Travel

Postcard from Gouda, NL

A fine spring day in Gouda, town that has given its name to the famous Dutch cheese. Nowadays Gouda is a historic destination for a relaxing day out from the steel and glass architecture of Rotterdam. We enjoyed coffee in the sunshine in the market place dominated by the medieval town hall and the weighing hall. Both the town hall and the nearby St. Jans Kerk have chiming carillon clocks.

Postcard from Rotterdam

Bustling Rotterdam is built around its estuary port. The business district has the usual skyscrapers and the water of the Nieuwe Maas is crossed by a modern asymmetric bridge, nicknamed “The Swan”, though the maps show it as Erasmusbrug (“Erasmus Bridge”).

The tourist boat trip took us near the SS Rotterdam, now permanently docked as a hotel, her hull painted fine white rather than North Atlantic black. We continued to the container docks, the huge ships and cranes dwarfing the handful of workers on board.

My postcard of 44932 LMS Stanier Class 5 4-6-0 and Crossrail's Tunnel Boring Machines

Postcard of a day trip to Bristol. Traveling just on a regular diesel HST dating from the 1960s but seeing at Bristol Temple Meads number 44932 LMS Stanier Class 5 4-6-0 steam locomotive hauling a charter up to Waterloo. The steam loco is one of the "Black Five" which survived running in service until the last day of steam on British Railways in 1968. Number 44932 was built in 1945 in Horwich Works near Bolton in Greater Manchester. So the steam loco is only 20 years older than the diesel HSTs still in service...

And a snap from just outside London Paddington showing two of the Crossrail Tunnel Boring Machines. TBM are huge machines, dwarfing the concrete mixer lorry nearby in front; behind the drilling plate there is a production line to remove the spoil and line the tunnel. Crossrail will link Paddington with Canary Wharf via Farringdon and is due to open for service in 2017. Crossrail's 21km of new twin-bore tunnels are first major new railway tunnels under London since the Jubilee Line.

Photo postcard from Caversham

Photos from a working visit to Caversham, the Berkshire “former village” where the Chilterns meet the valley of the River Thames at Reading.
Colourful but chilly near Caversham Bridge over the Thames with swans massing around one of the boathouses. There's been a bridge here since about 1168 AD. Higher up, vestiges of snowmen still on the ground at a part of the Ridgeway where drovers herded sheep above Hem Dean; these days Hemdean is full of red-brick houses and Cavesham is a commuter suburb, no longer a village.

Postcard from Evesham: Wood Norton, the River Avon and Evesham Abbey tower

Winter morning sunshine at Evesham, the country town on the banks of the river Avon (the same Avon that runs through Stratford). Evesham Abbey bell tower gleaming in the light, it's still hung with bells: we heard the peals when the campanologists were rehearsing the previous evening. Evesham abbey once housed some of the remains of Simon de Montford. His forces were routed in 1254 A.D. following the Battle of Lewes, both major battles of the Second Barons War.

Evesham abbey was ruined in the dissolution of the monasteries of the 16th century. A similar fate maybe awaits Wood Norton Hall, now vacated by the BBC (the technical faciliies remain on another part of the site).

More treasured is The Walker Hall, a classic timber-framed and jettied medieval building on one side of Evesham Market Square.