Tuesday 28 June 2011

Did The Earth Move For You, Darling?

Actually, it's another garden update!

David has got well and truly stuck into digging out the front lawn to make the fabled pull-in for the car! 

It currently resembles an open cast mine. First the turf sods have to be cut and removed and the topsoil separated from the subsoil and barrowed round to the back garden where David is  building up the levels, and he is uncovering an assortment of large sandstone rocks and boulders in the process which he is shifting single-handed. 
DIY rockery kit anybody? 
Actually, some of these would make a Bouldery, never mind a rockery!

My Pocket Hercules!
Cutting the sods.
Loading them into the barrow, supervised by our neighbour's granddaughter!
Standing Stones...
Boulders in the foreground yet to be dealt with.
A closer look at what we're up against.
The Rock Garden was proving to be very productive this year...! The Gnomes dwarfed....!
To boulder-ly go...!
 

The Whitehaven Festival 2011

The Whitehaven Festival took place over the weekend of Friday June 17th to Sunday June 19th and was an absolutely brilliant occasion, as always!
It is a combination of Maritime, Food and Music Festivals all rolled in to one, together with a brilliant Air Display, and it's possible to have a really good weekend while spending very little money indeed.
Tickets for the gigs average out at around £35 a head per gig (there are three, one on each evening) but you can wander down to the harbour and hear all the music and entertainment for free, even if you can't actually see what's going on. Actually, I've been at gigs where I couldn't see what was going on, so it's no big deal!
Friday Evening kicked off with 'Here And Now', the  successful high profile 80s  show, featuring Boy George, Bananarama and Carol Decker (of T'Pau), and the evening rounded off with the traditional fireworks display over the harbour. Brilliant! Spent so far, £0.00.

Saturday really saw things get underway. We wandered down at about 10am, being fortunate enough to live less than ten minutes walk from the Harbour, where everything is centred.

Almost every vessel participates in the Best-Dressed Boat Competition!

Although the weather was a little dull, the Harbour appeared to be full of life and colour, and plenty of people had turned up already. Around 200,000 people would attend the Festival over the three days, a pretty good turn-out for this little west Cumbrian's town's local Festival!

Among the attractions on the Saturday was the Jet Ski Display Team, the RAF Band, coverage and entertainment from Cumbria FM, a Fashion Show staged by the University of Central Lancashire, local musical acts on the Acoustic Stage, and a flypast by a Spitfire from the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.
You could see all the above for free,  but if you shelled out a whole £5 for wristbands for the whole weekend, you could also access the Sugar Tongue (the quay where sugar was unloaded in the heyday of Whitehaven as a major port in the 18th and 19th century) which is where the Cookery Theatre was sited, featuring celebrity chefs including the wonderful Jean Christophe Novelli, also Mark Bauman, Cheesemeister Sean Wilson and local chef Ricky Andalcio.
This is where two Royal Navy Archer-Class patrol vessels (HMS Biter and HMS Charger) and three Tall Ships were also moored.The were the Irene and the Bessie Ellen, two of the last examples of the West Country Trading Ketch, and the Johanna Lucretia, a Belgian built fishing vessel now used for private hire.

On the journey up to Whitehaven from Wales, the Irene had suffered a mishap resulting in a broken boom. The shipwright had to drive all the way up from Cornwall to do a repair job, and in doing so became something of an attraction himself. It's not everyday you see a craftsman at work, and visitors crowded round to watch him. He seemed happy enough to answer questions etc, and it was fascinating to see the two parts of the splintered boom trimmed up and  grafted together over the course of the weekend.

You can't see the join...!
 Meanwhile, on the Johanna Lucretia, visitors were taking advantage of being able to go aboard and take a closer look at  the vessel, under the occasional gaze of a very relaxed young man who closely resembled a sleepy Viking...!
Bless!
Other attractions on the Sugar Tongue  included a team from the Historic Diving Society, who don ancient looking diving suits and lead boots and dive in tank with enormous glass windows, much to the fascination of adults and children alike! 
 There was also a display of owls and birds of prey, including a Steppe Eagle, but I have to say they looked pretty mournful and I guess they were thinking that they would rather be elsewhere...


