Still in Porlock on a short break with Richard, we ventured off up into the hills above the harbour at Porlock Weir in search of Culbone Church.
At just 35ft long, Culbone is reputed to be the smallest church in England... but it's also quite possibly the most exciting, most remote and with the strangest history of any of them!
Accessible only on foot, the tiny church can seat around 30 people on it's ancient oak pews, but in its time it's known that the services were only ever attended by the vicar himself!
Perched about 500 ft high above the crashing waves on the rocky shore below, Culbone Church is reached from a very steep and convoluted path through ancient woodlands. Rare whitebeams, huge oaks and smaller birches shield the views to the sea, but they also hide other things...
Once past the wacky toll gate house on the Worthy Toll road, you pass beneath a moss-lined brick tunnel and may notice a few other bricks and stones that indicate previous history along the path. These are the remnants of Ashley Combe, a huge, terribly grand house built by the Earl of Lovelace for his bride Ada (daughter of Lord Byron) and only demolished in 1974 after falling into disrepair (following a stint as a country club with a rather unsavoury reputation!!) Not quite what the Earl of Lovelace had in mind when he was wooing the sweet Ada!
Ada must have been quite a delicate creature really, as these tunnels were built to shield her gaze from the terribly distressing sight of dreadfully common people and tradesmen, who would be passing by on the lanes up to the house or up to Culbone Church.
It has to be said that I am quite common, and though we may well be classed as riff-raff by the good lady of the house, I wasn't entirely happy walking through the tunnel. There is a very eerie feel to it, one of those that sets the hairs up on the back of your neck! In fact, it was positively spine chilling on the way back down!!
I've never felt such a strong sensation of someone being right at my back. I daren't look behind and I daren't stop! It was the most bizarre sensation and incredibly powerful, really, really creepy!!
The sensation of being watched was with me the whole time, all the way through the woods and also around the church. I don't know if Richard felt it, I felt too daft to say anything, but by 'eck, it was really spooky!!
The church itself is really simple, really peaceful and quite beautiful.
But quite spooky too! Its history is very long and is full of assorted vagabonds, outcasts and, in general, a lot of very unhappy people!!
Probably most notable was the leper colony, established in 1544 when the church sent 45 people to live and fend for themselves in the woods around Culbone Church. The Church authorities very kindly gave them seeds for them to grow their own food, but no tools with which to plant them or harvest them or grind them or anything! Charming!!
The Church also very kindly said that of course the people of the leper colony may take part in the services at the Church... so they put in a tiny window on the north wall of the church which would allow the lepers to watch the service without actually going inside!! Which was probably considered very good of the church at the time. Thank goodness we are more enlightened now!!
Anyway, the lepers stayed at Culbone, isolated and shunned until the last person died in 1622.
Various other people had been banished to the woods around Culbone as well. Prisoners were often sent there, taken by ship and left to fend for themselves. The area was so remote that there was little chance of escape, and so the area was home to murderers, rapists, thieves and, in the words of the church, the mentally insane!
In the 18th century, smugglers discovered the old leper huts and used them to horde their booty right up until the beginning of the 19th century, when smuggling started to wane and the woods reclaimed the land again.
Another group of people banished to Culbone were 38 East Indian slaves brought back to England in some time around 1730. No longer needed as slaves, they were sent to Culbone to live in the woods and earn a living as charcoal burners. They were to stay there for 21 years, after which they would earn the right to freedom. Miserable, captured and so far from their home lands, these poor men worked in the woods for the full 21 years. Only 23 men were still alive by the end and none were ever able to return to India. What a sad, shameful story!!
I didn't actually know any of this as we pottered about Culbone, but is it any wonder I felt so many eyes were watching us from the woods? What a terribly sad but also very interesting place it's been over the years!!
A famous visitor to the area was Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the poet who lived nearby in Nether Stowey, but was staying at Culbone when he penned the opium-induced 'Kubla Khan'; a poem which was interrupted by "a person from Porlock" and never finished as inspiration (or supplies of opium) left him!!
Perhaps equally famous, but rather more bizarre, is the story that the area once teemed with giants! One of them is said to have snapped off the tip of the steeple at St Dubricius Church in Porlock and carried it under his arm to put it on top of Culbone Church!! Not sure I believe that one, but it does make a lovely story!
Back down in Porlock Weir, where the smugglers would have plied their trade and certain women would have plied their wares, the surface is quaint and pretty
... scratch beneath it though, and the whole area comes alive in a much more exciting way! These rocky shores have seen all sorts of things over the years... just sit by the harbour, gaze up at the hills around you and listen, you'll feel that ripple underneath as the past whispers to you...
it's all still there, you can almost touch it!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Monday, 30 August 2010
Steep Hills, Tarr Steps & ... er, ice cream!!!
Porlock Weir in Somerset is absolutely my favourite place in the whole of the UK. It has everything that I love... sea, hills, woods, sunshine and a touch of the ever so slightly odd!!
My love affair with the place started when I was a child and we used to go and visit Granny & Grampy in Somerset. Originally from Northamptonshire, they fell in love with Porlock when they were still courting. They had travelled down on the motorbike, with Granny sitting in the sidecar, but it broke down on Porlock Hill. At a hair-raising 1 in 4 gradient, it's not unusual for breakdowns there, and this turned out to be a particularly fortuitous one. Forced to stay a few extra days, Granny & Grampy fell in love with the area and vowed to move back there when they retired.
If they hadn't broken down there, would I have ever found Porlock? Who knows! Granny and I used to go to Porlock every time I visited. We went other places as well, but no day out was as special to us as the trip to Porlock and Porlock Weir. When deciding where to go on a short break, there was no other place for me... it had to be Porlock!
Granny now lives close to us here in Berkshire and had tears in her eyes when I said where I was going. Happy tears, tears filled with the best memories and gladness that I'd chosen this place above all others in the UK to go to. I'm going to go and show her the photos this afternoon and I know there will be many happy reminiscences and chuckles over very, very happy days!
So, off I went with Rich and spent a couple of fantastic days. We stayed at the Hurlestone B&B in Porlock, which is a great place. A beautiful house, gorgeous rooms and a breakfast to die for!!! If ever you go to Porlock and are wondering where to stay, try the Hurlestone B&B; it's the best I've ever stayed in, and I've stayed in quite a few over the years!! (http://www.hurlestonebandb.co.uk/).
In all the times I've been to Porlock, I'd never walked along the marsh. A SSSI, Porlock Marsh is a very strange but beautiful place.
With Bossington Hill on one side and Porlock Hill looming over you on the other, the twisted and bleached driftwood forest on the marsh is totally surreal. There is also a very touching memorial to remember the airmen who died in 1942 when their aircraft crashed onto the marsh after clipping Bossington Hill in poor weather. 11 men died and one survived. There is a small plaque on a stone that has been made from a piece of the wreckage, just a few words, but it leaves a big impression. I really hope someone remembers them on November 11th and that a few poppies are left with love at the memorial.
Heading west across the marsh takes you into Porlock Weir, a medieval harbour once used to export tonnes of oak logs, but now more used to the tinkling sound of wires slapping the masts of pleasure yachts moored up in the tiny but beautiful wee harbour. An equally pleasing sound is the hubbub of chatter and laughter and the chink of glasses coming from the thatched, 16th Century Ship Inn. It would have been very rude not to join in!!!
The next day saw us driving up the very dizzying heights of Porlock Hill and heading over the purple heather-clad Exmoor for a walk at Tarr Steps.
Although the bridge gets washed away every so often, the stones are all numbered and painstakingly put back in place for tourists to cross and wonder at this ancient, ancient clapper bridge. It is awesome. A word I use a lot, but it really is!!
Walking alongside the River Barle, we sauntered in to Withypool. A comfortable 4 mile walk through ancient woodland in Lorna Doone country! Lovely!! A pot of tea and a huge slice of delicious cake later, we thought about heading back to Tarr Steps.
It was a lovely walk, but was just back the way we'd come... looking across the road to the post office in Withypool, we saw a rubber dinghy blowing about in the breeze and inviting us to buy. It was soooo tempting!!!! How much fun would that be, to raft down the river to Tarr Steps in the dinghy!! It really was very, very tempting!!! My more sensible companion talked me out of it and so we set off on foot.... but it still makes me chuckle to think how much fun it would have been!! Daft? Yes! Wet? Most likely! Fun?.. absolutely!!!
