Yorkshire contains a variety of areas, different people with different accents. There is no single Yorkshire way of speaking - but many.
But the Yorkshire we were in from Sunday morning to Wednesday was very different from that. Take the village of Alne for example. So many big and characterful houses with gravel driveways, neatly trimmed hedgerows and roses climbing round doorways. Girls in hard hats riding horses. Range Rovers splashing through puddles. There in the middle of The Vale of York where the soil is deep and rich and you wake to mellifluous birdsong.
Life is comfortable there. In Easingwold - which is really a small self-sufficient town thirteen miles north of York, I counted five thriving pubs adjacent to the wide Georgian central area. Once this comfortable settlement was the first stopping places for horse drawn coaches heading north from York. "Easingwold" seemed like a very appropriate name - for life appeared easy there just west of the Yorkshire Wolds that rise and fall on their way to Flamborough Head.
I went on two long walks with Tony and Shirley joined us on our second route. Because Pauline has had two hip replacements and a knee replacement in the last eighteen months, she ducked out - quite understandably. On Tuesday afternoon we joined her at the immaculate Aldwark Manor Hotel - for hot drinks and bowls of triple-fried chips with hummus and tomato ketchup.
If the chips were fried properly in the first place, they wouldn't need to be fried three times.
ReplyDeleteI've seen packets of life sized plastic lady bugs in a store but I am not at all doubting that the well photographed bug is a real one.
It is a harlequin ladybird - an invasive species - just like Europeans and rabbits in Australia.
DeleteTriple fried chips??? Wouldn't they be burned and hard to chew? The buildings are beautiful, I love Market Places. Is that barley the ladybug is on?
ReplyDeleteNo Elsie - it looks like barley but it is in fact rye. The chips were delicious.
DeleteThis looks like a very scenic area. Walking would be enjoyable.
ReplyDeleteI wish you had joined us Red. I thought about you in a charity shop in Easingwold when I spotted a carved Canadian stone - Inuit art - depicting an igloo and two native people. I should have bought it. Its roughness added to its charm.
DeleteThat last paragraph of yours - I know exactly what you mean.
ReplyDeleteMelliflous is a word I don't come across often, but I love it and find it very fitting for birdsong.
Chips with hummus? Now that's one way of having chips (or hummus) I have not tried before.
It was a nice combination and the saliva in my mouth danced mellifluously over the fried potato.
Delete"Some southerners think of Yorkshire as a place of industry and hardship" that is of course due to the films and tv dramas we see. I used to fry my chips twice, once to make them soft and the second time to crisp them up. Can't think what happens on the third fry?
ReplyDeleteOn the third fry they enter a heavenly state... something akin to Nirvana in a bowl.
DeleteA lovely post. As a Lancastrian, I freely admit that Yorkshire is indeed a most beautiful county. Some of my ancestors were from Thornton, Denholme and Haworth.
ReplyDeleteI am amazed that you did not marry a Yorkshireman Christina - because Yorkshiremen are exceedingly handsome, kind and intelligent.
DeleteLovely photos. That ladybird one is stunning!
ReplyDeleteYes ADDY but harlequin ladybirds are not native.
DeleteSuch beautiful photos! Your post got me interested in Yorkshire, so I looked it up to learn more about the geography, politics, etc. I love going on "virgin territory" walks too. I find accents amazing and I am curious now about the different types of Yorkshire accents!
ReplyDeleteI like the Texas joke.
ReplyDeleteYou had a good time away from home. Alne and its surroundings looks delightful.
Alne feels like it should be in rural Surrey or maybe even Berkshire when berks reside.
DeleteGreat photos; I love the architecture and the quiet country lane!
ReplyDeleteThank you Bob.
DeleteIt is 829 miles from east to west across Texas, a rather long ride. We should go back to Yorkshire, we spent a wonderful week there a few years ago.
ReplyDeleteYorkshire will be happy to see you again because we love Yanks with fat wallets.
DeleteThis sounds perfect.
ReplyDeleteYes - it was.
DeleteI really know nothing at all about the areas of England and am always glad when you take us on your tours and share your photos.
ReplyDeleteIt is nice to be appreciated Ellen.
DeleteWe spent a week in Yorkshire with 2 friends from London - 1 of whom was born and raised in Harrogate - and loved it. We rented a lovely little house in Pately Bridge. Beautiful countryside, charming people, and the sound of sheep softly bahhing a lullaby at night. I'd do it again in a heartbeat.
ReplyDeleteIt is the law that American visitors to Pateley Bridge should learn how to spell the town's name. It is not a place I know but I have heard it's nice there.
DeleteWhat glorious photographs. The top church is most unusual to my eye.
ReplyDeleteI feel lucky to live in a land which has such a rich heritage.
I have spent the past day or so working on a grant application for my local church. I am atheist but do love the buildings. It’s a small church in a tiny village but is set in a spectacular location but the upkeep is something else.
Thank you for your kind comment Traveller. I have visited hundreds if not thousands of English churches and St Stephen's really stood out as being quite different. Though the site is old, the church itself is Victorian. Like you, I am an atheist who loves old churches and I wish you all the best with your grant application. If you need help with spelling just run the application past me. I will happily proofread it for free.
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