Thursday, 17 May 2012

Longleat – Part 2

One day we visited Stourhead. We were hoping for a good day, weather-wise, for walking and taking photos. The weather turned out to be very mixed.
Stourhead is a 2,650 acre estate at the source of the River Stour, Wiltshire. The estate includes a Palladian mansion, the village of Stourton, gardens, farmland and woodland. Stourhead has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1946.

Stourhead House

Iconic view

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At the other end of the lake

View ruined by rain –
her ladyship was not happy

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Library in the house - Colt Hoare (he inherited the house in 1785) turned to recording and publishing the antiquities of Wiltshire. He filled the Library at Stourhead with topographical books and records.

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Like all the grand families of the time, they were great collectors and one of the greatest treasures of Stourhead is the Pope's Cabinet - a jewelled cabinet that was built for a 16th-century pope which has been restored at a cost of £50,000 and is now on view to visitors. The cabinet, which is 13 feet tall and is made of marble, alabaster and semiprecious stones, resembles a baroque Roman church and was owned originally by Pope Sixtus V. P1070730-001

Maya and Norman came to the caravan for a meal. They have very recently moved to Street (of Clark’s Shopping Village fame). We visited them later in the week. Sue managed a trip to the shopping village while Norman and I shifted a small shed.
We had a lovely day with them - thanks.

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We could walk into parts of Longleat and the meerkat enclosure was one of them. They run around your feet, so you have to be careful not to step on one.

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On another day we went to Bath. We parked at Bath  P&R and took the bus in. Unfortunately we ended up at the hospital (my fault). We eventually arrived at Bath centre. Sue tackled the shops and I did some geocaches.


Pulteney Bridge

Colourful pig by the Abbey

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The Royal Crescent Bath is a residential road of 30 houses

Houses on the hill,
by the Royal Crescent

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We came back from Longleat two days early. The forecast for our last day at the site was ‘rain all of the day’. We decided to come back two days early, but we will go back because it is a lovely site.

One of the rainy days.

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Oldie Photos

1981 - Stuart’s Mum at the Florian Turm, Westfalen Park, Dortmund


Sue and Mum in the Park.

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Thursday, 3 May 2012

Longleat - Part 1

We have recently returned from a caravanning trip to Longleat. After a very dry winter, we were subjected to some very inclement weather, along with the rest of the country. The caravan site is within the park, but segregated from the Safari Park (thank goodness). We did hear the lions occasionally and the sea lions regularly. We didn’t manage a trip into the Safari Park due to the bad weather, maybe another time.

Longleat is an English stately home and the seat of the Marquesses of Bath.  It is noted for its Elizabethan country house maze,  landscaped parkland and safari park. The house is set in over 900 acres of parkland, landscaped by Capability Brown. It was the first stately home to open to the public, and also claims the first safari park outside Africa.

The house was built by Sir John Thynne, and designed mainly by Robert Smythson, after the original priory was destroyed by fire in 1567. It took 12 years to complete and is widely regarded as one of the finest examples of Elizabethan architecture in Britain.

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The only lion we saw

Garden topiary

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Getting close to the less dangerous exhibits

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The Courts Garden, near Bradford-on-Avon – the house is still lived in, but the gardens are in the ‘hands’ of the National Trust.

There are water gardens and herbaceous borders interspersed with topiaries. P1070615-001

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After The Courts Garden we visited Great Chalfield Manor, fortunately the weather improved. If you recognise the house it appeared in ‘The Other Boleyn Girl’.

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View from the front

Rear entrance

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Oldie Photo – August 1977 - Prague, Czechoslovakia – another holiday we abandoned early due to wet weather. The water in the foreground is the River Vltava - tents had been pitched here the night before. Out tent and car can be seen on the right of the picture – we were on the verge of moving because the river was due to rise another metre during the day!

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