On September 14, 1999, my husband and I embarked on our first ever trip to England. This trip was a milestone for me, having never been across the pond to Europe; I had only taken extensive road trips around the USA and Canada, and had been several times to the Bahamas in the Caribbean. It was late in life for me to be traveling abroad for the first time; I was 43 and Mike was 45.ย We left behind our children, ages 15, 8 and 6, with their grandparents for the first time.
I remember being afraid to venture to a non-English speaking country, so we chose England to be safe. When I look back on it now, I realize how unadventurous I was in every respect.ย I was afraid of flying, afraid to explore unfamiliar cultures, afraid to leave the kids behind.ย I wouldn’t even consider traveling until we had wills drawn up in case we should die. I was so cautious then.
I thought England would be much like America, so I was thrilled to find it was surprisingly different. It felt foreign, even exotic! I realized I could travel abroad, and the journey transformed me into a braver and less anxious traveler.ย I began almost as soon as I returned home to plan our next trip to France in 2003.
In Bath, we walked around the Roman Baths, at one time the most elegant resort in Britain. We stayed in bed and breakfasts with sumptuous breakfasts; we watched senior citizens lawn bowling.ย I ate rarebit.ย We went to the Circus and the Royal Crescent. We laughed our heads off at the Bizarre Bath Comedy Walk.ย We went to Glastonbury Abbey under gloomy skies.

Bath

Royal Crescent
In Wells, we found quintessential British homes and gardens and were moved to tears by evensong sung by a men and boys choir at Wells Cathedral.

Wells
In the Cotswolds, we had lunch in the Plaisterer’s Arms Pub, and ventured to Sudeley Castle, where we enjoyed boxwoods, topiary, a knot garden and the Queen’s Garden. We bought an Ordnance Map and walked through rolling hills dotted with sheep and pheasants, and traipsed across farms to the remains of a Roman Villa, including a mosaic floor in some woods near Winchcombe. We stopped in charming villages such as Stanton and Chipping Camden, with their thatched roof cottages and well-tended gardens.ย We walked from Bourton-on-the-Hill through sheep fields and cow pastures, over stiles, through gates abutting cattle grids, and past the incongruous “Indian Palace” of Sezincote Manor. Rye Farmhouse became the house of my dreams. We drove through picturesque villages such as Upper and Lower Slaughter and the overly touristy Bourton-on-the-Water. We were overwhelmed by the sprawling Blenheim Palace, too grandiose and pretentious for my taste.ย We met wax figures at Warwick Castle and imagined horrors in its torture chambers and dungeons.

Walk to Roman Villa

Chipping Camden
In Windermere, in the Lake District, we stayed in the boathouse at the gorgeous Langdale Chase Hotel, where Mike got a stomach flu. I picked my way through a million bones in kippers. I took English baths while drinking a pint or two. We visited Dove Cottage, Wordsworth’s early home, in Grasmere. We strolled through Rydal Water in search of Wordsworth, while the confused skies sprinkled, drizzled, poured, and periodically glowed with sunlight. We rode the Steamboat Gondola on Coniston Water. Near Keswick, we took a six-mile hike up Cat Bells and alongside Derwent Water.ย The sun popped out to give us magnificent views over the Lake District.ย We were awed by the scenery as we drove through Kirkstone Pass amidst rolling mountains, sheep pastures and stone fences, from Ambleside to Glennridding to Ullswater.

