Showing posts with label cottages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cottages. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2013

My England................

I finished reading "A Fine Romance" ......I didn't want it to end. Every page was wonderful. It made me so homesick. It made me determined to go back soon. Susan Branch has an eye for what makes England so special. The details, the things she notices. The things I love. Only someone who truly loves the place would see it as she does. So..........what is it?
 photo 85319079-6c58-4a5d-9b04-4f3e3fd9b819_zps33d7ee97.jpg
One of her comments was that everything in England seems to have been made by hand. Places as old as Stonehenge and the cottages that have thrived for 500 to 800 years. The gardens that surrounds the castles and the cottages. The fact that the National Trust keeps things for posterity. People have no reserves in handing off their property to give to the country. Its so wonderful. In the days when the aristocracy dominated the lands and were the owners of vast properties, there came a time when the money runs out and rather than sell to be built on they gave it to us all. Forever. So our children and grandchildren can enjoy it forever into the distant future. Their legacy lives on and we can share it. So many of them open the homes they still live in so that their art treasures can be seen and appreciated. The amount that they get from the public may help them somewhat but it must cost a fortune (that many no longer have) to keep those places running and so when they reach the end of their pockets then the National Trust can carry on.
 photo dac845c8-7afd-421a-a8d6-700f5800e6a9_zpsc5ea475a.jpg
We have had "The Green Belt" a vast stretch of land surrounding the city that is supposed to always stay "green" meaning no more building. Or only with a special permit. Some people have got through the restrictions somehow but its rare. So we can be assured that some country lasts for the wild things.
The hedgerows and meadows protected. As they should be. Some of those hedgerows have been there forever. They are a work of art. For someone who is not a farmer or a country person, or even British to appreciate that thrills the heck out of me. Susan Branch got it, understood and appreciated it. She was there at the right time for all the best things that England has to offer. The Spring, between May and June. You will see the lambs, the bluebells and all the wildflowers.
Primrose and Cowslip
 photo 52f75e13-492d-440a-8412-6649fad8331a_zps760a3190.jpg
The oldness of it all, the history of it all...............I love the very dirt of England and all thats buried in it. Is that strange? There is so much under the surface, all our ancestors hidden in lost places along with their story. I could never never never give up my loyalty for my country. I could never be anything but English. She made me feel that in every bone of my body. I am grateful that I read that book. I treasured every page of it. Then there is our lovely Queen Elizabeth and her family. I have never been able to take that oath of citizenship, to be an American, it says that I owe no fealty to any King or Queen and only to the United States. I can't do it. It says "without reservation" ........nope just cant do it, I cant say it with my fingers crossed. I have to mean it, to want it and I don't.
 photo 0fc5b077-f7cc-46cd-bb94-388347d6ce93_zpsa6ca9eb6.jpg
She even liked the food. Susan that is. I never understood how England got the reputation for bad food because I think its awesome. Don't get me started
 photo 4796c92f-0112-408b-b4cf-3c127ba1fa9c_zps0bdc32c2.jpg
Then there are the country roads. The animals
 photo 56c2e341-bc12-4a9d-8d3f-ca5b709713d7_zps5517cb98.jpg
I could go on and on and on...............I found Susan Branch's blog, I am so happy with that and will enjoy that now. I am sad I finished the book but I won't put it away, not yet. I am going to explore some of her other books because she has shared some good recipes.
So for now I am saving my pennies and I hope she goes back and writes another book haha.................or maybe I will.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Thatched Cottages,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

While I am sure there are thatched cottages all over Europe, they seem to be the essence of Engishness. When I think of Scotland I think of stone crofts rather than quaint cottages with straw roofs. It's not accurate by any means but its my own impression. When we were home once for a holiday we got to see some roof thatch being repaired. It's not a dying art. There are still very many thatched roofs in the British Isles. thatchjpg There are as many patterns and designs as there are cottages. _46471850_thatch_466 Wikipedia says this......... Good quality straw thatch can last for more than 50 years when applied by a skilled thatcher. Traditionally, a new layer of straw was simply applied over the weathered surface, and this ‘spar coating’ tradition has created accumulations of thatch over 7’ (2.1 m) thick on very old buildings. Over 250 roofs in Southern England have base coats of thatch that were applied over 500 years ago, providing direct evidence of the types of materials that were used for thatching in the medieval period. Almost all of these roofs are thatched with wheat, rye, or a 'maslin' mixture of both. Medieval wheat grew to almost 6 feet (1.8 m) tall in very poor soils and produced durable straw for the roof and grain for baking bread. CotswoldsEngland-1 Can you imagine the insulation that a thatch roof gives?. Each straw is hollow so it would be hot in winter, holding in the heat, and cool in summer. The stone walls would be cool yet hold the heat. Maybe we could learn a lot from the ancient ways? and, it just had to be "green".... Here are some pretty cottages to give you some inspiration. collectjpg Don't worry about birds or vermin because the thatch wears a hairnet of sorts that will keep all the critters at bay. 2825008980_ca41035a9e_z Whatever else it is, the English thatched cottage will always inspire romantic pictures of tranquility and the past, even though they are very much modern and thriving today. cottage