4 Comments CherryPie on Nov 28th 2016
For this is the message that ye heard from the beginning, that we should love one another.
1 John 3:11 (KJV)
12 Comments CherryPie on Nov 27th 2016
…when foggy was the weather
The Saturday jaunt to visit my Aunt went well and as you can see we were treated to some fantastic scenes on our outward journey. The SatNav took us on the route that skims past Jodrell Bank which is normally a spectacular sight. Today, however the radio telescope was shrouded by fog and invisible (or beamed up by aliens…).
On arrival at my aunt’s we exchanged Christmas presents then chatted for a while before heading off for a carvery lunch at The Sheldon Arms. After lunch we returned to my Aunt’s house and chatted some more before preparing tea, which after yesterday’s dramas was well received.
10 Comments CherryPie on Nov 26th 2016
This evening, in preparation for a Saturday jaunt to visit my Aunt for lunch in one of her local pubs followed by a traditional English tea with sandwiches and cakes Mr C went shopping for the ingredients for tea. When he got home he placed the some of these ingredients on the working top ready pack in the morning.
As I was cooking this evening’s dinner I noticed that one of the packs of cakes said ‘Best Before 21 Nov’. I did a double take!! It is the 25th today… After dinner we took them back to Tesco for a refund. Mr C sorted out the refund whilst I went on a cake hunt. I found the same cakes with a better expiry date a few days hence. I also picked up a box of French Fancies to add variety to the cake selection.
It was only after I left the shop that I thought to look at the expiry date on the French Fancies… I was less than impressed to see ‘Best Before 25 Nov’. Usually I religiously check the dates on food items to make sure they will last until I need them. On this occasion I didn’t, I did not expect long life cakes to be out of date before or the day after I have bought them. I don’t buy cakes often but next time I do I will be sure to check the date.
This is the latest in several shopping issues we have had in more than one branch of Tesco in the last few weeks.
6 Comments CherryPie on Nov 26th 2016
St Swithun is the Saxon patron saint of Winchester Cathedral. Before the reformation his bones were displayed in a reliquary within the Benedictine Monastery. The reliquary and shrine to St Swithun was destroyed in 1538 by the commissioners of King Henry VIII.
The life of St Swithun, an Anglo-Saxon bishop, is rich in legend. A century after his death in 863, he was chosen as patron saint for the Cathedral’s Benedictine monastery. His bones, housed in a splendid reliquary, became famed for their healing powers. His cult lasted until the Reformation, when all traces of his shrine were swept away.
Who was St Swithun?
The story of St Swithun, the Cathedral’s much-loved Saxon patron saint, combines a handful of hard facts with many legends.
The facts are that he was born in Winchester around 800, became counsellor to the Saxon kings Egbert and Ethelwulf, and was Bishop of Winchester for the last 10 years of his life.
When he died in 863, he was buried in front of the west door of the Saxon Old Minster – you see its outlines traced in brick next to the Norman Cathedral. Here he rested for over a hundred years.
How did he become famous?
When Aethelwold, the reforming Bishop of Winchester, set up a new community Benedictine monks at Old Minster around 964, he decided they needed a new, purpose-made patron saint.
Bishop Swithun’s bones were dug up and placed them in a precious reliquary inside the building, given by King Edgar – an act later seen as against the saint’s wishes.
In the 11th century, Swithun’s relics were on the move again – this time, into the huge new Cathedral built by the Norman invaders. His Anglo-Saxon reliquary was carried with great ceremony to its new position behind the high altar, where it stayed until 1450.
His tomb became a major site for pilgrims, many seeking to be healed from illness. A short tunnel (the Holy Hole) allowed them to crawl right under his shrine, as close as possible to his miraculous healing powers.
In 1476, a new, even larger shrine was inaugurated at the far end of the building. It must have been a striking sight, festooned with gifts of silver, gold and jewels offered by grateful pilgrims.
What legends are told about him?
One legend claims that Swithun tutored the young Alfred the Great. Another says is that he built the first stone bridge over the River Itchen that runs through Winchester.
His most famous miracle tells of a simple act of human kindness to a poor woman. When crossing the bridge, she was jostled and dropped her basket of eggs. The saint took pity on her – and made her broken eggs whole.
One source claims that when Swithun died, he asked to be buried out of doors ‘where the feet of ordinary men could pass over him.’
This, and a possible mistranslation of a medieval text, may have given rise to the story that when the saint’s bones were moved inside the Old Minster on his feast day, 15 July 971, a terrible storm broke out, lasting for 40 days and nights.
This is the basis of the popular belief that if it rains on 15 July, it will rain for 40 days. Sadly, this claim has no basis in fact.
What happened to his shrine?
The cult of St Swithun and his shrine came to an abrupt end during the Reformation, when King Henry VIII seized control of the Catholic Church in England, and declared himself head of the Church of England.
On 21 September 1538, under cover of darkness at 3am in the morning, the king’s commissioners smashed it apart, and stole all the valuables. Three years later, a workman stopped up the Holy Hole.
Nothing remains of his once great shrine today, but you can see a modern memorial that marks the spot.
WHATEVER
PARTAKES OF
GOD IS SAFE IN GOD
ALL THAT COULD PERISH OF
+SAINT SWITHUN+
BEING ENSHRINED WITHIN THIS
PLACE AND THROUGHOUT MANY AGES
HALLOWED BY THE VENERATION AND
HONOURED BY THE GIFTS OF THE FAITHFUL
PILGRIMS FROM MANY LANDS WAS BY A LATER
AGE DESTROYED + NONE COULD DESTROY HIS GLORY
20 Comments CherryPie on Nov 22nd 2016
As we made our way to the Mary Rose museum featured in Saturday’s blog post we passed HMS Victory and were surprised to see that she was sporting different colours than we had seen on our previous visit. Initially we wondered if she was in the middle of being repainted and what we were seeing was the undercoat. It was only when we came out of the Mary Rose museum that I noticed a sign that explained what we saw was her new paint scheme.
Hidden Layers
We have implemented a historically accurate re-painting of HMS Victory. For the first time, visitors can see the ship in her true colours – exactly as she appeared at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.
Several hundred paint samples were taken from various locations across the ship and in some places they uncovered 72 layers of paint!
Careful research has shown that Victory was painted externally in pale yellow and dark gray at the time of her famous victory. It would have been the Captain, Thomas Hardy, Nelson’s trusted right-hand man, who was responsible for the painting of the ship.*
In addition to the new paint scheme HMS Victory is undergoing an extensive conservation programme.
A Battle Against Time
Lord Nelson’s flagship HMS Victory is the world’s oldest commissioned warship and famous for playing a crucial role at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, a naval battle which contributed to the defeat of Napoleon in 1815.
The ship is currently undergoing an extensive multi-million pound conservation programme to defend her against the ravages of time. And so a new battle begins…
The conservation project encompasses £27 million of work to be completed over the next 15 years. All the external hull planking will be replaced and the historic fabric of the ship will be stabilised with a state-of-the-art support system.
Every mast will be repaired for the first time in 125 years. The upper sections of all three masts have already been removed. This includes 20 miles of associated rigging and 768 wooden blocks, some of which are 100 years old.*
*Information from signboards next to HMS Victory
12 Comments CherryPie on Nov 21st 2016




























