Inside Oxburgh

 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-2

While the scavenger hunt held the attention of the children this weekend I was every bit as excited to see Oxburgh since the hall is now open for the season. It has a bit of a split personality, decor wise, being part medieval castle and part Victorian manor house.  This is because the manor has been used as a residence continuously – and by the same family – since it was built in 1482.  That's ten years before Columbus discovered American, for reference.  A really long time. 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-3

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-9

The hall is built in a U-shape around a large open courtyard.  There is one entrance, across a drawbridge over the moat. A moat is a very cool thing.  Until you find out what was in there. Turns out medieval toilets were placed in the four corners of the hall complex. They were essentially shoots and "shot" down open piping into yes, the moat. Ew. 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-4

Mar 2013 oxburgh  2web

(above – one set of shelves in the library was actually a false door into the dining room)

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-7

The family was Catholic which put them in a dangerous position when their faith was banned in England by Elizabeth I.  In 1589 the family, like many across the country, created a 'priest hole' in the event that their home would be raided when a missionary priest was saying mass.  This one was well concealed…..in the aforementioned medieval toilet shoot. 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-6
(btw, that bright blue streak atop the clock is a spoon.  The children had to spot colored spoons in each room as they toured) 

Many of the interior toilets were constructed in garderobes, precursor to the closet or dressing room.  Inside this room there was a narrow set of steps to what appeared to be an indoor latrine. A square of the heavy stone floor was hinged which allowed it to be lifted up so a person could access the shoot and slip down into a small holding area constructed in the tower below the floor. No windows, no water, no light. Once the 18in thick floor was put back into place there was no way to escape and the priest would be at the mercy of the family to retrieve him eventually.  It seems that the soldiers that raided would sometimes wait at the property for days. 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-12
Mar 2013 oxburgh web-13

Another nod to this era was a collection of embroideries by Mary, Queen of the Scots while in exile. 

Mar 2013 oxburgh web-11
Mar 2013 oxburgh web-10

Mar 2013 oxburgh  2web-2
Very sobering, all that.  You touch the prayer books and rosaries and know in your heart, that had you made your entry a few years earlier, this could be you.  It could be you.  

The happy ending is that this family carried on through good years and bad, as we all must. The world changes.  The world stays the same.  We put one foot in front of the other in faith day by day.   

Mar 2013 oxburgh web

hoppin’ down the bunny trail

 

Snatches of a very good day at home and abroad.  

Or at home abroad as the case may be. : ) 

Easter weekend was chillier than usual this year but we determined to spend it outdoors nonetheless.  We took the children to Oxburgh Hall for a scavenger hunt around the grounds and throughout the hall itself.  The especially delightful part was that the event was sponsored by Cadbury which meant there was a hefty chocolate egg at the end of the hunt. That kept them all going though Abbie Rose had a few moments which tested her resolve. 

The story of the estate needs its own post and it will have that God willing. For now….

 

Mar 2013 easter web
These were responsible for my humming, "One ha'penny, two ha'penny…" all. day. long.

Mar 2013 easter web-2
Mar 2013 easter egg roll web

The boys did the easter egg roll while the little girls got their faces painted as what else? Bunnies.  There were the ears after all. 

Mar 2013 easter web-4
Mar 2013 easter web-6
Mar 2013 easter web-7
Mar 2013 easter web-5

We spent a few hours at the estate and then headed home where we had our own egg hunt, because you don't mess with traditions around here.  

Mar 2013 egg hunt abbie web

Mar 2013 easter web-8

Dinner, most of which was in the crockpot/roaster deal all day or easily made fresh. Carrots didn't actually happen at the last minute. We didn't make a plethora of food since there was all that chocolate and the pie. 

 

Mar 2013 easter menu web

Mar 2013 easter web-9
Simple and silly.  They had a very good time.  

I missed my boys.   A lot. : ) 

Norwich Market

 

A foggy stroll through the open air market in Norwich.  If you haven't been to England you are probably saying that wrong. We Americans like to say WHICH or WITCH when in fact all those w's in many British place names are actually silent.  So the East Anglia town of Harwich for instance, I learned is pronounced "Harridge."  

Your cultural language tidbit o' the day. : ) 

Norwich boasts the country's largest open air market and a very nice pedestrian shopping area.

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-9
Mar 2013 norwich market web_
Mar 2013 norwich market web_-4

you can read the sign yourself.  Like to try it at home?  Directions here.


Mar 2013 norwich market web_-11
 Lots of pictures of patisserie shop windows to take home to Alannah, since she prefers this sort of baking to Cake Boss fondant. 

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-5

 Indian textiles.

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-6

There were a couple men pushing copies of The Big Issue like carnival barkers. They were really rather charming.  "BIIIIIIG ISSUUUUUUE, get yer BIG ISSUE! Now, ladies don't crowd me all at once. There's plenty of 'em to go 'round." And so it went. <g> 

Turns out the Big Issue employs formerly homeless individuals as vendors, whom I can tell you work very hard and most sincerely. Awesome. 

