East Sussex Exploration

Every year some plonker or other crawls out of the wood work and proclaims that “we’re going to have a wonderful summer” or some such. This year was no exception – “we’re going to have a wonderful June”. Well, it’s summer and it’s June and thus far it hasn’t been wonderful. In fact, it’s been relatively cold. So much so that people have been lighting fires and running their very expensive central heating. Be that as it may, we’ve just had a very pleasant (i.e. dry and largely sunny) week exploring East Sussex.

It's a long way down past countless layers of flint Beachy Head lighthouse dwarfed by the towering white cliffs One reason we went was to ramble along some of the South Downs Way, a 100-mile national trail running between Eastbourne and Winchester. Being at the Eastbourne end, we limited our first foray to the stunning white cliffs of the Beachy Head and Seven Sisters coastal stretch. I don’t recall ever seeing Beachy Head before but I was immediately impressed; so much so that I think the Cornish coastal path has a rival for my affections. The skies cleared, the sun shone and made the white cliffs glow against a brilliant blue English Channel that began to resemble the Mediterranean. The lighthouse, now at sea level because the high original was too often shrouded in mist, is utterly dwarfed by the towering cliffs. The structure of the cliffs was particularly fascinating with relatively evenly-spaced layers of flint interspersed with the white layers of chalk.

Floral tributes at the cliff edge A memorial to a jumper and Beachy Head lighthouse The darker side of Beachy Head is that it seems to have become the national suicide centre. It recently made headlines when a young couple, having lost their 5 year old child, jumped to their deaths together with their sadly departed child’s body in a rucksack. This happened while we were in Corfu and we heard about it even over there. I didn’t realize how popular a pastime jumping off Beachy Head had become until we walked along its coast and saw many floral tributes to those that had chosen to end their torment in the same way. It’s so popular that, in addition to the Samaritans,  there is even a Beachy Head Chaplaincy.

Forever England? Not for much longer, methinks. The Seven Sisters coast On a brighter note, a couple of miles west of Beachy Bead, the South Downs Way crosses the undulating landscape of the Seven Sisters. The Seven Sisters are seven valleys of varying severity descending towards the white cliffs of the coastline. There is absolutely nothing flat here,  you’re either walking up or down, and noticeably strenuous it is, too. The sight of the white cliffs, including chunks that are clearly about to break away, makes the effort worthwhile though. Since we tend to do walks that are “there and back again” (very J R R Tolkien), we had to walk 14 sisters rather than seven.

Our walking legs were swapped for cycling legs so we could spend a day on the second main draw to Sussex, rummaging around various graveyards looking for Curd headstones. My family hailed from this part of the world (Buxted, Maresfield) in the nineteenth century and I was hoping to see the grave of my great great grandfather. No such luck, I’m afraid, though Carol did spot what turned out to be the grave of one of his brothers, a great great granduncle I suppose. Many graves are without headstones and even more are illegible so, who knows, we may have walked right by it without knowing.

Carol waits for the Pooh Sticks to appear In some respects, East Sussex seems to be like England in miniature. Apart from archetypical quaint English villages, it has an area of “levels” very similar but much smaller than the Somerset levels. There is also Ashdown Forest, which is not unlike a much more compact New Forest. Not being a literary buff, I was totally unaware that Ashdown Forest was home to A A Milne and birthplace of Winnie the Pooh. The forest provides maps indicating “Eeyore’s gloomy place”, “an enchanted place” and, almost a Holy Grail, the original “Pooh Bridge” where the game of Pooh Sticks was developed. Naturally, we had a personal pilgrimage to Pooh Bridge for my inaugural game of Pooh Sticks. I lost but then I am a complete novice.

A Fisherman's Roll - £2! Finally we spent a day on a much flatter but windier cycle ride to Hastings and back. The 12 miles there was dead easy being wind-assisted. Returning was a different matter as we now had to battle into a fierce headwind. Fortunately we had been fortified by a wonderful Fisherman’s Roll, a bread roll filled with two fillets of extremely fresh, locally caught plaice fried in olive oil, and all for the princely sum of £2. What a deal! They were absolutely delicious. No wonder the eminent Mr Stein was a fan. Also fortunately, Carol’s bike waited until we were within 200 yards from our car before getting a puncture. If a flat tyre can ever be called lucky, this one could.

