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Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall

Lottie Storey July 10, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Charmaine Beaumont-Hammond heads to Bude for a beachy retreat 

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Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 68 of the July issue for more of this seaside adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Charmaine Beaumont-Hammond is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk and is a writer, photographer and co-owner of wealdstore.com. She blogs at wealdblog.co.uk; follow her on Instagram @wealdblog. 

 
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

 

Fancy winning a stay at Bude Hideaways? Enter our competition!

More from the June issue:

Featured
Feb 17, 2019
Small acts of kindness
Feb 17, 2019
Feb 17, 2019
Jun 27, 2017
Recipe | Gooseberry cake
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 26, 2017
Mindful moments | Download a chatterbox to colour in
Jun 26, 2017
Jun 26, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom inspiration:

Featured
SIM64.TIYK_oldelectricshop_cafearea.png
Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
SIM63.TIYK_p7070131_36013247736_o.png
Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
In Escape Tags travel, this is your kingdom, issue 61, july, cornwall
Comment

Escape: A converted barn in Wales

Lottie Storey June 18, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Jeska Hearne heads to the Welsh border for a family stay in an architectural gem 

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Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 68 of the June issue for more of this rural adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Jeska Hearne is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk and co-founder of online lifestyle store thefuturekept.com. More of her photographs and stories can be found on her blog lobsterandswan.com and Instagram @lobsterandswan.

 

More from the June issue:

Featured
Feb 17, 2019
Small acts of kindness
Feb 17, 2019
Feb 17, 2019
Jun 27, 2017
Recipe | Gooseberry cake
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 26, 2017
Mindful moments | Download a chatterbox to colour in
Jun 26, 2017
Jun 26, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom inspiration:

Featured
SIM64.TIYK_oldelectricshop_cafearea.png
Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
SIM63.TIYK_p7070131_36013247736_o.png
Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 60, june, travel, this is your kingdom
Comment

Outing | PYO summer traditions

Lottie Storey June 12, 2017

More than a chance to buy the freshest of veg, a day at a PYO farm is a treasure hunt in the sunshine. 

Some pick-your-own farms look like they could be in a snap from the 1970s – lines of fruit as far as the eye can see, punctuated only by a small wooden chalet. The simplicity of these places holds a strong sense of nostalgic charm, yet the new breed that can lay on a flat white and a fleet of miniature tractors to entertain accompanying tots as quickly as you can say: ‘One punnet, please’, has an altogether different kind of draw.

Pick Your Own has a number of precursors, such as in the Victorian farmers who invited their urban customers back to their land to harvest their own food, and ‘gleaning’ in the mid-20th century, when villagers were invited to collect and take home the corn that had fallen into the stubble after harvest.

More recently, the entrepreneurial Derbyshire farmer-turned-media personality Ted Moult is thought to have been the first to popularise pick-your-own strawberries by inviting visitors onto his fields in the early 1960s when reportedly, he greeted them one by one. As soft fruit became available in supermarkets all year round due to foreign imports, the pastime lost its allure, but with the 21st century’s renewed interest in seasonal food, it is regaining its rightful place as one of summer’s simple pleasures.

How to fill your punnet with only the sweetest, juiciest fruit

  • Select strawberries in the warmest part of the day and, once you’ve established that they’re ripe (red all over), pinch the stalk between your thumb and forefinger and pull.
  • Search for plump raspberries at the bases of the canes, which are often forgotten about. They should lift off easily when ready. Place in a shallow container in just one or two layers – they bruise easily.
  • Remove the cluster of currants (black, red or white) on a branch before stripping it of its fruits.
  • Gather under-ripe gooseberries in June for using in preserves, leaving enough fruits to sweeten for eating in July.

Turn to page 72 of June's The Simple Things for more PYO traditions.

 

More from the June issue:

Featured
Feb 17, 2019
Small acts of kindness
Feb 17, 2019
Feb 17, 2019
Jun 27, 2017
Recipe | Gooseberry cake
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 27, 2017
Jun 26, 2017
Mindful moments | Download a chatterbox to colour in
Jun 26, 2017
Jun 26, 2017

Soft fruit recipe ideas:

Featured
Petal sandwiches Kirstie Young.jpg
Jun 5, 2021
Make | Sweet & Silly Sandwiches
Jun 5, 2021
Jun 5, 2021
SIM72.GATHERING_ST Midsummer Jun18_16.JPG
Jun 12, 2018
Recipe | Summer strawberry tart
Jun 12, 2018
Jun 12, 2018
May 23, 2016
Recipe: Strawberry and thyme pie
May 23, 2016
May 23, 2016
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here.