We made it without incident back to Tarr steps and, suitably refreshed at the Tarr Farm Inn, we headed back across Exmoor to Lynton & Lynmouth.
No trip to Lynton & Lynmouth is complete without an ice cream with clotted cream on the top!!! And no ice cream is worthy of the name if it's not made from clotted cream and double cream!!!! Oh wow!!! You could cut our arteries up and serve them on a cheese board, but my word, how delicious was that!!! Mmmmm. Feeling ever so slightly sick but very happy, we set off back to Porlock... for dinner at the Top Ship!! Lol, and mmmmm again!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
My love affair with the place started when I was a child and we used to go and visit Granny & Grampy in Somerset. Originally from Northamptonshire, they fell in love with Porlock when they were still courting. They had travelled down on the motorbike, with Granny sitting in the sidecar, but it broke down on Porlock Hill. At a hair-raising 1 in 4 gradient, it's not unusual for breakdowns there, and this turned out to be a particularly fortuitous one. Forced to stay a few extra days, Granny & Grampy fell in love with the area and vowed to move back there when they retired.
If they hadn't broken down there, would I have ever found Porlock? Who knows! Granny and I used to go to Porlock every time I visited. We went other places as well, but no day out was as special to us as the trip to Porlock and Porlock Weir. When deciding where to go on a short break, there was no other place for me... it had to be Porlock!
Granny now lives close to us here in Berkshire and had tears in her eyes when I said where I was going. Happy tears, tears filled with the best memories and gladness that I'd chosen this place above all others in the UK to go to. I'm going to go and show her the photos this afternoon and I know there will be many happy reminiscences and chuckles over very, very happy days!
So, off I went with Rich and spent a couple of fantastic days. We stayed at the Hurlestone B&B in Porlock, which is a great place. A beautiful house, gorgeous rooms and a breakfast to die for!!! If ever you go to Porlock and are wondering where to stay, try the Hurlestone B&B; it's the best I've ever stayed in, and I've stayed in quite a few over the years!! (http://www.hurlestonebandb.co.uk/).
In all the times I've been to Porlock, I'd never walked along the marsh. A SSSI, Porlock Marsh is a very strange but beautiful place.
With Bossington Hill on one side and Porlock Hill looming over you on the other, the twisted and bleached driftwood forest on the marsh is totally surreal. There is also a very touching memorial to remember the airmen who died in 1942 when their aircraft crashed onto the marsh after clipping Bossington Hill in poor weather. 11 men died and one survived. There is a small plaque on a stone that has been made from a piece of the wreckage, just a few words, but it leaves a big impression. I really hope someone remembers them on November 11th and that a few poppies are left with love at the memorial.
Heading west across the marsh takes you into Porlock Weir, a medieval harbour once used to export tonnes of oak logs, but now more used to the tinkling sound of wires slapping the masts of pleasure yachts moored up in the tiny but beautiful wee harbour. An equally pleasing sound is the hubbub of chatter and laughter and the chink of glasses coming from the thatched, 16th Century Ship Inn. It would have been very rude not to join in!!!
The next day saw us driving up the very dizzying heights of Porlock Hill and heading over the purple heather-clad Exmoor for a walk at Tarr Steps.
Although the bridge gets washed away every so often, the stones are all numbered and painstakingly put back in place for tourists to cross and wonder at this ancient, ancient clapper bridge. It is awesome. A word I use a lot, but it really is!!
Walking alongside the River Barle, we sauntered in to Withypool. A comfortable 4 mile walk through ancient woodland in Lorna Doone country! Lovely!! A pot of tea and a huge slice of delicious cake later, we thought about heading back to Tarr Steps.
It was a lovely walk, but was just back the way we'd come... looking across the road to the post office in Withypool, we saw a rubber dinghy blowing about in the breeze and inviting us to buy. It was soooo tempting!!!! How much fun would that be, to raft down the river to Tarr Steps in the dinghy!! It really was very, very tempting!!! My more sensible companion talked me out of it and so we set off on foot.... but it still makes me chuckle to think how much fun it would have been!! Daft? Yes! Wet? Most likely! Fun?.. absolutely!!!
We made it without incident back to Tarr steps and, suitably refreshed at the Tarr Farm Inn, we headed back across Exmoor to Lynton & Lynmouth.
No trip to Lynton & Lynmouth is complete without an ice cream with clotted cream on the top!!! And no ice cream is worthy of the name if it's not made from clotted cream and double cream!!!! Oh wow!!! You could cut our arteries up and serve them on a cheese board, but my word, how delicious was that!!! Mmmmm. Feeling ever so slightly sick but very happy, we set off back to Porlock... for dinner at the Top Ship!! Lol, and mmmmm again!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Labels:
exmoor,
hurlestone,
landscape photography,
porlock weir,
somerset,
tarr steps,
withypool
Sunday, 29 August 2010
Power Stations!
I've always had a weakness for bikes and cars, so when Jan asked to get photos of his pride & joy's, a Mazda RX-8 and a Honda Fireblade, I was in no way going to turn him down!!
Talk about power stations (which I will do later!!!)... we had an awesome day out with his gorgeous motors!
Starting with the Mazda, we went out onto a quiet stretch of road nearby where Jan could drive past as I shot the car from the roadside. Safety conscious as always, I wore a very bright almost fluorescent coloured fleece (much nicer than it sounds!!) and had my assistant Holly keeping an eye on what was coming... we were amazed at just how busy our 'quiet' road turned out to be!!
Jan did a terrific job at keeping his distance from other traffic, but also at keeping a nice constant speed for me. As the road got busier we headed over to a nearby empty car park where I sat in the centre and Jan, quite literally, drove rings round me!!
He even happily splashed through a few puddles, despite having come out with a gleaming car in the morning! What a star!!
We then went for a few static shots where Jan could get the portrait part of his 'Pride & Joy Portraits' session under the trees, and Holly assisted by providing the lighting.
Holly held on to the large softbox that we used to direct some extra light onto Jan... given the wind at the time, it was rather like holding on to a huge sail but Holly clung on and managed to stay on the ground (it would have been a bit embarrassing if we'd had to rescue her from the trees but luckily she didn't get blown away and we got the shots we were after!).
The afternoon was equally as exciting and, thankfully, the weather had improved as we followed Jan out on his bike. Again we started with a few quiet country roads, but we also managed to find a very quiet roundabout on a business park where Jan could safely get his knee down and do his thing! Not something I would really encourage, but Jan has been riding for a lot of years now and had already demonstrated that he has great awareness of the roads and his position on them, so I felt comfortable that he was safe and sensible!
For the static shots, I really wanted somewhere 'manly', somewhere with a bit of power to reflect the strength and power of Jan and his bike. Hmm, where do you find 'manly' in the countryside? Yep, at the local power station!!! Perfick! Jan looks great, the bike looks great and the power station brought that touch of 'manly' that we needed.
All in all, a great day out!!
Thanks again to Kathryn and Holly, but a special thanks to Jan. It's not easy to rein in these awesome machines for a photo shoot, but you did a fantastic job and I'm so pleased you're happy with the results!!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Talk about power stations (which I will do later!!!)... we had an awesome day out with his gorgeous motors!
Starting with the Mazda, we went out onto a quiet stretch of road nearby where Jan could drive past as I shot the car from the roadside. Safety conscious as always, I wore a very bright almost fluorescent coloured fleece (much nicer than it sounds!!) and had my assistant Holly keeping an eye on what was coming... we were amazed at just how busy our 'quiet' road turned out to be!!
Jan did a terrific job at keeping his distance from other traffic, but also at keeping a nice constant speed for me. As the road got busier we headed over to a nearby empty car park where I sat in the centre and Jan, quite literally, drove rings round me!!
He even happily splashed through a few puddles, despite having come out with a gleaming car in the morning! What a star!!
We then went for a few static shots where Jan could get the portrait part of his 'Pride & Joy Portraits' session under the trees, and Holly assisted by providing the lighting.
Holly held on to the large softbox that we used to direct some extra light onto Jan... given the wind at the time, it was rather like holding on to a huge sail but Holly clung on and managed to stay on the ground (it would have been a bit embarrassing if we'd had to rescue her from the trees but luckily she didn't get blown away and we got the shots we were after!).