I’m pretty sure we’ll be back.

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A Couple of Recipes

  1. Send out geologists to explore the world and find oil fields.
  2. Erect expensive drilling rigs and send down a few test holes.
  3. If the field is viable, erect lots more rigs and start drilling in earnest.
  4. Ship the oil half-way around the world in vast, unbelievably expensive super-tankers.
  5. Process the crude oil in high(ish) tech, purpose built industrial plants.
  6. Distribute the resultant petrol in fleets of lorries to petrol stations throughout the country.
  7. Sell the petrol for about £5.00 a gallon, ~62.5 pence a pint.

People bitch about the price, most of which is government tax.

  1. Gather apples from relatively local orchards.
  2. Send these to a local pressing plant.
  3. Extract the juice in a low tech press.
  4. Add a smidge of yeast and leave it for about a week to ferment.
  5. Bottle or keg it.
  6. Distribute the bottled/draught cider to moderately inexpensive off-licenses and pubs throughout the country.
  7. Sell it for £3.45 a pint, or a whopping £27.60 a gallon.

It’s a very similar, simple story with beer. There’s still a serious amount of kill-joy government tax. People relatively happily, it appears, hand over the cash.

Which seems more exorbitant?

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Corfu Trail Album

The only bright side to the darn weather that we are currently suffering is that the rain and cold make it appealing to stay indoors for a couple of days processing digital photographs and building a web album. As a result, I now announce the publication of a summary photo album from our recent trip “Walking the Corfu Trail” organized by Explore!.

As usual, you can find it from our photo index page or here’s the direct link:

2009_Corfu

Will somebody please tell the weather that it is June, for Lord’s sake. Padstow celebrated the advent of summer over a month ago.

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Memories from the Corfu Trail

Well, we’re back home, though neither of us is particularly happy about that given the weather to which we’ve returned. It seems that England had some good weather while we were away but it collapsed to give us our normal wet welcome home. Since then, Suffolk has witnessed a funnel cloud and been covered with so much hail that it looked like snow, and some of our high ground actually has had snow – in June for Christ’s sake! It’s so damn cold. What the hell is going on? It doesn’t seem to be just us, either; our return flight flew for more than two hours over solid cloud covering much of Italy and all we could see of France. We made the right choice.

We succeeded in our ambition. The Corfu Trail is a snaking 220 kms/140 mls path winding its way from the southernmost point on Corfu to the northernmost point covering very varied terrain, crisscrossing the island as it goes (see previous posting for a map). When I say “we succeeded”, what we did was slightly different in that our Explore! group acted as guinea pigs and went from south to north on a modified route. We merged two original days into one, shortcutting a big loop that doubles back on itself at the northeast of the island. That gave us one very long last walking day of about 25 kms/16 mls. I estimate that our route would have been about 190 kms/120 mls covered in 10 days of walking. In retrospect, I’d have preferred to stick to the original route, just to have completed the official Corfu Trail, but it’s a relatively minor point, for me at least.

Massed dawn formations of swifts over Corfu Town. We flew out to Corfu a day early which gave us time to explore Corfu Town. It’s expensive and not just because of our currently disastrous Euro/Pound exchange rate: €3.50/£3.20 for a small beer. Corfu Town boasts Greece’s only cricket pitch, courtesy of being a British protectorate for a while in the 1800’s, where, I imagine, games are rarely rained off unlike Lords and the Oval, etc. At this time of year the skies above Corfu Town are absolutely full of whirling, screaming and chattering swifts. The screamers are regular swifts and the chatterers are larger alpine swifts which were new to us and quite a thrill being wildlife nuts.

The whole island is filled with magnificent Cleopatra butterflies. I’ve seen them before in southern France but never in such concentrations as in Corfu. Not a day went by without having Cleopatras flutter across or along our path. Neither have I ever seen such concentrations of spent 12-bore cartridge cases. The French have a reputation for blasting away at anything that moves but on this evidence I reckon the Corfiots have got them licked. Masses of colourful wild flowers, a few of which our assembled horticulturalists didn’t recognize, lined most of our route. Well, there has to be something to attract those butterflies. Then, of course, there were the olive groves. The olive trees on Corfu are like no others I’ve ever seen in that they are not pollarded or pruned. Apparently, Saint Spyridon declared that it was cruel to prune the trees so they are left to grow to their natural large size. The olives are harvested by covering the ground beneath the trees with netting and waiting for the olives to drop to be collected. We were frequently walking on net-covered tracks through olive groves trying not to crush the harvest.