In Escape Tags issue 60, strawberries, pyo, soft fruits, summer, summer fruit, summer outings, june
Comment

Escape: Get walking

Lottie Storey May 12, 2017

May is National Walking Month and the charity Living Streets is urging us to walk for 20 minutes a day as part of its Try20 campaign. 

If you need motivation, try one of these:

  • Borrow a dog
    If you love dogs but don’t own one, sign up to borrowmydoggy.com to make contact with dog owners in your area who need a hand with walking.
     
  • Track your walks
    Use an app such as Map My Walk, a Fitbit fitness tracker or a pedometer to keep track of your distance and feel your motivation soar.
     
  • Do it for charity
    The app Charity Miles donates money from corporate sponsors to your chosen charity for every mile you walk.
     
  • Make it a mindfulness exercise
    Walking is a great way to integrate mindfulness into your day. Instead of walking on autopilot with your legs moving and your mind elsewhere, observe what’s around you and the sensations in your body. Use the regular rhythm of your walk to keep your mind from wandering off and notice how much calmer and clearer-headed you feel afterwards.
    livingstreets.org.uk

 

More from the May issue:

Featured
May 29, 2017
Recipe | Smoked trout, cucumber and coconut salad with dosa
May 29, 2017
May 29, 2017
May 27, 2017
Garden hacks | Make a colander hanging basket
May 27, 2017
May 27, 2017
May 26, 2017
Recipe | Picnic Pies
May 26, 2017
May 26, 2017

More walking inspiration:

Featured
Wellbeing woodland walk.jpeg
Mar 29, 2025
Wellbeing | Moodscapes and walking routes
Mar 29, 2025
Mar 29, 2025
Emy Lou Holmes Coddiwomple.jpg
May 25, 2024
Words for Walks | Coddiwomple
May 25, 2024
May 25, 2024
Alamy Railway Ramble.jpg
May 20, 2023
Outing | Railway Rambles
May 20, 2023
May 20, 2023
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags walks, issue 59, may, charity, walking
Comment

Escape: A very British safari

Lottie Storey May 11, 2017

An out of Africa experience can be had closer to home, if you know where to look. Find exotic and native wildlife on your doorstep (or near enough) on page 64 of May’s The Simple Things. Or read on for our picks of safari glamping and armchair safaris.

Dawn to dusk encounters

Safari-style tents for glamping with wildlife on the doorstep

Bear Lodge, Port Lympne, Kent
Family-sized tents look out across the safari park’s rhino, bear and cheetah paddocks aspinallfoundation.org/port-lympne

Knepp Safaris, near Horsham, West Sussex
The Knepp Castle Estate’s rewilding project on arable land. Keep a night vigil for bats, owls and nightingales in your own bell tent or yurt.
kneppsafaris.co.uk

Bleasdale Estate, Lancashire
Wake to the dawn chorus and watch wild deer from a canvas retreat in the Forest of Bowland. lanternandlarks.co.uk

Cledan Valley, Carno, Powys
Hide out at this secluded site and you might spot otters or hares, and red kites overhead. cledanvalley.co.uk


Armchair safaris

Spy on shy species via these webcams (David Attenborough-style commentary, optional)

The ospreys of Loch Garten return each year between April and August to nest at the RSPB’s Abernethy reserve in Scotland.
rspb.org.uk/lochgarten

Grey seals haul out on the spit at South Walney Island.
cumbriawildlifetrust.org.uk

The comings and goings of waders and waterfowl at the Wildfowl and Wetfland Trust in Slimbridge, Gloucestershire are mesmerising.
wwt.org.uk/slimbridge

Life inside a bat cave (the roost where some of Devon’s greater horseshoe bats hang out) is just as topsy-turvy as it sounds.
devonbatproject.org

The colony of Atlantic puffins that breeds on Burhou, a small island off Alderney in the Channel Islands, is beamed live from an offshore camera between April and July. teachingthroughnature.co.uk 

 

More from the May issue:

Featured
May 29, 2017
Recipe | Smoked trout, cucumber and coconut salad with dosa
May 29, 2017
May 29, 2017
May 27, 2017
Garden hacks | Make a colander hanging basket
May 27, 2017
May 27, 2017
May 26, 2017
Recipe | Picnic Pies
May 26, 2017
May 26, 2017

More Escape inspiration:

Featured
Camping Alamy.jpeg
May 17, 2025
Outdoors | Camping Truths
May 17, 2025
May 17, 2025
Guernsey The Grandmother, a neolithic statue at St Martins church, is often bedecked with floral tributes..jpeg
May 6, 2025
Folklore | Guernsey Superstitions
May 6, 2025
May 6, 2025
Brocante.jpeg
May 3, 2025
How to | Brocante Successfully
May 3, 2025
May 3, 2025
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here.

