Norfolk

I saw the grand

Holkham Hall, sough facade

The Palladian mansion Holkham Hall

and the dilapidated.

Broken window on an old shed on a Norfolk Quay

Quayside workshop

The idyllic

Cottage on the edge of a duck pond. With ducks!

A peacful morning in Old Hunstanton

and the bleak.

Mud flats on the Norfolk Coast

Flat, flat, flat!

And I know where my heart lies.

I spent several hours one afternoon walking along the North Norfolk Coast Path.  It’s a long distance path along windswept shores and I picked a section going west between Holkham and Brancaster.  It was just about 10 and a half miles.  The first stretch was through miles of sand dunes, which can change shape overnight in strong winds.  Walking through the dunes you don’t see much except sky and the blue sea thistle.  And the odd naked man.  As you approach Burnham Overy the dunes fall away behind you and you find yourself walking along the top of the raised sea defences.  The land is flat here; there are no majestic cliffs to break the skyline and all you see are salt marshes stretching for miles.  This part of the coast is famous for it’s bird watching. Egrets, gulls, swans and curlews were two a penny, but I didn’t see anything more unusual.  (Note to self: take a pair of binoculars next time.)  In places, you walk along narrow board walks across the marsh with towering grasses on the seaward side and neatly clipped gardens on the other.  Walkers were rude.  At home everyone says hello, but here I’d step off the path to let people pass and not receive so much as a nod in thanks.  So I found myself singing a sarcastic “thank you” at the top of my voice as I stepped back on to the boards.  Nothing. Not a murmur.  Heads down, eyes fixed they trudged along like a defeated army.  These people, I thought, were as grey as the leaden skies.

I find it hard to describe my feelings about this landscape.  It was wonderful, elemental, but so bleak and exposed.  So, so different from home.  There was nowhere to shelter, nowhere to sit and take in the sky without also taking a battering from the winds.  It felt desolate, and at times the desolation felt like it would go on forever.  I would love to be there at dawn.  I can imagine the mist rising from the marshes in a watery light and the silence being broken by the dawn chorus. I’d sit there on the grassy path atop the sea defences, wrapped up in a blanket and a thick woollen scarf, breathing the sharp air.  My eyes would be closed and I’d be listening intently to the curlews. I’d ignore any passer by that broke my reverie with a “good morning” and I wouldn’t care if they too thought me as grey as the leaden skies.

A 10.5 mile walk between Holkham and Brancaster

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Holkham Hall

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Hunstanton

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Hope enjoyed the photo albums.  Back soon.

Love Stephie x

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Stitching up Norfolk

Hello my lovelies!  Not been here for a while have I?  Computer problems and a week in Norfolk are to blame – not me obviously!  I’m still in Norfolk as it happens, and I happen to have found a computer that works, if you’re one of the few people that consider Windows Vista as something that works…

We’re here in the east of England visiting family.  Heavy rain and blustering winds have been battering this part of the coastline for days now, so we’ve spent a lot of time inside (not having thought to bring a jaunty sou’wester and Norfolk gansey!).  Kim’s been running around with his cousins, one’s the same age and has the same passion for Star Wars and Lego as Kim does.  Two of them in the house?  Not good for the sanity.  I lost my train tickets before we came and had to buy new ones (I think I must have thrown them out with some old tickets to St Ives), but admist all the self-imposed stress I did manage to remember to bring some sewing and a sketchbook, so I’ve been happily keeping myself busy despite being stuck indoors for lack of warm and waterproof clothing.

All piled up and ready to go

I’ve been working on a quilt top I started some time ago now.  I rashly decided to make it entirely by hand, but it turned out to be a good decision.  It’s something I can easily carry around with me and get on with whenever the mood takes me, or I’m sitting in a waiting room somewhere.  I’ve finished all the nine patch squares now and have started on the sashings with the fussy cut squares.  Even though I’ve been doing this for a year or more, I still love the fabrics I chose and it surprises me how quickly it builds up when I get going.  I think I’ll be doing a lot more sewing this afternoon; I’m sat in my mother’s conservatory and it sounds like I might need an ark by nightfall!  I think I’ll forget about the 8 mile run I need to do and the walks I’d planned at Brancaster.  You never know, I might have a finished quilt top by the time I get home.

If you’re one of my keen-eyed readers you may have noticed that my From The Loft shop images have disappeared from the column on the right.  I haven’t closed it down, just shut it for the week I’m away. I’ve got some more  items to list when I get back, so keep an eye out for them.  ‘Til then I’ll love you and leave you and hope that where ever you are, you’re not getting too wet!

love Stephie x

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