Mythos Greek beer, even if owned by Scottish & Newcastle! Greek (Village) Salad with an intruding Amstel beer Thirsts en route were admirably slaked by the local Greek Mythos beer. Fuel generally came in the form of very good Corfiot food in various restaurants and tavernas along the way. (Do not be tempted to eat at all-inclusive hotels – that’s a different story). The grilled octopus and squid, though, were notably exceptional and everything was washed down with obscene quantities of crown-cap retsina. Excellent!

The weather in the first week was hot and humid. Walking up hills in 35°C/88°F was a little uncomfortable but we got used to it. The humidity made life hazy for vista photography but we snapped away regardless; we were wasting only pixels, after all. We had some cloud cover for some of the second week and, on one morning, rain. Gasp! Greece, June, rain? Doesn’t compute! Naturally, this was when we were walking up to the top of Mount Pantokrator, Corfu’s highest point at 913 metres/3000 feet. The peak was in the cloud so the views were obliterated. At least we’d taken the waterproofs for a reason.

Mostly blue skies, bright blue crystal clear water, white, terracotta and pastel coloured buildings draped with masses of bougainvillea, a lot of sun, a lot of Mythos (Greek beer), a lot of retsina, great group of companions and an excellent leader … what a terrific trip. 🙂

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Almost Gone

This is probably a final post before resorting to mobile phone tweets on Twitter. Later today we’re off down to spend tonight in an airport hotel at Gatwick ready (?) to check in at about 4:00 AM tomorrow. Yuk!

The universally difficult task of selecting and packing appropriate clothing for our activity holiday is well underway. It’s easier when one knows precisely what one is getting into but that’s not as exciting, is it? At least we don’t have to carry the clothing with us (at least, I hope not – yikes!), just the camera gear, water and walking essentials.

We’ve decided to cut down on photographic weight by sharing lenses rather than duplicating them. Carol’s going armed with our “standard” lens (17-85mm) and I’m taking the super-wide (10-22mm) and longer (75-300mm) telephotos. I bet everyone else will have compact cameras, sensible people, but lugging this lot will give us more exercise. 🙂 At least the tripod isn’t going – thank technology for image stabilized lenses and adjustable ASA settings.

corfu-trail-map-fullsizeI found this reasonable map of the Corfu Trail itself to follow progress. The path certainly does snake about over the island. The recommended route is from south to north and that’s what we’ll be doing.

We’ll meet the other Explore gang on Saturday evening and the walk itself begins on Sunday after transferring from Corfu Town to the south of the island. The walk is split into two 5-day sections with a rest day between at Liapades Beach. Watch the legs seize up! I suspect the main requirement there will be laundry – what fun. The last couple of northern sections seem to be the toughest but, hopefully, we’ll be a little fitter and a few pounds lighter by then.

Greek salads, here we come. I do hope there’s plenty of crown capped retsina on the island. 😉

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Devon and Cornwall, 2009

After having to regress and re-install Jalbum for a reason that I still do not understand, I have finally managed to publish a web album summarizing our recent trip damper-than-we-would-like trip to Devon and Cornwall. You can find it at:

http://www.curdhome.co.uk/photos/2009_Southwest/index.htm

or, of course, just click on the flappy England flag beneath “2009_Southwest” on our photo album index page.

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Not so Stellar

I would be the first to admit that, for some unfathomable reason, the Brits cannot make lager properly. I don’t understand why one the world’s finest brewing nations (the Belgians beat us into second place, I’m afraid) can turn out the world’s finest real ales whilst producing some of the most miserable lagers available, even when we are using someone else’s recipe. Having said that, since I rarely go to a pub, I settled upon good ol’ Stella Artois as my canned brew of choice for home consumption.  The stuff in the UK is brewed under license and is a pale shadow of the genuine Belgian article, since it has been brewed by the aforementioned lager-ruining country, but it was OK.