In Escape Tags issue 59, may, escape, safari, nature
Comment

Escape: Rainy day adventures

Lottie Storey April 24, 2017

A rainy walk with friends or family feels somehow enlivening, as if you’re defying the weather, having fun and making memories... even when water gets in your wellies

“There’s no such thing as bad weather, only unsuitable clothing”
Lake District fellwalking legend Alfred Wainwright (originally from a Norwegian adage)

Feel the rain on your skin, see it drip through a hazel leaf funnel onto the forest floor. Touch the bark of a gnarled, rough oak or a smooth, grey beech trunk made dark by running water. Run your fingers over a velvety bracket fungus. As the sun comes out from behind a cloud, find a clearing and hold your face to the sky. A free dose of Vitamin D, courtesy of spring.

Hear the squelch and suck of wellies in gloopy mud, splash through a puddle, or linger on a bridge over a babbling brook. Hush up a little and you’ll notice birdsong all around, maybe a woodpecker at work. If the wind picks up, the branches creak and groan in an arboreal conversation that makes you believe in magical creatures. Big kid or little kid, climb a tree and feel the breeze whistle through the branches around you.

Turn to page 24 of April's The Simple Things for more of our April Showers ideas.

 

More from the April issue:

Featured
Apr 2, 2021
Recipe: Hot Cross Bun Cakes
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 6, 2019
Recipe: Wild garlic soup
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 24, 2017
Escape: Rainy day adventures
Apr 24, 2017
Apr 24, 2017

More adventures:

Featured
Camping Alamy.jpeg
May 17, 2025
Outdoors | Camping Truths
May 17, 2025
May 17, 2025
Guernsey The Grandmother, a neolithic statue at St Martins church, is often bedecked with floral tributes..jpeg
May 6, 2025
Folklore | Guernsey Superstitions
May 6, 2025
May 6, 2025
Brocante.jpeg
May 3, 2025
How to | Brocante Successfully
May 3, 2025
May 3, 2025
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Buy, download or subscribe

See the sample of our latest issue here

Buy a copy of our latest anthology: A Year of Celebrations

Buy a copy of Flourish 2, our wellbeing bookazine

Listen to our podcast - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

 

In Escape Tags issue 58, april, escape, april showers, rain, walks, school holiday ideas
Comment
Illustration: Geraldine Sy/Good Illustration

Illustration: Geraldine Sy/Good Illustration

Escape: The modern pilgrimage

Lottie Storey April 12, 2017

Modern pilgrims quietly travel on foot to places with meaning or significance. You may have been on a pilgrimage without even knowing it. All it takes is to walk purposefully towards a place that means something to you. 

All over the world, different religions have taken up pilgrimages: Muslims head to Mecca, Christians to Santiago de Compostela, Hindus walk the length of the Ganges. Whereas modern pilgrimages don’t require a belief in God, they can follow the paths of these earlier pilgrims to a cathedral, chapel or shrine, and appreciate these places for the holy spaces they are.

What is considered sacred today, however, is much broader. Many ancient sites exert a powerful pull and have the additional benefit of being in the landscape, often in out-of-the-way and lovely places. Journey to a long barrow on the crest of a hill, a standing stone overlooking a bay, or a stone circle in the heart of a wheat field, and chances are that you will experience something profound and steadying. As philosopher and writer Alain de Botton puts it: “Certain places, perhaps because of their remoteness, vastness, chaotic energy, haunting melancholy, exert a capacity to salve the wounded parts of us.”

Five British pilgrimage sites

Join other wayfarers at these ancient and sacred places. 

Stonehenge and Avebury stone circles, Wiltshire
Solstice gatherings of druids at the UK’s most famous stone circle are well known, but at other times of the year it’s impossible to get close to the megaliths. Better to head to nearby Avebury for more convenient stone-hugging. 

Bardsey Island, Wales
Bardsey was a major pilgrimage destination in medieval times, and is still a destination for anyone seeking a spiritual place. 

Walsingham, Norfolk
Following a vision of the Virgin Mary, a rich widow called Richeldis de Faverches built a shrine here in the 11th century. The site has remained significant for Roman Catholics, and still attracts 100,000 pilgrims a year. 

Iona, Inner Hebrides, Scotland
Iona has been a centre of spirituality since Saint Columba established a monastery here in AD653. It now attracts visitors on religious and secular retreats. 

