Cornish Bliss (part 1)

Let's start this with a cliché:

A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian: £8
Best Of by Nina Simone: £14
One week in a rather swish house just outside St. Ives: about £200
No email. No Jabber. No Subversion. No Bugzilla: priceless

For the last week Vicky and myself were in Cornwall, staying in a house just outside St. Ives with her family. The house was much nicer than we expected, very tastefully decorated and well equipped, with a DVD player, hi-fi, coffee machine, and so on.

Settling In

The house was in Carbis Bay, about a twenty minute walk from St. Ives along the costal path that was directly off the bottom of the garden. The path towards St. Ives is also the nicest stretch of costal path I've been on: it is surfaced and wide enougth to drive on, unlike the paths we've been on previously which are often no more than a foot wide cutting in the earth, next to a sheer cliff.

St. Ives The Sea

Our first impression of Cornwall was one of chill: when the taxi dropped me off at the train station to start the journey down the thermometer said 38°C, but at the same time the next day it was only 23°C. Brrrr. The traditional Cornish summer proceeded to roll in a few days later, with heavy rain, gusty wind and general grimness for a day. Yay for DVD players!

Typical Cornish Summer

St. Ives is a lovely town. Unlike Newquay which was got far too popular for it's own good (the two-carriage train had both a Stag and Hen party on board en route to Newquay, trying not that subtly to pull each other), St. Ives is busy but not crammed. There is no demographic that dominates the tourists, a mix of families young and old, surfers, twenty-somethings and pensioners means it doesn't feel like a tourist hotspot, and it manages to cater for everyone. The habour front has lounge bars, traditional pubs, restaurants and cornish pasty shops, catering for everyone. The town has become quite a focal point for artists recently (since 1928, Wikipedia tells me), and there seems to be more independent art galleries than pasty shops (!), including the Cornwish outpost of the Tate. Tate St. Ives is pretty small for anyone who has been to Tate Modern, but it's damn good: due to the size it is very focused (there are just two galleries) and the building itself is a wonderful modern piece of art deco architecture. We went with the intention of getting some more pictures for the house and did quite well: a print of Horizontal Stripes by Patrick Heron, and a limited run print (427/600) by a local artist. I'm too lazy to remember the name of the picture or the artist, but I'll take a photo of it later. Our Grand Plan of having more individual art in the house is going well, we've an original oil-on-canvas abstract to collect from the framers that we bought in Paris too.

To be continued...

21:10 Sunday, 06 Aug 2006 [#] [life] (7 comments)

Posted by andyp at Sun Aug 6 21:37:27 2006:
Sounds great Ross! We were in Cornwall a few weeks ago, not far from St Ives. It's a fantastic place to get away from it all :-)
Posted by Rob Caskey at Sun Aug 6 22:42:34 2006:
Wow, that dark-sky picture is great in itself and lends itself particularly well to wallpaper. It's on my new background.

--Rob
Posted by Ross at Mon Aug 7 07:31:10 2006: Posted by Dan at Mon Aug 7 19:27:32 2006:
cough my photo cough :)

http://www.danalderman.co.uk/images/hatfield_forest.jpg

Nice hi res one for your desktop.

D.
Posted by Ross at Mon Aug 7 19:29:12 2006:
cough isn't that my photo taken with your camera, and your version is my version with levels tweaks? cough. :)
Posted by Dan at Tue Aug 8 09:43:31 2006:
Clearly it's my photo, look (/me points), it's in my iPhoto library with the date n' everything. The EXIF states 20D with 17-40 lens.  Clearly as you don't own one of those and I do, clearly, it must be mine ;-p
Posted by Calum Benson at Tue Aug 8 23:06:18 2006:
Wow, that brings back memories... we had a family holiday in Carbis Bay about 30 years ago.  Am I old or what?

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