Thursday, October 30, 2008

A retreat day and other travels

On Sunday I was invited to lunch by a couple from church.  They live in Wheatley.  After lunch, we went for a walk around the village.  One of the major points of interest is the one-man lock up.  This was used in the 17th century for those convicted of drunk and disorderly conduct. The unique building is located on the edge of a playground, an incentive to get the kids to behave.



The local post office won a prize as one of the best post offices in Britain a few years ago.







Tuesday morning I left home early, took the bus to the center of Oxford and transfered to another for a trip to Stanton St John to spend a day on retreat.  The bus ride was an experience in itself.  The driver knew all the regulars.  At one point we waited for nearly five minutes at a stop.  After a while, I saw an elderly woman slowly making her way down the street.  The driver knew the woman was making her way to the bus and was waiting for her.

The trip only took thirty minutes. I got off the bus and entered a small village in the English countryside.

I walked through the village and down the road tree-lined road to Stanton House. (My room is actually the one shown in the publicity photo.)  






I came around a bend in the driveway and saw the house.





I was shown to my room, named as you can see.  Just down the hall I had use of a well-appointed kitchenette with coffee, tea and snacks available. Each person was given a tray enabling them to make their own breakfast and take it to their room





After I had settled in, I took advantage of a walk around the property.

I went past a couple of horses in front of the house. When I went by the fence, they came over for the carrot I did not have.




On the side of the pasture, water flowed from the rocks


The floor of the forest held other treasures, like these toadstools.







The artesian well water is directed through a series of ponds. Sitting under the willow trees, I relaxed to the sounds of running water, cackling ducks and squawking geese.

Returning to the house, I shared a very good dinner in the company of the other guests.  After dinner three of us spent some time discussing contemporary Christianity in Britain.  Interesting.


Early the next morning I left the grounds and walked past the Honeysuckle Cottage, a quaint abode with window boxes and thatched roof, and made my way to the bus stop and a trip back to Oxford in time for another day of work.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Salisbury Cathedral

We arrived in Salisbury on a beautiful sunny autumn day.


Inside I marveled at the columns, high windows and the magnificent vaulted ceilings.








The tour included the old as of pennants that were in tatters.  The tour guide indicated that the really old ones were captured from the White House during the War of 1812.  




and the new of the a baptismal font that was dedicated two weeks ago.



The old:  Bishop's seat 




And the new:  This is the east window, Prisoners of Conscience, that was installed in 1980.





I also went to the Chapter House.  I could not take photos there, but I enjoyed seeing one of the original copies of the Magna Carta.


After the tour of the cathedral, I sat on the Close for a while.  This view shows the restoration that is taking place.  On the other side of the building the park area was well used by families enjoying the sun and the grass.






I started to town for coffee and on my way out of the Close, I saw this sundial on the side of a building.  The quote at the top is "Life is but a walking shadow"  The dial also give the day of the year in the horizontal lines.

Once I got to town, I saw this butcher shop.  During the few minutes I sat there, the window was often obscured by waves people looking at what they could buy.  The building is obviously at least Victorian.






I then went to the Salisbury Museum that had a wonderful collection of costumes through the centuries which included stumpwork embroidery.  I did not take photos of the clothing because the flash would not have been beneficial to the preservation of the cloth.  I did take this photo of the interactive corner where children could dress up.  The museum had several other interactive centers for other exhibits.



I then returned to the cathedral and took a seat in on of the choir section (or quire as they spell it) for Evensong.  The wood on these seats is from the 1300s. The tags indicate the areas in Britain that support the cathedral. The carvings over the seats are the bishops who have served through the centuries.





On my way out, I took this photo the cathedral lit for the night.  The building, inside and out has been well photographed. If you would like to see other images you can go here or here or here.



Monday, October 13, 2008

An Eventful Weekend

This weekend ended up being full of quite different activities.  Saturday morning I took the inter-city bus to Woodstock to hear P.D. James and Kate Summerscale discuss the genre of true crime and mystery novels.  I thoroughly enjoyed and even had P.D. James answer one of my questions.  She claims that her characters do not surprise her, but that by the end of writing a book, they are more fleshed out than when she of them in her original plan.  

She autographed a copy of her most recent book for me and I told her that the videos of her books had helped me recuperate from major surgery. (I watched six of Dalgliesh videos in one week, several of them six hours long, when I was recovering from knee surgery.)