Glastonbury Tor, Somerset
Glastonbury attracts both Christians and non-believers. The town may be full of crystal shops but up on the Tor, it’s all about the view and King Arthur.

Turn to page 74 of April’s The Simple Things for more on Clare Gogerty’s look at modern pilgrimages.

More from the April issue:

Featured
Apr 2, 2021
Recipe: Hot Cross Bun Cakes
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 6, 2019
Recipe: Wild garlic soup
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 24, 2017
Escape: Rainy day adventures
Apr 24, 2017
Apr 24, 2017

More Escape inspiration: 

Featured
Camping Alamy.jpeg
May 17, 2025
Outdoors | Camping Truths
May 17, 2025
May 17, 2025
Guernsey The Grandmother, a neolithic statue at St Martins church, is often bedecked with floral tributes..jpeg
May 6, 2025
Folklore | Guernsey Superstitions
May 6, 2025
May 6, 2025
Brocante.jpeg
May 3, 2025
How to | Brocante Successfully
May 3, 2025
May 3, 2025
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags escape, issue 58, april, outing
Comment

Escape: A light-filled wooden cabin on Skye

Lottie Storey March 28, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: India Hobson and Magnus Edmondson experience a window on wildlife in Scotland

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SIM58.TIYK_Coral Beach HR-57.png
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SIM58.TIYK_Wildlifecroft Skye HR-60.png

Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 80 of the April issue for more of this Scottish adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

India Hobson and Magnus Edmondson are contributors to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. Their findings on travel, lifestyle and design are at haarkon.co.uk and on Instagram @haarkon_ 

 

More from the April issue:

Featured
Apr 2, 2021
Recipe: Hot Cross Bun Cakes
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 2, 2021
Apr 6, 2019
Recipe: Wild garlic soup
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 6, 2019
Apr 24, 2017
Escape: Rainy day adventures
Apr 24, 2017
Apr 24, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom travel: 

Featured
SIM64.TIYK_oldelectricshop_cafearea.png
Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
SIM63.TIYK_p7070131_36013247736_o.png
Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
Escape: A converted barn in Wales
Jun 18, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

 

In Escape Tags this is your kingdom, issue 58, april, scotland, escape
Comment

Escape: Shed heaven beside the sea

Lottie Storey March 10, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: SarahLou Francis stays in a farmhouse nestled in Devon's coastal hills

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Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 60 of the March issue for more of this seaside adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Sarah-Lou Francis specialises in storytelling photography (sarahloufrancis.com). She’s on Instagram @lapinblu, and also contributes to This is Your Kingdom.

 

More from the March issue:

Featured
Mar 21, 2017
March issue: One day left to buy!
Mar 21, 2017
Mar 21, 2017
Mar 19, 2017
Garden hacks: DIY seed tapes
Mar 19, 2017
Mar 19, 2017
Mar 17, 2017
How to stop procrastinating
Mar 17, 2017
Mar 17, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom travel:

Featured
SIM64.TIYK_oldelectricshop_cafearea.png
Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
SIM63.TIYK_p7070131_36013247736_o.png
Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
Escape: A converted barn in Wales
Jun 18, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 57, march, this is your kingdom, travel, devon
Comment

Escape: A simple, ancient cottage in Kent

Lottie Storey February 9, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Jeska Hearne stays in a 500-year-old, grade-II listed Tudor cottage

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SIM56.TIYK_The-Walled-Nursery-1.jpg
SIM56.TIYK_Sissinghurst-Castle-1.jpg
SIM56.TIYK_The-Milk-House.jpg
SIM56.TIYK_providence-cranbrook-interiors-13.jpg

Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things – turn to page 64 of the February issue for more of this Tudor adventure – and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Jeska Hearne is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk and co-founder of online lifestyle store thefuturekept.com. More of her photographs and stories can be found on her blog lobsterandswan.com and Instagram @lobsterandswan.

More from the February issue:

Featured
Mar 29, 2017
Competition: Win with Nature's Path Organic cereals
Mar 29, 2017
Mar 29, 2017
Feb 21, 2017
Make: Skin-boosting body butter
Feb 21, 2017
Feb 21, 2017
Unknown_jwret.jpg
Feb 20, 2017
Recipe: Feelgood fish fingers
Feb 20, 2017
Feb 20, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom posts:

Featured
SIM64.TIYK_oldelectricshop_cafearea.png
Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
SIM63.TIYK_p7070131_36013247736_o.png
Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
Escape: A converted barn in Wales
Jun 18, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

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In Escape Tags this is your kingdom, february, issue 56, travel
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Escape: Low-season romance

Lottie Storey January 16, 2017

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Lou Archell stays in a Georgian B&B in quiet and wintry Penzance

SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-3.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-4.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-12.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-16.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-26.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-32.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-33.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016-35.png SIM55.TIYK_Lou Archell littlegreenshed 2016.png

Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things - turn to page 66 of the January issue for more of this Cornish adventure - and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Lou Archell is a regular contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. Follow her blog at Littlegreenshedblog.co.uk and find her on Instagram as @littlegreenshed. 

