Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Autumn


A sunny Saturday afternoon found us taking a trip to Charlecote Park, a National Trust house south of Warwick, where we had a gentle wander around the deer park, enjoying the beautiful autumn colours, a look at the secondhand books, and a visit to the tea shop. Trying to pack in what we can before the baby comes, although there was a moment during our walk when we wondered whether it was about to come. False alarm.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Lady of leisure

Debbie is now settling into the rigours of maternity leave. Here she is enjoying a sunny November Thursday with her Mum and Dad in the pretty Cotswolds town of Chipping Camden. Mark is hoping that paternity leave will be similarly relaxed, but perhaps that is wishful thinking?!

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Gunpowder, treason and plot

On Saturday evening we went with the twenties and thirties group from St John's to the firework display at the Castle, which was rather more spectacular than this photograph suggests, with the castle as a great backdrop to the fantastic fireworks. The baby seemed to enjoy them too, jumping around in time to the music (sort of).

An early start

Last Saturday found Mark waking early and unable to resist the prospect of an early morning traipse round the castle, in the frost, with the sun just rising. Very cold, but very pleasant. Surprising how many other people are up at 7:30am, mostly walking their dogs. Maybe one day Mark will be able to do the same!

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Baby Dadswell


Yesterday Debbie headed over to Northampton to meet 5-week old Rebecca Dadswell - Gayle and Steve's beautiful little girl. It's amazing to think that the 'bump' featured in 'Welcome Home' is now this little person. Louise came over too for a lovely Durham girlie get together - how life has moved on! Nice to be ladies of leisure - well sort of, for a while at least!

Monday, October 30, 2006

Star!

On Sunday Debbie's cousin Rob came fifth in the National Trust Snowdonia Marathon, finishing in the amazing time of 2 hrs 51 minutes. By all accounts it's a challenging race, much harder than the average marathon. Rob's achievement could entitle him to a place in the elite race in the London Marathon! Well done Rob - we're really proud of you.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Preparations

We are now busily preparing for our imminent arrival. On the first day of her Maternity Leave, Debbie's Mum and Dad came over to give a hand with decorating the nursery. 'Grandad' pasted up a border while 'Nanna' (name tbc!) took up the curtains. We hugely appreciated their help - and suspect that they quite enjoyed it too. We think the final effect looks lovely, and now feel much more ready to welcome our baby into our home.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Seaside


A visit to Mark's parents on the Suffolk coast resulted in a trip to pretty Aldeburgh on a grey Sunday morning (although the rain held off until our journey home). Composer Benjamin Britten lived for many years in Aldeburgh, a fact now recognised by the addition of a large, slightly rusty scallop shell on the beach, inscribed with the words "I hear those voices that will not be drowned" from Britten's opera Peter Grimes.

Four go crazy (not mini) in Warwick

After a satisfying lunch at the Saxon Mill last Saturday, we decided to head into Warwick to check out the mini golf course with Jo and Dan. Last year we had played the full 18-hole course at Stratford, and the 9-hole course at Warwick (apparently a crazy golf course, rather than mini-golf, according to the chap taking our money) was probably not quite up to the same standard, but good fun in any case, particularly as the Dawsons comfortably defeated the Penns. Not sure whether crazy (or mini) golf in October will prove a lasting tradition, but so far it's working out well!

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Aunt and Uncle to be


Last Sunday we had a visit from Uncle Stephen and Auntie Lucy (to be). We gave them some dinner and then took them on the obligatory walk around Kenilworth castle to work some of Lucy's pudding off. Someone offered to take our photo just after the camera had clicked but we thought we'd managed ok on our own, even if it is at a slightly odd angle.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Ducks

We've been a bit busy recently with double doses of ante-natal classes the last couple of weeks. Now it feels real!
We got in some practice with a weekend visit from Tim, Celeste and Keziah two weeks ago. Here Keziah is enjoying meeting the ducks in Jephson Gardens in Leamington. We can't believe how fast she is growing up.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Mobile

Anyone we've spoken to recently will have heard us agonising about buying a pram/pushchair and our complete inability to make a decision. But we finally bit the bullet and we're very happy with our Pramette which arrived a few days ago. Now all we need is a baby! And either Debbie has eaten too many pies or we won't have too long to wait!

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Victory!

Victory for Chedham's Yard in the final of the BBC's Restoration programme on Sunday night. This means that the people of Wellesbourne could have £millions to spend on redeveloping this fascinating series of 19th century workshops as a working museum. We were very pleased to see Chedham's Yard had won and we look forward to going back there in hopefully a couple of years time to see the restoration completed!

