Forty-six year old Christian happily negotiating the world with a wife and three daughters
Our Good Friday was marked with a boat trip and picnic over at Runnymede, on the Thames in Surrey.
Around 30 of us embarked on the Bray Princess at around 11am this morning to enjoy a 45-minute journey along the Thames in the warm spring sunshine. Many of those attending were children who attend the Friday Club at Parkside Christian Fellowship with the rest of the party being made up of young families and other associated hangers-on.
The mercury had already reached 17°C by the time we left home and we, like many in the party, decided to opt for shorts as an appropriate attire for the day.
We again made use of our National Trust membership and managed to park for free in their car-park close to the river at Runnymede.
Once aboard the Bray Princess we took our seats on the upper deck in the warm spring sunshine. Our journey first led us upstream to Old Windsor before we retraced our route, passing the boat’s mooring and headed on downstream to the crowded riverside haunt of Runnymede itself.
At Runnymede others trying to board were dissuaded from doing so by the Captain, ostensibly because of the ‘large party’ on board – and I thought we were well-behaved as well!
The journey was punctuated with frequent informative, if occasionally uncertain, interjections from our long-suffering pilot which occasionally added amusement to the trip.
Eventually we found ourselves back where our journey had begun and disembarked to find a suitable location for a picnic lunch.
We found an area offering some welcome shade from the relentless sun that continued to burn down from an azure sky, and settled down for lunch. This was followed by a kick around with a rugby ball and later still by the inevitable ice-cream.
After the last Cornetto had been consumed we headed home and later on, once the lawn had been cut, we had our first BBQ of the season. It was a great ending to a fun day in the sunshine.
Today was Sarah’s 36th birthday, and, given that it’s been a week since I last posted anything on here, it’s high time to mark such an auspicious occasion with a few well-chosen words!
Sarah decided to go up to Hughenden Manor for her birthday. We joined the National Trust back in October and, although we haven’t yet received our proper tickets yet (early days!), we really need to get out and about and make the membership worthwhile.
Hughenden Manor is only a twenty-minute drive from Maidenhead and is found just outside High Wycombe. It is the former home of Benjamin Disraeli who was Prime Minister back in the 1870s. Unfortunately I didn’t learn a great deal more about him during the day that I already knew – trying to keep three children entertained rather put the kybosh on any kind of historical learning!
We began by looking around the walled garden which is filled with all kinds of fruit and vegetables and makes our own efforts look somewhat feeble! It was made more interesting for kids by having model bugs to hunt for and tick off. We also ended up with some free pea seeds for completing the ‘bug hunt’ – something else for the vegetable plot!
The formal garden on the back lawn was also impressive and the girls enjoyed running around the various paths and looking at the statues.
Going around a Victorian house may not be your idea of fun when you’re only 8 months old, but Emily tolerated it well. Again, kids are well planned for with replica vintage toys being found in several of the rooms, which they are encouraged to play with.
During World War II the house was known as Hillside and was commandeered by the UK Air Ministry and used for planning bombing missions including the famous Dambusters raid. The basement of the house is set up with various wartime memorabilia and a replica room from the 1940s, which the girls found interesting.
We had a lovely picnic lunch in an orchard of apple trees most of which were planted over a hundred years ago.
Finally, after the ubiquitous visit to the shop and mandatory ice-creams we prepared to bid farewell to Hughenden – but only after the girls had explored a ‘den’ that they found in the extensive woodland.
Hughenden Manor is well worth a visit if you’re in the area and is suitable for all the family.
In the late afternoon we were able to get out without the children and went over for a potter around the shops at Marlow.
We ended up eating at Francesco’s, an Italian restaurant which also serves delicious desserts. Finally we enjoyed a short stroll along by the river before heading back home to collect the kids.
As we get older, it’s true that birthdays tend to lose something of their excitement and become something to be tolerated – but that doesn’t mean that they can’t still be enjoyable!
Happy birthday Sarah, hope you enjoyed today as much as I did!
x