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Fri 29th August 2008

Moseley Folk Festival

Luckily, the weather was good today, the first day of the Moseley Folk Festival. The queues for the beer tent were huge - about 35 minutes the one time I went. Still, the festival is so small that you can get a good view of the stage from the beer queue. The act I liked most was: The Accidental %EXT% (not to be mixed up with The Accidentals), nice anti-folk like songs with good lyrics and vocals. I also caught the very last song of Lucy and the Caterpillar %EXT% - I want to be an Animal which sounded like great fun!

Mon 25th August 2008

Staithes

Staithes is a wonderfully picturesque seaside village not so far from Whitby and near to the highest place on the English coast. This means that it's a steep walk down the single street from the car park at the top of the cliff. The houses are painted in various bright colours and accessed by tiny meandering passageways and steps. There's a small but nice beach, and some excellent scenery.

Staithes from above

Staithes

I stopped off at the Seadrift Cafe on the harbour front for some of their "Cobble Cake" (as recommended by the owner of the B&B I stayed at) and it was great: moist and fragrant with spices. They also did good sandwiches and snacks.

Cobble Cake

Sun 24th August 2008

Whitby

The main streets of Whitby were heaving with lots of people, mostly from North Yorkshire, or the North East. I don't think I'd like to live somewhere with so many tourists, but the volume means there's plenty of cafes, winkle stalls and fish and chip shops about. I went for Fish and Chips, not at The Magpie - right in the busiest spot, with long long queues, but at a place the other side of the river which was listed as "One of the top 5 chip shops in the North of England" - the rather unlikely sounding "Mr Chips".

One of the things you don't want with good fish is to have it straight out of the fryer, it needs to rest for a while (and drain off any excess oil), and despite the queue of about 10 mins, the fish and chips were faultless. No wonder they're won a string of awards!

I also explored the town and went up to the Abbey, got some beautiful views of the town and harbour.

Whitby Harbour
Whitby Harbour

Whitby Houses
Whitby Houses

Whitby Abbey
Whitby Abbey

Sat 23rd August 2008

Whitby

I got the train and coach to Whitby - 4 hours, 13 mins which isn't too bad considering it's right up on the North East coast. There is a train station in Whitby, but it's only served from Middlesbrough which adds an hour to the journey - I guess you can blame Mr Beeching who decimated our railway system %EXT%.

I changed from train to coach at Malton, and the bus took me through various pretty North Yorkshire towns such as Pickering, Thornton-le-Dale and Goathland. There were quite a lot of people taking advantage of the free-bus pass for the over 60s, hopping on the first bus which came and seeing where it took them. The route went over the moors to Whitby, which were covered in purple heather - it's hard to believe just how purple they were!

Heather turns the moors to purple
Heather turns the moors to purple

As it's a Bank Holiday weekend I had problems finding a B&B, even a few weeks in advance, but after ringing about a dozen I found one with a cancellation - the Brunswick B&B %EXT%. I'd no idea what to expect, except that it was very central and about 3 mins from the coach stop. The place was lovely - the room was light and airy and the owner welcoming and friendly, the exact opposite of the stereotypical "seaside landlady". Breakfast included bread from an artisan bakery and wonderful home made fruit salad. I'd definitely recommend it.

Brunswick B&B
Brunswick B&B

Weds 20th August 2008

Birmingham Opera

This was the third Birmingham Opera's show I've seen, the others being at the ICC late last year and a great Don Giovanni at an old bank. The venue for King Ideomeneo tonight was an old rubber factory in Ladywood/Springhill.

When we arrived we were stickered with a dayglow horses head which marked us out as Trojan prisoners, and left to mill in a striking covered loading bay. After a few minutes, we moved inside the building and waited while being surveyed by what looked like prison guards. Suddenly, they made a move and grabbed one of the audience, dragging him off kicking and fighting. In fact, his struggles were so fierce that another audience member was almost knocked to the ground! Presumably the first guy was a "plant" but the other seemed quite supprised and put out - as you would be! Guards shouted at us and we crowded to squeeze through a narrow door into the main factory space.

Inside we found a large hill built out of earth, a grove of orange trees and an altar. On a small hill, a pair of giant mirrored walls formed the backdrop for the first aria. The story is that greek King Ideomeneo, returning from the wars, only survives by making a deal to sacrifice the first creature he sees on land to Poseidon. As luck would have it, that turns out to be his son. However, the King is not so keen to go along with his side of the bargain, which brings a run of bad luck for his kingdom.

For the first 50 minutes or so, we stood, and moved around the space, watching as the action moved around the large factory space. After this, the director took pity on us all and the cast/chorus of 100s handed out blankets and directed us to sit up on the large hill. The performers moved through and, at some points, sang within the audience which gave a real feeling of engagement.

Luckily, the performance was in English, and was relatively easy to follow. Had it been in German or Italian I'd have been pretty lost.

The set was stunning and the whole experience exciting and uplifting. If you ever get the chance to see Birmingham Opera perform, grab the tickets quickly as they sell out fast!

King Ideomeneo all at sea
King Ideomeneo all at sea

A whole tree!
A whole tree!

Small Hill
Small Hill

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See Also: Web Changes for other recent updates, All Blog Pages for previous blogs. You might also want to read other Birmingham Bloggers

This is my blogchalk: United Kingdom, West Midlands, Birmingham, Moseley
Topic attachments
I Attachment Action Size Date Who Comment
all_at_sea.jpgjpg all_at_sea.jpg manage 29 K 06 Sep 2008 - 12:32 Unknown User King Ideomeneo all at sea
brunswick_b_and_b.jpgjpg brunswick_b_and_b.jpg manage 26 K 06 Sep 2008 - 12:50 Unknown User Brunswick B&B
cobble_cake.jpgjpg cobble_cake.jpg manage 31 K 06 Sep 2008 - 14:29 Unknown User Cobble Cake
purple_hills2.jpgjpg purple_hills2.jpg manage 29 K 06 Sep 2008 - 13:04 Unknown User Heather turns the moors to purple
small_hill.jpgjpg small_hill.jpg manage 43 K 06 Sep 2008 - 12:32 Unknown User Small Hill
staithes_from_above.jpgjpg staithes_from_above.jpg manage 61 K 06 Sep 2008 - 14:30 Unknown User Staithes from above
staithes_garden_view.jpgjpg staithes_garden_view.jpg manage 66 K 06 Sep 2008 - 14:31 Unknown User Staithes
the_abbey.jpgjpg the_abbey.jpg manage 39 K 06 Sep 2008 - 13:50 Unknown User Whitby Abbey
tree.jpgjpg tree.jpg manage 53 K 06 Sep 2008 - 12:32 Unknown User A whole tree!
whitby_harbour.jpgjpg whitby_harbour.jpg manage 39 K 06 Sep 2008 - 13:50 Unknown User Whitby Harbour
whitby_houses.jpgjpg whitby_houses.jpg manage 37 K 06 Sep 2008 - 13:50 Unknown User Whitby Houses
Topic revision: r3 - 07 Sep 2008, andyp
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