19.9.25

A wedding cake church and autumn showers


Autumn is truly here and although the swallows are still here, happily swooping around as if they have no intention of migrating, I don’t think we’ll be getting an Indian summer. After months of near drought conditions in the Midlands, rain has returned and the countryside is green again. The September sun provides a glorious contrast to the brooding clouds that bring in short, heavy showers, making the harvested landscape gently glow pale and golden.


In need of a little outing, I cycled out to investigate a nearby parish church, following the long, hedgerow lined road which eventually leads to the village.



It’s not been on my radar for visiting, despite being close to home, as it’s mostly built in the rather grand perpendicular style of the Medieval period.  I much prefer smaller, older churches, plain and humble, preferably with a fragment of surviving Anglo-Saxon stonework somewhere in the brickwork, or at the very least, something Norman (which might make me a church snob). This one has always reminded me of a lurid, over sized wedding cake. 



But here we are, with No.6 propped up against the red Shropshire sandstone walls. I wasn’t able to explore inside, as there is an A4 sheet of paper pinned to the (hundreds of years old) door, declaring that entry is temporarily forbidden due to there being the dual calamities of a wasp nest and a hornet’s nest inside.



That left the surrounding graveyard to investigate and it charmed me more than I had anticipated, with a jumbled mix of stones from the relatively humble to the more ornate, overgrown with long tangles of dried summer grass and dark ivy creeping over once important names. 




It would be the perfect setting for a gloomy, 1970s style children’s TV series, with a child ghost and some kind of awful, ancient secret lurking under a large, elaborately decorated tombstone.




I did have a lovely surprise though, when I spotted a mysterious gate in the back wall, with a tantalising glimpse into a formal garden. As some of you reading may know or remember, I adore topiary.



Beyond all this tangled, decaying splendour lay the immaculate grounds of the village ‘big house’. Presumably it provided a quick and private route to church services for the family once upon a time. Now it is owned by a private company offering outdoor pursuits, but the gardens are still beautifully maintained and I was able to enjoy a secret peek, enjoying the sight of immaculately sculpted trees and pristine lawns. I may have to return one day with a sketchbook.




Then a short shower began and I took refuge in the thick walled stone porch, chatting to the attendant who was greeting visitors with offers of cake and coffee. 



We discussed bell ringing and wasps for some time, until someone else arrived and the rain had passed. Time for home and lunch.



I cycled home quickly, using No.6’s handy pedal assist to get me swiftly up the hills, trying to beat the next wave of showers which were moving in swiftly from Wales. Here in this backwards look, you  can just see the church tower poking up with its tiny flag, nestling in the faraway green.



We got back just in time, with the first fat raindrops falling as I turned the key in the cottage door. Time for homemade red lentil soup, salty and smoky, with just a hint of warmth from a pinch of chilli flakes and a sprinkling of Worcestershire sauce.




6 comments:

Kathy said...

Nice to hear from you. Looks like you made it home just in time! Your soup looks so good. Kathy

Gillian said...

Those dark clouds look very threatening. Pleased you got back home in time x

Granny Sue said...

I can just see you sketching those topiary shrubs! A very pretty place,Gretel.

School on the Heath said...

Beautiful Shropshire. I visited there many many years ago, in the deep mid winter when the lambs were in the fields. It was bitterly cold but memorably beautiful.

Twiglet said...

I really love that iron gate photo Gretel - it makes me think a fabric collage with embroidered greenery would be a nice idea( haven't done any of that for a while) Good to hear you are out and about on your bike. The weather has been lovely over here for the last few days but we did get caught in the rain on Saturday. x x Jo 🌈

Mary, Windy Meadows Farm said...

Oh it looks like a lovely ride...the scenery is so gorgeous, and the church (minus the little intruders!) is so charming, It looks like it stepped right out of a mystery show: maybe Father Brown (a favorite for me.) And the secret garden, oh I would have been so tempted to slip inside (you know, "accidentally" of course, if I was caught! Truly, it looks so wonderful...I'm quite envious, sigh...