Saturday 10 April 2021

HRH, Peter Rabbit and glorious Lake District countryside

Clip from a video of the Buckingham Palace press reception
In June 2009 I had the pleasure (while editor of TTN Middle East Magazine) of being invited by VisitBritain and British Airways to tour the UK. What an eye opener it was to be a tourist in a country I thought I knew well. 
The highlight was to briefly chat to and shake hands with His Royal Highness, Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh, at a press reception in Buckingham Palace. It was part of his 88th birthday engagements and among the 22,191 solo engagements (according to the BBC) he attended during his lifetime.
Since his sad passing last month (9 April 2021) I thought I would revisit that wonderful experience and tour.

Some of the articles..

BEATRIX Potter, creator of the Peter Rabbit children’s stories, was an active environmentalist long before the term became fashionable.
She lived in the UK’s Lake District, a rural area in northwest England most famous for its lakes and mountains, and its associations with poet William Wordsworth and of course Potter. She had a deep concern for the preservation of the landscape and traditional fell farming here, so much so that she
Lake District and Beatrix Potter's home


bought up as much land as possible to ensure it remained unspoiled. Also a farmer of the Lake District’s own curious breed of Herdwick sheep, when she died in 1943 she left 14 farms and 4,000 acres of land to the National Trust (a charity independent of government), which were tenanted out to local people
dedicated to traditional farming.
Now her land lies within the Lake District National Park, a beautiful region of spectacular lakes and mountains and vista after vista of rolling green countryside, well stocked with quaint hotels, holiday homes, campsites, bed and breakfasts.
People from this area rely heavily on tourism, so there are thousands of tour options on offer in the Lake District.
A typical tour for a Beatrix Potter fan would be loosely based around the following:
A must is to be armed with a knowledgeable guide, such as those from Mountain Goat who negotiate mini coaches skillfully through precarious narrow one way roads and deliver tourists safely at the other end.
Another must is to see Hill Top, the 17th century house where Beatrix Potter wrote many of her famous children’s stories. The house has been left as it was in her time; the cottage garden contains the same unconventional mix of flowers, herbs, fruit and vegetables.
En route is the Tower Bank Arms pub, which featured in her story The Tales of Jemima Puddleduck. Accommodation is available here – for a twin bedroom or a double room en suite it costs £83 per night per room including breakfast, and from November 1 to December 17 the rate is £55 per room per night.
The higgledy-piggledy village of Hawkshead is worth stopping at, and for a peaceful gentle walk there is a scenic lake called Tarn Hows. A bed and breakfast, Yew Tree Farm, which was bought by Potter, featured the 2006 movie Miss Potter, based on Potter’s life.
But there’s more to the Lake District than Beatrix Potter. It has 10 lakes set in mountains and valleys to explore by foot, car or bike; 4,000 year old ruins plus the Hardknott Roman Fort, the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway, a miniature steam railway at kept alive by ardent ferroequinologists: trains run daily from March 21 to November 1, but are also open most winter weekends, and throughout the Christmas holidays and February half term.
Muncaster Castle's owner 
Not far from here are some of the Lake District’s many stately homes, which are either half open (as the owners still reside there), or completely given over for public perusal. The impressive historic houses of Holker Hall in Cark-in-Cartmel and the 14th Century Levens Hall and are all stuffed with history, but no more so than Muncaster Castle, which is also, according to its owner Patrick Gordon Duff-Pennington (who could well be attending to the rhododendrons when you visit), home to several ghosts. Not surprising really, in a castle that has housed the Pennington family since 1208. In fact ghost sits are available to visitors, where about six people (over 17 years) can stay overnight in the Tapestry Room and hear – and possibly see – the legends of Muncaster. Costs range from £425 to £495 per group.
Then there is the Lake District food – sticky toffee pudding, Grasmere gingerbread and Flookburgh shrimps are among the favourite and famous gastronomic delights. Roll on summer holidays.

