Pages

Monday, 24 July 2023

Back out at last - to Kedleston



After yet another period of enforced quiet I've been starting to re-build my energy with short walks around home, and on Thursday dared to go out somewhere for a 'proper' walk. Proper in this case doesn't mean 10 miles (ha! as if) or even 5, but maybe a mile in total around the gardens and beside the lake at Kedleston.













Kedleston has become my favoured place for recovery walks - after my slip on the stairs, after Covid  - so it seemed a logical place to start. It's not far from home, I know the terrain, the park and gardens split nicely into small walks, and I know how much energy I'll need for each section.








I started, and expected to finish, with a stroll round the Pleasure Grounds. The wildflower beds which I loved have been replaced now with perennials, which are just getting established, so the beds look a little bare. Hopefully next year they'll be much fuller.
There are colourful hydrangeas though, and a late-flowering wisteria



After a short rest, I decided I'd try to walk back down the drive to the bridge - this is an easy option because if the worst comes to the worst my husband can meet me halfway back with the car :)











As it was, I felt energetic and decided to continue, to walk across the parkland to the boat house. Grass is tricky stuff when your legs feel weak, and any slight unevenness can twist an ankle, but it wasn't too bad.
















 I even carried on a little further to the weir, where there's a convenient seat to rest a while. 
I'd expected a morning of intermittent showers but the sky was beginning to clear, and the sun shine. It still wasn't quite as hot as the sheep thought though.



I sat for a few minutes, watching the geese flying, swans swimming, and the cows grazing on the other side of the water, then ambled slowly back.
It was harder this way - slightly uphill and being able to see how far I needed to walk - but I made it back to the car. Now slowly but surely I need to build up strength and stamina.



 

Tuesday, 4 July 2023

Festival season; it's not all about Glastonbury

 Every year when Glastonbury weekend comes around my social media feeds are full of people talking about it - some watching it on TV, some reminiscing about the time they went, some lucky folks actually there. And, always one to not miss out on something, I think maybe I should try and go one year - after all I may be old but not as old as some of the performers.

Then I look at the crowds, think about standing for hours, walking between tent and stages, queuing for toilets, and acknowledge that it's not really for me (unless, you know, I could go along as a VIP or maybe a headliner's guest)

I've come to festivalling late in life, so maybe it's age, maybe it's just that I like things a little quieter but I prefer something smaller, more intimate, less hectic, more relaxing, with a mix of music, activities, and ideas.



One of my favourites is Timber Festival, almost on my doorstep in the National Forest, to which I've been several times as one of their 'pioneer' bloggers. Held this year on the 7-9th July, talks will be headlined by Poet Laureate Simon Armitage and Raynor Winn, author of The Salt Path and Landlines, music by The Go! Team, Keston Cobblers Club, and Sister Wives. At the heart of the programming lies the forging and maintaining of our relationship with nature in general, and trees in particular.  Workshops range from guerrilla gardening to writing, foraging walks to yoga, printing with leaves to learning how to decoratively fix holes in clothes. I find there's always something new to discover.


A logical sort of progression from Timber is The Green Gathering, at Piercefield Park, near Chepstow, 3-6th August. It maybe has a 'hippie' sort of vibe but I think there's a lot that all of us could learn from it. As the 'original off-grid festival', the whole event is powered by renewable energy, and there are folks around to show you how it's done, and how you could do it too. At the speakers Forum you'll find experts discussing green issues such as climate change, building a greener Britain and Wales' Net Zero initiative. In the craft area you can learn the skills necessary for a more sustainable life - mending tools, making things from wood or willow, even having a go at making a trinket at the Nowhere Forge  - or in the Campaigns Field you can learn about social and environmental issues. It's not a totally serious weekend though. There's an eclectic array of musical artists from folk to psychedelic sounds via politically-conscious singer songwriters.  Anyone who follows me on either Twitter or Instagram will know I grow my own veg and fruit, turn it into meals, jam and pickles, knit, sew, and am generally looking out for ways to live a greener life, so in many ways this is an obvious choice for me.





If that's a bit too 'out there' for you, I'd suggest a gentle relaxing weekend in Capability Brown parkland at ALSO festival on Park Farm Estate, Compton Verney, in Warwickshire. The setting is wonderful, with the original landscaping making level areas by the lake just right for camping pitches, food marquees, and stages. 

This year -14th-16th July - is ALSO's tenth anniversary and there'll be as wide a range of speakers as ever, including Jess Philips MP, Sara Pascoe, Robin Ince, and Jeffrey Boakye, music to dance the night away to, an organised run or dance workshops for the energetic, paddle-boarding and swimming at the lake, or just chill out in the beautiful parkscape. A new addition is the food festival within the festival, with a wider range of bookable lunches, masterclasses and tastings. 




