Thursday, 28 October 2010

Ride to Hudnall

Thursday, 28th October. The autumn tints are coming in fast as I rode to Hudnall, a village
near the Ashridge estate in Hertfordshire, through the village of Jockey End although there saw not a jockey or a horse to be seen, although grazing in a field the unexpected site of a
herd of llamas or various colours. I met and old friend there of many years who has recently had a new knee to replace an arthritic one. He has made a very fast recovery and is back riding his bike after just a few months. Not bad for an 81 year old! So if you think you are too old to enjoy the countryside and the autumn tints that's no reason not to get a bike!

Tuesday, 26 October 2010

Ayot ride


Ayot old church as I referred to in my last but one post. Ayot St Lawrence was the home of the playwright George Bernard Shaw, known as Shaw's Corner, now owned by the National Trust and is open to the public.

Thursday, 21 October 2010

This morning was the coldest in Hertfordshire this autumn with a widespread frost and ice on a few puddles.The trees are sheding their leaves like falling snow. Time to wrap up warm to go cycling but the rewards are the crisp air and the varied colours of the trees. The narrow lanes in Herts are relatively free from traffic and the countryside undulating, which gives a chance to work on the pedals and keep warm. Best sight of the morning was a field with shire horses and the foals grazing happily in the frosty grass. Only the quietness of cycling can give you this pleasure. Try it!

Sunday, 17 October 2010

Ride to Ayot St Lawrence

Today, Sunday, October 17, I had a bicyle ride to Ayot St Lawrence, a short distance from my home in Wheathampstead. Ayot is a well-known village where George Bernard Shaw, the playwright lived from 1906 to 1950. His house, known as Shaw's Corner, is a National Trust property and can be visited by the general public. Google Shaw's Corner to find details.
A unique feature in the garden in a small hut where Shaw composed his work, the hut being on a turntable so that he could follow the sun by moving the hut around. Autumn is coming in fast and the trees are tropping their leaves. A quite new feature in this part of Hertfordshire in the red kite population. It's nice to see this wonderful birds in flight in the early mornings when it is peaceful and a mist lingers over the countryside.

Tuesday, 12 October 2010