Thursday, 17 January 2019

More Mobility and Manhattan



Friend Gill & I aboard the Sylvania
Last time I blogged about my time in the United States was about my very early days there and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Time to bring it more up to date, I think.
The Peters who I worked for had arranged for me to have driving lessons. Dad had tried to teach me a few years previously until one day when I hit the accelerator instead of the brake and ended up in someone’s front hedge so I was more than a little worried about how I would cope with proper lessons. I was to learn in a car with manual gear shift because the car I would be driving was a Volkswagen Beetle. Once I passed the test, I would also be able to drive the big automatic Plymouth Estate car if I needed to and did so on occasions. The driving lessons, together with practice runs with Mr Peters, who was very patient with me, in the Volkswagen, went very well and I had soon passed the theory test. (At that time, there was no theory test in the UK.) The American practical test is nothing like the UK test, in which drivers are tested in actual town/city situations; the American test consisted of manoeuvering the car in make-believe situations on an away-from-it-all test site but including, importantly, parking in a limited space. I found that part of it easy compared with a British test.
              I can’t remember how long it was before I got my US Drivers’ License but I don’t think it was very long, certainly no more than 8 or 9 weeks from the time I had landed. When I passed my test, I was jubilant, a feeling which quickly turned to fright when the Peters said I could now drive on the road – on my own. I had made arrangements to go into Princeton that evening but when I asked if I could call a cab to get into town they told me to use the Volkswagen Beetle instead. I could not believe that they trusted me to go out on the road so soon after passing my test, especially as the test hadn’t been in a real town/city situation. I managed it though my hands were shaking with fear on the steering wheel to begin with.
              The breakthrough in my social life had come about because I had been introduced to Linda, another mother’s helper, whose yard (what Americans call their gardens) adjoined the Peters’ yard and whose children played with their children. She had been there about a month longer than me and hated it. Her people weren’t like the Peters. Linda’s people were somewhat brash and overpowering. What’s more, they did not believe in disciplining the children. The kids were more or less allowed to do just what they wanted, when they wanted so that poor Linda was run off her feet. Unknown in the UK at that stage, they were allowed to pick and choose what they wanted to eat; again this involved Linda in cooking different things at mealtimes for, in her case, six children. Up till my arrival, she hadn’t been out much either and was nearly driven to distraction.
              Mrs Peters suggested we go to a dance being organised by the Princeton International Club in the YMCA building. They figured it would serve as some kind of introduction to a social life with people of a similar background. Accordingly, Linda and I got a cab into Princeton (this was before I had passed my driving test) and somewhat apprehensively paid our entrance fee. There were all nationalities there, Swedish, German, French, even the odd Brit or two, one of whom I became quite friendly with later, a bloke called Barry. Truth to tell, they weren’t a very lively bunch and we were a bit bored. That is, until a few students managed to inveigle their way in. And that was how I met Rick.
              He was tall, with fair hair, of athletic build and he flirted outrageously with me, though he was only around twenty to my twenty-three. Linda found herself being treated in the same naughty, but nice, way and we were soon laughing uproariously, much to the disgust of some of the more staid members of the International Club. We made no firm arrangements to meet again but were advised to go into Fenwick’s Coffee Shop, which was the hub of much student activity and definitely the place to be seen. Linda and I went home feeling we were on the verge of a breakthrough.
2004 photo outside what used to be Fenwick's Coffee Shop
              A few nights later, we took another cab into town and went into Fenwick’s, not knowing what to expect. It was, without doubt, a revelation. We’d no sooner sat down and ordered our coffees than we were being chatted up. Guys would come and plonk themselves down and ask outright for our phone numbers. I found later that even if you were in there with a date, a friend or even just an acquaintance they would demand to be introduced, then ask for our phone numbers. Rick and his friends came in that night and he made a beeline for me. What’s more, he stayed, which is more than the others did, drifting backwards and forwards as they did.
              I ended up going out with him a few times but it was never serious. As soon as the novelty of a limey date wore off, he drifted on to someone new. But Rick served a purpose; he was my intro into the world of the students, so many that I can’t remember all their names, almost all of them younger than me.
              Through the students and attending various parties, we were introduced to other girls working as mothers’ helpers and Linda and I built up a good circle of friends. It helped too, once I had use of the Volkswagen, it gave me so much more freedom.
              On the voyage over, I’d become friendly with a young woman about my age who was doing the same as me, working as a mother’s helper. Gill was to be based in Rochester in New York State about the same distance from New York City as me but in the opposite direction. Anxious to keep in touch, we arranged to meet in Manhattan about once a month on our days off. The first time this happened was about a month after we’d arrived. The journey by bus took about an hour and Gill met me at Port Authority Bus Terminal. She’d already been into the city several times so was familiar with the bus system. They simply travelled either across town or uptown and downtown. The street grid system, with numbers instead of names, seemed blindingly simple, if a little impersonal. Only the older streets, such as Wall Street or Watt Street in downtown Manhattan had street names. Broadway wasn’t simply a street close to Times Square and the theatre district, it ran further uptown and down to Greenwich Village.
              On our regular trips to the city, we made sure we saw all the tourist attractions, the Empire State Building (scary ride to the top!), the Rockefeller Center, Central Park, usually ending up the day having a meal in some bar somewhere. One of the places we visited was the Peppermint Lounge, the birthplace of the Twist, the dance craze that played havoc with the knees. Chubby Checker was first credited with starting the craze with his records ‘The Twist’ and ‘Let’s Twist Again’. In the bar’s heyday, it had reputedly been immensely popular with celebrities flocking there but when we visited, it was typical Manhattan bar, long and narrow, with separate booths, subdued lighting and no music.
              How improbable it all sounds, living the quiet life that I do now, to believe that I regularly went to Manhattan on my days off!