The afternoon was equally as exciting and, thankfully, the weather had improved as we followed Jan out on his bike. Again we started with a few quiet country roads, but we also managed to find a very quiet roundabout on a business park where Jan could safely get his knee down and do his thing! Not something I would really encourage, but Jan has been riding for a lot of years now and had already demonstrated that he has great awareness of the roads and his position on them, so I felt comfortable that he was safe and sensible!
For the static shots, I really wanted somewhere 'manly', somewhere with a bit of power to reflect the strength and power of Jan and his bike. Hmm, where do you find 'manly' in the countryside? Yep, at the local power station!!! Perfick! Jan looks great, the bike looks great and the power station brought that touch of 'manly' that we needed.
All in all, a great day out!!
Thanks again to Kathryn and Holly, but a special thanks to Jan. It's not easy to rein in these awesome machines for a photo shoot, but you did a fantastic job and I'm so pleased you're happy with the results!!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Saturday, 21 August 2010
Sweet in Swallowfield!
As you may know, I am branching out into wedding photography.
The upside to that is that I get to go to weddings... which I love... working with people on one of the happiest days of their lives... which I also love... and if I'm lucky I might even get a piece of cake... which I think everybody knows by now, I LOVE!!
The downside to my decision, however, is that I don't have much in the way of variety to advertise on my website and to show people that I can and will do my absolute best to give them wedding photography that they will love! So, armed with a wedding dress, veil and tiara, I went along to Swallowfield in Berkshire with the absolutely beautiful and gorgeously sweet Jessica! She was a dream come true!!
Apart from needing a couple of pins for the dress, we were able to start shooting straight away and, with no previous modelling experience, Jessica was as natural and as lovely as I could possibly wish for! She was amazing!! She needed very little direction, she never complained, she was sweet and happy and laughing... perfect!
What a star!! Thank you Jessica, and I really can't wait for next time! Thanks too to Kathryn and Holly for your help, and see you on Friday for the bike shoot!!!! Wow!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
The upside to that is that I get to go to weddings... which I love... working with people on one of the happiest days of their lives... which I also love... and if I'm lucky I might even get a piece of cake... which I think everybody knows by now, I LOVE!!
The downside to my decision, however, is that I don't have much in the way of variety to advertise on my website and to show people that I can and will do my absolute best to give them wedding photography that they will love! So, armed with a wedding dress, veil and tiara, I went along to Swallowfield in Berkshire with the absolutely beautiful and gorgeously sweet Jessica! She was a dream come true!!
Apart from needing a couple of pins for the dress, we were able to start shooting straight away and, with no previous modelling experience, Jessica was as natural and as lovely as I could possibly wish for! She was amazing!! She needed very little direction, she never complained, she was sweet and happy and laughing... perfect!
What a star!! Thank you Jessica, and I really can't wait for next time! Thanks too to Kathryn and Holly for your help, and see you on Friday for the bike shoot!!!! Wow!!
Rebecca, x
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Labels:
Berkshire,
bridal portrait,
wedding photographer
Loitering Round Lichfield!
Well, maybe not quite loitering, we were actually working but it was a jolly relaxed and fun day out all the same!
I met Andy at the railway station... I should say "at one of the railway stations" as there are actually 2 in Lichfield and, between us, myself and Andy managed to see them both! He was waiting eagerly at the Trent Valley station as I sent a text to say that we were coasting up to the platform... but I was actually on the train that was coasting up to the platform at the City station! Oops!! No wonder he couldn't see the train that I was adamant I was on!!!
We were soon reunited however and carried on into the City of Lichfield to see what we could find. Inevitably, we found a coffee shop first of all and, having partaken of a particularly large and perhaps not quite wholesome breakfast, we wandered in towards the Cathedral.
The purpose of the day was to ensure that Andy was confident at using manual exposures on his camera, and then a look at using the computer to offload, upload, download, and any and all other loadsa things that can be done to, with and from images on a computer! That is actually a mammoth subject and impossible to cover completely in one day, so it was rather an introduction to it, a look-see at the digital darkroom, accompanied by a manual (written by myself) that Andy could take home and carry on with at his leisure. He can also contact me at any time for more help and assistance if he needs it... and it is quite likely that he will, so please don't hesitate to call me Andy!!
So, what did we cover on our day out? Well, we started off at Captain Smith's statue in Lichfield.
Yes, he was the Captain of the Titanic, but no, he didn't come from Lichfield! Apparently (I don't know how much truth there is to this story, but I have it on good authority), Captain Smith was from Stoke on Trent but they refused to erect a statue in his honour and so his memory was denied until Captain Scott's wife (Captain of the RSS Discovery, which is in permanent dock at Dundee... go see it if you can, it's awesome!!).. where was I? Yes, Captain Scott's wife persuaded the good folks of Lichfield to have his statue there instead!
The challenge for Andy was to get a photo of the statue against the sky, while retaining detail in his face and all cloud detail behind. No HDR, no multiple exposures; 1 exposure, manually created by Andy with only very minimal guidance from myself. We took a colour exposure which we converted to black & white later on during our computer skills session. It has to be said, Andy coped most admirably... no pun intended, he was just a cap'n anyway ;-)
We then went into the Cathedral in search of lowlight, high contrast, interesting and beautiful images. Another big challenge for Andy and, again, he did an amazing job!
Having only been on 2 photographic tuition days with me, Andy is now very much in charge of his own camera.
Rather than let it decide what settings to use, Andy chooses it all himself. ISO, aperture, shutter speed, composition, framing, timing... all his own work and all very, very impressive!!
So, having loitered round the Cathedral (where we did purchase a photography permit each by the way), we headed back into the city via another tea room for an afternoon on the computer. All in all we had another smashing day out and I can safely say that we will be doing it again, but as friends rather than as work! Now that's not a bad job is it?!!
Thanks for another great day out Andy, and for all your hard work. It's been an absolute pleasure working with you!!
Rebecca, x
If you would like your own personal photography tutorial, contact me and we'll get it arranged to suit you! We have 3 whole days in total, you get 2 manuals written just for you that are yours to take away and keep, plus email assistance when you're at home, for however long you want or need it. All that for £185. If you would like to discuss it further with me, please do email me and I'll get back to you as soon as I can!
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
I met Andy at the railway station... I should say "at one of the railway stations" as there are actually 2 in Lichfield and, between us, myself and Andy managed to see them both! He was waiting eagerly at the Trent Valley station as I sent a text to say that we were coasting up to the platform... but I was actually on the train that was coasting up to the platform at the City station! Oops!! No wonder he couldn't see the train that I was adamant I was on!!!
We were soon reunited however and carried on into the City of Lichfield to see what we could find. Inevitably, we found a coffee shop first of all and, having partaken of a particularly large and perhaps not quite wholesome breakfast, we wandered in towards the Cathedral.
The purpose of the day was to ensure that Andy was confident at using manual exposures on his camera, and then a look at using the computer to offload, upload, download, and any and all other loadsa things that can be done to, with and from images on a computer! That is actually a mammoth subject and impossible to cover completely in one day, so it was rather an introduction to it, a look-see at the digital darkroom, accompanied by a manual (written by myself) that Andy could take home and carry on with at his leisure. He can also contact me at any time for more help and assistance if he needs it... and it is quite likely that he will, so please don't hesitate to call me Andy!!
So, what did we cover on our day out? Well, we started off at Captain Smith's statue in Lichfield.
Yes, he was the Captain of the Titanic, but no, he didn't come from Lichfield! Apparently (I don't know how much truth there is to this story, but I have it on good authority), Captain Smith was from Stoke on Trent but they refused to erect a statue in his honour and so his memory was denied until Captain Scott's wife (Captain of the RSS Discovery, which is in permanent dock at Dundee... go see it if you can, it's awesome!!).. where was I? Yes, Captain Scott's wife persuaded the good folks of Lichfield to have his statue there instead!
The challenge for Andy was to get a photo of the statue against the sky, while retaining detail in his face and all cloud detail behind. No HDR, no multiple exposures; 1 exposure, manually created by Andy with only very minimal guidance from myself. We took a colour exposure which we converted to black & white later on during our computer skills session. It has to be said, Andy coped most admirably... no pun intended, he was just a cap'n anyway ;-)
We then went into the Cathedral in search of lowlight, high contrast, interesting and beautiful images. Another big challenge for Andy and, again, he did an amazing job!
Having only been on 2 photographic tuition days with me, Andy is now very much in charge of his own camera.