This is an event that I was invited along to last year but just because I went for free doesn't mean it wasn't any less special.







photo credit: The Big Feastival
For food lovers there's a treat at The Big Feastival 25-27th August in the Cotswolds. I stumbled across this festival last year, when Kathy Slack (whose cookery demonstration I'd seen at ALSO), announced she was appearing. The emphasis, perhaps obviously, is on food with over 20 chefs cooking and inspiring festival-goers,and Feast on the Farm with Pasture offers a three course sit down lunch or dinner for anyone who thinks fine-dining belongs only in a restaurant. The offerings from street food traders looks wonderful too.

photo credit: The Big Feastival

This is also, of my chosen list, the festival with biggest music headliners - Sigrid, Tom Brennan, Blossoms, and Rick Astley,  I think it was rightly described as 'Glastonbury but with lots more delicious food'.*  There's also a vintage funfair, a fire pit with cookery demos (you'll never look at your backgarden bbq the same way again), a craft corner, children's entertainment in the Big Top, a chance for both adults and children to get hands on with M&S cookdery classes, and a hot dog eating competition (most? quickest? with least tomato ketchup on your top? I know which one I'd win)

photo credit: Department Two


 Now if you still thought these festivals sounded too large and busy, then there's one, or a series, designed specially for you. For several years The Good Life Experience festival was held in early September at Hawarden Castle in North Wales, but now the organisers have decided to change to a series of Summer Camps held on four weekends throughout July. 



photo credit:
Department Two
In form they're much like the festival was - celebrating the good things in life with food, music, workshops, talks, lake swimming, and paddle-boarding - but with far less participants so you can actually get to know your fellow festivallers/campers. There'll be evening feasts prepared by chefs like Romy Gill or Valentine Warner, a secluded castle garden to explore, new activities to try, new skills to learn. As co-founder Charlie Gladstone puts it "Summer Camp will be a retreat, a place to recharge and to explore new places and ideas". 

It sounds idyllic to me.





There's one event left which I'd recommend for anyone interested in a different slant on the news -  Byline Festival, which has been running in Sussex for several years but is now moving to the Dartington Trust near Totnes in Devon. It's mission, in the words of sister orgainsation the Byline Times,  is to shed light on 'what the papers don't say' and is packed with speakers such as Jonathan Pie, Bonnie Greer OBE, Joanna Scanlan, George Monbiot, and Carole Cadwalladr, with the serious talks interspersed with good food and dancing. There's one regrettable snag though - it's so popular that it's sold out! There is a 'wait list' though in case of any ticket returns.


Another snag prevents me personally from packing up my tent and spending all summer under the festival skies - after a series of unfortunate mishaps with twisted ankles and pulled leg muscles walking on grass is too hazardous for me, and the thought of putting up the tent makes me shudder. Hopefully I'll be back to full fitness for next summer. Fingers crossed.

*by Zahra Surya Darma Conde Nast Traveler


Saturday, 1 July 2023

Not a good six months

 This year so far has been plagued by injury and illness. 

On New Year's Day I slipped at the bottom of the stairs. I only missed one step but ended up in a heap on the floor thinking I must have broken something. I hadn't, but my ankles were in agony and couldn't take my weight. So for a while I mainly sat around, watched the snow fall, and joined in an online embroidery course to keep me occupied.


Slowly I recovered, trying each week to walk further and for longer. By the end of February I was getting back to normal, apart from having lost a certain amount of stamina from having spent so much time resting.

Then I caught Covid.



More quietness. More resting. No walking. Getting increasingly unfit.

We went to Cambridgeshire for a very quiet break in a Canopy and Stars cabin by the river Nene. Sitting relaxing was good. Walking less so. 


Throughout May I tried to get fitter with short walks at local places with good footpaths - knowing the terrain I'd be facing was important; the bluebell walk at Calke while hardly uphill was exhausting. 

By the end of the month I could walk round Calke gardens to see the wisteria  and to Tissington to see well-dressings. Still only around 5000 steps at tops but getting better.






I felt fit enough for another short break - this time to North Wales to see the laburnum arch at Bodnant Gardens - but the week before, without quite realising it - I twisted something in a leg. I dismissed it as a twinge and carried on. Not a good idea.







From comparative inactivity I went to 10,000, 16,000, 9,500 steps over Saturday, Sunday and Monday. My leg ached but I was on holiday and wanted to be out and doing things. We came home and midweek I wanted to go out to Ashford in the Water well-dressings, then decided to round off the day with a walk by Cromford canal. Nearly 6,000 steps. A big mistake following on from the weekend. 

The next day I couldn't move. Or the day after. So it was back to taking things quietly. Gradually I improved. Then I twisted a muscle walking down stairs! How?! 

So, altogether, another three weeks with no walking. 

Honestly, so far, this year seems to have been one of bad luck. My plans for getting fitter, and hopefully thinner, have all had to be abandoned. I am back at to feeling almost recovered though, and this time intend taking the next stage more gradually.