Monday, 29 November 2021

A Halloween Surprise

 Last month, one of our human guardians' very kind friends sent us some free tickets for the Gloucestershire and Warwickshire Railway, but they had to be used before the end of October.  Once we got back from our boat trip, that didn't leave very much time but we decided to go on the last day of the month and Polar booked us into B&B at a nice pub so we wouldn't have a long, dark drive home afterwards.

Polar drove us down and we got to Toddington just in time for the first steam train of the day!  We were all so excited to see it - we love steam engines!
Polar and Grizzly found seats in the buffet and got themselves cups of tea to enjoy with their sandwiches on a nice long journey up to Broadway, the newest station.  We had a marvellous view of the countryside from our Bear Bag, as Polar put it on the table.
Soon we arrived at Broadway, which is quite a new station although there was an old station here when the line was still part of the main network and ran all the way from Bristol and Cheltenham to Honeybourne, Stratford and Birmingham.  You would never think this was a newly-built station, would you?
This is the end of the line for now, so the locomotive had to run round the train, which is always a good time to get photographs.  We looked after our table while Polar went out with her camera and Grizzly bought us some more tea.
Then we set off through lovely countryside on the longest part of our journey all the way to Cheltenham.  There are several little stations on the way including one that the train doesn't stop at.
Gotherington station is privately-owned and is someone's house now, but it still has lots of original features on the platform, like advertising signs and fire buckets, and a narrow-gauge railway in their garden!
The end of the line is now at Cheltenham Racecourse.  There was no horse-racing that day, so it was very quiet there.  Polar took some more photos of the loco running round and we watched from the window.
When we set off back to towards Toddington, we noticed the sky had turned rather stormy.  It was also rather windy, though we were nice a snug in our train.  We were having so much fun that we asked Grizzly if we could go all the way to Broadway again, and he agreed.
One of the things Polar pointed out to us was the ridges in many of the fields, which she explained went back to medieval times, when people farmed individual strips of land in large, communal fields before landowners "enclosed" it with hedgerows and fences.
When we came back to Toddington, we had a little look at the loco yard, where there were some old diesels and waggons.  We weren't able to go inside to see any of the other steam engines but maybe we'll visit again one day.
Before we left, we saw the diesel unit that was running as the other service that day.  It was very neat and, if it hadn't been the very last train of the day and not going any further, we might have enjoyed a little ride on it, so maybe we'll do that another day.
When we got to our B&B pub, there were candles everywhere.  We thought it was for Halloween but it wasn't - there was a power-cut as the stormy weather had brought down a power line!  Polar and Grizzly thought about going home, but decided to wait and see what would happen and luckily the power did come on again, though too late for a proper Sunday dinner.  But we all slept well and had a nice big breakfast in the morning, ready for another adventure which I will tell you about in my next post.

Sunday, 28 November 2021

Paws Around the Potteries - Five Bears at Trentham Gardens

 Ay up, everyone!  It's me, Hanley Bear, with another Paws Around the Potteries post and this one is about visiting Trentham Gardens late in the summer.

Trentham Gardens is one of our favourite places for an adventure as there is so much to see and do, especially if you're a small bear who loves climbing and running and playing in leaves.  We have most of our adventures in the woods around the lake, so today I thought I'd tell you about other fun things small bears can do at Trentham.
One of our favourite climbing trees is beside the River Trent and it's a big copper beech.  When the leaves are on the tree in the summer, we can climb the branches and sit on the boughs in the shade, and no-one can see us, but we can watch the people on the path or the ducks on the river, which is a proper river rather than just a stream by the time it gets here. 
There are big drifts of tall plants near our tree which grow in the spring and summer, flower in the summer and autumn and die down in the winter - Endon Bear says that makes them "perennials".  They are great for bear adventures!
Because the flower stalks are quite strong and there are lots of them close together, and because we are quite light small bears, Endon and I found we could sit on top of them.
So we invented "flower surfing", where we slide across the top of a clump of flowers until there's a gap. which we fall into - like getting "wiped out" doing sea surfing, but much safer and without swallowing seawater or seaweed or getting sand or gravel in our fur.
Even the bigger bears could do it where the flowers were dense enough!

The perennial beds are also brilliant places to play hide-and-seek, although we have to be very careful not to get lost.  That's where being bears and having a great sense of smell helps - we can always tell the right way to go to the cake and coffee shop!
On quiet days, we can also do flower surfing and hiding in the formal gardens, when there aren't too many other people about.  There are interesting plants to see here all year.  I like red and white flowers because those are my team's colours.
There are also the Trentham fairies to look out for.  Every time we visit, there seems to be an extra one, and they are getting more elaborate.  Some of them move in the breeze and a lot of them seem to like being near the water - there is even a mermaid fairy in one of the pools.
We love the woodland walks best as there are logs and stumps for climbing and sitting on, and flowers to see all year round in the woodland meadows - in fact, there are often more flowers when the leaves aren't on the trees.
The gardeners at Trentham usually leave trees than have fallen down or had to be cut down to decay naturally, to make homes for beetles and other creatures, although they might have to saw them into logs to make them safe.
This means there are always new stumps where we can try out our climbing skills or just sit in the sunshine.
Endon Bear likes to see what flowers are blooming in the woods, as he has a shady patch of our human guardian's front garden to look after and gets ideas of what they can grow from here.
One of my favourite places to explore is a willow tunnel that was part of a dragon sculpture.  It's easily big enough for human cubs to run around inside but makes a great bear den when there aren't any humans around.
We always say hello to the stag beetle sculptures too.  Real stag beetles are big, but not this big (fortunately), and we have never seen any, but there are supposed to be some in the woods here.
On warm days, Polar and Grizzly like to sit on the benches by the lake, and Grizzly sometimes has a nap.  We can talk to the fairies that live around here and watch the ducks, geese, grebes and cormorants until we decide it's time to have cake, when we'll wake Grizzly up and ask him to see if the teashop is open.
So that's a small bear's guide to Trentham Gardens.  I hope you have enjoyed reading about how bear-friendly it is and will come and visit one day.
We would love to show you around!