Monday, 29 June 2009

A Doggy Scene Stealer in an Orleans Bookbinder




Just been to Loire valley to write a little article. In the city of Orleans, we visited a book binder, M. Ferriere, pursuing his traditional craft at 9, rue Pothier. He does a lot of interesting work with books, and also restores fascinating old journals and books of maps...



...but I hope he won't mind my mentioning that I fell in love with his charming dog, Dune, which really, really wanted to join in the social event. Dune didn't make a fuss, just quietly struck poses like this all over the room. A real scene stealer.

Wednesday, 24 June 2009

Soppy Or What




Two sets of darling animal twins in Kent. Or are they twins? Or perhaps those lambs are clones!?! Yuk!

Sunday, 21 June 2009

Pebble Art in Kent

Who needs to go and see Andy Goldsworthy or Richard Long - at least in Kent? We found plenty of bits of art that anonymous people had created out of stuff they found lying around. Here are some made of pebbles.

Is this a claw, for instance, on the bleak seafront at Dymchurch?

Below left, a stone octopus or squid blends into the other stones on the beach, in a weird stormy yellow evening light.

Below right, a submarine disappears into pebbles in Dungeness.




Thursday, 18 June 2009

Cats, Custard Pots, Uneven Doors and the Battle of Britain


The trip to Kent is now behind me, or at least it feels like that. But here's a photo inside the Cat and Custard Pot at Paddlesworth. It's the local pub for the Battle of Britain Museum, and no doubt their wartime memorabilia endears them to the people who run it. That plane hangs from the ceiling, as if flying.

As for the name, who knows? Legend says it used to be the "Black Lion" but the artist who did the pub sign wasn't very good at drawing lions. And what was the custard pot? Your guess is as good as mine, and my guess is a round, custard-pot shaped shield.

The nearby tiny church is very sweet and very old. What used to be the main door of this dear little church is now relegated to the back door. The reason is either that people 800 years ago were a lot smaller than they are now, or they didn't mind bending double when they went into church.

The door's two sides do not match. You often get this in very old churches. Symmetry was no more important than headroom, it seems.

Eating the Clouds



No time to write, but this building, in Santa Cruz, looked eerily as if it was sucking in the passing clouds

Saturday, 13 June 2009

And on the road again

But probably not with much access to a computer. At least someone will be here to water the plants which have been suffering from mummy's absence.

Thursday, 11 June 2009

More Kent...


Canterbury Cathedral is so famous that anything I could write about it has been written by others, no doubt. We spent half a day wandering round the building and could probably have spent longer, except that we became dazzled by all the monuments, pillars, carvings, ironwork and of course the vast quantities of medieval stained glass. I know that Canterbury did not escape the vandalism of Cromwell and his un-merry men, so I have yet to learn why so much glass has survived.

It was a surprise to me that the glass was so elegant, framed as it was in subtly varied shapes and with such harmonious colours and carefully judged layout. No reason why they shouldn't have been able to do such a good job, yet I had imagined that stained glass of that period would seem primitive. Far from it. You must, of course, imagine these windows as part of a wider scene, with more windows on either side, and very tall....




When there is so much to see, you can get a bit punch-drunk, and then you stop taking in what you're seeing, and need to have a rest. It was great having a precinct pass - we got it because we were staying at the Cathedral lodgings - so we could come and go without paying the charge to enter the Cathedral grounds.

Canterbury's only a small town, not unlike Oxford or Cambridge, with big castle-like fortified gates. Many unusual old buildings, including this shop
which makes me feel a little less bothered about the tilting floors in our own old house.

Our route down the Kent coast zigzagged around via Whitstable, Dymchurch (sometimes known as Grimchurch, so someone kindly told me - after we'd booked to stay there) and Dungeness.

The coast in that part of Kent is not improved by being built up for miles with ribbon-development. I think of the houses as ugly modern bungalows, but perhaps to their owners they are dream homes by the sea - a wind-lashed sea, hidden in many places behind a large grassy dyke.

Whitstable, famous for its oysters, is quite charming once you get through the dreary suburbs. We had a bite to eat in the Tudor Tea Rooms. There was a fashion for Tudor tea rooms in the 1920s, although it's a mystery why that should be, since tea itself was not introduced into England until many years after the Tudors. It's a cavernous, genuinely very old building with some fascinating items inside, and a kind of vintage 20s charm, now, too. It also has a sunny back garden - hard to find in Whitstable teashops - which they hardly advertise. If it looks rather empty, it's because it was nearly closing time.

We cycled between Canterbury and Whitstable on the Crab and Winkle Line. The start of the line is marked with a handsome mosaic plaque on a wall in Whitstable This claims to be the first proper passenger steam railway line in the world, although this is sometimes disputed. It's a very early one, anyhow, and opened in 1830.

There are no rails left, and it's now a very pleasant cycle route that runs mostly through woodland. You can stop at something called the "winding pool", a round pond which provided water for the steam engine that "wound" the carriages up gradients that were too steep for the primitive locomotives of the time. Now, it's rural and overgrown and popular with picknickers.