 

More from the January issue:

Featured
Jan 24, 2017
Recipe: Raspberry biscuits with lemon coriander curd
Jan 24, 2017
Jan 24, 2017
Jan 22, 2017
Winter Skin Tonic
Jan 22, 2017
Jan 22, 2017
Jan 20, 2017
Recipe: DIY tortilla chips
Jan 20, 2017
Jan 20, 2017

More This is Your Kingdom posts:

Featured
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Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
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Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
Escape: A converted barn in Wales
Jun 18, 2017
Jun 18, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 55, january, this is your kingdom, travel, cornwall
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Christmas: Boxing day walks

Lottie Storey December 23, 2016

Cheek-chilling walks, daredevil dips or a day at the races, turn to page 74 of December’s The Simple Things for plenty of energetic ideas to persuade you from your sofa to make a day of it on the 26th

Read on for three Boxing Day walks with a twist.

Go with a guide

Joining a guided walking tour can bring a whole new dimension to your country ramble or parkland stroll. Check out the National Trust (nationaltrust.org.uk). Hinton Ampner in Hampshire,
is holding a four-mile tour around the estate led by the head gardener; at Bodiam Castle in East Sussex a guided walk also offers an exclusive preview of the castle interiors followed by a breakfast bap.

Take to the streets

Explore the urban landscape on your doorstep. You may think you’ve seen it all before, but have you? Stop to read plaques and signs, take the turns you usually pass by, and discover a new-found love for those familiar streets (see our feature on urban walks in October 2016, issue 52).

Set up a treasure hunt

It’s just not Christmas without a quiz. Add a bit of fun and healthy competition to your festive walk by setting up a Christmas- themed treasure hunt. The prize? The last of the mince
pies of course! 

 

More from the December issue:

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Nov 30, 2023
Christmas: Choosing the tree
Nov 30, 2023
Nov 30, 2023
Dec 25, 2021
Christmas crackers: How to wear a paper hat plus six awful cracker jokes
Dec 25, 2021
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Dec 24, 2021
Christmas recipe: Mulled white wine
Dec 24, 2021
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Christmas, Escape Tags issue 54, december, christmas, events
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Escape: Island Adventure

Lottie Storey November 29, 2016

An island adventure on Tresco, Laura Pashby holidays at a seaside cottage on the Isles of Scilly

SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-3.png SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-26.png SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-17.png SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-25.png SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-21.png SIM53.TIYK_laura-pashby-scillies-18.png

Our series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things - turn to page 64 of the November issue for more of this Cornish seaside adventure - and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Laura Pashby is a contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. She shares her photographs and snippets of her life on her blog circleofpinetrees.com. See more of her photographs on Instagram, @circleofpines

 

More from the November issue:

Featured
Nov 29, 2016
Escape: Island Adventure
Nov 29, 2016
Nov 29, 2016
Nov 21, 2016
Escape: British road movies
Nov 21, 2016
Nov 21, 2016
Nov 20, 2016
Fall asleep with a dream and wake up with a purpose
Nov 20, 2016
Nov 20, 2016

More This is Your Kingdom posts:

Featured
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Oct 23, 2017
Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
Oct 23, 2017
Oct 23, 2017
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Sep 12, 2017
Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 53, november, this is your kingdom, cornwall, isles of scilly
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Image: Alamy

Image: Alamy

Escape: British road movies

Lottie Storey November 21, 2016

They say life is a journey, not a destination. Turn to page 68 of November’s The Simple Things for a look at how to make motoring from A to B more of an adventure. Here, we pick four classic British road movies

If lagging behind Hollywood, which teems with cinematic hymns to the American highways from Two-Lane Blacktop to Thelma and Louise, Britain has produced a few great movies that have put our B-roads on the big screen.

The Open Road (1926) dir: Claude Friese-Greene
Made by a pioneering cinematographer using, then highly experimental, film stock, this recently restored groundbreaking travelogue presents a colour from-a- moving-car portrait of Britain from Land’s End to John O’Groats.

