As was my intention, I have come to the UK for the summer. It is exactly what I wanted and needed. Peaceful, green, no drama.
To knit up some loose threads from last time – I didn’t put my stuff in storage, I did find wonderful housesitters, the Cuenca airport has not closed as yet and Africa is not happening, which I think is a good thing really.
There was some last minute drama before I left Cuenca again, but that’s for another day. The stress did result in a recurrence of my upper respiratory problems, which is typical, so I no longer go to get it checked out. Thankfully, it more or less resolved before I had to get on the plane, which was a big relief. I had visions of a mob of passengers demanding that I be thrown out without a parachute as I went into spasms and paroxysms of wracking coughs almost turning my body inside out. So yeah, grateful that is over, for now at least.
I spent a night at an airport hotel at Heathrow, then found my way by bus to this little hamlet. I didn’t even know that there was a bus terminal at Heathrow, so I am still learning.
The only glitch was that I expected the first bus to drop me off at the bus station in High Wycombe. Instead, we reached something called High Wycombe Carriageway where there was nothing but an enormous grocery store, and a long, low brick building in front, where the bus stopped.
I consulted the driver, who didn’t know about buses to Aylesbury which was where I was headed towards, as that would be a different bus company. But he pointed me towards a bus stop in front of the low building. He suggested I wait there for a city bus that would likely to take me to the bus station, which would likely harbour the Aylesbury bus.
With no alternative in sight, I decided to follow his advice. I did wonder whether, as is the case in many places including Cuenca, I would be able to ride the bus without a card or pre-bought ticket. However, I figured there must be taxis in and out of the mega-grocery store, and I had taken the precaution of getting a UK SIM card in my phone, so I could probably call a taxi if all else failed.
None of the backup plans was necessary though. A bus pulled in, the driver allowed as how he was indeed going to the bus terminal (after a 15 minute wait) and he would take cash or a credit card for the £2 fare. Awesome.
That’s it. The sum total of drama for this trip, so far at least. My homeowner had described where I should get off the bus (conveniently, in front of a big Indian restaurant on the highway). I only had a few minutes to wander aimlessly (in the wrong direction of course) before she appeared with Jasper the dog, to lead me to her little house, about three minutes away, in a charming small development with a dozen or so townhouses all done up in stylish black shaker board siding.
The house is great. It’s always a relief to find a home that is fully equipped, well organized and comfortable. The homeowner even had a printed manual of critical and useful information. I am so grateful for that. It has been a source of some amazed humour, when I have occasionally over the years arrived at a housesit to find virtually no information at all, a dearth of what I would consider the kitchen basics, cupboards and fridge jammed so full there is nowhere for my food or even to lay open my suitcase, and sparse and uncomfortable furniture. It makes me feel like I am back in my student days. It doesn’t matter if the home is huge or tiny – organization and consideration for the person who will be living there, is always very welcome. You don’t want to be faced with essentially camping out, perching on the edges of someone else’s chaotic life or weird living arrangements. One or two of the bathrooms I’ve encountered!
Jasper is a large springer spaniel with comically long eyebrows and lashes.
He’s adorable. Although he did get very excited to meet me and kept jumping up, this turned out to be the exception to otherwise lovely behaviour.
He walks on a harness with the clip for the lead in front. I have been here several days and I still have to reverse engineer it every time I get him ready for his walk. Fortunately he is patient with my idiocy.
Maisie the cat is affectionate, but fairly independent too.
It’s funny to watch her wrestle with Jasper. She has a cat door and spends the night outside, but she can enter the front part of the house through the catflap. She is barred from the rest of the house and the bedrooms especially. I suspect this is at least in part because she is mighty huntress. I have come down two mornings in a row to find dead mice, one disembowelled. Not something you want to find in your bed. Although I am conscious of the high compliment she pays me, in presenting her hunting bounty to me.
Yesterday Jasper suddenly went charging out into the glorious garden and then Maisie came charging in and there was great excitement in the glassed in conservatory. I confined both pets in the house and went in search of what they were so interested in. Turned out to be a bird. A British robin I think.
Luckily, after I moved some furniture, it escaped out the open conservatory door back to the garden.
Much easier than the two magpies who got into the house I was looking after in Australia. That was quite the battle and ended up with a lot of mopping of bird poop too. This little robin was very politely behaved. Maybe it’s a British/Australian cultural thing?
The garden – oh my.
Everything is blooming both in the garden and in the country lanes where I walk Jasper.
The air smells of lilacs and green growing things. Even roses are in bloom against some cottage walls, as well as wisteria, laburnum, towering chestnut trees and many nameless (to me anyway) varieties of shrubs and plants.
Those are yellow roses climbing up the walls of that thatched roof house.
The garden here has a lemon tree. With a lemon. In mid-May.
I think this is a jack-in-the-pulpit?
The house is just outside the hamlet, and the hamlet is comprised of nothing but houses and a pub.
We are about 50 minutes from London in Buckinghamshire. The Prime Minister’s country residence of Chequers is about a 35 minute walk away over the fields. Many of the fields are dotted with sheep or horses. Jasper is a particular fan of the sheep, like these black ones.
There are many little hamlets with names like Great Kimble and Little Kimble, Monks Risborough and Princes Risborough (the latter of which is the nearest town with grocery stores and banks and such).
And, so unlike Canada, there are buses or even trains to take you everywhere among all these little settlements. As Jasper and I walked down a lane on the outskirts of the hamlet of Monks Risborough, we came upon a set of stairs leading to a long platform with a set of stairs leading down at the other end. It was a stop for the local train.
Princes Risborough has a charming little market square.
I enjoyed this surgery sign.
There is also this – a far cry from the ‘pool hall’ my parents used to decry in the town where I grew up.
The houses are mostly preserved cottages, farms, rectories and such, many with exquisite thatched roofs.
This one looks exactly like the woodland cottage where Sleeping Beauty hid out with her three good fairy godmothers before the whole regrettable pricking-her-finger-on-a-spindle incident.
But there are many more.
Some of the thatched roofs have intricate designs, or additions like these ducks.
Where houses do appear to be newer, they have clearly been built with the surrounding architecture and history in mind, and blend in seamlessly.
I just know there is a curved window seat set into that leaded glass bow window.
The houses do not have numbers. Instead, that are all named, unironically, things like Lilac Cottage, Foxes, Wyvern House, Hillview, The Old Forge, Mulberry House, Rectory Farm, The Grange. Olde England as envisioned in Disney films and Epcot, but the real thing.
Names do apparently change from time to time though.
Occasionally there is a bit of the past preserved in a way that makes me smile.
The gate has been open every time I’ve been by.
It’s probably not coincidental that I’ve seen a lot of expensive looking sports cars and even a big Rolls-Royce.
Those historic houses and especially the thatched roofs, must cost a fortune to maintain.
Jasper and I have walked and walked, for hours and hours, and I have yet to see one house less than impeccably maintained, including massive gardens and lawns.
We’ve come across churches that look like they could be in Canada.
But this one dates to the twelfth century.
And look, there seems to be a Canadian fetched up in this enchanted place.
All this is juxtaposed with areas of wild hedgerows, ancient mossy trees, covered with vines that look older that Canada.
It’s amazing to me how you can turn from the noisy, busy highway onto a tiny overgrown path marked “Public Footpath” and suddenly inhabit a quiet world full of blossoms and bunnies.
Very Beatrix Potter.
It is all quite stunning, but maintains its aura of peace and tranquility. It’s not flashy. It’s not gilt covered grandeur. It is the heart and soul of the English countryside.
I am so lucky to be here.
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