tried to go though a fence and nearly landed on the car bonnet. The farmer said it was our fluorescent jackets that was the problem. The horse rider thought it was his horse. The cow went back to where it came from.
We had to retire to the nearby pub to steady our nerves and try a pint of the local brew. Neil then saw the recalcitrant cow going in the correct direction. 

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While Neil and I were cycling Sue and Jen went to Mudeford, Christchurch and Ringwood on the other days.

A nice day for a ride. We are at Standing Hat east of Brockenhurst.

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Maggie and Andy arrived shortly after Neil and Jen left. Andy had to leave very early on Sunday to catch a flight from Heathrow so we only had an evening and one day altogether (Sue and Maggie went to the shops in Ringwood on Sunday). I had a plan to go to Wimborne Minster, on Saturday, to see the chained library in the Minster, but it looked as though the library might not be open. When we arrived at the Minster the library was closed, but luckily for us the person who looks after the library arrived to do some research for himself and he agreed to show us around.

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Wimborne Minster chained library was founded in 1686. It was one of the first public libraries in the country. There are about 6 chained libraries in the country.
Text from the Minster website ‘The first donation came from Revd William Stone, who had seen many religious books like his being burnt by the authorities, and wanted to ensure that part of his collection would be kept safe in Wimborne. These theological books (Church ‘Fathers and Commentaries’) were in Latin, Greek and Hebrew, and so must have been used mainly by the clergy; they were not chained. When another local donor, Roger Gillingham, gave another 90 books in 1695, he insisted that the books be chained up, but also that the Library should be opened, free, for the people of the town, providing they were ‘shopkeepers or the better class of person’.

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Below – Walton’s Polyglot Bible

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The library is housed in a very small room up a spiral staircase. It is thanks to ‘Frank’ Tandy’ (our guide) that all is in order today. When he first set eyes on it all the books were heaped on the floor.

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To distinguish which book is which there are hand written markings on the ‘fore edge’.

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Below the Oldest Printed Book – note the RED capitals on the left hand page and none on the right. Writing the capitals was very time consuming and they never managed to finish the rest of the book.

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Coming down the spiral staircase

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Inside the Minster

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The Minster Astronomical Clock shows the earth as a dark blue ball in the centre with the sun going around it, pointing out the time on a 24-hour dial. The clock also tells the position and phase of the moon.

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Outside on the Minster Green there was a food fair taking place. We looked, but didn’t partake!

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To keep the local inhabitants in order on this busy day they had brought the Home Guard in with other military equipment.

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Cpl. Jones ? Not exactly a Ferrari

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Oldie Photo 
1963 Cycling in the Moselle Valley. Stuart on the left Neil on the right (see the first photo of this blog)

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