Recently, my erstwhile trusty Stellas didn’t seem so stallar; they just didn’t seem to be tasting as they should.  I blamed my taste-buds. Wrong! A swift glance at the information emblazoned upon the side of the can revealed the problem: the alcohol content has been cut from 5.2% to 5.0%. My taste-buds are vindicated. A swift trawl of the Internet found a claim that Morlands had reduced their formerly excellent Old Speckled Hen from 5.2% to 4.5%, though I haven’t yet managed to verify this myself as yet.

All the media hype about 4% so-called beers (Artois Petersen, Becks Vier) seems to be affecting the real thing. Despite our media banging on misguidedly about so-called cheap alcohol, the price is going up while the alcohol content seems to be dropping. I’m used to the thieving bankers slashing my savings interest rate but now the blasted brewers are cutting the alcohol rate as well. Is this interference by the nanny state?

I wish we could buy the genuine Belgian products without resorting to a “booze-cruise”.

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Twitter @Home

Hopefully we will be bound for Corfu at some ungodly hour (5:55 AM take-off) on Friday morning. On Saturday 23rd May we should join the Explore! group in Corfu town to walk the Corfu Trail, a long distance (220 kms/140 mls) footpath running the length of Corfu island. There are several climbs and descents on the trail, the highest point being about 900 mts/3000 ft.

We won’t be able to resist carrying cameras but we most certainly will be able to resist carting a laptop with us. What, no Traveblog? Fear not. Enter a foray into another weird modern communications technology: Twitter. I have signed up for my Twitter id (@jccurd) and have been practicing. Naturally, with a new (to me) piece of technology goes some new vocabulary. Apparently I’ve been tweeting. Hmm. I have even managed to set up tweeting by SMS text messages from my relatively modern, lightweight mobile phone, which I don’t mind carrying with me. I hope to be tweeting about our progress. Marvellous!

As a consequence, I’ve at last found something more constructive that just introductory blurb to put on our home page. http://www.curdhome.co.uk now comes complete with Twitter updates. Check it out.

Not quite as much fun as blogging but useful nonetheless.

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In Search of Sun

Our recently completed trip to Devon and Cornwall started with good weather and ended with good weather but the two weeks in between left a lot to be desired. We did manage to do a reasonable amount of walking up and down the coastal paths but there almost always seemed to be something of a meteorological threat lurking above us.

For our next entertainment, we had our ferry crossing booked on Sunday 24th May for our traditional early summer dose of France. The weather in France for the current week was not looking encouraging, it being wetter than here if anything, and we were not overjoyed at the prospect of further meteorological upsets to our outdoor activities. We are ready for some sun. So we have been looking for some hopefully more reliable alternatives. Our ferry crossings have been put off until late summer. That in no way guarantees any better weather but, if we can get something decent in between time, then we won’t feel as disgruntled.

The Greek islands have been beckoning and there is a relatively new long-distance footpath running the length of the island of Corfu which we’ve been considering for a couple of years. It would be a relatively challenging walk, covering about 220 kms with a few significant climbs and descents but now would be good timing given our recent training exercise in Devon and Cornwall. Also, since nobody is getting any younger, if we really wanted to take this on, sooner would be better than later.

Explore! runs a two-week trip to complete the trek with 11 days of walking and, as luck would have it, there were just two places remaining for their 23rd May departure. All was not entirely wonderful ‘cos they informed us that there was now a thumping great £269 supplement per person to use their scheduled flights (London Stansted – Athens – Corfu). A huge supplement for the honour of flying from Stansted which, let’s face it, sucks.

We debated, decided against it and declined. Then we felt disappointed and that we’d cheated ourselves out of something of an ambition. Grump! Enter easyJet with a daily London Gatwick flight to Corfu direct. Other than a revolting departure time of 05:55 AM, which would mean checking in around 04:30 AM, the price was right, especially if we went a day early, gained some leeway and had an extra night in Corfu town.

We’re booked. We’ll need to figure out the Gatwick early morning (or is it late night?) connection and we’ll need a room in Corfu town but we’re booked. 🙂

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Reluctant Return

Today was our originally intended day to travel home. The day dawned sunny – sunnier than anything we had experienced since our first two days of the trip. We didn’t want to go home so we decided to ask the site manager to let us stay a day longer to enjoy this rare appearance of the sun.

Carol remembered an appointment with her optician on Monday morning.

We packed and came home. 🙁

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