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I haven't updated the pictures of the 2004 trip in awhile. You can look at the current set by CLICKING HERE.

This was one of the last stops we made in Cornwall, on our way to the cottage we rented in Somerset. It was one of my favorite memories of the trip. I've written about it here. It was a lovely, quiet place that put my heart at ease. We all fell completely in love with it.

I also shot my favorite picture of the entire trip here. I'll let you decide which one it was.

Alpha

temple church


and Omega

worship
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Here's the remaining pictures of our day at Tintagel.

Once you've made the climb to the top, there are some interesting ruins, but the vistas—oh, the vistas are spectacular. On the very top of Tintagel there isn't much but bluebells (in spring) and the bare outlines of castle ruins. So why have I always said this one of the highlights of the trip for me? I suspect endorphins played their part, but really—Tintagel is about those incredible vistas and the dramatic coastline all around it on all sides; it's about the romance of what once was there; and the even bigger romance of what might have once been there. It's a mystical kind of place for all that, and if you're any kind of an Arthurian, it's a must see.

To see the entire new batch, CLICK HERE.



cliffs opposite tintagel pan


This is the shore opposite Tintagel. You can see some of the sea caves that are prevalent in this stretch of coastline.
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My latest uploads from our very busy day on the moors can be viewed by CLICKING HERE.

This is the last of the pictures from the Cornish moors, but unfortunately, I still have many more uploads to go.

men-pan-tol pathway

This is the pathway to the prehistoric monument of Men-An-Tol.


men-an-tol-stone-500

Here's somebody else's picture of Men-An-Tol, the way I've seen it photographed many times. Which is oh-so-ironic, really.
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Here's the latest uploaded batch. I found one leftover shot of St. Michael's Mount. CLICK HERE to get to the new batch—which is mostly about the lovely little church of St. Grada, near Madron Holy Well.


one more st mike's mount


St. Grada

st. grada panorama
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This immense estate has beautiful gardens in a large variety of environments, as well as being an important wildlife sanctuary. The gardens became "lost" when the owners ceased to take interest and everything became an overgrown jungle. Now in public trust, the gardens have been lovingly restored and provide a nice day of enjoying the flora and fauna. Some of these environments are like stepping into another world. We took a ton of pictures that day. I've culled some, but there are still 25 in the latest upload. Click on either picture to get there.


the lost gardens of heligan


earth sculture, heligan
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Here's the next batch of photos, showing the afternoon we were headed to Golitha Falls and got lost in the countryside—which turned out to be a nice drive anyway. We'd never have seen sweet St. Neot otherwise. Although the poor wanker us broads accidentally interrupted might feel differently about our adventure. We thought it hilarious. I suspect he didn't.

The set-so-far can be found here.

The latest pictures can be found by clicking on the first photo:

countryside near st. neot

The countryside

Photobucket

St. Neot's churchyard
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I promised [livejournal.com profile] mnfaure that I'd post the rest of my "panoramas" of Cornwall, but I thought Tintagel required some explanation. Or maybe I just think it does and wanted an excuse to blab. Either way. Four years later, this is still one of the high points of the trip for me. A beautiful, rugged landscape and a beautiful release of endorphins.

Be warned: there are more photos behind the cut then are indicated by the labels.

We visited towards the end of our week there, and as may be evident from the pictures, it was a chilly spring day—although most of the weather we'd had in Cornwall up until then had been sunny and beautiful. It was actually perfect weather for visiting Tintagel, I think, which is quite a romantic and dramatic site. Plus, it's a sodding great climb to get onto the "island." I wouldn't like to do that in hot weather. As you'll be able to see in...

Panorama #1. )

Panorama #2. )

Panorama #3. )

Panorama #4. )
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Live life, live love. Hope you had a really good day.


Here's a pretty photo for you. )
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I grew enamored of doing panoramas like this because I've always been a big fan of David Hockney's photographic assemblages. I like the rough cut feel of putting them together like this, the tension of the varying angles and light.