Rather than let it decide what settings to use, Andy chooses it all himself. ISO, aperture, shutter speed, composition, framing, timing... all his own work and all very, very impressive!!
So, having loitered round the Cathedral (where we did purchase a photography permit each by the way), we headed back into the city via another tea room for an afternoon on the computer. All in all we had another smashing day out and I can safely say that we will be doing it again, but as friends rather than as work! Now that's not a bad job is it?!!
Thanks for another great day out Andy, and for all your hard work. It's been an absolute pleasure working with you!!
Rebecca, x
If you would like your own personal photography tutorial, contact me and we'll get it arranged to suit you! We have 3 whole days in total, you get 2 manuals written just for you that are yours to take away and keep, plus email assistance when you're at home, for however long you want or need it. All that for £185. If you would like to discuss it further with me, please do email me and I'll get back to you as soon as I can!
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Tuesday, 17 August 2010
Inspiration causes Perspiration!!
I'm the sort of person that is never really happy with anything I do, it can always be better and must get better!
I know there is no such thing as perfection and so I don't actually strive for that, but I do strive to improve, improve and improve some more... to keep growing and getting better and to learn as much as possible while it's still possible!
I've been inspired by so many people in my life and it would be impossible to count or name them all here, but I also continually seek new acquaintances and friendships with those people that I admire. It may be that I respect their work, their artistry, their passion or just their outlook on life, but all these people bring something that I can think about and try to put into who I am too.
Although we've not yet met in person, somebody who has been very influential and inspirational in the way I approach both my life and my work is Glyn Davies. A Cornishmen on Anglesey, Glyn has a passion for life, his family, the landscape and photography that is truly awesome!
I believe we think along the same lines in so many ways and so I do feel a very strong connection with Glyn, even though we've never met. He seems to be a lot like me and a lot like my very best friends, which is why I feel that I've already known him for years!
Well, to go back to the subject of inspiration, I've just purchased 2 of Glyn's books "Anglesey Landscapes" and "Anglesey Landscapes II".
I hope he doesn't mind me writing about them and blowing his trumpet for him, because they are outstanding!!!
The quality of the photographs is, of course, everything that you would expect from THE landscape photographer of Anglesey, but it is so very much more.
His passion for the island and for Wales is clearly evident, but so is his passion for seeking out the undercurrents of wild Anglesey. I don't mean the undercurrents in the sea... though they are responsible for the key elements in many of Glyn's photographs... I mean the undercurrents of that indefinable thing that pulls us into a landscape, into nature and into ourselves.
I can't really put it into words, it is something indefinable, but Glyn puts it into his books both in the photographs and in the accompanying text. If you 'get' the outdoors, if you 'get' the pull that drags you out of bed at unspeakable times of day and in unfeasibly wet, cold and windy weather, then you will already know what I mean and you'll be as absorbed by Glyn's books as I am!!
If you don't 'get' it, then read Glyn's books... feel the passion in his written words and in the power of his photography. I can honestly say, you WILL be blown away! Inspired? Yes, oh yes I am!!
Inspired not only to get out and get better landscape shots, but also inspired to re-connect with life and those undercurrents that I talked of just now. I've had a difficult year on a personal level and I think that has got in the way a bit, led my attention away from the strands and wisps that I love to follow through life. Not really aimless, more a voyage of discovery!
Just recently I've been aimless, but, (without him knowing it) Glyn has re-directed me, inspired me to buck up and get on, to re-focus and get some of that old sparkle and passion back. Inspiration? Sorted!!
But what about the perspiration? Well, as I said at the beginning, I am always striving to improve and, to that end, I have recently become a member of the Society of Wedding and Portrait Photographers (SWPP). I aim to work my way up through their qualification structure and to learn and improve and be the best that I can be all the time that I can.
First step is the 'Mentor Me' scheme that they run. I have to choose 20 images that I've taken and submit them for critique and guidance on where to go next, to step up to the next level. You wouldn't think it would be that hard, doesn't sound hard, but the HOURS that I've put in this week already!!! I am loving it though, and it's been fantastic re-visiting old images and of course the memories of the laughter and head-scratching that accompanied them!
Onwards and upwards me friends, I'm on a mission!!! I'll keep you informed as I go along, wish me luck and I hope you'll stay along with me for the ride! Oh, and Glyn, I REALLY hope I get this right... Diolch iti, gyda'm holl galon!! If you've not been yet, pop by Glyn's website and you'll see just what I mean! www.glyndavies.com
Rebecca, x.
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
I know there is no such thing as perfection and so I don't actually strive for that, but I do strive to improve, improve and improve some more... to keep growing and getting better and to learn as much as possible while it's still possible!
I've been inspired by so many people in my life and it would be impossible to count or name them all here, but I also continually seek new acquaintances and friendships with those people that I admire. It may be that I respect their work, their artistry, their passion or just their outlook on life, but all these people bring something that I can think about and try to put into who I am too.
Although we've not yet met in person, somebody who has been very influential and inspirational in the way I approach both my life and my work is Glyn Davies. A Cornishmen on Anglesey, Glyn has a passion for life, his family, the landscape and photography that is truly awesome!
I believe we think along the same lines in so many ways and so I do feel a very strong connection with Glyn, even though we've never met. He seems to be a lot like me and a lot like my very best friends, which is why I feel that I've already known him for years!
Well, to go back to the subject of inspiration, I've just purchased 2 of Glyn's books "Anglesey Landscapes" and "Anglesey Landscapes II".
I hope he doesn't mind me writing about them and blowing his trumpet for him, because they are outstanding!!!
The quality of the photographs is, of course, everything that you would expect from THE landscape photographer of Anglesey, but it is so very much more.
His passion for the island and for Wales is clearly evident, but so is his passion for seeking out the undercurrents of wild Anglesey. I don't mean the undercurrents in the sea... though they are responsible for the key elements in many of Glyn's photographs... I mean the undercurrents of that indefinable thing that pulls us into a landscape, into nature and into ourselves.
I can't really put it into words, it is something indefinable, but Glyn puts it into his books both in the photographs and in the accompanying text. If you 'get' the outdoors, if you 'get' the pull that drags you out of bed at unspeakable times of day and in unfeasibly wet, cold and windy weather, then you will already know what I mean and you'll be as absorbed by Glyn's books as I am!!
If you don't 'get' it, then read Glyn's books... feel the passion in his written words and in the power of his photography. I can honestly say, you WILL be blown away! Inspired? Yes, oh yes I am!!
Inspired not only to get out and get better landscape shots, but also inspired to re-connect with life and those undercurrents that I talked of just now. I've had a difficult year on a personal level and I think that has got in the way a bit, led my attention away from the strands and wisps that I love to follow through life. Not really aimless, more a voyage of discovery!
Just recently I've been aimless, but, (without him knowing it) Glyn has re-directed me, inspired me to buck up and get on, to re-focus and get some of that old sparkle and passion back. Inspiration? Sorted!!
But what about the perspiration? Well, as I said at the beginning, I am always striving to improve and, to that end, I have recently become a member of the Society of Wedding and Portrait Photographers (SWPP). I aim to work my way up through their qualification structure and to learn and improve and be the best that I can be all the time that I can.
First step is the 'Mentor Me' scheme that they run. I have to choose 20 images that I've taken and submit them for critique and guidance on where to go next, to step up to the next level. You wouldn't think it would be that hard, doesn't sound hard, but the HOURS that I've put in this week already!!! I am loving it though, and it's been fantastic re-visiting old images and of course the memories of the laughter and head-scratching that accompanied them!
Onwards and upwards me friends, I'm on a mission!!! I'll keep you informed as I go along, wish me luck and I hope you'll stay along with me for the ride! Oh, and Glyn, I REALLY hope I get this right... Diolch iti, gyda'm holl galon!! If you've not been yet, pop by Glyn's website and you'll see just what I mean! www.glyndavies.com
Rebecca, x.
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
Labels:
anglesey,
glyn davies,
landscape photography,
SWPP,
Wales
Monday, 9 August 2010
Getting Steamy in the Valley!
The Churnet Valley Railway in Staffordshire provided the perfect location for a full day photography tutorial, as well as the perfect location for a fantastic day out!
If ever you are wandering about on the Staffordshire / Derbyshire border and wondering what to do, why not drop by to travel the Churnet Valley Railway? It is spectacular!!