The coast around Hythe and Dymchurch doesn't look promising at first. The towns themselves tend to be on the dispiriting side. They're not too bad architecturally, but sport lots of charity shops and a kind of listless air as though nobody's got around to improving much since about 1980. Grimchurch is indeed worse than Hythe, yet we found all kinds of curious corners there. Not necessarily appealing, but curious. More about those later...


Of course a big pleasure is the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway, a miniature train which runs a proper service through several of these coastal places, and little carriages pulled either by steam or diesel engines.

Wednesday, 10 June 2009

Really Cycling in Kent

I'll add the first few photographs now and continue as I have time. A blog can only touch the surface of things - which is probably just as well otherwise we would be reading all day. My longterm plan is to print the photos out and also print out the diary I kept during the trip. It'll go into an album - I mean, a real one with pages, the old fashioned type. It will then be either treasured or ignored forever by us and our kids.

It has been fun looking at the photos for the early part of the trip. Even then, there was such a lot of variety. The whole trip was full of variety, in fact. One thing that always pleases me about England is how quickly it changes. The geological map of the British Isles always reminds me of one of those Spanish scrambled egg omlettes, with lots and lots of different colours to represent all the different sorts of rock.

Because of this the character of the landscape can change very quickly, often within a few miles. It gives you the feeling you're getting more travelling for your money.

The photo above sums up the semi industrial character of the route out of Gravesend. On one side it was all warehouses and light industry, often with curious objects to be seen, such as the great big grinning head in the yard below. On the other side of the road was a lovely little canal full of wildlife and lined with flowering elder and roses.


Needless to say it is far better to explore this type of countryside under your own steam - cycling, walking, horseback.... only then can you appreciate what you are seeing. Like chewing your food properly - you appreciate it far more than if you just gulp it down.

We caught the market at Faversham, which has lots of interesting history, including a church full of wonderful monuments. Here's an Elizabethan tomb which has a life sized effigy; it did look as if he had just laid down for a bit of a rest.


In Faversham boatyard, several Thames barges are moored, and one is under repair. It's a funny place, the boatyard. It seems to have been done up in the hope of attracting light industrial units and perhaps offices, but, probably because of the recession, there's very little there and it is almost deserted.

Consequently, it's a strange mixture of atmospheric weirdness and workaday bustle. We chatted with a very pleasant guy who lived on one of the barges. In exchange for the accommmodation, he did maintenance work. We left him becalmed in the mud.

On to Canterbury, where we stayed at the Cathedral Lodgings actually inside the precinct. We strolled around and admired Rowan Williams' fine residence. The lodgings were about 10 years old, simple and comfortable and inexpensive, and I was mightily impressed by this delightful library for the benefit of the guests. Free internet and newspapers, and all the theological books you could wish for.

Cycling in Kent?

Have just had a good cycling week starting at Gravesend and working West. It was going to be longer but we just came back for a couple of days to wait for the weather to improve.

Not Made of Sugar

Er, no, before you ask, NOT made of sugar and WON'T melt. Cycling in bad weather can be very interesting, and I have often done it - but just not in June, thanks, given the choice.

I'm also immensely relieved that this has given me some time at home when I am officially "on holiday" and so not having to deal with the Carroll book, plus another book which is due to go to an acquisition meeting at a major publisher's and some magazine projects - including one in particular for a prestigious title that I've been trying for years to get into. I'm finding it all very scary and nerve racking specially since none of it is in the bag.

At times like this when there's hardly any money around, you can end up stressing out and working like mad, only to find at the end of the day you are not a penny better off and not a step further forward, because those holding the purse strings are making cuts.

Cancelling Commissioned Projects

Indeed, my agent says that some publishers are using small print in the contracts to cancel some already commissioned projects, because they can no longer be afforded. It's touch and go whether anything gets funded, at present, apart from celebrity stuff which seems to be recession-proof.

But then, the recession is hitting everyone in various ways, and I feel I am very lucky compared with many, particularly recent graduates and people with huge mortgages who have lost their jobs.

The other good news is that I've decided to take that French trip. It's only three days and sounds as if it will yield a nice little story.

Cycling in Kent!!!

Oh, yes, this post was going to be about cycling in Kent. Hm. I will sort out some pictures of Kent and post another blog entry very soon about THAT. It was a most interesting trip. It's wonderful what there is to see right on your own doorstep. And wonderful to be free of the kind of obsessing thoughts that you see above!

Saturday, 6 June 2009

On the Road

I'm on the road - literally, most of the time, since I'm cycling in Kent. This has been scheduled for weeks. I'm keeping a detailed diary and taking lots of photographs, because it's difficult to get onto the internet when you're in the depths of the country with a maximum speed of 10 mph. Well, it depends on the terrain - right now, I'm in Romney Marsh which is extremely flat, and luckily the wind is with us

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