Genevieve (1953) dir: Henry Cornelius
This gentle British comedy classic, starring Kenneth More and Dinah Sheridan and replete with an infectious theme tune by the harmonica-virtuoso Larry Adler, finds two couples locked in an increasingly unsporting race from London to Brighton on the veteran car rally in order to settle a ‘friendly’ bet.

Withnail and I (1987) dir: Bruce Robinson
Infused with a similar end-of-the 1960s melancholia as Hunter S Thompson’s drug buddy American road epic Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Bruce Robinson’s much-loved and oft-quoted cult movie turns on the decision of two underemployed and over- imbibing actors to drive from the squalor of their Camden Town flat to a holiday cottage in the Cumbrian countryside in a clapped out Jaguar MK2.

Radio On (1979) dir: Chris Petit
Shot in a luminous black and white and featuring songs by Kraftwerk and Berlin-era David Bowie on its soundtrack, Chris Petit’s debut film is a meditative road movie that follows a London radio DJ as he journeys to Bristol in a temperamental old Rover. The journey takes us through a post-punk Britain poised between the aftermath of the Winter of Discontent and the arrival of Thatcherism, peopled by various waifs and strays – including Sting, who appears as an Eddie-Cochran-obsessed caravan-dwelling petrol pump attendant.

  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

 

 

 

More from the November issue:

Featured
Nov 29, 2016
Escape: Island Adventure
Nov 29, 2016
Nov 29, 2016
Nov 21, 2016
Escape: British road movies
Nov 21, 2016
Nov 21, 2016
Nov 20, 2016
Fall asleep with a dream and wake up with a purpose
Nov 20, 2016
Nov 20, 2016

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In Escape Tags issue 53, escape, films, film, movies, driving, road
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Escape: How to spot a lost river

Lottie Storey October 6, 2016

It's not all about Thermos flasks and hiking boots, a long walk through your nearest town or city can be as invigorating and enlightening as a country ramble. 

Turn to page 66 of October's The Simple Things for a closer look at discovering neighbourhood secrets on a good long urban walk, and read on for how to spot a lost river.

How to spot a lost river

In many large cities, rivers have been diverted and hidden underground to make way
for growing cities. You can still see traces of their path on the ground, if you know what to look for:

Stink pipes

Tall, thin poles with no wires attached. When Victorian sewers were built, often incorporating rivers, these allowed the release of potentially explosive gases.

Gushing water sounds

If you hear this beneath drains and manhole covers it’s a giveaway.

Roads that slope

They may echo the course of a river towards its outlet.

Confusing boundaries

Rivers were once used as natural delineations between one borough or district and the next. 

 

More from the October issue:

Featured
Oct 25, 2016
The tallest oak was once just a nut that held its ground
Oct 25, 2016
Oct 25, 2016
Oct 24, 2016
How to make a corn dolly
Oct 24, 2016
Oct 24, 2016
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Be a kitchen witch!
Oct 19, 2016
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May 17, 2025
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

  

In Escape Tags issue 52, october, walking, walks, City
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Escape: Sand, sea, surf

Lottie Storey July 25, 2016

See, do, stay, love the UK. This month: Lou Archell stays in a surf shack in Cornwall

SIM49.TIYK_morning beachlighter VG.jpg SIM49.TIYK_cafelighter VG.jpg SIM49.TIYK_building the fire2.jpg SIM49.TIYK_IMG_6258.jpg

Our regular travel series comes from online UK travel guide This is Your Kingdom, whose handpicked contributors explore favourite places, special finds and great goings on.

You can read about one we love each month in The Simple Things - turn to page 80 of the July issue for more of this Cornish adventure - and plenty of others at thisisyourkingdom.co.uk.

Lou Archell is a regular contributor to thisisyourkingdom.co.uk. Follow her blog at Littlegreenshedblog.co.uk and find her on Instagram as @littlegreenshed. 

 

More from the July issue:

Featured
Jul 25, 2016
Escape: Sand, sea, surf
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
The Simple Things letterpress print
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 15, 2016
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Jul 15, 2016
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Read more This is Your Kingdom posts:

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Escape | A secret 16th century apartment in Hay-on-Wye
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Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Escape | A rustic hideaway in Cornwall
Jul 10, 2017
Jul 10, 2017
Jun 21, 2017
Competition | Win a stay at Bude Hideaways in Cornwall with i-escape
Jun 21, 2017
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Jun 18, 2017
Escape: A converted barn in Wales
Jun 18, 2017
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Mar 28, 2017
Escape: A light-filled wooden cabin on Skye
Mar 28, 2017
Mar 28, 2017
Mar 10, 2017
Escape: Shed heaven beside the sea
Mar 10, 2017
Mar 10, 2017
Feb 9, 2017
Escape: A simple, ancient cottage in Kent
Feb 9, 2017
Feb 9, 2017
Jan 16, 2017
Escape: Low-season romance
Jan 16, 2017
Jan 16, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 49, july, this is your kingdom, escape
Comment

Listen: Sea songs playlist

Lottie Storey July 20, 2016

It’s time to pack a bucket and spade and head to the coast with our sea songs playlist!