Running for ten and a half miles through the Staffordshire countryside, it'll take you on a journey through nostalgia. Running alongside the Caldon Canal and the River Churnet, the railway takes you into a really interesting and exciting past.
I went along last week with Andy, who was with me for his second photography tutorial. We talked more about exposure and how to be creative using the manual controls on his camera. With the old-fashioned stations, the authentic decor and fittings, the engine sheds and the volunteers who work so hard and so enthusiastically, it's impossible not to take photos at the Churnet Valley Railway! It was the perfect place for our tutorial, a photographer's paradise!
We started off with a bacon roll at Kingsley & Froghall Station (actually, Andy had a Staffordshire oatcake with cheese & bacon and it looked lovely!!!!), where the tea rooms happily open in plenty of time to make full use of before the first train of the day. Joined by the driver and guard of the train, it's a good sign of the quality of the fare!!!
Our first engine was a diesel and we were taken along to Cheddleton Station where we could potter about the engine sheds. It was tipping down with rain, so the engine sheds were extremely inviting in more ways than one, but we didn't realise quite how inviting until we'd gone in.
Not only were we faced with the engine that graces the covers of the Churnet Valley literature in all her naked glory, but there was also a whole host of locomotive and engineering paraphernalia laying about waiting to be restored to life. It's a tremendously exciting place, but it was also a little bit disappointing because visitors were only allowed as far as a barrier just inside the doors. Not to be put off (and it was still tipping down outside!!), we spent a while getting the right exposure for Andy and getting him using his tripod.
Having pottered about for a while, a very lovely chap called Dave came over and invited us in to get some more photos. We happily agreed that it was at our own risk, and joined Dave on his side of the barrier... awesome!! Dave showed us around the sheds and then accompanied us out the far end where I thought I'd faint with excitement!!
Coaches, locos, all kinds of bits and pieces
and, of course, Dave himself. Full of enthusiasm, knowledge and an expert guide, we even managed to persuade him to model for us!
Dave, you're a star and we can't thank you enough!!
Having left Dave, we wandered over the bridge to the Boat Inn for lunch before heading back to the station for a steam-hauled trip to Consall. With not quite enough time for a walk round the nature reserve, we pottered about by the canalside.
The railway bridges the canal here and it's a popular place to moor up with the Black Lion pub just over the crossing. Giving great views down the line from the beer garden, it's a great place to try some shots with the long lens and have a cup of coffee at the same time!
Who says tutorials are like school? Ha ha.
Walking just a short way brought us along to a small weir that was perfect for Andy to practise creative exposures to blur the water.
Not everyone's cup of tea I know, but it is a useful technique to learn for the number of different applications that it can be used for, and was something that Andy can take away to get creative at home or on holiday!
We then wandered over to the old lime kilns, now owned by the RSPB,
before heading back to the station for the last train home. Back at Kingsley & Froghall gave us more opportunity to watch the guys working around the station and around the loco itself.
The weather had cleared up and cheered up, and we stood at the end of the platform like a couple of schoolkids on a trainspotting holiday!
All we needed was a tin of cheese and pickle sandwiches!! I absolutely fell in love with the Churnet Valley Railway and can guarantee that I'll be back, without a doubt! I saw a poster for an evening special that really tickled me and I only wish I was more local so that I could go... 'Diesel, Curry, Beer, £12, Nuff said!' Love it!!
Hmm, wonder what the chances are of the line extending down to Berkshire? Yeah, thought so... I'll just have to go back up!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
If ever you are wandering about on the Staffordshire / Derbyshire border and wondering what to do, why not drop by to travel the Churnet Valley Railway? It is spectacular!!
Running for ten and a half miles through the Staffordshire countryside, it'll take you on a journey through nostalgia. Running alongside the Caldon Canal and the River Churnet, the railway takes you into a really interesting and exciting past.
I went along last week with Andy, who was with me for his second photography tutorial. We talked more about exposure and how to be creative using the manual controls on his camera. With the old-fashioned stations, the authentic decor and fittings, the engine sheds and the volunteers who work so hard and so enthusiastically, it's impossible not to take photos at the Churnet Valley Railway! It was the perfect place for our tutorial, a photographer's paradise!
We started off with a bacon roll at Kingsley & Froghall Station (actually, Andy had a Staffordshire oatcake with cheese & bacon and it looked lovely!!!!), where the tea rooms happily open in plenty of time to make full use of before the first train of the day. Joined by the driver and guard of the train, it's a good sign of the quality of the fare!!!
Our first engine was a diesel and we were taken along to Cheddleton Station where we could potter about the engine sheds. It was tipping down with rain, so the engine sheds were extremely inviting in more ways than one, but we didn't realise quite how inviting until we'd gone in.
Not only were we faced with the engine that graces the covers of the Churnet Valley literature in all her naked glory, but there was also a whole host of locomotive and engineering paraphernalia laying about waiting to be restored to life. It's a tremendously exciting place, but it was also a little bit disappointing because visitors were only allowed as far as a barrier just inside the doors. Not to be put off (and it was still tipping down outside!!), we spent a while getting the right exposure for Andy and getting him using his tripod.
Having pottered about for a while, a very lovely chap called Dave came over and invited us in to get some more photos. We happily agreed that it was at our own risk, and joined Dave on his side of the barrier... awesome!! Dave showed us around the sheds and then accompanied us out the far end where I thought I'd faint with excitement!!
Coaches, locos, all kinds of bits and pieces
and, of course, Dave himself. Full of enthusiasm, knowledge and an expert guide, we even managed to persuade him to model for us!
Dave, you're a star and we can't thank you enough!!
Having left Dave, we wandered over the bridge to the Boat Inn for lunch before heading back to the station for a steam-hauled trip to Consall. With not quite enough time for a walk round the nature reserve, we pottered about by the canalside.
The railway bridges the canal here and it's a popular place to moor up with the Black Lion pub just over the crossing. Giving great views down the line from the beer garden, it's a great place to try some shots with the long lens and have a cup of coffee at the same time!
Who says tutorials are like school? Ha ha.
Walking just a short way brought us along to a small weir that was perfect for Andy to practise creative exposures to blur the water.
Not everyone's cup of tea I know, but it is a useful technique to learn for the number of different applications that it can be used for, and was something that Andy can take away to get creative at home or on holiday!
We then wandered over to the old lime kilns, now owned by the RSPB,
before heading back to the station for the last train home. Back at Kingsley & Froghall gave us more opportunity to watch the guys working around the station and around the loco itself.
The weather had cleared up and cheered up, and we stood at the end of the platform like a couple of schoolkids on a trainspotting holiday!
All we needed was a tin of cheese and pickle sandwiches!! I absolutely fell in love with the Churnet Valley Railway and can guarantee that I'll be back, without a doubt! I saw a poster for an evening special that really tickled me and I only wish I was more local so that I could go... 'Diesel, Curry, Beer, £12, Nuff said!' Love it!!
Hmm, wonder what the chances are of the line extending down to Berkshire? Yeah, thought so... I'll just have to go back up!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
Peeking about the Peaks!
I suspect that I'm not the first to use such a title, and most likely won't be the last, and yes I do agree that it's cheesy, but hey, it'll have to do for now!
So, indeed I did take a peek around the Peak District National Park last week. The White Peak area, so-called because of it's limestone substrata, is a particularly beautiful place in this ridiculously pretty part of England! Why don't more people know about it? It's gorgeous!!
Well, I am very pleased to say that I now know of it and have seen quite a large portion of it over the last few months. This time I wandered over the area of Monsal Dale, taking a circular route from Ashford-in-the-Water up to Monsal Head and down through the Dale, following the lovely River Wye back to Ashford-in-the-Water again.
As you walk up along the fields that sit above the village, have a look at the drystone walls. There are so many fossils easily visible in the limestone that has been dug locally to provide the stones for the walls. Mostly shells of varying forms, it tells of times when the peaks and dales were actually on the shores of a vast tropical sea! It's really hard to picture white sands, blue seas, palm trees and crystal waters when the wind and rain is coming at you sideways on the Peaks, but if you use a little imagination it is strangely warming!
