The little brown car took me,
Irene, Paul and Mary with our entire luggage on a five hour trip ‘up north’. We
made two rest stops, with a driver change before leaving the A1 and arriving at
our holiday home in Beadnell. Half way through the journey we left the sunny
weather in exchange for the ‘wet stuff’. In addition to the rain the unseasonal
cold was to be a feature of our holiday.
We neglected to research the road
to the bungalow, which turned out to be unmade which also became a small pond.
However, it was good
accommodation. Each couple had a private bath or shower. The living room/
dining area, kitchen was spacious and the rear windows looked towards the back
of the dunes. Unfortunately there was only one day when it was fit to go over
the dunes to the wide sandy beach.


On Saturday, despite the
continuing inclement weather we headed north along the coast road. Seahouses
was the first place we reached. The town boasts a Co-op, a garage and a
harbour. While Paul and Irene explored the gift shop Mary and I went down to
the harbour and booked our trip for the Farne Islands. We thought that the weather
may improve later in the week and so we booked our trip for Wednesday at 11.30
pm.





Then we drove on up the A1 and
made a right turn towards Holy Island. Thinking that there would not be food on
the island we stopped off at ‘The Barn’ at Beale. They were offering
pensioners’ portions. How could they think that pensioner eat less than younger
people.



On Sunday the weather was truly
atrocious but we did need to get out of the house.

We were about to start the fourth
day of the holiday with little let up in the weather and so on Monday we
decided on a town visit and it would be to Alnwick (pronounced anick).


To end the visit we went to the
tree house. Irene thought that it was just for children but it had adult sized
rope bridge and a large restaurant which was too pricey for us.
On the way back to the car we
managed to buy two much needed jigsaw puzzles.
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The sinks change colour |
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Upside down fountain |
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Keep off the grass (cannabis) |
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Tree House |
In Berwick we discovered the one
failing with free parking; there was none available. Disc parking was ‘free’
but only allowed us three hours. Irene and I again set off for museums and
galleries with no success. However, we did find our way on to the wall and down
to the river and along the bridges. Here I was able to take some atmospheric
photographs. Because of the rain we returned to the car park earlier than
planned but I did succeed in getting a cup of the hottest coffee that I have
ever had. I phoned Mary and she told us that they had found a pub for lunch and
that the landlord would move his car when we arrived. Which he did.
Strangely, the cloud lifted as we
reached Bamburgh and so we stopped to take some sunnier pictures of the castle.
Even so mistiness can be seen in this picture. Before returning to the
bungalow we had one thing to do. This was to find and photograph the Beadnell
AA Box.
The rising cloud was a good
portent to what we would find the following day. It turned out that the trip to
the Farne Islands would be blessed by brighter, clearer, warmer and, above all,
drier weather.
After the chaos of crowds on the
dock side we boarded the ‘Serenity’. This was known by me as the ‘Serendipity’.
The weather was a happy accident. The cruise took us around the islands to view
the wild life from the water and then we landed on Inner Farne. We had been
well warned to cover our heads as we had to run the gauntlet of Arctic terns
nesting right up to the board walk. Mary was dive bombed 9 times to my three
times and mum’s not at all. Mary wore a green coloured hat, I had straw and mum
had white. I wondered if there was a correlation between hat colours and the
frequency of dive bombing. The professionals in the camouflage hats seemed to
fair the worse as they seemed to be targets of the droppings.
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Guilemot chick |
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Common gull |
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Arctic tern |
On the island we had an hour to walk around the board walk. This took us to the cliff edge to view the cormorants with their chicks and then more shots of puffins before returning to the landing stage to be trapped in a line, as a good target for the terns before getting back on to the boat.
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Beadnell Lime Kilns |

On our last day the weather was
back to its usual thing. Once more the even browner car was put into action for
a drive south along the ‘Coast Road’. First we came to Aylmouth (pronounced
Ailmouth) after the river Ayl (pronounced the same as the town, but not after Alnwick).
The beach had beautiful soft golden sand, but we were not even tempted to
paddle. Here we had refreshments in the local tea room.


Warwick castle, on the way back
to the bungalow, made the last shot of the holiday. Then it was time to pack,
go to bed, load up the car and take the five hour journey home.
This was without incident apart
from the fact that mum stubbornly refused to keep to 50 mph through road works
to the visible and audible call from a lorry who wanted her to move into the
overtaking lane so that he could undertake her at slightly more than the speed
limit. If it’s not the rain then there has to be something else.
We arrived home in good time. A
lot of unpacking was done. Around tea time I had a call from the community
centre to say that the toilets were flooded. A top had come off a tap. You
can guess when the rain chose to bucket down. With water turned off, a plumber
booked and the chairman alerted it was time for tea before Paul and Mary picked
us up finish off the day at a friend’s 60th birthday party.
Things can end well!