Sunday, January 28, 2018

CHESTER

DEVA VICTRIX BLUR
The logistics of sightseeing with young children can put a damper on this particular hoofer’s scattershot approach to visiting a new place. One needs to worry if the little fellows are tended to, their nappies dry, their bellies filled. I’m kind of a frantic ADD traveler when it comes to new places like the city of Chester and for me it's especially difficult if I have limited time. Janet has taught me to calm down a bit when visiting a new place. We take a tour and figure out where we would like to focus our exploring. That’s usually a good idea, and in the long run we experience more than if we (er, I) ran about like a headless chicken. Sadly though on this particular day trip we really had just a bit more than 4+ hours of parking lot time, a toddler and an infant in tow and the day was dreary and raining at times. So far much of this most recent trip to England has been all about balancing the kids on our knees, walking daily to the Sainsbury’s super market or trundling out to a pub for a beer, so no matter how short the trip was to Chester, it was a welcome diversion and a new experience for your humble chronicler.

So, the tourist city of Chester in the North West of England, not far from Liverpool and just over the border from Wales is 20 miles from our home base of Nantwich. It’s close enough to allow for short day trips and Janet had already been to this ancient city a couple of times before with the kids. On one of their visits they went to the Chester Zoo, which is one of the largest in the UK and the most-visited wildlife attraction in Britain. It was far too cold and dreary for a visit that day though and given the enormity of the zoo there really wasn’t time to enough to explore it all. 

The city started as a Roman fortress called Deva Victrix around 79 AD and became a major city over the ensuing years. The Roman ramparts protecting the fortress were eventually replaced by a defensive stone wall that still exists today and Chester is the best preserved walled city in England. After the English Civil War in the mid-1600s though the wall ceased to have a military function but was kept for leisure and recreation and is maintained to this day. It is perhaps the city’s main tourist attraction.
 
Christmas Tree Festival
Janet had already hiked some of the 2 mile stretch of wall in a previous visit, but because it was raining when we first arrived we decided to stop into the Chester Cathedral for their Christmas Tree Festival and hoped the rain would subside.

CHRISTMAS TREE FESTIVAL
Chester was a Roman stronghold and the site of the Chester Cathedral may have been a place for Christian worship since then. Typical of English cathedrals it has been modified over the years from its initial erection just after the Norman conquest of England. You remember that date 1066. All the major styles of medieval English architecture can be found at the cathedral. Services are held still, but the cathedral hosts events and concerts. As it was raining we scampered up from the parking lot, underneath Eastgate and its ornate clock, to the cathedral to take in the Christmas Tree Festival. Now in its 5th year the Cathedral’s cloisters were decorated with Christmas trees from area schools and businesses.
just below Eastgate

Unlike the Minster in York, where we visited a couple of summers ago, admission to the Chester Cathedral is free, although a donation is humbly requested.

We then strolled through the cathedral waiting out the rain. There was a cafeteria and, of course, a gift shop near the exit.

THE SECOND MOST PHOTOGRAPHED CLOCK IN ENGLAND
Eastgate is the original main entrance to the old Roman fortress of Deva Victrix. The entrance was once guarded by a tower, but after the English civil wars the medieval walls became obsolete for military use and the wall impeded traffic into the city. Thankfully the walls were not torn down, but Eastgate was replaced by an arch and in 1897 for Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee an ornate wrought-iron turret clock was constructed. It is said that the gold emblazoned timepiece is, after Big Ben, the most photographed in England.

Janet at Eastgate Chester
It was at Eastgate that we ascended the stairs to walk much of the wall. Somehow fitting at the foot of the stairs wedged in a little space is a donut shop. As we did not have that much time we did not purchase donuts or dawdle on the wall. I could have spent the entire allotted time strolling the wall and the sights it afforded, but we tripped along at a clipped pace, pausing only briefly to ogle the Cathedral or peer down onto the canal that flowed far below. We made it as far as Chester Racecourse, also known as the Roodee, and the oldest still in use in England, before fearing we’d run out of time and we left the wall and headed straight away into the city. 

WHAT’S BLACK AND WHITE AND ROWED?
Another attraction to Chester that we literally skipped through is the shopping area known as the Rows. The four main streets within the city walls are lined with picturesque black and white Tudor-style buildings. The unique system of shops at street level and covered walkways leading to more shops on the second floor supposedly dates from medieval times although the Black-and-white Revival is relatively new from the 1800’s. It was then that area architects covered the medieval facades with the current Tudor-inspired appearance. With their timbers painted black and the panels between painted white the buildings are strikingly gorgeous as if one had been dropped into a story-book setting. The rows still maintain old names like Shoemakers Row or Ironmongers Row, but the wares have changed to boutique shops, etc. Found mostly on the four main streets; Bridge, Eastgate, Watergate and partially Northgate that intersect at the St. Peter’s Church and the city’s High Cross; we marveled at the beautiful buildings. People milled around the open square before the church and the pedestrian mall taking advantage of the respite from the rain, enjoying street performers, but we could not dawdle. We had lunch waiting for us.
 
Chester Wall
We certainly could have spent much more time in this area. We did clamber up one flight to peer out onto the beautiful streets, but only for a moment before moving on to beer…

Part of the Rows Chester

I still have a flip phone but GPSMyCity.com/tours may aid me in shedding my Luddite ways just so I could download their app. On this visit we had no time to explore Chester, but their app turns a “smart” phone into a personal tour guide using a built-in GPS navigation system. And, because it works offline no data plan is needed when traveling abroad. They offer a black-and-white architectural tour of Chester.  At their website they list a number of other cities around the world.

Indeed, though Chester had been mentioned several times over the years as a destination I had dismissed it out of hand. I was wrong and this trip only whetted my appetite to return. There’s much to explore in Chester, including a boat trip on the canal.


BEER!
Well, time on the meter was ticking away and the boys needed to be fed (as well as the adults). With the rain beginning to fall again we ducked into Brewhouse and Kitchen on Love Street, just beyond the Eastgate entrance. A small English chain they were a microbrewery that had a healthy selection of other beers. The food was good and prices were reasonable, although their particular beers were just all right. Service was good and patient with our large group.  
CHESTER UK WALL








Monday, January 1, 2018

RESOLUTION

Some may feel that the start of a new year requires a clean slate and a resolve to begin some new endeavor, as if jump starting a life that had grown stagnant has to begin on January 1. Sure, purging old bad habits is good whenever it begins and if self-improvement needs a starter pistol day of reckoning like today then so be it.

Here at VFH central our resolutions remain firm year after year. They are really very simple and may sound rather bland and simplistic I know, but here they are: Allow love in your life, forgive past transgressions and laugh as often as possible. Nothing has to be so dreadfully serious that it has to ruin your day. Gosh we are only here for a finite amount of time in this glorious Garden of Eden and you might as well just go along for the ride!

Whether you travel near or far fair readers, travel well and cheaply!
love
Janet and Greg