I was looking through the panoramas of my 2004 trip to Britain and realized that of the 10 or so panorama shots I'd done, every last one of them was of some place in Cornwall. Cornwall was just that kind of place, I guess. I have no idea if this is going to work since one of these is FREAKING HUGE, so I'll put it behind a cut and hope for the best.

Panoramalama. )
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[livejournal.com profile] sartorias has asked for pictures of castles and interesting buildings so her readers can take a virtual tour. As I live in the Westside of Los Angeles, where we tear anything interesting down to build more condos, there are very few compelling buildings within easy striking distance for me to photograph. (Unless you count the tiki house just around the corner from here. I'm mad for tiki! But I didn't know if others shared my affliction.) So with [livejournal.com profile] sartorias's permission I'm posting some of my photos from somewhere else. I realized that all my shots of actual castles (taken with my Canon AE-1 not my digital) are "yet to be scanned" so here's the best I could do on short notice.

Interesting places. )

Quietude

Feb. 17th, 2006 03:53 pm
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When we were in Bodmin we went to a restaurant called La Providence. It was a slow night and the chef, a native who'd gone to London and done the restaurant business there for several years before returning home, came out to talk with us. He suggested several places he thought we'd enjoy visiting. One place he mentioned was the Temple Church out on Bodmin Moor. Actually, the church is St. Catherine's at Temple, a small village, but everyone calls it the Temple Church. It was founded by the Knights Templar, abandoned in the Eighteenth Century, restored in the late 19th, and sits now in a small, green valley. We decided to visit it before leaving Cornwall for the cottage we'd rented in Somerset.

Of all the sweet little churches we visited on our trip, this was by far my favorite. So much love surrounded it, from the villagers who lovingly kept it up, to the peace of the churchyard. It's a tiny cruciform structure, but has lovely stained glass windows. They look plain from the outside but blaze with color inside the church—because they were designed not for folks to appreciate from outside, but to enhance worship on the inside.

It had no pews—just simple wooden chairs before the altar, and an ancient stone baptismal font crowded against one wall with a glorious stained glass window above. St. Francis? A saint with birds flying all around him and the words beneath, He prayeth well who loveth well/Both man and bird and beast.

So much spirit there, so much sense of something beyond the human occupants of the place, so much peace and quietude. Truly a place that renewed the spirit.

The Temple Church )

Vistas

Feb. 15th, 2006 04:47 pm
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Since April 20 is the two-year anniversary of my trip to England, I thought I'd better finish getting the photos scanned and posted on my photo page. This will definitely be the last vacation where I use the old Manual SLR. I love my Canon AE-1, but I do not like the scanning and fiddling. If I'd had a brain in my head, I would have had the photo lab save them onto a CD, but I left my brains at home that day. Such is life.

I don't take vacation snaps so much as I do photo montages, so be warned. There are a great many pictures in my albums (and I'm only two-thirds of the way done), but they do include everything through Tintagel:

http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/sapelle/my_photos [link no longer works]

If you would like to read about the stories behind these pictures, these are the relevant blog entries:

Days Lost, Days Gained
High Points, Low Points
The Other High Point
The Stories Behind the Pictures
The Wyrd Woman of Chysauster
A Really Good Day
ETA: Quietude

If you'd druther not, here are a couple of panoramas:

Panoramas de Tintagel )
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Thanks to everyone for participating in The Pam's First Poll. At least as many people requested that I stop eating their brain as designated themselves craftspersons. Those who thought of themselves as an Artist-Craftsperson combo dominated.

Other news of the day: Since coming back from my vacation from Night Warrior on Monday, I've been cranking it out. I did 1,000 words today in not quite an hour and I'm probably 3/4 to 2/3 of the way through chapter 25. The ms. hit 104,000 words today. I'm still not as close to The End as I'd like to be, but I'm getting there.

Thought of the day: There must be a law of physics that says air conditioners can never and will never work properly—except, perhaps, in Bizarro World. The country is sweltering, this city is sweltering, but everyone in my office is swaddled in extra clothing and my legs, I think, are starting to form icicles. This is a new building and the AC has never worked right, and even though we just moved into the place in October, things are always breaking. We've begun to refer to it as the $50 million fixer-upper.

But it looks good. On the outside.