The discussion took place at St Mary Magdalene, the Episcopal church in Woodstock. When I first entered the church, I was overwhelmed by the spectacle of the hundreds of hand-stitched kneelers in a myriad of colors and designs.  It took my breath away.


Many of the kneelers have Christian messages.  Some of them represent the beauty of nature, birds and flowers and so forth.




And some of them commemorate particular people such as the Duke of Marlborough.  St. Mary Magdalene parish includes his family home, Blenheim Palace, so this is his church home.



At the end of the discussion, I  wandered around outside.  Someone pointed me to the Norman door.  
I went to an antique show and bought Farmer Giles of Ham, a book by J.R.R. Tolkein.  Then it was time for the bus back to Oxford.





After feeding the dog, I made my way down the road to the community orchard for the Wolvercote Apple Festival.  At one of the booths, sponsored by the Nature Society,  I discovered that standard acorns in England are more oblong than the ones in the US.  I also drank some fresh pressed cider, or apple juice as the Brits would say. (Cider in Briton is an alcoholic beverage.)  The Victorian variety was thin and slightly sour.  The other one I tasted, from an apple variety I have forgotten, was much fuller and sweeter and had a slight pear taste.

This one of the trees in the orchard full of fruit.  I found the Falstaff variety to be sweet with a very tough skin.




Saturday evening, I read several chapters of The Private Patient, by P. D. James book.

On Sunday, after church, I took the London Tube, a bus line to London, to its first stop, Lewknor.  St Margaret's Church was hosting a green festival and dog show.  I bought my weekly supply of vegetables and cheeses, sampled a bit of expertly prepared venison, dined on an organic burger and home-made dessert, and finished it all off with a glass of very good local wine.






Outside, the dogs were patiently waiting for the show to begin.













Soon they were put through their paces. They and their young owners all received ribbons.





After the show, I walked back to the highway to catch the bus to Oxford where I  had chicken mai fun at the Noodle Bar and went to the evening service at church.  

Monday, October 6, 2008

Community

The frost was on the meadow this morning.  Winter has arrived.  But I realize that I have the warmth of community here in Oxford.  I have become a part of the lives of many people.

The IFES community

The IFES office buildings.  We work behind the windows on the third floor (or second floor in Britain.) The people have been very helpful in getting me settled in and in encouraging me as I adapt to a new culture.

We meet daily for prayers. Today we prayed for preparations for the next World Assembly in 2011.








During the summer we went on 
several picnics in a local church yard.




We had a farewell party for one of the people at the office.



I have gotten involved with a Christian environmental concern group.  We have gone on a preaching weekend and will host a table at the local green fair in December.  This photo shows some of us on a short walk in Keynsham.


The Wovercote Community


Once a month the local pub hosts a music, poetry and storytelling evening. This past week the group included six guitars, a banjo, a mandolin, a couple of dulcimers, and a squeeze box.  I even told the story of the enchanted toll road


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At a barn dance in the Village Hall, the local Morris Dancers performed

and the rest of us joined in.






American Voters Abroad

I have taken advantage of this being an election year and joined a group of American Voters Abroad.  We meet periodically in local pubs to discuss politics and get to know one another.  I met someone who had been an Air Force wife in the Philippines and another young woman from Alaska who gave us real scoop on Palin.

Another, and possibly most significant, community that I have become a part of is my church, Woodstock Road Baptist.


On the bank Holiday in August, one of the church members organized a day to a local public farm.  The kids played on the swings and went through the petting zoo.  I went to the pick your own area and found a few strawberries even at that late date.  They were planted on shoulder-height platforms under awnings.  This made the picking somewhat easier, put I miss the rigor of having to stoop over for the sweetness of the fruit.



During the school year the church offers lunch after church on Sunday.  This is one of the cute kids in the congregation.



This summer, the church had a picnic on one of the rainiest days of the summer. The women did their thing in the kitchen,

 
and the men did their thing at the grill.








                                                      The children had their faces painted



and some of the adults got into the fun of the event, creating their own commentary on life.







Just this past week end I went to London with the church women for a regional women's conference.  Can you imagine me going to spend a day with 3500 other women?  Being in a different country brings out strange parts of a person.  Though I must admit being around all those people was a challenge, but I heard Helen Roseveare speak again and had a good dinner with some friends from church.

On the bus on the way back through London, some friends from church told me to look to the right.  I could see the famous Gherkin building through the side streets.  At the last possible moment I got this shot.  You can see the building at the mid right of this photo.



I look forward to enriching these relationships through the rest of the year.  I can imagine that these relationships will be the thing I will miss most when I leave.