At the end of the tour, there is a very thought provoking
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Freedoms and rights - 7 April 2007
At the end of the tour, there is a very thought provoking
Amsterdam - 6 April 2007
Sitting at a street café looking across to the Waag we enjoyed a delicious salad lunch, and then wandered off to visit the museum in the house Rembrandt owned and worked in for 20 years. Sadly, he went bankrupt, but from the detailed inventories made at the time of the forced sale the museum has been able to restore and furnish the house as it was when Rembrandt lived and worked there.
Since it was now well after 7 p.m. we thought that the Anne Frank queue might have shortened so detoured in that direction. The queue was at least twice as long as in the morning: looks like an early morning start is the answer.
The guide books warn of the consequences of taking photos, so you just have to imagine a beauty pageant with all the contestants in their bikinis, but instead of standing in a row on a stage, they are all behind glass doors in every house along particular streets, often looking totally bored. Perhaps one needed to show a bit of interest in what they were offering to solicit some sort reciprocal response.
The footpaths were crowed with groups of curious tourists. (Clearly this did not include us – we were simply returning to our hotel!)
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
7, 24 or 9 Arches - 1 April 2007
82 Arches - 31 March 2007
The recently restored early Art Deco house, 78 Derngate, was the highlight of our day. In particular the entranceway and guest bedroom were stunning.
In the afternoon, we travelled north to Harringworth, to do a walk based on the Welland Viaduct.
An excellent dinner in The White Swan at Harringworth ended the day in fine style.
Monday, March 26, 2007
The day was ruined - 25 March 2007
The interior of the attached chapel was purchased from a bankrupt aristocrat and is an amazingly unexpected celebration of Baroque architecture. However, these places are not really seen at their best on a grey overcast
Our lunch stop was the picturesque village of Henley-in-Arden: the long main street has, apparently, examples of nearly every period of English architecture and is well worth a visit.

Hartlebury, Harvington, Holes & Hills - 24 March 2007
After lunch at the canal town of Stourport-on-Severn we visited the very interesting medieval and Elizabethan house, Harvington Hall.
Now you see him, now you don't
Kinver Edge is very nearby and at the foot of the escarpment is Holy Austin Rock that has several very interesting cave houses built into
In Kidderminster we saw the statue of Sir Rowland Hill who invented the Penny Post and about whom William Gladstone said, “His great plan ran like wild-fire
The wheels on the bus go round and round,
round and round, round and round.
The wheels on the bus go round and round
except when waiting for the 269.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
Never in the course of history .... - 18 March 2007
... have so many owed so much to so few.
... have so many been upset by one theory.
It may have been Mothering Sunday but we focused on a couple of famous fathers. One of the houses that has been on the list for a visit for quite some time is Down House, home of Charles Darwin.
While in the area we re-visited Chartwell, home of Winston Churchill.
Both houses were very much focused on the owner’s Study, where their books were researched and written. Churchill said that a day away from Chartwell was a day wasted and Darwin was largely confined to home by ill health, such was the significance of these rooms to these two great men that were nationally mourned at their deaths.
The other place of significance at Down House was the glasshouse where Darwin conducted experiments on plant propagation.
... have so many been upset by one theory.
While in the area we re-visited Chartwell, home of Winston Churchill.
The other place of significance at Down House was the glasshouse where Darwin conducted experiments on plant propagation.
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