An Indian Summer


A gloriously sunny Sunday afternoon found us at Stoneleigh Abbey, the model for the house that Fanny Price visited in Mansfield Park(see Chapters 8-10 for Austen's description of the house). We went on a Jane Austen tour, following in her footsteps on a tour around the house. Apparently you can buy apartments in parts of the house - probably slightly out of our price range!

Life Begins At...


A couple of weeks ago we celebrated an important birthday for Debbie's dad - but we wouldn't be so mean as to say which one! We spent a lovely family day together, including a 'posh' meal at the Madeley Court Hotel in Telford and a potter around Much Wenlock (or Much Wedlock as it has become fondly known between us...), and rounded the day off with a nice birthday tea, complete with champagne and strawberries. We decided it would be a fire risk to put the right number of candles on the cake, but Dad seemed to enjoy his birthday cake anyway!

Monday, August 28, 2006

A very British Bank Holiday Monday

Our Bank Holiday Monday started off in a typically British way, sat in a traffic jam in the rain - with Clare and Rich and their neighbours Dan and Leanne. Things perked up when we eventually arrived in Ratley , a pretty village on the Oxfordshire/Warwickshire border, where we began a walk which took in Edge Hill where the first major battle of the Civil War was fought in 1642. The walk culminated in a visit to the Castle Inn at Edgehill, with a fantastic view from the beer garden over South Warwickshire. It was a welcome sight at the top of a pretty steep climb!

Relaxing in Jephson Gardens

This August Bank Holiday we had a visit from Tim, David and Martin. Whilst Debbie, Heather and Jamie enjoyed a girlie shopping trip, Mark and the boys scoured the charity shops of Warwick and Leamington for board games and sampled the delights of Jephson Gardens during a rare spell of August sunshine. Later we played 'JetSetGo!' - Martin's personally designed board game which will undoubtedly be the charity shop 'must have' in 20 years time!

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Welcome home

Louise and David arrived back in Blighty a couple of weeks ago after living in New Zealand for four years. Today we had a little reunion of some uni mates with Louise and David near Nottingham and were treated to some cordon bleu veggie cuisine. It was great to catch up after so long. Meeting up also gave Debbie and Gayle a chance to compare bumps.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

An evening drink


A slightly chilly evening drink at the Saxon Mill near Warwick. The picture tells a lie - we rapidly retired to the much cosier inside to sit on huge leather sofas - although alas no fire yet. After all it is still August, although as Mark and Lucy kept reminding us, it had only been 13 degrees when they left Helmsley in North Yorkshire that morning. It'll soon be Christmas!

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Restoration Village


The BBC's Restoration Village programme has Chedham's Yard in Wellesbourne as one of the three Midlands buildings people are able to vote to restore. We took a visit to this crumbling but fascinating time capsule of rural life. Three workshops crammed full of tools, benches and equipment, including a wheelwright and a working forge, started in the early 1800s and untouched since it closed in the 1970s. You can vote for it to be restored!

On the beams in the Wheelwrights workshop are snippets of weather records, such as the one below, which reads that the last day of October 1934 there was a "heavy snow storm".

Warwick Castle


Yesterday we spent a lovely day with Sue, Mark and (nearly) 1 year old Beth, and enjoyed a trip to Warwick Castle, our first since we moved to the area. We arrived just in time for the jousting, got dive-bombed by a hawk, none of which seemed to faze Beth, and wondered around the grounds and some of the inside for a very pleasant couple of hours.


And after the exertions of climbing the towers and ramparts, we needed an ice cream.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Orleton Park School


A few weeks ago we visited Debbie's old school of Orleton Park in Wellington, Shropshire (1987-1992) to take some final photos before they knock it down. The school closed for the last time in July and is to become part of the new Hadley Learning Community which opens in September eleswhere in Telford.

Debbie says that too many significant places in her life have been knocked down - her infant school, Orleton Lane Infants; Wembley Stadium, where she saw her first football match (Telford FC v Enfield Town FC in the 1988 FA Trophy final) ; and now her secondary school.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

St Michael's Mount


We also enjoyed a walk along the causeway to St Michael's Mount, a rocky island near Penzance, crowned by medieval church and castle. At high tide, the sea surrounds this island completely.

Seals on the Isles of Scilly


On our return to St. Mary's from Tresco, we took a slight detour on our boat, "Wizard" to some of the outlying rocks to the north and east of the islands. We were very excited to see a number of seals basking in the afternoon sunshine, and swimming around the boat.

Tresco Abbey Garden


We thoroughly enjoyed the subtropical gardens on the island of Tresco. Tresco Abbey Garden is 19 acres of winding, tree lined avenues, a dazzling array of flower species, as well as statues and sculptures by respected artists.