Showing posts with label Norfolk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norfolk. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 August 2019

Beautiful Cromer #Norfolk

August 5th ~ 9th.  I went back to Cromer, where I used to live, for a few days.  Missing it already.....








I always loved going for walks early on summer mornings, 
when there is hardly anyone about.


If you've read my book Tipping Point, you might be interested to know that Shipden, where the virus first breaks out, is based on Cromer, which was originally called Shipden-juxta-Felbrigg.  More about its history here.




Love the narrow streets....

I made this plate in 2001 for Breakers Café's then-owner, when I lived there; four owners later, it's now older than some of the girls who work there 😁
The food is and always was first-rate, by the way! 

(It is called the Seagull café in Tipping Point ~ as for Lawrie and Gemma, who owned it... I admit a slight resemblance, apart from the fact that they're both alive and kicking 😉)




For four years I lived in a flat in the white-ish building at the end of this photo.  Lovely morning views :)








Saturday, 12 September 2015

All the SUNDAYS of my life...


'Millions long for immortality who don't know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon' ~ Susan Ertz

A Sunday afternoon on the island of La Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat

I got the idea for this post after reading one by Tom Angel: Every Day is like a Sunday...
.....and it got me thinking about the changing face of the day of rest; these are my experiences but I am sure many will share similar :)

My 1960s childhood Sundays meant a church service I thought would never end, forcing down Sunday lunch (I hated it!), a walk in the woods, David Copperfield on telly at about five-thirty (with tea on the coffee table in the sitting room, such a treat!), and that feeling of doom about school on Monday.  Brussel sprouts, long sermons and the dread of Monday aside, very nice ~ but it all went downhill when I mooched (in a particularly gauche fashion) out of childhood.  I don't think today's teenagers, with their short attention spans and need to be constantly entertained by iThis and iThat, would be able to deal with the long dark tea-time of the soul that was four o'clock on a winter Sunday afternoon in the 1970s :)

Photo by Max Dupain

The 'long dark tea time' phrase was nicked from Douglas Adams, of course.  It's perfect, isn't it?  I remember it so well, sitting upstairs in my bedroom, cold and dark outside, wondering what on earth to do with all those hours until bed time; I can't recall what my parents did on Sunday afternoons; not that they do any of these things now, but they certainly didn't go shopping, watch DVDs or go for a drink ~ televisual entertainment was a three channel affair and pubs/shops weren't open!  I think Dad did stuff in the garden and Mum in the kitchen.  As an older teenager, when I was at the stage of being in the house as little as possible, I can remember wandering around dark, wet streets with my friends (doubtless with our flared jeans dragging in the damp - I'm talking the mid 1970s!), stretching out a coffee in the only place that was open, whilst we waited for the pub to welcome us back at seven o'clock.

I like to think we were more subtle about it....
..
  ... which brings me onto the 1980s, which wasn't much different.  I loved going out for a drink or six in those days, but if you didn't get to the pub by one o'clock on a Sunday you couldn't get as pissed as you want to when you're in your twenties, because opening hours were a meagre noon until two pm.  During most of that decade I had a shop in Northampton town centre with Husband #1, and we lived above it; our 'local', The King Billy, was only twenty seconds walk away.


Something we used to do with a group of friends was the shared all day lunch with a theme - French Day, or American Day.  We'd each bring a course, and dress up appropriately.  Average calorie intake each ~ 4000 for the day.  Such days always resulted in increased sales of Andrews Liver Salts.  Great way to spend a Sunday, though, especially in the winter!

Sundays weren't always about self-indulgence, I hasten to add!  We used to do those indoor crafty/arty type fairs in which we sold the wares from our shop, or went for long saunters in places like Salcey Forest, which is in Northamptonshire. 


In the early 1990s I used to spend Sundays at the casino - I was living with a compulsive gambler!  Oh, those six hour long games of kalooki, the sessions round the blackjack table during which our holiday fund was lost to the turn of the card....  and it was some time during the 1990s that shops began to open on Sundays between 10 and 4, wasn't it?  Like many people, I was against it.  Not from the religious aspect (though I understand and respect that, of course!), but because it stopped Sunday being something special, a bit different.  

In the late 1990s I was an alternate weekend step-parent, which I loved; Saturday nights was spent under the duvets with Jonathan Creek and scary films, but Sundays meant the park, and gamesUm, and sometimes it would be a drink or two in a pub garden, many pubs being more family orientated by then.  The Crown and Cushion, on the way back from Abington Park, even had a children's play area, and my 11 year old stepsons were allowed into the pub to play pool with their father.

Delightful stepson David, now doing Sunday things with his own daughter!

In 2000 I moved to Cromer in Norfolk - and what would Sunday be without a walk on the beach, whatever the weather, calling into The Kings Head on the way back? I worked full time then, so Sunday was a wonderful day - always is if you live by the sea, regardless of the time of year!

Photos by Jackie Rivett

 Me and Kings Head chums Ema, Gail (landlady) and Fee, on a return visit in 2013!

Nowadays, of course, people go shopping, stay in the pub all day, go to work ~ Sunday is a lot like any other day, though it still has its own atmosphere, doesn't it?  There's something about the papers, the smell of the beef cooking ~ which often means opening the first bottle of red; not that I've done that for a few years now, as I'm married to someone who doesn't eat meat, I hardly drink, no longer get the paper and am usually writing!  Oh, and when I go to stay with my father I even accompany him to church... and enjoy it, too.  Mostly because I am fascinated by the history of the church (some parts of which were built in the 10th century), it has to be said!