Cliché du jour: Their eyes held a silent plea.

Darling du jour: Behind us, all sound stopped except the occasional jangle of horse's tack, the shifting of hooves, the commentary of the crows.

I don't usually like to designate darlings because often they look pretty stupid in retrospect, but this one's okay. It's held up for a couple of days now, anyway. Next week, it may look stupid.

Picture of the day

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

This is a panorama of the Cornish moors near St. Just, taken last year. I hope you can see it all scrunched up like this. I'll know once I post this sucker, won't I?

This was my last vacation taken with a manual camera. I love my manual camera, but I still haven't got all the photos scanned in and posted at my photo site. I should have had the damned things saved to disk when I developed them, but I'm such a little fluffy head... la di da la di da...

If you want to see more of my pix of England, you can visit them here:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/boneandsteel/albums/72157617867686631

And if you want to read me blah blah blahing about the day this photo(s) was taken, you can go here:

http://pjthompson.dreamwidth.org/429555.html
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I just posted more photos of The Trip [old link no longer works: GO HERE.], some more of our day on the moors in Cornwall visiting the ancient stuff. Of course that's got me reminiscing. That was a jam-packed day. And lots of German speakers on the road, for some reason. We ran into the same group repeatedly, all apparently doing "the megalithic thing."

We started off at Chysauster, the 2000 year old village, then went to St. Grada and Madron Holy Well. Next up was Lanyon Quoit and Men-an-Tol out on the moors, lunch and "arting" around at the galleries and shops in St. Just, wandering lost through hedgerows in search of Carn Euny (another ancient village), zipping across Slaughter Bridge and "Hey, I think that was something significant" but the road was way too narrow to turn around in and by the time we found someplace, we decided we'd had enough and headed back to our hotel in Marazion (and dinner). Actually, all this stuff was within about a ten mile radius so even though we saw a lot it was mostly a ramble rather than a rigid schedule. But the stuff that day was so intense, so groovy, it does kind of feel like we visited them on separate days.

I've dealt with our adventures at Chysauster here, and St. Madron's rhapsody waxing here, so I won't inflict that on you again. Lanyon Quoit, one of those ancient megaliths, was really cool because it's just out in the middle of a field beside the road. You pull over, climb over a stile, and there you go. Massive stones holding up another massive stone slab, about six feet tall I guess, and there's nothing but rugged moorland all around. This area was one of the few places in Cornwall that looked like I'd pictured it in my mind's eye. I was thinking Hound of the Baskervilles whenever I pictured Cornwall, but it's mostly rolling green hills and the sea. Though I guess there are parts, deeper inside Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor that are more rugged and quite dramatic.

What we saw was beautiful, just not what I expected—and it didn't take long for us to get tired of quaint little seaside villages. How jaded that sounds, but...seen one, seen 'em all, basically. And that's where the tourists hang, so they tended to be more crowded. The things we saw on this trip that stayed with us (and I'm not just talking for myself here) were all inland, away from the tourist rim. Well, okay, the little village of Tintagel was pretty touristy (and by the sea), but that was different. There was the tourist part—the Merlin’s Cave Inns and the King Arthur Lounges and the like—then there was the real part where you had to do some serious climbing and communing with nature. That last bit was totally exhilarating. As I rhapsodically waxed here.

After Lanyon Quoit we went in search of Men-an-Tol. Funny thing about M-A-T. I'd been seeing pictures of it for years. In fact, a picture much like this. These pictures always gave the impression of a sweeping, impressive monument—gigantic in scale and mind-blowing thinking of how the ancients engineered it and erected it. Well, I'm here to tell you, Men-an-Tol is seriously lacking in the sweeping department. In fact, whoever took this picture had to be laying on their belly to get this perspective. M-A-T is a wee bit of a monument, a dinker, no more than waist high. And we walked miles to get to it! All right, maybe it was only a half mile or so, but it felt much longer. Even longer on the way back because bathroom issues were added to the mix. (I swear, these kinds of circumstances are the only ones in which I have penis envy.)

