Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Kenilworth Castle III


The Great Hall, built by John of Gaunt between approx 1373 and 1380. This was the second major structure to be built at Kenilworth Castle.





You just don't see anything like this in the States. I should add there were throngs of uniformed school children, all nattering politely about what they were seeing. I felt as if I were in a Harry Potter movie.


What it would have looked like in its heyday. [taken from the official guidebook]


View from the back of The Great Keep, which would be the northernmost part of the compound. Much of this would have been underwater at the time--you can see the low lying areas. Kenilworth was known for it's water defences. I would guess this tower was every bit of 4 stories high.

Kenilworth Castle II


Leicester's Building, named for Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester, and the last major structure built at the Kenilworth Castle Grounds [more on Kenilworth here] . This ENTIRE structure was built to host visits from Elizabeth I, whom Leicester hoped, unsuccessfully, to marry.



What the structure would have looked like upon completion. Taken from the official English Heritage guidebook.


A rendering of the Kenilworth compound from about 1575 [again from the official Guidebook]. Note the X. Most of the photos you will see following are from this part of the compound, to the east of the compound.

From the Privy Garden's [private gardens constructed for Elizabeth.] The would have had a privacy wall around originally.



The following are all more views of the eastern part of the compound.






To the right of the picture, looking upon the Great Hall.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Kenilworth Castle I


First stop, Kenilworth Castle. Anna and Rob try to sneak in the back way. Kidding, kidding. [Shown is Lunn's Tower, part of the outer fortifications.] Kenilworth is one of the largest ruined castles in the UK, and was a royal castle for most of it's history. It's considered one of the great historical sites of the UK.



Another view of Lunn's Tower. Love the textures.



View of the ruins from the main entrance. The castle--actually composed of three buildings--sits atop a sandstone hill. This allowed King John in the 13th century to build a dam creating a great lake that became part of the castle's defenses [good enough to withstand a major seige in 1266]. The low lying area to the left was all once water. In the fore right is part of Mortimer's Tower, one of the gatehouses and part of the stone defenses of the castle. Orignally, it would have stood two stories tall.


A painting of the castle as it would have appeared in 1620 [from a copy of a 17th century painting.] Notice the large lake, which was called a mere.



The main approach to the castle across the dam. Which was widened in the 1500s some time to become a 'tiltyard' or where they would have held jousting tournaments.



Close up of Mortimer's Tower.


Anna and Rob ponder adding a new stone feature to their garden.



The main castle grounds. On the left is the first building--The Keep--built in the 1120s [although the hill had long been used as a fortified high ground] by Geoffrey de Clinton. In the center back is The Great Hall built around 1373 by John of Guant. On the right is the most recent structure Leicester's Building, biult in 1571 for Elizabeth I and her servants to use as accommodations on her visits.

Rob & Anna & Tamworth


In London primarily for the Online Bingo Summit [whoohoo!] I was invited by my lovely friends and crack exhibition stand designers and builders Anna and Rob Laight to visit them and tour the Midlands. We left London Wed eve. after the stand broke down. Tamworth is a little over 2 hours [barring traffic] from London.



The morning started with a delicious breakfast of porridge looking out at Anna and Rob's lovely and immaculate garden. [Anna and Rob pictured.] The weather was absolutely smashing. Periodically sunny, 68 or so, breezy.




More of the lovely garden....




They have a really charming summer house, which I failed to get a good picture of. You'll see in this picture and the next blurry spots. I dropped my lens on the ground and didn't realize it wasn't completely dry. I was also operating under some sleep deprivation, having stayed up talking to Anna until 2am, then up at 7am. Some photographer I am.

I had problems adjusting to the length of day in England. England is approximately the same latitude as northern Canada--approaching 20 hour long days in June. The first morning in London I thought, oh, I'll just leave the curtains open and get up with the sun. The sun rises. I get up. I shower. I feel like HELL. I look at the clock. It's bloody 4am. Aggghhh! And then in the evenings I'd be working or reading and look at the clock and it's freakin' 10pm and still light out and I've not had dinner and I'm nowhere near ready to sleep. So...not so much sleep this trip. But like I said earlier, weather: flat out gorgeous and such a relief after Florida's steamy summer.



Front of the house with two blurry people. Sigh.


First stop Kenilworth Castle approx 45 mins away.

Spawn of Sparky


I don't know if he's actually related to Sparky or not, of course. But I like the alliteration. [The cats bring in a lot of anoles and I'm always catching them and taking them back outside.]

Monday, June 22, 2009

View of a generous world



It's finally rained

the rich air vibrates with life
each breath tastes of green

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Snuggly Cat Belly #2


A sweet puzzle, this--
skittish wild kitty sleeps with
such wild abandon

Yardlong Bean

A variety of Yardlong bean [3 feet plus, white bean? Can't remember]


Do they get to be a yard long? Pretty close. I often see them at 30 inches or so.
Love the Florida summer. Maybe 60 days to flowering? I started these in March.

Prolific as hell. Two plants, about one week.
That's a regular sized dinner plate, sports fans.


***
Yardlong beans for dinner
Yardlong beans for lunch
Covered in roast onion and tarragon pesto
I'll even have them for brunch

***
Yardlong beans on the grill
Yardlong beans with tofu
Yardlong beans in stir fry
A lot of yardlong beans to go thru


***

Florida. Summer.
Watching the yardlong beans grow
a sweet recompense


You can get seeds at Evergreen Seeds.
That's a lot of beans for $4.50 worth of seeds.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Spring Blanket


thickly-coated cat
any downwind petting mom
wears his shedded hair

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Sons & Daughters


It's May and the blue jays
are learning to fly
still partly gray
awkward adolescent heads
they make flying leaps of
10 feet, then 15, then 30
hopping and cheeping around the yard
somebody's blue jay daughters
somebody's blue jay sons.

Photo courtesy of Ralph Deeds

Friday, May 15, 2009

Morning


faint light and birdsong



killer Haley finds fortress


behind my curved legs

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Great Egret


So I'm taking a shovel back to the tool corral [where Stephen is supposed to keep his mes, um tools corraled] and I notice something new to the yard....


It's a great egret! It's big! It's after the fish in our fish pond! It does not want to go away! We finally had to build a mesh cage to put over the pond. It remains optimistic about its chances though. We see it all the time.



Awfully pretty though. And kind of wonderous to have in your yard in downtown Snorasota. Florida is amazingly fecund.


glowing in sunlight
thinly bound by gravity
hope stands on stilt legs