Cat Bells & Derwent Water

Cat Bells & Derwent Water
We drove east across Yorkshire Dales National Park and stopped in the atmospheric Fountains Abbey, where we found schoolchildren dressed in monk’s habits doing a monk reenactment.
Finally, we ended up in London. Our time in the capital was too short.ย We only had time for the Thames, St. Paul’s Cathedral,ย Hyde Park.ย We glimpsed Kensington Palace, stopped by Buckingham Palace, and delved into Westminster Abbey.ย We wandered through Notting Hill and the Travel Bookshop — the model for the bookshop in the movie Notting Hill.ย We marveled over tiny British cars and double-decker red buses.ย We mingled with the pigeons at Trafalgar Square. To top it all off, we enjoyed a play called Quartet at the Albery Theater after a dinner of spicy Indian food.
This trip marked a turning point in my life.ย My once sheltered and constrained life would become increasingly interspersed with travel.ย My nomadic side kicked in, and I sprouted an adventurous side. While during the first 43 years of my life I had only traveled to four countries, including my own, I have now, in the last 20 years, traveled to a total of 30, with return trips to several countries (France, China, Japan, Canada, Spain and Portugal).
As 1999 was before the digital days, I spent endless hours putting my photos into a scrapbook. I wrote a villanelle called: schoolchildren at abbey ruins. I also wrote a poem about Evensong at Wells Cathedral, which is scheduled to post on November 2. I loved creating something from our journey that would bring back happy reminders whenever I cared to revisit them.
Most importantly, this was the beginning of a more confident and adventurous me. ๐
ย ************************
โON RETURNING HOMEโ INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about returning home from one particular destination or, alternately, from a long journey encompassing many stops.ย How do you linger over your wanderings and create something from them?ย How have you changed? Did the place live up to its hype, or was it disappointing? Feel free to address any aspect of your journey and how it influences you upon your return. If you donโt have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.
For some ideas on this, you can check out the original post about this subject: on returning home.
While Iโm in Spain walking the Camino de Santiago from August 31 โ October 25, and then in Portugal from October 26 โ November 6, I kindly request that if you write a “returning home” piece, please simply link it to the appropriate post, this one or my next one as soon as it publishes.ย I will try my best to read your posts while Iโm on my journey, but I wonโt have a computer or the time or ability to add links to my posts.
My next “on returning home” post will be on Monday, October 1, 2018.
This will be an ongoing invitation on the first Monday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. ๐
I hope youโll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
the ~ wander.essence ~ community
I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.ย I promise, youโll be inspired!
- Atreyee, of Bespoke Traveler, wrote about what makes a place a home.
- Jim, of Memories & Thoughts, wrote an evocative piece about returning to the places he calls home,ย Albury and Molong, that hold physical, as well as reflective, memories.
Thanks to all of you who wrote “returning home” posts following intentions you set for yourself.ย ๐
What a lovely article, I very much enjoyed reading this post.
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Thank you so much! ๐
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Interesting to read of the birth of the wanderer, and that you kept a travel log well before blogging! That bit of you hasnโt changed.
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Thanks Anabel. It wasnโt much of a travelogue but it was a start, I suppose. I canโt believe I took me so long to venture away from the USA.
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Itโs a huge country with such a variety of landscapes – in that way, why would you need to? Of course, encountering other cultures is the real bonus.
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I agree. Itโs the different cultures I love, Anabel. ๐
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“My nomadic side kicked in”
Love it! Better late than never one could say, and boy have you made up for it since then. You managed to see an awful lot of England on your trip, did you and Mike hire a car then? And how wonderful to see a Cathy with black hair!!
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Yes we hired a car or as we say in the states, rented a car. I kept telling myself stay to the left. I loved driving on the narrow country roads!!!
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Hi Mike – lovely to hear from you! Do you mean it when you say you loved driving on our narrow roads? Actually on many of them there is no left or right, only a middle ๐
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You really got the hang of it quite well! ๐
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Yes we did, Jude, and Mike drove, as you saw from his comment. We packed in way too much in 10 days. Now I like to go a minimum of 2 weeks and see fewer destinations. Haha, I do miss my dark brown hair, but it was impossible to keep up with the white roots.
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I think your white hair is beautiful. Mine is going grey gradually and looks horrible! Hope you are doing OK ๐
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Thanks Jude. All is well. I thought I responded to this, but I donโt know if I did! You wouldnโt have liked todayโs hike – rough terrain and steep descents and lots of scree. I canโt believe I made it without injury!
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You are right, I wouldn’t have enjoyed that. Glad you made it without mishap. Hope the weather is staying fine for you.
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So far, weโve had rain forecast every day, but had only a few drops here and there. Iโve been lucky so far.
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What a lovely post and I’m so glad you kept a log as you did and could reference it for this blog. Doubly glad that it spurred you on to further excursions to Europe which I grow to love more and more as I get older. My days of long-haul travel are at an end I think but the European mainland is still within easy reach and I’m off to my favourite part, Sicily, in a few weeks time. I think your time on the Camino will also change you if the experiences of the friends who have done it are anything to go by.
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Sicily sounds wonderful, Mari. I hope you have a wonderful trip! I hope the Camino will be transformative. Thank you for your comment. ๐
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So enjoyed this look into how the travel bug struck you.
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Thanks so much. It took so long for me! ๐
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What a lovely keepsake of your first overseas adventure. Beautifully done! You werenโt so late compared to my first time abroad (other than Canada): I was 51…and 18 years later Iโm still going. As they say, โKeep on truckinโโ ๐
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I like it when we discover our adventurous selves late in life, Vivian! ๐ Thanks so much. โจ๐๐ปโจ
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What a lovely, lovely post, Cathy! I was ambling around with you there, to many places I’ve been myself, and a few I haven’t. ๐ ๐ I’ll think of you whenever I pass by Fountain’s Abbey in future. And I still eat Welsh rarebit sometimes, with Worcester sauce. ๐ If ever you come to pack up house, Cathy, you’ll have a job and a half with all those journals. They’re brilliant. God speed, hon!
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Thanks Jo! That was back in the day before digital photos, when scrapbooking was all the rage. Now itโs all digital for me! ๐
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Hiya darlin! How’s it going? ๐
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Great Jo! Today wasnโt as exciting as the first two days over the Pyrenees, and it was quite grueling without the payoff of fabulous views. But all is good so far! Thanks! xx
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Good to know, darlin! Cheering you on! ๐ ๐
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Thanks Jo!
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You’ve certainly made up for lost time since then, Cathy.
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I guess I have, Carol. Life is certainly an adventure!
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I’m glad you enjoyed our little country and it spurred you on the Great Things!
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Me too! Thanks Jemima. ๐
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I’m pleased the ‘Exotic’ little England was a changing point for you ๐
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To me, it was wonderfully exotic, Gilly. So it was the perfect launch to our European travels!
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