So, back in the car with bladders taken care of, we decided we were starving and meandered towards St. Just for lunch. This is a lovely village out in the middle of the moors which has seen quite an influx of artists and artisans. It hasn't been discovered in a big way like St. Ives and doesn't have seaside vistas, so it was actually rather pleasant. The folks were friendly, the arts less touristified, but more importantly—they had really good coffee , tea, and chow. We wandered into one arty store where I managed to drop a bundle of cash. I didn't spend much on this trip, but I think I spent about a third of my entire knickknack budget there. We also struck up a conversation with the cute, funny young man minding the store. He had a lot of keen observations about the local sights. He wanted to know which part of the States we were from because his wife came from New York. "From that big island there. I can't remember what it's called." "Long Island?" we suggested. "No, that doesn't sound familiar. It's that really big island there." After much hemming around he finally remember the name of the big island: Manhattan.

Afterwards, we wandered down to the bakery because we had our eyes on some brownies we'd glanced in the window. We struck up a conversation with the nice lady behind the counter who seemed very local to us, with a real Cornish accent. She also wanted to know what part of the States we were from. Turned out she was from New York. "Oh, are you married to the young man down at the shop?" "Him? No, he's married to my niece." She'd lived in St. Just twenty years and had become quite local after meeting (in New York) and marrying a young Englishman, who introduced the niece to his buddy, who..."Love is a many splendored thing," as the lady at the bakery said.

We tried to follow the directions to Carn Euny given to us by the nice young man, really we did. Everyone agreed that it's one of the more interesting ancient sites around, and you can actually go down into the fogou there, unlike Chysauster. But it had rained heavily the day before, see. And the road leading to Carn Euny was wide enough for our van, but all muddy and rutted and it looked like one would need a tank to traverse without getting stuck. And I think the site was three or four miles up that road and we'd already done so much walking! It was getting on towards late afternoon and we'd eaten too much, okay? We decided not to. I've regretted not going up there since, but what are you going to do? I don't think vacations should be endurance tests, frankly. We were tired and bilious. Some of the Germans were heartier, though. They parked their van and took off hiking up the muddy, rutted road. We felt shame and hung our heads, then leaped gleefully back in the van and drove away.

I think we decided to look for a church along the way, maybe Sancreed, or maybe it was when we were driving up and down the road looking for the minimal signage pointing to Carn Euny, but we zipped across a little bridge and I noticed a sign saying, "Slaughter Bridge." It rang a bell, but I couldn't place it until we were back in Marazion and I was looking through my Green Guide. It turned out to be a legendary Arthurian site, one of the gazillion places in the British Isles claimed to be the place where Arthur fought his last battle, Camlann. As legend has it, A & His Boys fought here and managed to hold off the enemy and keep them from crossing the river Camel. Now, this was not such an imposing bridge, nor was the river much more than a wide stream. In fact, I could have probably stood in the deepest part of that river and still been nearly as tall as the top of the bridge. (Although I will admit we drove rather quickly over it and my memory has hazed a bit in the last four months.) Taking into account that I would have been tall by Medieval standards (at 5'7"), I'm still hard-pressed to see anyone being stopped at this bridge when they could so easily walk around it to get to the other side. Unless the river was a roaring cataract in those days, but in that case they would have needed a much bigger bridge.

Then I remembered Men-an-Tol and a possible answer came to mind. Maybe the ancient Cornish simply suffered from a severe lack of proportion. It would explain so much.
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Okay, I guess I'll stop blabbing about this trip soon. I was quieting down, but the pictures got me stirred up again, the new batch I posted today especially.

After driving out of Looe, we decided we might drive down the coast to Mousehole or Penzance for our next stop, but we were concerned about getting there late and finding a place to stay, so we decided to detour through the Bodmin Moor to the town of Bodmin. They had a Tourist Information Bureau there and we thought we'd book a room with them and continue driving. But once we got to Bodmin we fell in-love with it. Such a quaint little town and we got rooms at a lovely bed and breakfast high on a hill above the town looking out to the distant hill where the town erected a obelisk in honor of a man who'd done a lot of good things for the town. Bodmin turned out to be a perfect place to stay to explore the moors and we wound up staying two nights. We would have stayed a third night if they hadn't been booked up. We had a lovely meal at a restaurant in town called La Providence, with lots of London panache because it was run by a London chef, Simon, who'd gotten fed up with London and moved back home to Cornwall. He gave us hints on a lot of nice local sights we might have otherwise missed.

