sexta-feira, 2 de maio de 2008

Beamish Open Air and Aberfan disaster. Y dyddiau du. Taith trwy luniau









After moving from London and not finding a house to buy straight away, Jacky and I stayed at Hillhead Farm house, Westerhope, the family home of our friends John and Jenny Arthur, on the outskirts of Newcastle upon Tyne, I reckon that all the North of England towns are named after the location or the dire state that people found themselves in the location. County Durham for example as the town of Pitty Me and it certainly as nothing to make you want to stay there. Although the barn that we eventually bought was at Shotley Field near Snods Edge, so its anyones guess over these names.
Whilst at Hillhead and later at Shotley Field, friends from London would stay with us and the attractions for the guests were usually a trip to the Roman Wall, Hadrians encampments on the wall or the ones that are near to the wall, like Chesters, the other big attraction was the reconstruted village at the Beamish Open Air Museum. I cannot do justice to Hadrians Wall or to Beamish with the small space here but it is well worth a few minutes to visit the sites that have both. There are many buildings buildings at Beamish that remind me of the house at East Black Dean, County, Durham where Jacky and I first stayed after London, also farm stable buildings that are very similar to the barn we bought at Shotley and therefore give a good idea of the inside of the barn when we first bought it.
There are also trains and rail stock there, of which the small wagons used for transporting coal make the memories of three small boys hitching a lift on the slow moving convoy of these wagons and dropping off at one of many small lakes, that the coal mines formed where we would build rafts for fishing and moar them in the centre of the lake to stop others using them. The coal mines had a rail system for moving the slack waste from the pit to a distant location where the spoil gradualy built moutains, the sad case of Aberfan in Wales on the 21st October 1966,was the result( much like cities on the falt line) of waste being tipped next to houses and a school. Photos can be seen at http://www.rapo.com/icrgallery/Aberfan.htm and it is something that I think can be best appreciated with the photos of Aberfan that my childhood was also near the pits and the whole area of the West Midlands had relied for many tears on the mines for jobs, folks were born, lived, married and died all within a miles radius, the dialect of the midlands was so varied that I as a child would have difficulty understanding neighbours. English is a broad and varied language and is still changing faster than other languages. For info and photos of Beamish go to http://www.beamish.org.uk and http://www.bpears.org.uk/Beamish/index.html. This site is a good simple one for explaining and showing Hadrian's Wall http://www.aboutscotland.com/hadrian/index.html. There is one other museum at Birmingham which is much like Beamish but with that twist of the Brummy angle on life and that is the Black Country Living Museum which is possibly best seen at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Country_Living_Museum as the Midlands are incapable of creating good designed sites.

just Campbell and Muriels ideal






























This is really just a lazy way of giving an idea to C and M for their roof terrace so when I am next in Scotland I can redo the garden without too much discussion. Campbell and Muriel have a mews house in Edinburgh, lovely setting but was without a garden, Campbell has leaded part of the roof above the kitchen and utility room to allow him to have decking and a fence to cover the roof slates of his neighbours. It is very much as these photos show but is in need of a face lift at the moment. I am due to return to Scotland and he as asked me to give a couple of days for work on the terrace.
The other photos make me think of France and my new aquaintance with the country, Michaels Bergerie conversion is to have one bedroom ensuite with my name tacked to the door, also I have a workshop being built there at this very moment. The French affair and my 'novo amor' with Graca makes the future quite exhilarating and I now feel much like I did in the early 70's with opportunities there for the taking and passing age not as yet a problem. It seems that age is another part of the learning process and we do with it what we want and not always what we expect.
The photos are from a nice garden blog called http://gardenrooms.typepad.com and it too as a good selection of feeds to other worthy sites. This is something that I like about blogs, they are personal but open and have your requirements at heart as well as clearing the throat of the writer, they give better information and take you on a trip that you may not of thought about before.

quinta-feira, 1 de maio de 2008

Trees and their life





































































Whether it is the rain forest , mangrove in Brazil, brush, copse or orchard in England and France or the Caledonian forest and heathland of Scotland, the diversity of cover allows for a huge mixture of animals and insects to thrive and the general well being of the country can be much affected by this mix or balance. It is important to take an interest in the treatment of waste and the life cycle, as it were, of your rubbish bin as well as the rogue merchants that are cutting huge sways through the forests in Brazil. It is so clear that the main problem in Brazil is the lack of education and therefore the lack of desire to save the forest but a desire to save plastic bottles. Brazil is so lucky with its resources that its goverment are blasé about taking protective measures and caring for the natural world as they would for the farmed land, somehow the idea of sugar cane giving alchol for the use in cars gets far more attention here and even more so when its exportable, cash in hand I suppose is worth more than the forests area value.
There are a lot of sites for Brazilian trees here are a couple http://www.arvores.brasil.nom.br http://www.trees.com.br and http://www.treesforlife.org.uk for Scotland also for the States there is http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/consumer/factsheets/trees-new/index.html and a world site with http://www.globaltrees.org
This is a very interesting site for the trees that are now in danger.
There is one tree that brings back memories of the theatre and props, the
Dracaena draco The Red Data Book of Cape Verde classifies the species as "Endangered", while it is known to be extinct in the wild on Brava and Santiago where only planted specimens exist today; it is also at severe risk of extinction on the island of S. Vicente where it is classified as Critically Endangered. The Guanche people of the Canary Islands used the sap in their mummification processes. In Ancient Rome Sangre de Drago was used as a colourant and across Europe it has been used as a varnish and anti-oxidant for iron tools.