Monday 23 July 2018

Best place in the world to live?


Chris Downer on the wonderful internet programme Geograph, says of his picture shown here:

"One of the most expensive places in the world to live, a feature of Sandbanks is large, luxury houses such as these along Banks Road which have outlooks to the harbour on one side and the beach on the other.









Diane Sambrook, on the same programme,
has close-up view of some of the homes.






This is the ferry terminal taken this morning. The traffic, double banked,  goes back  for a mile on the road in and out of one of the most expensive places in the world to live.









Peter Timming, on Geograph, has an even more colourful view of the ferry.


I live 4 miles away, much preferred by me to the traffic ridden chaos that is the first day of the summer school holidays!

Sunday 15 July 2018

A hot day when you can't walk far

If you have no garden, a small balcony, some flower pots and an enterprising wife, just look at what beauty there is to share.

At an age when walking means going down the road to the shops or the recreation ground, I can still enjoy a summer's day sitting here with a book - bottom left hand corner of picture - enjoying our county as described in 1906 by Sir Frederick Treves in his Highways and Byways of Dorset.

I soon discovered early in his interesting book, there other things to read about apart from the joys of the countryside.  For example, The 'Me Too' movement is not a recent phenomenon by any means, as witness this excerpt from page 5.
  
"... the Archbishop of Canterbury, on his visit to Shaftesbury in 1285, excommunicated Sir Osbert Gifford for stealing two nuns, not unwillingly on their part and assumed to be the two prettiest nuns, out of his nunnery at Wilton". 
The described punishment is better left out of this blog.

Treves started his journey at Shaftesbury. Of the steep-sided solitary ridge of the chalk hill on which it stands he writes:

"On the southermost edge of the ridge is a delightful wooded walk, called Park Walk from which extends a view unsurpassed by few in England".






Here is Park Walk today






and the view he describes, as produced by Jonathan Hutchins on the Geograph website.

Sir Frederick Treves seems to have been quite a nice man to go by some of his writing.
Writing of Sturminster Newton which is not far from Shaftesbury he remarked of the town pump:
"On it is a notice spitefully warning the passer-by that he will be prosecuted if he does it hurt, and adding further that no children must use the exclusive structure. There is a sourness in this, for all children delight to play with pumps".