Finding Sladers Yard

After a walk at Hive beach we arrived at West Bay around four o’clock on a winter afternoon, and drove around hoping for tea and cake.  We parked and dashed to a café we’d spotted, just as they turned the sign to closed. I asked the staff member if there was another café nearby and she grunted that we could try across the road. Thank goodness they were closing, because ‘across the road’ was perfect.

She had directed us to Sladers Yard, a historic rope warehouse from the early nineteenth century, that supplied rope to the whole of the British Navy. Since 2006 it has been a café, and judging by the lemon polenta cake, the food is excellent. Here is the main café area.

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There is a further multi purpose space,  and the building is used as a party and wedding venue and for poetry and musical performance. Notice the building? IMG_0456_

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It is beautifully done, with a perfect balance of restoration and  rawness, and as a contemporary gallery it is a stunning backdrop for the art displayed.

Sladers is run by Petter Southall a furniture designer craftsman, and his wife Anna Powell. Petter’s work is the stuff of dreams, the kind of wood that makes you want to stroke it and inhale the fragrance.

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The upstairs gallery
The upstairs gallery

Goodbye Sladers, I’ll be back in summer with enough time for lunch, outside in the yard.

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Checking for the date of the building, I came across . . .

https://sladersyard.wordpress.com/  where you will find photos that are much better than mine, do have a peep.

 

Hive Beach Stroll

Friday was the most perfect winter day here and I had an extra day off, so it couldn’t be wasted! My friend and I set off heading east with a vague idea of perhaps Lyme Regis or Charmouth. Leaving the A30 at Honiton and taking the A35, a winding, up hill and down dale road passing through little villages, Wilmington, Kilmington and Raymonds Hill. Enjoying the view, high and wide, of east Devon and west Dorset, Golden Cap, a hill and cliff which is the highest on the south coast of England, waiting for me to climb one day.

Something took on us past the Charmouth and Lyme turning, towards Burton Bradstock, ten miles further and passing through we stopped instead at Hive beach which has a National Trust car park and access to the South West Coast Path. Hive is a noisy beach, not human noise but nature’s noise, as the waves crash onto the shore and then rush back down the steeply shelved shingle.

Shingle beach
Shingle beach

There were quote a few people walking off the seasons excesses on the beach so we thought we would check out the view from the cliff path.

Looking back onto Hive beach
Looking back onto Hive beach

We climbed quite high and Lyme Bay opened up.
Lyme Bay

A gap along the path
A gap along the path

At the highest point we looked north towards Bridport.

Countryside around Bridport
Countryside around Bridport

In the distance stands Colmer Hill, somewhere else I’d like to visit.

Colmer Hill
Colmer Hill

Then we circled around common land on the side of the hill.

The flat top hill is Golden Cap
The flat top hill is Golden Cap

And retraced our steps.

Lyme bay view
Lyme bay view

We had already sampled the Hive Beach Café’s coffee, so we set off to find tea and cake, tomorrow I’ll show you where!

We only had time for a short walk because the daylight was fading fast, but the area deserves some serious hiking, there is so much to see in West Dorset.

Reluctant William

New Years Day at Blackbury Camp and dens need building, according to Louisa anyway.

William thinks otherwise
William thinks otherwise
Can't you see I'm wearing my crocodile gloves and that's far more important!
Can’t you see I’m wearing my crocodile gloves and that’s far more important!
Okay, I'll just bring you  one stick
Okay, I’ll just bring you one stick
No I'm not going to be in your den photo.
No I’m not going to be in your den photo.
Brothers, honestly!
Brothers, honestly!

Weekly Photo Challenge: New

Michelle W. says,

It’s the first photo challenge of 2015, and the theme is “new.” Cliché? Perhaps, but clichés develop for a reason. For many of us, the year’s beginning is time to take stock of the past and plan for the future; this week, let’s get excited about those plans by celebrating what’s new.

Well, I’m expecting something new and really exciting this week but meanwhile, for me, these are pretty cool!

My new Christmas books, with their bright paper and sweet scent, tempting me into their pages, but I’m resisting until I’ve finished my current read.

new

Got something new to photograph? show us all here, https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/new/

Travelling home

Meg and I found each other a few months ago and she is a real treasure, someone that I feel a real connection with. Today she has posted about her journey home from her daughter’s in Queensland to new South Wales – around a thousand kilometres, and a ‘wonderful woggly journey’. She passes through places with names both familiar, Clyde, Glen Innes and Yeoval, and really funny like Toogong, Wee Waa and Cumboogle! If you’ve ever wondered about the real Australia, away from the big cities and famous beaches, come along on the drive. Meg’s photos of the landscape are beautiful, but her words on their own bring the places to life. Enjoy a lovely read. Meg, I’m touched that you thought of posting this for me, thank you, thank you dear lady.

morselsandscraps's avatarsnippetsandsnaps

For you Gilly at https://lucidgypsy.wordpress.com/

I hope you enjoy being our companion as we head home after solstice celebrating.

 

I’ve been away from home for nearly a month now. It’s time to head south again, on one of those wonderful woggly journeys that use backroads for maximum pleasure and that evolve as we go, sitting at intersections, reading the map and debating the next part of our route.

We leave Stanthorpe, still needing frenzied windscreen wipers. Ultimately our journey passes through Tenterfield, Glen Innes, Inverell, Bingara, Narrabri, Wee Waa, Pilliga, Coonamble, Gilgandra, Gulargambone, Dubbo, Yeoval, Cumnock, Molong, Cudal, Canowindra, Cowra, Boorowa, Yass, Murrumbateman, and Bungendore, before we head down Clyde Mountain to the coast. Other place names include Gum Flat, Staggy Creek, Sandy Creek, Gilgooma Rd, Eumungerie Rd, Cumboogle, Eurimbla Rd, Gumble, Shingle Ridge Creek, Woolpack Creek, Toogong, Moss Hollow Creek, Frisby Lane, Fox’s Elbow Rd. I couldn’t resist…

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2014, a Photo a Month

I thought I would look back over the photos I’ve taken this year and choose just one from each month, easy right? Wrong, it’s taken ages to narrow down to one that I like, means something to me, shows a glimpse of Devon or may just be a little interesting.

A little magic
february1
march1
april1
may1
june
july
august
september
october1
november
december

So that was 2014, any thoughts? any smiles? any boos? 🙂
Have a very wonderful Old Years Night and I’ll see you next year.

Woohoo 2014 in review!

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for Lucid Gypsy, and I’d like to thank my superstars – exactly the same lovely people as last year!

~~~~Take a bow please ~~~~
Tess http://letscutthecrap.wordpress.com/

Sylvia https://anotherday2paradise.wordpress.com/

Madhu http://theurgetowander.com/

Celestine http://readinpleasure.wordpress.com/

Issy http://isadoraartandphotography.com/
All my visitors are wonderful and I appreciate you so much, you make it all worthwhile!

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 39,000 times in 2014. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 14 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.