 Daddy outside church

It's still a bit special, Sunday, isn't it?  Always will be....


Monday, 9 September 2013

One of my favourite places!

Lovely Cromer: the Gem of the Norfolk coast!  Written in September 2013 to go with the publication of WHAT IT TAKES which is set in Norfolk, but aside from that it's got lots of lovely Cromerian pictures ~ and memories. 

*What it Takes is on offer at just 99p/99c from 19~24 June*

I love Norfolk and find it hard not to set all my books there; with my latest one What It Takes, I succumbed once more. It's the most beautiful, peaceful place - most of it, anyway; maybe not Prince of Wales Road, Norwich, on a Saturday night, but I like the way it's remained very English, too, and a bit old-fashioned in the nicest possible way. I lived there for nine years and I miss it.

What It Takes is mostly set in a fictional village called Branningham and a fictional town called Aylsworth, but I've also written about Blakeney, Brancaster, Salthouse - and there is a whole chapter set in Cromer, where I used to live, as a tribute to it.


Mostly to amuse any of my readers who live there, but also for those who've read the book and might be interested, here's a run-down of the places mentioned in that chapter, so that they might become more real to you.

Welcome to Cromer!


Photo by Jackie Rivett


First of all, here's where I imagined the guest house to be - the one where Karen and Ava stayed.  See the bigger of the yellow coloured buildings?  I used to live in one of those flats!  Just at the bottom of the page you can see the beach.  It was lovely - instead of a water feature in my front garden I had the North Sea. 



And here's my sister, leaning on the window, so you can get a better idea of how 'in the sea' it was!


Here's a picture of my sister and me outside The Kings Head pub, in winter 2009 - it's where Karen sat in the beer garden with gorgeous sister Ava, wishing she turned heads, too:  "...she took her hoodie off to reveal a faded t-shirt that Karen knew she’d had for years; all the men in the courtyard sat there with their tongues hanging out."    It's my favourite pub in Cromer, was my local for the nine years I lived there, and felt like an extension of my living room at times - so often I'd nip in with my friend Kathryn for 'a quick one' and end up staying for hours - a great place with a really good atmosphere.  Happy days. I love the 'High Street' too - narrow and winding with six inch pavements!





....and here is The White Horse, where Karen met Gavin for her night of passion on the beach!!  I used to walk up that road to go to work every day.




..."Mrs Flowers at the guest house had recommended the café as the best in Cromer, and even Ava untied the leash on her calorie count..."   and here it is, Breakers Cafe, undoubtedly the best!



....with the welcoming staff to greet you - okay, yes, the owners are friends, and I worked there for a little while :)



Please note - there is no need for me to put the exact locations of any of these landmarks, as Cromer is roughly as big as Toy Town - you're never more than ten minutes walk away from anywhere, and usually less.

This is a shot of the old Victorian Hotel De Paris, which Karen could see as she sat on the pier, watching the world go by and drinking the coffee that she wished was a gin and tonic ~ 


".....she could see families relaxing on the right side of carefully situated windbreaks, lone walkers wandering along the soggy sand where sea met land, children splashing in the surf, joined by the occasional teenager in a bikini or mum wearing a t-shirt over a swimming costume to hide cellulite-ridden thighs..." 



To leave Cromer for a moment, this is The Dun Cow at nearby Salthouse, where Danny wanted to take Karen for their reunion day out ... that never happened.




"....he’d read a leaflet about the birds that populated the marshes while he was in the pub on his own, once, and he was rather proud of knowing about them.  He would tell Karen, point them out; spotting them might be something they could do together.  Hey, perhaps they might even become ‘twitchers’!  He laughed at the thought.  Nah, perhaps not... 

... and also nearby is Blakeney, where Karen went for that December walk with Sam, when suddenly everything became clear...



Photos by Jackie Rivett




I've been to Blakeney and Salthouse many times myself, as you can probably guess.


Back in Cromer, here's a lovely photo of the beach, another one taken by the very talented Jackie Rivett - on Christmas Day!  ....where Karen looked out to sea and "...it made her feel as though nothing else mattered, none of the silly things she worried about, as though she could just keep wandering out into that shallow, warm water, become part of the sea and the land and the sky, and never think about anything else again..."   That's how it used to make me feel, too!     




and another one by Jackie...




one more... I think this one is terrific!




On a far more down to earth note and slightly less picturesque note (!) - here is Budgen, where Karen bumped into her lover Gavin, the morning after the night before, as one tends to do...!  Down the road and just out of sight is the Kings Head pub.  
A friend of mine used to have one of the flats above - a perfect view for the switching on of the Christmas lights in the churchyard over the road...


.... where Karen sat, bemoaning her fate, before meeting Gavin!
  "...She stopped for a moment and wished she still smoked; Danny used to stop on benches to have a cigarette, when they were walking through town.  It was something to stop for, like people walking dogs instead of just going for a walk...."    You can walk up the church tower and look out from the top; it's the highest in East Anglia I believe.  The museum (on the right) is excellent, too.  


I hope you've enjoyed your little tour around Cromer, and if you've never been there, I hope you will one day.  In nine years, never a day went past when I didn't appreciate living there.


Me and my pal Sharon on the prom, 2009


Photo by Jackie Rivett