I hope you do have a look for the fossils in the stones, but please, it is worth saying, don't be tempted to take any of the stones home! These walls are extremely old and should be protected. They've stood for hundreds of years and sheltered so many people, both travellers and farmers, shepherds, shepherdesses, and villagers who used the walls to hide behind while conducting business or, far more excitingly, romantic liaisons and illicit trysts!! Yes, I do have a fairly active imagination, but I really like to think of who else has been along these ancient pathways and who else may have touched the walls and looked for fossils just as I do now!
As it happens, these really are ancient pathways! Walking across the top, you amble past Fin Cop, which is the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort. A little further along is the very exciting Hob's House, a rock formation that was also home to a legendary giant called Hob, who came out at night to thresh the farmers corn. Clearly grateful, the farmers rewarded Hob with bowls of cream! I like that!!
Anyhow, having wandered past the fields on the tops, the path drops away dramatically at Monsal Head into the dale below. It's a very popular view point, and it's easy to see why. The views must look fantastic at any time of year! I really would like to come back in the autumn when all the trees are changing colour and the sun sits lower in the sky. It'll look wonderful.
Just as we arrived at Monsal Head, a light rain started and it seemed an excellent time to nip into the tea rooms at the craft shop. One pot of tea and an extremely tasty homebaked fruit scone later, and we carried on our way down to the bottom of Monsal Dale. The view is pretty much dominated by the old viaduct, but as you go lower down, even that disappears under the volume of foliage and vegetation alongside the river.
The path carries on across a bridge where the view back up to the top is as breathtaking as the view down was!
Passing under the viaduct (now no longer carrying trains, the viaduct is used as part of a footpath now!) we wandered into the meadows that sit prettily beside the River Wye here. Full of wildflowers and butterflies, and surrounded by birdsong, it's also easy to believe that this is a landscape that hasn't changed for centuries (well, apart from the enormous great viaduct of course!!). Turning a corner though you come across a weir, which although concrete in structure, still sits attractively in its setting beneath the trees that line the escarpments of Monsal.
Another place that will look stunning in the autumn... and in winter, and in spring!!
The walk back to Ashford-in-the-Water carries you across the A6 and into a rather different but equally impressive landscape! Entering Great Shacklow Wood is rather like entering a film set for Lord of the Rings!! Also known as Demon Dale, this whole place feels very eerie and it's easy to see why so many legends and myths have been born from these paths. I really wouldn't like to walk through it on a foggy day!!
Further along, as you drop down from the woods and come back to the river, you will see an old derelict mill.
It's actually rather attractive and the detailing around the window frames and roofline is stunning... but the eerie feelings from the woods live on and pervade this place, which was once actually a mill used for crushing bones to make fertiliser!!!
Safely back at Ashford-in-the-Water and free of any demons, it seemed the right thing to do to visit the local shop and sample their wares... a sausage roll and an egg custard tart to be precise. Yum!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
So, indeed I did take a peek around the Peak District National Park last week. The White Peak area, so-called because of it's limestone substrata, is a particularly beautiful place in this ridiculously pretty part of England! Why don't more people know about it? It's gorgeous!!
Well, I am very pleased to say that I now know of it and have seen quite a large portion of it over the last few months. This time I wandered over the area of Monsal Dale, taking a circular route from Ashford-in-the-Water up to Monsal Head and down through the Dale, following the lovely River Wye back to Ashford-in-the-Water again.
As you walk up along the fields that sit above the village, have a look at the drystone walls. There are so many fossils easily visible in the limestone that has been dug locally to provide the stones for the walls. Mostly shells of varying forms, it tells of times when the peaks and dales were actually on the shores of a vast tropical sea! It's really hard to picture white sands, blue seas, palm trees and crystal waters when the wind and rain is coming at you sideways on the Peaks, but if you use a little imagination it is strangely warming!
I hope you do have a look for the fossils in the stones, but please, it is worth saying, don't be tempted to take any of the stones home! These walls are extremely old and should be protected. They've stood for hundreds of years and sheltered so many people, both travellers and farmers, shepherds, shepherdesses, and villagers who used the walls to hide behind while conducting business or, far more excitingly, romantic liaisons and illicit trysts!! Yes, I do have a fairly active imagination, but I really like to think of who else has been along these ancient pathways and who else may have touched the walls and looked for fossils just as I do now!
As it happens, these really are ancient pathways! Walking across the top, you amble past Fin Cop, which is the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort. A little further along is the very exciting Hob's House, a rock formation that was also home to a legendary giant called Hob, who came out at night to thresh the farmers corn. Clearly grateful, the farmers rewarded Hob with bowls of cream! I like that!!
Anyhow, having wandered past the fields on the tops, the path drops away dramatically at Monsal Head into the dale below. It's a very popular view point, and it's easy to see why. The views must look fantastic at any time of year! I really would like to come back in the autumn when all the trees are changing colour and the sun sits lower in the sky. It'll look wonderful.
Just as we arrived at Monsal Head, a light rain started and it seemed an excellent time to nip into the tea rooms at the craft shop. One pot of tea and an extremely tasty homebaked fruit scone later, and we carried on our way down to the bottom of Monsal Dale. The view is pretty much dominated by the old viaduct, but as you go lower down, even that disappears under the volume of foliage and vegetation alongside the river.
The path carries on across a bridge where the view back up to the top is as breathtaking as the view down was!
Passing under the viaduct (now no longer carrying trains, the viaduct is used as part of a footpath now!) we wandered into the meadows that sit prettily beside the River Wye here. Full of wildflowers and butterflies, and surrounded by birdsong, it's also easy to believe that this is a landscape that hasn't changed for centuries (well, apart from the enormous great viaduct of course!!). Turning a corner though you come across a weir, which although concrete in structure, still sits attractively in its setting beneath the trees that line the escarpments of Monsal.
Another place that will look stunning in the autumn... and in winter, and in spring!!
The walk back to Ashford-in-the-Water carries you across the A6 and into a rather different but equally impressive landscape! Entering Great Shacklow Wood is rather like entering a film set for Lord of the Rings!! Also known as Demon Dale, this whole place feels very eerie and it's easy to see why so many legends and myths have been born from these paths. I really wouldn't like to walk through it on a foggy day!!
Further along, as you drop down from the woods and come back to the river, you will see an old derelict mill.
It's actually rather attractive and the detailing around the window frames and roofline is stunning... but the eerie feelings from the woods live on and pervade this place, which was once actually a mill used for crushing bones to make fertiliser!!!
Safely back at Ashford-in-the-Water and free of any demons, it seemed the right thing to do to visit the local shop and sample their wares... a sausage roll and an egg custard tart to be precise. Yum!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
Poking about Nottingham's Underworld!!
If you think of Nottingham, you will almost certainly think of Robin Hood and the Sherriff of Nottingham. You'll quite likely think of Sherwood Forest, and probably lace making, and you may even think of Boots the Chemist and Raleigh Cycles... but would you think of caves? Lots of caves!
About 500 caves actually, none natural, all carved out by hand and directly under the city itself. People have certainly been carving and using these caves for centuries.
In 868 AD, Asser (Alfred the Great's chronicler) wrote of Tigguacobauc (now known as Nottingham) which translated as 'City of Caves'!
The caves have been dug into the relatively soft sandstone over which the city stands, and have been used for a multitude of purposes, from domestic and peaceful to nefarious and hair-raising!! The caves I explored last week were in the Broad Marsh area of the city and, rather bizarrely, accessed from the second floor of a modern shopping mall. The photos I took were all handheld, no flash at ISO 3200. Just as at Portsmouth, the Nikon handles the high ISO really well and I was pretty pleased with the results!
It was here that the caves were used as an underground tannery. A fairly revolting job to be done underground, and the only example of such in England, but fascinating to see and hear about. In fact, it was so revolting that the tanning pits in the Broad Marsh caves were just about the only place in the UK where you couldn't catch the plague!! It was so disgusting down there that even the rats refused to go in!! The tannery closed in 1639 but the pits have been preserved as they would have been Tudor and Stewart times.
Not open to the public until 1994, these caves have now been granted ancient monument status!
Over the centuries, many of the caves had disappeared as Nottingham grew and building works caused the caves to fill up with brick and rubble and wood. The caves won't be forgotten though... in 1826 a garden collapsed killing seven boys, and in 1880 a shop built over one of the Broad Marsh caves collapsed as it fell into the pit below!
Hmm, the entrance to these caves is now through a multi-storied shopping mall, yikes! No need to panic though, pillars and a concrete bridge were built around the caves to take the weight of the shopping centre but leave the caves safely intact.