Sunday, 14 October 2018

Come Visit My Garden


Summer Spendour (1)

As a writer, I’ve self-published two novels A Suitable Young Man and Bittersweet Flight (link below). a collection of short stories Entertaining Angels (www.tinyurl.com/y6w6a5ss) and am currently editing book three. I should probably be on book six or seven by now except that I share my love of writing with my other passion - gardening. Which is what this blog is about.

When we first moved into this bungalow in Derbyshire some 18 years ago the garden was, quite honestly, a mess. It’s a large corner plot bordered by a busy main road and slopes upwards. The previous owners had built an extension some three years previously and the land to the side of it had been left to a weed-infested wasteland. What’s more all the unused building materials had been left at the side of the garage. The path at the back of the house was horrendous and held three coal bunkers, (this is after all a former mining area) filled not with coal but accumulated rubbish.  My husband’s language when he discovered that wasn’t fit for anyone’s ears, let alone our neighbour who was at that moment putting some rubbish in the dustbin!
The mess that awaited us at the back of the house!

For the first three years, we concentrated on getting the house as we wanted it with me just about keeping the garden tidy though mowing the grass – I won’t dignify it by calling it a lawn – was a tricky procedure the grass being on a slope. Finally, in 2003 a start was made on the garden and for the next seven years, my lovely husband laboured in the garden, hard-landscaping and terracing it and, after a problem arose with a natural spring, prevalent in this area, installing drainage. I can’t remember how many waste skips we had in that time but it was a LOT. It’s been worth it though as it’s given us so much joy and pleasure over the years, not only us, but to passers-by who quite often tell me over the fence what a lovely garden it is.
Just a few of the cyclamen coum
This is particularly so when the cyclamen coum that we planted as five plants in the early days have naturalised all over the garden. It’s a glorious sight in late February/early Spring.

Summer Splendour (2)
Sadly, with an ageing body, I can no longer spend as much time in the garden as I used to. I do what I can when I can and manage to keep up with it, just about. Originally, we had a greenhouse which I loved pottering in but that’s had to go as it wasn’t being used as it should. The patio which housed that is now a bare paved area now and I have plans to make a courtyard garden there with lots of different sized containers over the next year or two. Fingers crossed I can do that!

A short blog this time but lots of photographs.

Summer Spendour 3





Friday, 21 September 2018

Wild and Wonderful Northumberland



Housesteads, Hadrian's Wall
Just over a week ago, we returned from a week’s holiday in Northumberland, our fourth holiday there in the space of the last decade. It’s a wonderful place to visit with the wide vistas of the Northumberland National Park and a glorious coastline. And, having been a major player in English history, there are castles, all well worth a visit. We felt we wanted a more relaxing holiday this time so we didn’t get around as much as we have done previously. So what follows is a summary of some of the wonderful places we’ve visited over the years.
Top of my list of favourite places to visit has to be Bamburgh Castle. Standing as it does on a headland and overlooking the North Sea, it dominates the coastline and can be seen for miles in either direction. Like any castle, it’s a mixture of styles and eras which can be seen from the photograph here.
To quote from their website 

‘Each year Bamburgh Castle thrills, enthralls and captivates many thousands of visitors from across the globe with its incredible history, dramatic views and treasure-trove collection of unique pieces which tell the story of Bamburgh’s many reincarnations over the centuries, from Anglo Saxon Royal palace to Victorian inventor and industrialist The First Lord Armstrong’s vision of a perfect castle.’

And it’s still owned by the Armstrong family rather than one of the national historic institutions.

The Grand Cascade at Alnwick Castle
We haven’t visited Warkworth Castle even though we’d intended to because we simply couldn’t find anywhere to park (I’m sure there must be a car park there somewhere but we must have missed it.) However, previously we did visit Alnwick Castle, the family seat of the Dukes of Northumberland. At the time we visited, it was at the height of the continuing success of the Harry Potter books and films and the castle had been used in many shots of Hogwarts School. Consequently, the castle grounds were heaving with children on their summer holidays so we chose not to look round the actual castle. We did visit the famous Alnwick Garden though with its famous Grand Cascade. Again, well worth a visit if you’re up that way, especially if you’re a keen gardener like me.
Yours Truly in the Alnwick Garden


One of the quieter places to visit, but well worth it, is Belsay Castle, Hall and Quarry Gardens. The castle itself is a ruin now but the Hall was built in the early 19th century, the stone for which was quarried on the estate. The owner, Sir Charles Monck, then turned the quarry into the picturesque Quarry Gardens, which I loved.The estate is now in the hands of English Heritage.
Quarry Gardens, Belsay Hall


For stunning scenery, the Northumberland National Park takes some beating. It covers about a quarter of the county, and lies between the Scottish border in the north to just south of Hadrian’s Wall. From watching various house programmes on the TV, I know that it’s one of the least populated areas of England. Included in the National Park is the mighty Keilder Water and Forest Park with any number of outdoor pursuits – if you’re that way inclined (personally I’m not!)

For the second time, we stayed at Annstead Farm, a working farm with several holiday cottages as well as camping/caravanning facilities. It’s located between the fishing town of Seahouses and the village of Beadnell. They do allow dogs and just across the main road from the farm is the beach, just a short walk through the dunes, ideal for those essential walks.

I hope that’s given you a yearning to visit the wonderful county that is Northumberland. You won't be disappointed.