  

 Over on the Milennium Promenade, Titan the Robot was strutting his stuff. Having seen 'him' last year I was happy to give it a miss. there is something unnaturally tall and predatory about the creation which I don't much care for, although I can appreciate the cleverness of the concept and the strange appeal.
By mid-afternoon the funfair was in full swing, and it was lovely to see people genuinely enjoying themselves. The atmosphere was brilliant, and I am always delighted to see how different this fair is from some I have been to in the South, very family-orientated with no yobs or tension from fear of crime or violence. Plenty of stalls selling candy-floss, hot dogs etc, but you can inhale the aroma for nothing!







Saturday evening's musical entertainment was provided by Madness, who absolutely rocked the Harbour, but sadly the fireworks which usually round off the evening had to be cancelled because of the strong onshore wind. I reckon that was the only disappointment of the weekend, and couldn't be helped.

Total spent so far, £10 for wristbands for the Sugar Tongue for both of us for the whole weekend, and £2.20 for some fudge from the Galloway Fudge Company who had a stall in the food area. We have experienced their amazing fudge before, and it is a once a year treat not to be missed!

The Sunday was brighter than the previous day, which was great for the Veteran's Parade, which was this year led by the Queen's Band of the Royal Marines and included a Royal Naval Colour Party, the RAF, Cadets and a squad of local Veterans. The Parade was followed by  a Glenn Miller concert by the superb RAF Dance Band, The Squadronaires. 
It was great to be able to wander down at leisure and take in the sights and sounds.

One of the highlights for me was the beautiful and majestic Chinook helicopter. The canvas camp-bed type seats of which actually rival most budget airlines for comfort, surprisingly!

We took in the sights and smells of the Made In Cumbria Shopping Village and the Continental Market.



 We resisted all temptation, until we reached the Galloway Fudge Company stall again. Oh dear. Well it is only once a year...Oh ok! Twice a year if you want to be pedantic about it!

Sunday afternoon saw the brilliant Air Display, yet another amazing free entertainment to be enjoyed to the full by tightwads like us!
Needless to say, my little point and shoot camera couldn't do any of it justice but I'll include a few grainy pics just to prove I was there!

RAF Sea King Helicopter


RAF/RNLI Search and Rescue Demo





Black Knights Parachute Team



P51 Mustang


Hawker Sea Fury


 The pictures are pretty poor, but the line up included a Spitfire of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight, aerobatics from Garry Ferryman and Steve Carver flying purpose-built Extra stunt planes, The SWIP team of Peter Wells and Guy Westgate in Silence Twister single-seaters, the Hawker Sea Fury, a display of precision parachuting (straight into the Harbour!) from the Black Knights, all regular serving soldiers on loan from the Royal Regiment of Artillery, an air-sea rescue demonstration featuring an RAF Sea King helicopter working in conjunction with the RNLI, the Matadors aerobatics team and (my favourite!) the P 51 Mustang. Fantastic! 
We found a brilliant viewing spot, and thoroughly enjoyed the display.
The Sunday musical extravaganza was provided by Razorlight, which went down very well!

Yet again we had a brilliant festival weekend, although we didn't have to part with very much dosh at all.


Total spent : £15.75 (Wristbands, Programme and Fudge!)
Of course, we are lucky to live close enough to enjoy the days and go home for lunch and out again in the afternoon! 

Amazing place, Whitehaven!



 I had to go into the town the next day, so took my camera along to see if I could get some shots of the tall ships after the hordes had departed...










Sunday 19 June 2011

Very Quick Garden Update!