Listen now 

 

More from the August issue:

Featured
Aug 27, 2016
Wellbeing: How to embrace idleness
Aug 27, 2016
Aug 27, 2016
Aug 18, 2016
Recipe: Raspberry, apricot and orange ice lollies
Aug 18, 2016
Aug 18, 2016
Aug 16, 2016
Competition: Win one of three natural skincare hampers from MOA worth £110
Aug 16, 2016
Aug 16, 2016

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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Think, Escape Tags issue 50, august, playlist, sea songs, school holiday ideas
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Image: Getty

Image: Getty

Escape: Caravan holidays

Lottie Storey July 14, 2016

A new view from your bedroom window but with home comforts all around you: a caravan holiday delivers the ideal combo of home and away 

Have you ever wondered about the appeal of a touring caravan? Then consider the freedom one offers. Not just the obvious freedom of the road, where you can journey spontaneously wherever and whenever fancy takes you, but the freedom to take your home comforts with you. Fancy a cup of tea? Pull over at a lay-by and put the kettle on. Suspicious of hotel bedlinen? Yours is all there tucked away in neat little cupboards, waiting. Worried that tea and biscuits might not be up to scratch in a B&B? You have tins of your favourites stowed away and ready for use. Miss your real home? Furnish your mobile one with customised cushions, curtains and bits and bobs.

Then there are all the benefits of the outdoors. Arrive on site, erect your awning and you can put up a deckchair, barbecue some sausages, let the children run free (and bring the dog) without wandering more than a few metres from your door. Try doing any of that outside a hotel room.

A caravan (and this includes the unfairly derided static caravan or mobile home) also offers the freedom to escape the workaday routine without going too wild. Instead of eating meals on the sofa in front of the TV, you can eat around a campfire beneath the stars. But no camping hardship here: proper plates, cutlery and glasses can be employed, not plastic cups and billycans. And rather than each family member being glued to their tablet, a pack of cards or a board game provides the evening’s entertainment. Really, what’s not to like about caravanning? 

The spirit of the sprite

The first caravan to tickle the fancy of the UK holidaymaker was the Alpine Sprite, above, a light, low-cost (£199) caravan made from tempered hardboard that could be towed behind the family car. It was the brainchild of designer Sam Alper* who in 1948, saw a gap in the market for a post-war leisure vehicle.

As the years went on, Alper developed different models. The model that still survives in vintage caravan sites and the odd front garden is the Sprite 400, which could be towed behind smaller cars, and the Sprite Cadet, launched in 1970

You can still pick up a vintage Sprite on eBay for between £500 and £1,000. 

 

Turn to page 56 of July's The Simple Things for more of Clare Gogerty's caravan feature.

 

More from the July issue:

Featured
Jul 25, 2016
Escape: Sand, sea, surf
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
The Simple Things letterpress print
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 15, 2016
Dogs in blankets with Laughing Dog
Jul 15, 2016
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Read more outdoor holiday posts:

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Escape | A hipster hideaway in London
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
Escape | A Welsh eco retreat with room to roam
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017
  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 49, july, camping, caravan, outdoors
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Escape: How to read water

Lottie Storey July 13, 2016

We can look at the same stretch of water every day and not see the same thing twice. How is it that bodies of water can change so much so often? Natural navigator Tristan Gooley solves some of the clues on streams and rivers 

  • What happens to a river after lots of rain depends whether it is ‘flashy’ or not. If surrounded by impervious rocks and soils like clay then rain can go from sky to river in a matter of hours but if the surrounding rock is porous, like chalk or limestone, then it can be months before the water that collects in underground aquifers (natural reservoirs) reaches the river. The clue is in the bridges: those in flashy river country will be higher and have supporting pillars to avoid being swept away by floodwaters.
     
  • Fancy a wild swim but don’t know the river well? Look for waterlillies, which are rooted to the bed; white ones like shallow, very slow and very clear water, so are more common in ponds but if you do see them on a river, you’re looking at pure, relatively undisturbed water no more than two metres deep. Yellow water lilies prefer deeper water (up to five metres) and will tolerate more flow. But neither can handle the turbulence boats create so they mean a river-traffic-free spot for a dip. 
     
