A year ago when we were out-n-about with host Chris, and saw a bridge out on the landscape that took you to Wales (yes, we were that close!), I immediately said I wanted to go to Wales one year! Truth be known, I really wanted it to be
this year...
this trip.
And so it was!
Thus, the day after our Blists Hill blogger meet-up (
last post), we drove all over tarnation for about 6 hours, getting from Bath to...eventually Wales...and then back home again.
We first stopped in
Ledbury, a town in Herefordshire, known for it's timber-framed buildings. See what I mean about how Chris knew exactly what we'd want to see without even asking!
The Market House from 1617, standing on its 16 pillars, is the most notable.
I love architecture like this!
A stone's throw away, across the street, is Ledbury's library
clock tower.
It's dedicated to poet Elizabeth Barrett-Browning who lived and wrote in the town.
We didn't stay long but...long enough to get a taste for this quaint little English town.
Notice I said English and not British. Chris often had to correct my...English!
Once back in the car, and within minutes, still within the Ledbury district, Chris then stopped at this little gem: the
Church of St. Michael and All Angels in Castle Frome, Herefordshire. And it was open!
It was out in the middle of nowhere..."at the end of a farm track well away from the village."
When we arrived it was sunshiny (left side); when we left a storm was brewing (right side).
The
font from c.1170 is one of the wonders of the church (top-right image)..
When I walk inside these quaint churches, I always wonder what my preacher dad would think!
And speaking of out in the middle of nowhere...just off the church property is this rapeseed field.
Astrid had been talking all trip about getting good pictures of the rapeseed in bloom everywhere.
BINGO.
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Back in the car again, towards our "final goal" of stepping foot inside Wales...it was time to stop and eat lunch.
Leave it to Chris to have picked up some lamb meat pies for us in Ledbury.
What a host with the most!
It so happens we stopped to eat just after crossing this private toll bridge.
To avoid delay, have coinage ready. 80p.
It still blows my mind that such a bridge can be owned by a private family.
They operate it and maintain it via the toll that comes in.
See all the debris at the bottom of the pilings? Hmmmm....
Once again, we were out in the middle of nowhere.
Sometimes those are the best places for photography!
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Then suddenly...we were in WALES!
Hay on Wye, to be specific, right on the Welsh-English border.
All signage while in Wales was in both English and Welsh.
It's a good way to learn another language, right?
Wiki says Hay on Wye is known as the town of books.
It has a literary festival every June that draws approx. 80,000 visitors.
(The town itself has a population of only 1500 people!)
This particular bookshop in the Hay Castle is Europe's largest secondhand bookstore.
And YES, it was open!
Can you imagine trying to find a specific book there????
We couldn't leave, of course, without our favorite treat.
I scream, You scream, We all scream for ice cream!
By now it was time to head back to Bath! My feet had touched the very land of WALES and I was a happy camper. My day had been filled to the hilt! I was short of eyes....
But Chris was not yet done!
What to our wondering, short-of-eyes should appear but...Tintern Abbey, from 1131!
It is probably the most spectacular ruins of an abbey we will ever see in our lifetime.
It, too, is in Wales, just over the River Wye border from England.
Wouldn't you want to do a photo shoot there?!
So you see, in one swell foop, we had such a fabulous day in the life of our 2012 England trip. Are we lucky or what! And I'm not even done yet....