 

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-3

Mushy peas, just what they sound like – smashed green peas.  A very popular side dish. My clan is nearly evenly split between mushy pea fans and not.  Ok, fan might be generous. 

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-8
Mar 2013 norwich market web_-7

Sign – quote from Noel Coward's Private Lives

Mar 2013 norwich market web_-2

The sport of kings

 

The older girls and I ventured down to Newmarket the other day while the weather was bright and sunny. Newmarket is the birthplace of thoroughbred racing and home to a national museum dedicated to same.  Records dating back to the 1100's indicate this was the earliest racing venue in the post-classical world. Thousands of horses still train in the area.  They do this in the morning.  We were there in the afternoon.  Hence, of those thousands, we actually saw two. 

You win some, you lose some. : ) 

Up side? After 1pm you can walk out onto The Gallops which are the training tracks. We did wander around all of that and thought you might like to talk a virtual look around as well. 

Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_
Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-2
Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-4
Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-3


Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-6


Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-5

Feb 2013 newmarket racing web_-7

 

black-nosed sheep

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-8

 

Thousands of sheep, soft-footed, black-nosed sheep — one by one going up the hill and over the fence — one by one four-footed pattering up and over— one by one wiggling their stub tails as they take the short jump and go over — one by one silently unless for the multitudinous drumming of their hoofs as they move on and go over — thousands and thousands of them in the grey haze of evening just after sundown — one by one slanting in a long line to pass over the hill…

– Carl Sandberg

The meadows of the Ickworth Estate boasted such soft footed, black nosed sheep at every bend in the road.  They never fail to stir up great affection within me. My Gram had a small heard of Suffolk sheep, six I believe.  At least in the beginning. (I inherited her tendency to multiply projects.)  I remember she took a night course at the local extension office. She bought the sheep, bred them. Soon there were twenty, then fifty.  I think there were several dozen by the time my grandfather was overwhelmed and the sheep project came to a close.  

We learned a lot in the interim however. All those biblical analogies take on new meaning after watching a sheep's unique response to challenges (to give up, by and large), towards pack mentality, and the tendency to flee.  Yet, we loved them she and I. In later years she framed a watercolor of a young woman in a nightgown with a winter coat tending a needy sheep in a snowy pen because it reminded her of those late night emergencies that would so often crop up.  

In the late 70's, while we chased those sheep through hill and dale, I certainly never expected to see a herd while standing in Suffolk itself. It is a singular blessing. I know it would make her smile. 

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-7

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-2


Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-6

and yes this sky is from the same hike.  It was a brief clearing!

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-4


Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-10

with this ring

 

 

We are now card carrying members of the National Trust which makes me ever so happy because now I can wander through the gardens and manor houses of 300 historic British estates. The first on the list was Ickworth where we stumbled upon the most elegant wedding party this past weekend.  This may have set the bar rather high for our daughters I think.  Not that they are even dating, mind you.  This was the sort of scene that plants all sorts of romantic ideas into a girl's head though.  So classically British, it was like a fairy tale. 

I am so looking forward to the weekends now. You know where you'll find me. : ) 

Feb 2013 ickworth web

Feb 2013 ickworth web-2

Feb 2013 ickworth web-3

Feb 2013 ickworth web-4

Tintwhistle

 

Rolls right off the tongue doesn't it?

Tintwhistle. 

I love words.  Have I mentioned that? 

Our cranky GPS rarely takes us to or from a place the same way twice.  Keeps things fresh, know what I mean? So while we went to Manchester by major highway, we returned along a rural road through some rugged high country dotted with little hamlets like this one near Derbyshire.  I really wanted to stop and get some shots in this one because this one had sheep. 

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-2

Like many European country villages there was one main thoroughfare and I couldn't tell if the side streets were wide enough or two way etc until it was too late to turn down them.  This really exasperated one son who shall remain nameless, but you can boo at him here just the same. ; )  I may or may not have passed up an additional dozen or two farm drives because it was impossible to tell if the drives were truly drives or closed gates.  Hence we traveled a couple miles out of town before I had a big ol' public drive to turn around in and head back to those sheep.  I am nothing if not cautious. (…worry wart, overthinker, scaredy-cat, whatever <g>)

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web

We parked on a wayside initially and Alannah and I walked a quarter mile back to the pasture we saw them at the first pass by. They were no longer by the road however.  They had ambled alllllll the way up the hillside. Contrary to what that son might tell you, I wasn't gone that long turning around.  They made good time moving uphill though.  So after some grumbling between us we hightailed it back to the vehicle and into town.  

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-8

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-3

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-7

Green for January, yes?

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-4

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-5

I want photography points for actually scaling the back of the little cemetary wall for this one:

Jan 2013 tintwhistle web-6

The little town was classic, sort of post industrial, though some old buildings date back to the 1600's. Just what I would have pictured. We walked for a bit and then headed off.  Most of the passengers fell fast asleep but, my adventures in U-turning now forgotten,  son and I enjoyed some very Colorado-esque views from the top of whatever wild barren hill we were on.