  • Deciding where to ford a stream or river can be a tricky business. Moss can help as it only grows well on stable rocks not being moved by the water whereas algae can spring up temporarily. The old saying holds true: “a rolling stone gathers no moss”. As well as showing you where to put your feet, moss is less slippery than algae. If you do fall into fast-moving water, point your legs downstream as soon as possible to avoid hitting your head on something.
     
  • One of the loveliest things to see on a riverside walk is a kingfisher. Watch out for a branch or perch overlooking the river with white splashes on it. Kingfishers are territorial birds and once you’ve found its perch it’s just a matter of waiting before you see the bird itself. They are another sign that a river is in fine health.
     
  • If you’re crossing a bridge with small children there will inevitably be a demand to play pooh sticks. Depending on whether you want to let them win or not, take note of the following: look down and you’ll see that water flows faster in the middle of the channel than at the sides where there is more friction. So the best tactic is to throw your stick as close to the middle as possible.

Tristan’s latest book is How To Read Water: Clues, signs and patterns from puddle to the sea (Sceptre) 

 

Read more from the July issue:

Featured
Jul 25, 2016
Escape: Sand, sea, surf
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
The Simple Things letterpress print
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 15, 2016
Dogs in blankets with Laughing Dog
Jul 15, 2016
Jul 15, 2016

 

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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 49, july, water, summer, wild swimming
Comment
Image: Plain Pictures

Image: Plain Pictures

Rules of the game: Croquet

Lottie Storey July 12, 2016

Cunning and competitive but with no need to break a sweat, croquet is the slow summer game

“One of the most amusing things about croquet is how everyone plays to marginally different rules,” says Joe Jaques, the eighth generation of the family who popularised the game in the 1860s (see page 64 of July's The Simple Things). At the highest level, there’s Association Croquet; Golf Croquet is easier and widely played in many clubs, and then there’s Garden Croquet, a simplified form of Association Croquet. This does have official rules, although in practice, it’s likely to be as idiosyncratic as your family. “It’s not uncommon to see a couple who have grown up playing different rules,” continues Joe. “Depending on how competitive, argumentative or well-lubricated they are makes for an endlessly entertaining game.”

So here, for the sake of argument, are the simplified rules of garden croquet, according to the World Croquet Federation (read the full rules at croquet.org.uk):

THE AIM: Two sides compete to get their balls (either red and yellow or blue and black) to the peg by hitting them through the hoops with their mallets in the order shown, right.

THE KIT: four mallets, four balls, six hoops and a peg.

THE LAWN: A croquet lawn should ideally be 17.5m x 14m with the peg in the centre and hoops laid out as shown. If your garden is smaller, simply scale this down. THE SCORING: Each hoop ‘run’ or passed through scores one point, as does hitting the final peg; so the winner will be the first side to score 14 (one point per hoop and peg per ball).

 

 

HOW TO PLAY: The first side strikes one of their balls towards the first hoop. If the ball clears the first hoop, you may take another shot. If not, play passes to the other side. All four balls must be played in the first four turns. After that, each side can decide which of their balls to play. If your ball hits another ball, you earn two extra shots. This is really the fun of croquet – as Joe says, “it’s as much about disadvantaging your opponent as advancing your own game.” The first of your extra shots must be taken from where the knocked ball has ended up. Place your ball so it is touching the other ball and play your shot. The second is played from where your ball ends up. 

Turn to page 62 of July's The Simple Things for more croquet.

 

More from July's The Simple Things:

Featured
Jul 25, 2016
Escape: Sand, sea, surf
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 25, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
The Simple Things letterpress print
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 15, 2016
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well

Get hold of your copy of this month's The Simple Things - buy, download or subscribe

View the sampler here

In Escape Tags issue 49, july, games, garden, school holiday ideas
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  Buy ,  download  or  subscribe   See the sample of our latest issue  here   Buy a copy of our latest anthology:  A Year of Celebrations   Buy a copy of  Flourish 2 , our wellbeing bookazine  Listen to  our podcast  - Small Ways to Live Well
Feb 27, 2025
Feb 27, 2025

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The Simple Things is published by Iceberg Press

The Simple Things

Taking time to live well

We celebrate slowing down, enjoying what you have, making the most of where you live, enjoying the company of of friends and family, and feeding them well. We like to grow some of our own vegetables, visit local markets, rummage for vintage finds, and decorate our home with the plunder. We love being outdoors and enjoy the satisfaction that comes with a job well done.

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