We won't ever win prizes for speed (life gets in the way too often!) but the garden is progressing, one baby-step at a time.
David has begun to dig out the raised lawn at the front of the house, which will eventually provide a pull in off the road for the car. As we've dug over the narrow border and dug out some of the earth, we have discovered some lovely smooth, weathered sandstone rocks, small boulders really, so I've put them to use as the beginnings of a mini rockery which will conveniently provide a demarcation zone between the raised level of the narrow side border and the lower ground level.


Ivy, Thrift and Campanula, to be joined by London Pride and grasses later.



 We've also levelled the 'path' somewhat, and dug out half-bricks, cobbles, coal and what must have been some of the original 80 year old builders rubble in the process. We've had to use some of the earth we've dug out at the front in an attempt to bring it up to something approaching level. A layer of weed-suppressant membrane has gone down to help prevent walking dirt into the house.






These concrete steps have so far failed to yield to all mere physical attempts to demolish them, but their end is nigh - David is determined to take a steel saw to them and lay in a gentle slope alongside that of our neighbours which will lead up to the front door.






The borders look pretty nondescript at the moment, but they will provide an area of permanent planting round the edge of the pull in, and some containers will add a splash of colour under the windows, while some little friends (yes, I realise that I will never be allowed to exhibit at Chelsea, ha ha!) make me smile and David shake his head in disbelief...!

  
Mini Me and Mini Him!

Meanwhile, in the back garden, the fence along the right-hand side is now complete, and we have an area to swallow up some of the earth from the front diggings to bring up the levels and reduce the slope towards the house.



It might not look like very much at the moment, but it represents a vast improvement from three years ago when this was an expanse of overgrown bushes, dying trees and neglected privet hedging. in fact, when we bought the house, we assumed that the garden was at least a third shorter than this because you could neither see nor get through the undergrowth to the back wall! 
Hopefully, it will improve further in time, and at least Bacchus/Dionysus has found his rightful place on the far wall, having travelled to this, his third home with me!

Family Friday

On Friday we went over to Leeming to visit Lizz and the girls, who had Jon, Elisha and Alex staying for the weekend.
It was lovely to catch up with them, and take a new batch of photos of the grandchildren, who seem to have grown up almost beyond recognition every time we see them - one of the penalties of long distance grandparent-hood!

Alex pushing Freya around for a change!


Freya putting her shoes on before going out to play.
We had bought Freya and Alex a little watering can each - we liked the design as they had a very small filling hole on the top, preventing (hopefully) water from slopping out between tap and garden. I liked the design so much that I bought one for myself for watering my containers - by the design, I mean the fact that it is relatively spillproof, not that it is a charming bright orange plastic elephant, ha ha!

Little Alex trotting around with his watering can..
...then letting his daddy carry the can, so to speak...
...before dashing off to do something more exciting instead!
Unfortunately, this left Daddy with the watering can to play with...!
Boys will be boys!
 Freya, meanwhile, was getting the hang of using her new     watering can.

Quite the little gardener, keeping Grandpa busy filling the can.
More please, Grandpa!

While Freya was watering, Alex was playing with sticks and stones (who needs toys!) and eventually the children, big and small, ended up on the slide and climbing frame...


Lizz was looking after baby Chloe, and Alex had discovered the fun to be had climbing over the backs of the springy fold-down garden chairs...
The look that says "Mother, put my picture on your blog at your peril...!" 




Freya had gone very quiet at this point and had gone back  to her watering...




She must have become aware that nobody was taking very much notice of what she was doing, so she had a quick double check that she wasn't being observed...
              and decided to see what being a flower feels like...

                      Wet presumably!



Fortunately, she has a very laid-back Mummy, who saw the funny side, even if she privately felt that Spy-Granny should have prevented the soaking!

It was lovely to catch up with the family, and we appreciated the lunch that Lizz had laid on, complete with chocolate cake provided by Elisha, as did the little ones...!




If I'd known what fun my grandchildren were going to be, I'd have had them first!