Flotsam-2
Originally uploaded by tamaranth
No, that's not a typo.

On Wednesday I wanted beach, but the weather wasn't really up to it so I opted for Orford. Walked along the seawall -- grey skies, tide coming in fast, seagulls yelling at me -- and saw signs for the Orford Loop walk, so decided I'd do that.

Bad move. Except: good move, because by the time I had walked eleven miles (including a detour after foolishly thinking that the signs would continue after I'd crossed a field, but finding myself in someone's back garden with no obvious exit: dear Suffolk Council, thank you so much ...) my head had stopped churning over various stuff, and my thoughts were focussed exclusively on how nice it would be to sit down.

Which is not to say that I didn't enjoy the walk -- I didn't meet anyone all the way, there was a brisk sea wind, there was nature live and dead (2D roadkill snake, anybody?) and I foraged for perfectly ripe blackberries along narrow, little-used country lanes. And I think I needed that amount of zen-inducing exercise. But next time I'll make sure I'm more appropriately dressed and shod ...

Given the poor signage, I was extremely glad of the GPS on my phone, which not only told me where I was (Iken) and how to escape, but also showed me the outlines of exciting military installations on Orford Ness.

8 photos on Flickr
Christopher Somerville's piece on this walk (first published in the Times)
Mr Somerville's Map
someone else complaining of lack of directions
my map of walk

Tamaranth is ...

Monday, March 2nd, 2009 09:02 pm
1. Back from Lanzarote.
2. Grateful to the RAC (flat battery), [livejournal.com profile] groliffe and C (non-flat cat), [livejournal.com profile] bugshaw (foooooood in fridge!), [livejournal.com profile] ladymoonray (not drowning me).
3. ottava rima )
4. Camera-less. (Lost on last day.) My fault entirely, but waaaa, my lovely pictures of lichen!. Luckily [livejournal.com profile] ladymoonray took plenty of photos. Though not of lichen.
5. Enjoying pink fizz, smoked haddock and [livejournal.com profile] ozymandias_cat.
6. Browner than a week ago.
7. Asleeeeep (if not right now then soon).
Cool thing: if you buy one of the Rough Guide Directions guidebooks, you can get a free Palm / Microsoft / Adobe ebook copy of the guide. (You need the actual book, or a friend with one, to answer a password question.) Ebooks, of course, have a search function ...

List of their ebooks here

Swisstone in action

Thursday, July 31st, 2008 09:01 pm

Tony does his Thing
Originally uploaded by tamaranth



[livejournal.com profile] swisstone bringing history to life, translating and explaining a Roman milestone: Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, last weekend.

Ecinocorys

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008 01:17 pm

Ecinocorys
Originally uploaded by tamaranth
Yesterday I went to Peacehaven to look for ammonites but ended up on the wrong beach which was full of NotAFossils. I did find this rather nice echinoid though.

Ammonite-hunt inspired by this moment in the first episode of Primeval:



1. This afternoon I went to Bracklesham Bay, which is not only a glorious (and largely sand-free) beach for swimming, but has more fossils than you can shake a stick at. I picked up quite a few 'twixt salt water and shingle, mostly Turritella inbricateria (little spiral things), with a few Venericor Planicosta (cockles, more or less). Eocene, so ~50 million years old.

2. Found my new Biber CD, Vespro Della Beata Virgine (1674) which I (vaguely) recalled unwrapping but could not locate anywhere. Naturally, it was where I left it in the logical place for new CDs, the car. It's gorgeous, especially the opening Dixit Dominus which is rather ... forceful, with a violin part that reminds me of Vivaldi's Winter and glorious bass/soprano harmonies.

3. Post-beach, was in need of carbs and caffeine, so I bought myself a picnic and headed for Boxgrove, setting for a non-fiction book that I found gripping -- Fairweather Eden, an account of the excavation and archaeology of one of the oldest prehistoric sites in Britain. (Includes a tutorial on flint-knapping.) People were working flints and butchering food here half a million years ago, during one of the warmer interglacials. Not long in terms of Turritella inbricateria but not to be sneezed at.

Sadly, I have no idea where the dig actually was, and as it was rescue archaeology the land has probably reverted to aggregate extraction. Instead, I went to have a look at some modern stuff: Boxgrove Priory, where one can wander around the ruins of the 13th-century guesthouse whilst the soberly-clad choir hurry past to some event in the main church.

Back from Lille!

Monday, August 20th, 2007 08:25 pm
Sam has stopped head-butting me for long enough that I can type a brief entry.

Good things about Lille:
-- FOOD (especially seafood, though Lille is not on the coast)
-- Hotel Alliance, a.k.a. Convent des Minimes. Even though their brickwork is pastede on yay. (Photos to follow)
-- DRINK (especially champagne, and cherry beer)
-- red panda! (in the zoo)
-- rat glue! (in a shop: not the brand I've linked to, but still Cool)
-- C&A! (we left them some stock)
-- really cool notebooks!
-- CHEEEEESE (I had a flam ch'ti for lunch, which is basically cheese with extra local cheese on a thin crepe)
-- avoiding the cocktails in the hotel, except the ones with champagne

Less cool things:
-- all the bottles in Lille and surrounding regions (not just the ones we emptied) were recycled outside our room at 7am
-- Lille station has no Left Luggage (and not much else to commend it)

Ataraxia in Essex

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007 08:36 pm
Saturday would have been my father's 81st birthday. Since it was a glorious day I decided to celebrate it and him by heading back to the Essex marshes.Essex, Illustrated )

Shive Tor

Monday, January 15th, 2007 12:40 pm
Yesterday I went to look at Shive Tor, "a certain lonely castle that stands off the Isle of Grain, in view of the open sea, and that may be reached directly from the Continent without interference by Her Majesty’s Customs agents." (Neal Stephenson, The System of the World).Read more... )

Sun, wheel, Disney

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006 01:26 pm

Nov06-CA06-SunWheel
Originally uploaded by tamaranth.
Some of my photos from the California leg of my trip are now up over at Flickr. See Pirates! Seabirds! Me, looking inane!

Y Viva España

Thursday, February 16th, 2006 02:53 pm
So this year tomorrow we're off to sunny Spain.

Can anyone recommend fiction set in Barcelona? Or good Spanish fiction?

Can any of you remember which Patrick O'Brian novel is partly set in Gibraltar?

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