by Cheryl Mandy

UAE visitors big spenders in UK

VISITOR numbers from the UAE to the UK are increasing along with their spending, making them the second biggest spenders in the entire Asia Pacific Middle East and Africa (APMEA) region, according to executives with Britain’s Tourist Authority VisitBritain.
Since 2000, there has been a 95 per cent growth in travel to the UK from the UAE, and spending there showed a 24 per cent growth in 2008 over 2007. In 2008, some 232,000 UAE based travellers to the UK spent £289 million ($477 million). Those provisional 2008 figures represent a significant jump over 2007 figures which account for 187,000 UAE visitors spending £189 million ($312 million).
“UAE travellers to the UK have more to see and do than ever before, and now it’s even more affordable, so we are not at all surprised to see UAE visitor numbers and related spend continuing to climb,” said Carol Maddison, VisitBritain’s marketing manager, UAE.
So what is there to do this summer in the UK? Besides London’s many free art galleries, street markets, ancient traditions (such as changing of the guards at Buckingham Palace), famous squares and historical buildings, there are the traditional sights such as the Houses of Parliament, London Eye, Big Ben and countless more. To my mind, there are some Simply Must Do’s in the capital:
A London show: whatever floats your boat, there is something for everyone practically every night of the year. If Billy Elliott is anything to go by, the theatre experience in London must rate the best in the world. The talent of even London’s youngest performers is simply astounding. The late booking websites and the half-price ticket office in Leicester Square are worth checking out if you don’t have a show preference.
Buckingham Palace tour: The summer opening of the State Rooms at the palace is from July 26 to September 30 when the Queen moves to her summer residence of Balmoral in Scotland. Admission is by timed ticket, and prices are £16.50 for adults. Concessions are available. Every year there is a special exhibition and this year marks the 60th anniversary of the formation of the Commonwealth. The exhibition will include over 100 gifts, some quite unusual, presented to the Queen who, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, has made over 170 official visits to Commonwealth countries. 
Afternoon tea options: An afternoon tea of cakes, pastries, scones and sandwiches plus 30 tea blends is available from £33 at the five star Langham Hotel in Regent Street. Refined elegance dating back to 1865 welcomes the guest that enters the grand lobby emanating a charming subtle ginger and lily scent which continues throughout the hotel.
Afternoon tea selections start at £23.50 at The deVille Restaurant of the Mandeville Hotel five minutes walk from Selfridges, and include a special tea exclusively for men. Gone are the cucumber sandwiches - replaced with roast beef and a gentleman’s relish – plus chicken satays, Earl grey tea, a choice of fine whiskies and ‘hearty’ chocolate brownies.
Recently refurbished at a cost of £15 million, the shocking pink or green seats of the cocktail bar, its pseudo Victorian paintings and the cerise walls sporting black and white photographs of Audrey Hepburn among others lining the route to the restaurant toilet all quirkily gel into a highly stylish hotel.
Experience London life: at Covent Garden where buskers, mime artists, opera singers, jazz musicians all compete for a few pennies in the cobbled streets. The restaurant choice is endless, but for a really authentic Indian meal try Masala Zone which this summer does a great lunch and pre-6.30pm menu at £8.50 for two courses. The food is completely nutritionally balanced, healthy and fresh, representing dishes from every state in India, all served under a curious canopy of colourful puppets from Rajasthan. Halal and special meals for children are served here.
A guided walk: London Walks, winner of a recent tourism award, provides a variety of guided walks throughout the city, an absolutely Must Do for anyone wanting to learn more about the its history. Why the English call doctors ‘quacks’ and the toilet a ‘loo’ plus the horrific conditions during the plague and the Great Fire of London following it in 1666 are all fascinatingly brought to life. Visitors walk past the modern building where Cruella de Ville had her office in the movie 101 Dalmatians, and tread upon the cobbled streets of Diagon Alley of the Harry Potter films.

by Cheryl Mandy