The caves have also been used for good though. During the second world war many of the caves were converted into air raid shelters, often reinforced with brick and steel. Perhaps the most impressive is under the John Player cigarette factory where there was room for 8000 people!!
One of the biggest stories though is the use of the caves as housing for poor people over the centuries.
It was well known that if a man had no money, all he had to do was travel to Nottingham with a shovel and a pick and he could dig himself a home! What also really interested me was to see that the caves are still being put to various uses.
As well as the tourist attraction of the Broad Marsh caves, there are many less well-known caves being used. A gun club meets in the caves beneath Nottingham Castle, the Fire Brigade train in tunnels beneath the Guildhall, and many shops and pubs use the caves as cellar storage. Perhaps the most famous of all is the pub built into the caves at the foot of Nottingham castle.
'Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem' dates from 1189 AD and is arguably the oldest pub in Britain. I say arguably as there is apparently another pub in Nottingham city centre that is vying for the same title!! Regardless of it's distinction as the oldest pub in Britain, the 'Trip' is certainly amongst the most remarkable! Small snugs and saloons nestle into the caves carved into the sandstone beneath the castle walls, and the feeling is awesome, I loved it!! I also rather liked the pint of 'Old Trip' ale which I found to be extremely drinkable and most certainly a good reason to return!!
Ales have been quaffed by many people at the bar in the 'Trip' for centuries, but perhaps the most famous is Richard the Lionheart, who downed a few pints of the landlord's finest before setting off on his way to the Crusades. It feels strangely bizarre to be standing at a bar that also served King Richard himself, but the name of the pub is also a bit of a surprise. It would be apparent that it relates to the Crusaders and their travels to Jerusalem, but did you know that a trip was actually a rest stop, not the journey at all. It makes sense if you think of a trip as a break in progress, as happens when you trip over something, but I'd never heard of it being used in the context of breaking a journey before. I always thought the trip was the journey!!
Nottingham; City of Caves, city of surprises!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
About 500 caves actually, none natural, all carved out by hand and directly under the city itself. People have certainly been carving and using these caves for centuries.
In 868 AD, Asser (Alfred the Great's chronicler) wrote of Tigguacobauc (now known as Nottingham) which translated as 'City of Caves'!
The caves have been dug into the relatively soft sandstone over which the city stands, and have been used for a multitude of purposes, from domestic and peaceful to nefarious and hair-raising!! The caves I explored last week were in the Broad Marsh area of the city and, rather bizarrely, accessed from the second floor of a modern shopping mall. The photos I took were all handheld, no flash at ISO 3200. Just as at Portsmouth, the Nikon handles the high ISO really well and I was pretty pleased with the results!
It was here that the caves were used as an underground tannery. A fairly revolting job to be done underground, and the only example of such in England, but fascinating to see and hear about. In fact, it was so revolting that the tanning pits in the Broad Marsh caves were just about the only place in the UK where you couldn't catch the plague!! It was so disgusting down there that even the rats refused to go in!! The tannery closed in 1639 but the pits have been preserved as they would have been Tudor and Stewart times.
Not open to the public until 1994, these caves have now been granted ancient monument status!
Over the centuries, many of the caves had disappeared as Nottingham grew and building works caused the caves to fill up with brick and rubble and wood. The caves won't be forgotten though... in 1826 a garden collapsed killing seven boys, and in 1880 a shop built over one of the Broad Marsh caves collapsed as it fell into the pit below!
Hmm, the entrance to these caves is now through a multi-storied shopping mall, yikes! No need to panic though, pillars and a concrete bridge were built around the caves to take the weight of the shopping centre but leave the caves safely intact.
The caves have also been used for good though. During the second world war many of the caves were converted into air raid shelters, often reinforced with brick and steel. Perhaps the most impressive is under the John Player cigarette factory where there was room for 8000 people!!
One of the biggest stories though is the use of the caves as housing for poor people over the centuries.
It was well known that if a man had no money, all he had to do was travel to Nottingham with a shovel and a pick and he could dig himself a home! What also really interested me was to see that the caves are still being put to various uses.
As well as the tourist attraction of the Broad Marsh caves, there are many less well-known caves being used. A gun club meets in the caves beneath Nottingham Castle, the Fire Brigade train in tunnels beneath the Guildhall, and many shops and pubs use the caves as cellar storage. Perhaps the most famous of all is the pub built into the caves at the foot of Nottingham castle.
'Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem' dates from 1189 AD and is arguably the oldest pub in Britain. I say arguably as there is apparently another pub in Nottingham city centre that is vying for the same title!! Regardless of it's distinction as the oldest pub in Britain, the 'Trip' is certainly amongst the most remarkable! Small snugs and saloons nestle into the caves carved into the sandstone beneath the castle walls, and the feeling is awesome, I loved it!! I also rather liked the pint of 'Old Trip' ale which I found to be extremely drinkable and most certainly a good reason to return!!
Ales have been quaffed by many people at the bar in the 'Trip' for centuries, but perhaps the most famous is Richard the Lionheart, who downed a few pints of the landlord's finest before setting off on his way to the Crusades. It feels strangely bizarre to be standing at a bar that also served King Richard himself, but the name of the pub is also a bit of a surprise. It would be apparent that it relates to the Crusaders and their travels to Jerusalem, but did you know that a trip was actually a rest stop, not the journey at all. It makes sense if you think of a trip as a break in progress, as happens when you trip over something, but I'd never heard of it being used in the context of breaking a journey before. I always thought the trip was the journey!!
Nottingham; City of Caves, city of surprises!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
Labels:
broad marsh,
caves,
high iso,
nikon,
nottingham,
nottingham castle,
trip to jerusalem
Up Pompey!
Actually, it was down to Pompey really, as we drove directly south to arrive just over an hour later in the town of Portsmouth!
Portsmouth has been affectionately known as Pompey for years but nobody really seems to know why. There are quite a few theories about, as any quick search of the internet will show you, but I think the most likely is the one that refers to the navigational charts and shipping.
Ships entering Portsmouth harbour make an entry in the ships log 'Pom. P.' which refers to Portsmouth Point. Navigational charts also use this abbreviation, as 'Portsmouth Point' is apparently far too long to note down in full. Sounds plausible to me, and I reckon that's the one I shall go by!
So, anyway, Pompey or Portsmouth, I drove down for a day out with my nieces and my brother and mum, and it's a great place! There is so much to see and do that a day is nowhere near enough!! Just as well we got tickets for the harbour that are valid for a year so we can return as many times as we like!
My nieces live just north of Nottingham, which is about as far from any coastline as you can get in England, so it was good to take them down to the south coast and board the ferry for a trip round the harbour. The tour lasted an hour and took us pretty close to the Naval dockyards where we saw all sorts of ships in for repair or overhaul.
Pretty exciting for me was to see the icebreaker 'HMS Endurance' berthed alongside the aircraft carrier 'HMS Invincible'. I can't really explain why that particularly excites me, other than that I obviously don't get out much, but I was genuinely thrilled to see them both and see them together! Pity I didn't get a good shot of them, but at least we saw them anyway!
Something that struck me as we sailed round the harbour was the neat entanglement of old and new... ancient and modern twisted together as seamlessly and with all the strength of a good old-fashioned, but still used, nautical knot!
I think I mentioned a while ago about chatting to a couple of ex-submariners recently. They had been talking about a huge tank system that they have to go up inside from the bottom to the top. It filled me with horror to hear them talking about it... and gave me watery nightmares for weeks which I posted about a few months ago, but the true horror of it became apparent when I saw the tank in question. Oh my word... well, something with four letters in anyway, blimey!!!! It's HUGE!!!! Imagine that big tower filled with water and then having to go up inside it!! Ooh shuddery no, it fills me with absolute, sheer, unfettered, unbelievably immense amounts of horror! But, for those who could do it, this is where they did it.
HMS Dolphin was where submariners were trained and based for many years, and that is the very same tank they were telling me about. Brrrr, really, really makes me shudder!
Something else that blew my mind somewhat was this very impressive looking Palmerston Fort out in the Solent.
Approximately a mile out of Portsmouth Harbour, the fort is a totally man-made island, built in 1867 as a response to a threat of French invasion under Napoleon III. The four Palmerston forts were designed to protect the Naval dockyards at Portsmouth and were owned by the Ministry of Defence until as recently as 1982. Now privately owned, some are available for exclusive hire for parties or filming, and also have restaurants, museums and, on one of them, the potential for a micro-brewery! Marvellous!! A big up for Pompey!!!
