About Me

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Hi! I'm Eunice and I live in Bolton, Lancashire, with my two dogs Sophie and Sugar and an assortment of cats - well it used to be Sophie and Sugar, now it's Sophie and Poppie. I first began camping back in 1997 when my then partner took me to Anglesey for my birthday weekend. We slept in the back of the car - a hatchback - using the cushions off the settee at home as a mattress, and cooked and brewed up on a single burner camping stove. The site was good, the views were great, the weather fantastic and I was completely hooked. Following that weekend we got a two-man tent and some proper accessories and returned to Anglesey two weeks later, then over time we progressed to a three-man tent followed by an old trailer tent, then a new trailer tent, a campervan and finally a caravan. When my partner decided that the grass was greener on the other side of the street - literally - in April 2009 and I suddenly found myself alone after fifteen years, I decided there was no way I was going to give up camping and caravanning if I could cope on my own. This blog is the story of my travels, trials and tribulations since becoming a solo camper - I hope you like it

Thursday September 15th 2016 - Southwold & Walberswick Part 2 - Southwold Pier

The first thing I saw when I walked onto the pier was a sign on the back wall of the amusement arcade telling me how far it was to the end. The distance wasn't measured in feet, yards or metres as you would expect but in planks - I don't know how wide a plank is but I wasn't even going to start calculating that one.



Next was a notice with an arrow saying "This way to the home made under-the-pier show" but it was pointing along the pier itself - was whatever it was actually under the pier or was it further along? All was revealed when I got halfway along - housed in one of the single storey wooden buildings was a collection of some of the wackiest machines I've ever seen. I didn't know if they actually worked, and at £1 a time I wasn't going to try in case they didn't, but they certainly made me smile.


 





Next came something which, although still wacky, was actually useful. In the centre of the pier was a working clock made out of various bits of scrap copper; a nearby notice said it operated on the hour and half hour so I decided to wait to see what it did. Although water had been running down it constantly, when the half hour arrived it suddenly came to life; flowers appeared in the trough at the bottom, water filled the bathtub at the top which then overflowed to water the garden below, and the shorts on the two figures dropped down so they could both take a very long pee. It was one of the most unusual things I've seen for a while and was certainly very amusing.



When I finally got to the end of the pier I found one of those big brightly coloured cut-out picture things you can put your own face in; there was no way I was going to take a photo of myself with my face stuck in it but I still took a shot of it just to prove I'd walked the stated 940 planks along the pier from beginning to end.



The only other people at the end of the pier just then were a couple of guys who were fishing so I stayed for a few minutes to enjoy the relative peace and quiet with just the sound of the sea below me, then I made my way back to the beginning of the pier and set off back along the promenade on my return walk to Walberswick.



Thursday September 15th 2016 - Southwold & Walberswick

Another gloriously sunny day arrived and by 8am it was already too warm to stay in the tent so breakfast was made and eaten al fresco. I'd just cleared away my plate and mug and got the map book from the van when I was startled by a small young female deer which ran hell for leather straight past me and along the camping field, jumping into the crop field at the far end. Now I've seen rabbits on the camping field many times but that's the first time I've ever seen a deer and I could hardly believe what I'd just witnessed. 

A while later I got talking to the guy from the camper van in the corner of the field, he said he hadn't seen where the deer came from but it must have lost its bearings as it had spent a couple of minutes throwing itself at the end fence in an effort to escape before dashing past me to freedom at the other end of the field. I could only assume that it had come from the crop field in the first place, though I didn't think there were any deer in that vicinity - and if I hadn't been getting the map book from the van I might just have seen it in time to snap a photo of it.

After that little bit of excitement I tidied the tent, put the dogs in the van and I was ready for my day out. This time it was to be a visit to Southwold and Walberswick; it had been a few years since I was last there so it would be nice to go back for another look round. As I headed down the A12 towards Walberswick I began to wonder if somehow it had been moved as the drive there seemed to take longer than I remembered, but I got there eventually. I knew from experience that it was cheaper to park on the Walberswick side of the river than it was to park on the Southwold side - a very reasonable £3 for all day - so I left the van in the quayside car park and after a short walk along the nearby beach I got the rowing boat ferry across the river.



Over on the Southwold side a heat haze had cut down the long distance visibility but I could still see the lighthouse, St. Edmunds church tower and the tall chimney of Adnams brewery across the fields and with the camera on zoom I managed to get a reasonable shot of the view. Walking right to the end of the quay I turned onto the beach by the dunes and wandered along near the water's edge until I drew level with the first row of beach huts then headed for the beginning of the promenade. A path, quaintly named Primrose Alley, ran from behind the beach huts past a pleasant green with a couple of houses tucked in the corner and took me to the road leading the short distance into the small town centre. Up ahead the road split into two with the tiny market place set in the triangle, so once I'd run out of shops on one side I crossed to the other side and took the second road back to the promenade.


The heat haze had cleared by then and I was able to get some good shots overlooking the beach and the pier. There was nothing much beyond the pier itself, just a small boating lake and a cafe on the landward side of the road, both of which were closed, and the backs of a long row of beach huts on the seaward side, with much of the wide road being given over to car and coach parking. The road itself ended in a path which disappeared into oblivion across the heath to the north so I turned round there and retraced my steps back to the pier.


As I'd never actually been on Southwold pier before I decided to go and have a look. The entrance off the promenade was just the same as many pier entrances, with a large arcade full of various machines, a cafe and an ice cream kiosk. There was a good view looking back over the beach to the colourful beach huts so I snapped a shot of that then took a walk down to the far end to see what was down there - and it showed me some things so wacky and amusing that they really deserve a post of their own.