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Home→Categories United Kingdom→Gloucestershire

Category Archives: Gloucestershire

National Trust – Chedworth Roman Villa

Blasdale Home Posted on December 21, 2023 by SteveJanuary 9, 2024

21st December 2023

On a damp, dark, cloudy day we visited Chedworth Roman Villa. This villa has been partially excavated, with protective shelters built over the top of some of the remains. Viewing of the floors and hypocausts are from walkways above. There’s a smallmuseum of finds.

We arrived along some narrow roads and parked beside the road some 200 meters from the site. The main parking was full, and there was a coach party of schoolchildren. Guided tours were available, but Rosemary and I, seeking a self-paced exploration, opted for the audio guide. It offered various options, from factual narrations about the villa’s history to playful dramatizations of life during Roman times. We decided to stick to the plain facts, eager to unravel the secrets embedded in the ancient stones.

Before delving into the ruins, we refuelled in the cozy cafe, relishing a warming coffee. After the tour we ate a light lunch there amidst the clean and cheerful ambiance. I imagine on a sun-drenched summer day, the surrounding areas would transform into a delightful picnic haven, the open air adding to the charm of the place. Somehow R managed to find their small secondhand book shop.

Our exploration along the raised walkways, overlooking fascinating remains showed us:

o – Roman Mosaics: Exquisite floors crafted from tiny coloured stones

o – Hypocausts: These ingenious underfloor heating systems, utilizing hot air channels, warmed the Roman floors and baths, offering a glimpse into their sophisticated approach to comfort.

o – Toilets: These were explained in all their glory details to the listening school kids.

Our online research unveiled a curious detail – Chedworth Roman Villa is apparently home to a thriving population of Roman Snails! These intriguing creatures, protected by their unique status, add a touch of biodiversity to the historical site.

National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa
National Trust Chedworth Roman Villa

Posted in Art, Gloucestershire, National Trust | Tagged Chedworth Roman Villa, National Trust | Leave a reply

Trip to Chastleton House

Blasdale Home Posted on November 30, 2022 by SteveJanuary 6, 2023

30th November 2022

We visited the National Trust’s Chastleton House to see it decorated for Christmas. We try and visit a National Trust house at this time of year to see the Christmas decorations. We bypass houses such as Waddesdon Manor, as a protest, because they charge NT members who visit at Christmas time.

Chastleton House is a large house clothed in dilapidated splendour. The previous owners fell on hard times, with the resultant leaking roofs, no heating and poor decoration. The NT has preserved this look throughout the house. The house was decorated for a 1960s Christmas. You can see vinyl records, the old tube monochrome TV, the old 60s GPO phones and valve radios. The homemade crackers were brilliantly made by the volunteers from crêpe paper and toilet rolls. Do you remember making paper chains by sticking together coloured pieces of paper? The volunteers must have spent a while making all those on display! Great use was made of games and various glasses and cocktail paraphernalia. Champagne coups were a feature and some wonderful 60s food. There were also exhibits from before the 1960s. At Christmas in 1938, the children’s parcels were parachuted in by an uncle who was an RAF pilot. The parcels were scattered across the front lawn, stuck in trees and attached to the house. R spied a thriller written by one of the last private owners. Yes, she ordered a copy, but sadly could not find one with the same attractive jacket.

There was limited access to the gardens, but nice for a quick wander.

After our visit we looked for somewhere to eat (yes, shockingly there is no NT tea-room!), and ended up in the roadside Cotswold Cafe next to a garage. Excellent; it was very clean and served very good basic grub. I had a baked potato with baked beans, cheese and salad while R had a tuna mayonnaise filled roll with salad. The cafe was decorated with old motoring memorabilia, see the model campervan photo.

After our lunch we headed to the nearby limestone Rollright Stones, where you park in a layby in Oxfordshire. There is a nominal fee of a quid each to visit, which we put in the honesty box. There are three monuments – The Kings Men, a late Neolithic or Early Bronze Age stone circle, with nearby an Early or Middle Neolithic dolmen, named the Whispering Knights, while across the road (and in another county, Warwickshire) lies the King Stone, thought to be a single monolith Bronze Age grave marker.

Well worth a visit, though everything would have looked better on a bright sunny spring or frosty winter day, rather than the heavy overcast sky we were greeted with.

We have visited Chastleton House on other occasions. The previous visits were in 2007 and 2005. Did we remember doing so? Mmmm.

Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
Chastleton House
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones, Whispering Knights
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
The Rollright Stones. King Stone
Posted in Gloucestershire | Tagged Chastleton House | 1 Reply

Snowdrops at Painswick

Blasdale Home Posted on February 14, 2003 by SteveDecember 31, 2020

Today started out as a beautiful sunny day, but cold. Rosemary and I decided to visit the Painswick Rococo Garden, which is situated in a hidden Cotswold valley in Painswick near Gloucester.

This time of the year is a special treat with floods of Snowdrops amongst the gardens and woods. After viewing the gardens we had a pub lunch with a pint of Hook Norton.

I took a few photos of the garden while I was there. Hopefully, they will be on the site in a couple of week’s time. I was not alone with my camera, there were several professional photographers taking pictures of the Snowdrop grove.

Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Snowdrops at Painswick
Posted in Gloucestershire | Tagged Gloucestershire, Painswick, Snowdrops | Leave a reply
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