Heading round the harbour to Gunwharf Quay, you can't help but notice the fantastic Spinnaker Tower. It is stunning! I haven't seen it at night but I've seen quite a few photos of it and it is simply beautiful. It's visible from so many areas around the harbour, and it blends so well with the masts, towers and rigging of the old Portsmouth Harbour. New and old, biding together beautifully.
Speaking of old and new, the captain of the ferry, who was also giving us a very entertaining commentary on the cruise, pointed out a very new and significant structure that sits in the dockyard beneath the mighty towers and historic masts... it is none other than the brand new Admiralty toilet block! I didn't get a photo of it, but if you really want to know it is quite spacious, built of red brick and looks very comfortable indeed!! Something else that caught my eye was this crane that I managed to get in the right place to make it look as if it was lifting the Spinnaker Tower into position.
Made me chortle anyway. Once back on solid ground, we explored the Historic Dockyard and, more specifically, the inner workings of the tremendously famous HMS Victory. What a fabulous ship!
It, as so many other things round Portsmouth, is also HUGE! The restoration and reconstruction of work and rest on board is awesome. It's so well done. Flash photography isn't allowed in many parts of the ship so I set my ISO to 3200 (yikes!! Yep!!!!) and tried it to see what I could get. The images are obviously a bit noisy, but overall I was pretty pleased with the way the Nikon handled such a ridiculously high ISO. The cannonballs are lined up right in the middle of the inner decks, as far from any light source as possible, and against dark wood planks.
Tricky for sure, but not too bad at all really. Not quite the composition I would have liked but I was laying on the floor and wedged against a pillar whilst getting tutted at by a very large and very vocal group of French tourists! So while I was at it, just to be equally obnoxious, I hung around for a few seconds more and got a photo of this grappling iron at the same time!!
Again, fairly noisy but not too bad.
The outer decks are also fascinating. The miles and miles of ropes and rigging are just mind-boggling! The buckets hanging along the rails were essential for the cannon, but they also look quite appealing at the same time.
But then I'm quite easily pleased!!
Wandering down onto the quayside again, I took a look around the ship and was gobsmacked at the size of it. Whichever way you look at it, it's a beautiful, beautiful ship! Whilst wandering about under the bowsprit, I looked across and saw yet another relationship between the old and the new. HMS Dauntless, the new Air Defence Destroyer of the Royal Navy berthed in the shadow of the magnificent HMS Victory.
Nautical knots everywhere you look!! There is still so much I want to see at Portsmouth, so you may be quite sure that I shall be back... and of course having paid for a full ticket anyway it'd be daft not to!! So, a big up for Pompey, it's awesome!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
Portsmouth has been affectionately known as Pompey for years but nobody really seems to know why. There are quite a few theories about, as any quick search of the internet will show you, but I think the most likely is the one that refers to the navigational charts and shipping.
Ships entering Portsmouth harbour make an entry in the ships log 'Pom. P.' which refers to Portsmouth Point. Navigational charts also use this abbreviation, as 'Portsmouth Point' is apparently far too long to note down in full. Sounds plausible to me, and I reckon that's the one I shall go by!
So, anyway, Pompey or Portsmouth, I drove down for a day out with my nieces and my brother and mum, and it's a great place! There is so much to see and do that a day is nowhere near enough!! Just as well we got tickets for the harbour that are valid for a year so we can return as many times as we like!
My nieces live just north of Nottingham, which is about as far from any coastline as you can get in England, so it was good to take them down to the south coast and board the ferry for a trip round the harbour. The tour lasted an hour and took us pretty close to the Naval dockyards where we saw all sorts of ships in for repair or overhaul.
Pretty exciting for me was to see the icebreaker 'HMS Endurance' berthed alongside the aircraft carrier 'HMS Invincible'. I can't really explain why that particularly excites me, other than that I obviously don't get out much, but I was genuinely thrilled to see them both and see them together! Pity I didn't get a good shot of them, but at least we saw them anyway!
Something that struck me as we sailed round the harbour was the neat entanglement of old and new... ancient and modern twisted together as seamlessly and with all the strength of a good old-fashioned, but still used, nautical knot!
I think I mentioned a while ago about chatting to a couple of ex-submariners recently. They had been talking about a huge tank system that they have to go up inside from the bottom to the top. It filled me with horror to hear them talking about it... and gave me watery nightmares for weeks which I posted about a few months ago, but the true horror of it became apparent when I saw the tank in question. Oh my word... well, something with four letters in anyway, blimey!!!! It's HUGE!!!! Imagine that big tower filled with water and then having to go up inside it!! Ooh shuddery no, it fills me with absolute, sheer, unfettered, unbelievably immense amounts of horror! But, for those who could do it, this is where they did it.
HMS Dolphin was where submariners were trained and based for many years, and that is the very same tank they were telling me about. Brrrr, really, really makes me shudder!
Something else that blew my mind somewhat was this very impressive looking Palmerston Fort out in the Solent.
Approximately a mile out of Portsmouth Harbour, the fort is a totally man-made island, built in 1867 as a response to a threat of French invasion under Napoleon III. The four Palmerston forts were designed to protect the Naval dockyards at Portsmouth and were owned by the Ministry of Defence until as recently as 1982. Now privately owned, some are available for exclusive hire for parties or filming, and also have restaurants, museums and, on one of them, the potential for a micro-brewery! Marvellous!! A big up for Pompey!!!
Heading round the harbour to Gunwharf Quay, you can't help but notice the fantastic Spinnaker Tower. It is stunning! I haven't seen it at night but I've seen quite a few photos of it and it is simply beautiful. It's visible from so many areas around the harbour, and it blends so well with the masts, towers and rigging of the old Portsmouth Harbour. New and old, biding together beautifully.
Speaking of old and new, the captain of the ferry, who was also giving us a very entertaining commentary on the cruise, pointed out a very new and significant structure that sits in the dockyard beneath the mighty towers and historic masts... it is none other than the brand new Admiralty toilet block! I didn't get a photo of it, but if you really want to know it is quite spacious, built of red brick and looks very comfortable indeed!! Something else that caught my eye was this crane that I managed to get in the right place to make it look as if it was lifting the Spinnaker Tower into position.
Made me chortle anyway. Once back on solid ground, we explored the Historic Dockyard and, more specifically, the inner workings of the tremendously famous HMS Victory. What a fabulous ship!
It, as so many other things round Portsmouth, is also HUGE! The restoration and reconstruction of work and rest on board is awesome. It's so well done. Flash photography isn't allowed in many parts of the ship so I set my ISO to 3200 (yikes!! Yep!!!!) and tried it to see what I could get. The images are obviously a bit noisy, but overall I was pretty pleased with the way the Nikon handled such a ridiculously high ISO. The cannonballs are lined up right in the middle of the inner decks, as far from any light source as possible, and against dark wood planks.
Tricky for sure, but not too bad at all really. Not quite the composition I would have liked but I was laying on the floor and wedged against a pillar whilst getting tutted at by a very large and very vocal group of French tourists! So while I was at it, just to be equally obnoxious, I hung around for a few seconds more and got a photo of this grappling iron at the same time!!
Again, fairly noisy but not too bad.
The outer decks are also fascinating. The miles and miles of ropes and rigging are just mind-boggling! The buckets hanging along the rails were essential for the cannon, but they also look quite appealing at the same time.
But then I'm quite easily pleased!!
Wandering down onto the quayside again, I took a look around the ship and was gobsmacked at the size of it. Whichever way you look at it, it's a beautiful, beautiful ship! Whilst wandering about under the bowsprit, I looked across and saw yet another relationship between the old and the new. HMS Dauntless, the new Air Defence Destroyer of the Royal Navy berthed in the shadow of the magnificent HMS Victory.
Nautical knots everywhere you look!! There is still so much I want to see at Portsmouth, so you may be quite sure that I shall be back... and of course having paid for a full ticket anyway it'd be daft not to!! So, a big up for Pompey, it's awesome!!
Rebecca, x
www.rtphotographics.co.uk
rebecca@rtphotographics.co.uk
Labels:
harbour tour,
historic dockyard,
hms victory,
palmerston forts,
pompey,
portsmouth
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