But before that meal, since we got to Bodmin early, we decided to drive around the countryside. There was a place called Golitha Falls we'd seen in the photographs of a friend and we asked our hosts at the B&B how to get there. They gave us instructions, but well, those country roads can be a bit confusing. We were winding through hedgerows and country lanes and dirt roads and we thought we were on track--and we were, but we were also kind of . . . not lost exactly . . . more like finding an unplanned adventurous route to our chosen destination. The way I look at it, even if you're wandering blind down country roads, you're always headed somewhere, so you're never really lost. We came to a lovely crossroads that sort of kind of pointed us where we were going, but the land around it was so beautiful, we pulled over by the side of the road to take pictures.

It wasn't until we pulled over and got out of the car that we noticed someone was already parked by one of the hedgerows. It was a gent in a tiny red car, not looking at the scenery, not reading, not sleeping—just sitting there staring out the windshield at nothing. Or maybe he was concentrating. On something else. That we couldn't see. Anyway, he wore one of those blank, internal looks. We should have been creeped out, I suppose. Unfortunately, we got a fit of the giggles and, well, once that kind of behavior starts there's just no stopping until it's run it's sorry course, no matter how much you shush yourself or tell yourself it's not the appropriate time. We didn't look at him, pretended he wasn't there in fact, and pointed at the scenery, and snapped away. We weren't talking in loud, obnoxious American voices, but we were speculating rather a lot in whispers about what he might be doing, and that only added to the giggles, I'm afraid. Which I suppose was rather obnoxious.

"He's come to the most remote location he could find to commit suicide," we speculated merrily. "He was sure no one would bother him here."

"He's pondering the meaning of his life and finding it wanting, wondering why he was ever born."

"He's got a house full of relatives from America who've descended on him and he just needs a little bloody peace and quiet."

After about five minutes of our giggling and snapping the poor man started his car and drove away at a rather rapid clip. We were not a balm to his rattled spirit, I'm afraid. I have nothing to say in our defense. All we did was laugh rather more loudly after that. We did feel bad about it afterwards, though. Sort of.

Then we got back on the road—knowing our way the whole time, of course—and reached the tiny, sweet village of St. Neot, which hadn't exactly been in the directions we'd been given. We decided to stop and take a look at the church. You know, I'm not a big fan of most cathedrals, but little country churches really move me. You can feel the human dimensions in them, the centuries of people spending time there, and St. Neot was not a disappointment. Wonderful, elaborate Medieval wooden arches inside, quiet, peaceful, imbued with spirit. As a project someone had done needlepoint pillows with the names of all the parishioners to kneel on and left them in their favorite pews. Just a lovely place.

No tiny red cars with solitary gents hanging about.

Eventually, we got back in amongst the hedgerows and Ann said, "I don't think this is the way. I think we're lost." And that's when I saw the sign pointing the way to Golitha Falls. See, we knew the way all the time. We pulled into the car park and noticed the highway about fifty yards further up the windy, bumpy road we'd just traversed. The highway our hosts at the B&B had directed us to take. It made the drive back to Bodmin ever so much quicker and more straightforward.

Maybe as punishment for our appalling behavior with the solitary gent, I snapped one picture at Golitha then it was time to reload. My camera jammed—my lovely, ancient, manual Canon AE1. I couldn't get the film to advance no matter what I did and I only had the one roll of new film in my pack. Ann did manage to get some good shots of the Falls—very rugged and quite beautiful. We did a lot of clamoring over rocks and through muddy paths to get to them, but it was well worth the effort. The locals out walking their lovely puppies were amazed people had come all the way from Los Angeles to see their local falls. Everyone was so nice. Hopefully, they weren't related to the gent in the red car.

And fortunately, my problem with the camera turned out to be temporary, due to a bad roll of film and not my camera itself. I took lots more pictures after that. Six more rolls, in fact.

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