Powered By Blogger

Monday 27 July 2015

Hungerford Arcade Russell Has Arrived



Hungerford Arcade owners, Adrian and Hazel, managers, staff and stallholders send their congratulations and very best wishes to Arcade stallholders, Daniel and Sarah Cordory on the birth of their son Russell, weighing in at 7 pounds 13 ounces at 2.56 am on 26th July.



Mummy and baby doing very well. Daddy needs a sleep (after wetting the baby's head - of course!)

Rita

Friday 24 July 2015

Hungerford Arcade Jewellery Valuation Day, 25th July 2015



25th July 2015 Free Jewellery Valuation Day

10.00 am – 3.00 pm



Hungerford Arcade stallholder, Frances Jones is holding one of her very popular Jewellery Valuation Day’s here at the Arcade on Saturday, 25th July from 10.00 am to 3.00 pm. Frances is very well known for her expertise in jewellery and precious stones, i.e. diamonds, which are one of her specialities.  So, ladies and gentlemen, do come along and bring all your jewellery with you for your free valuation.

Rita

For all the latest news, go to our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com


Sunday 19 July 2015

At Hungerford Arcade, we just love animals and every now and again, a four legged friend comes in and introduces him/herself. Mr. Peanuts came in with his owner, Forge, and immediately wanted to make friends with everyone.  One customer totally fell in love with Mr. Peanuts (who was, of course, lapping it up).

Forge keeps biscuits in his pocket and gave a few of us one each to give to Mr. Peanuts.  You do not have to say anything to him.  Show him the treat and he will hold his leg up to shake your hand.  Then, when he has eaten the biscuit, he sits right up and waves a thank you.  He is an amazing boy and very polite.

Mr. Peanuts can come and visit us any time he likes - he can even bring Forge with him - if he would like. 
Rita

For all the latest news, read our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com






Hungerford Arcade J'adore - Hungerford

Phillip's cheese was certainly fragrant!
All the fresh fruit you could want
As I walked down Hungerford High Street to open up the Arcade this morning, I was met with the smell of freshly baked croissants, sizzling crepes and perfectly ripe summer fruits.  The High Street had been taken over by a bustling Continental street market and although I knew it was going to happen, I didn't expect it to be quite so big.  


Is this Hungerford or an Italian Piazza?
Every different type of food you can imagine, from cured meats, delicious stinky cheeses and oven fresh baguettes, to huge pans of paella, new potatoes in tomato sauce and chicken provencial.  All right on the doorstep of Hungerford Arcade.


It wouldn't be a French Market without fresh garlic 
The weather really turned out for the occasion too with the sun beating down like it also believed we were actually in the south of France! 


We have to thank Danni from the Town and Manor for putting it all together and we will let you all know when the next one will be.







Friday 17 July 2015

Friends of Hungerford Arcade: An evening with Ken Haddock

If you're looking for a good night out on Monday 20th July, look no further! Ken Haddock is a talented singer songwriter from Belfast. He is a good friend of Unit 47 stallholder, Philippa Harper. Philippa has arranged for Ken to play a live acoustic set at the New Greenham Arts Centre in Newbury and by all accounts, it's a night not to be missed!

Ken has been writing and performing for more than 15 years and is an institution in his home town of Belfast, Northern Ireland. His songs have been described by song-writing legend, Bruce Cockburn, as "Subtle and beautiful, delivered as the are with fine singing and guitar work."

An acoustic set will truly showcase Ken as a songwriter and singer. It promises to be a very special performance.

For tickets contact the Corn Exchange Box

Office on 0845 5218 218.

Thursday 16 July 2015

Hungerford Arcade Moonraker

Sophie, Adrian and Joe
Hungerford Arcade co-owner, Adrian Gilmour had a fun time when Joe and Sophie came into the shop to buy some china.  Joe and Sophie own Moonraker Canal Boats, “Five star cruising on the Kennet and Avon Canal” .  
The canal boats are fabulous and have wonderful names.  There is ‘Medusa’, ‘Moonbeam’, ‘Moondance’, ‘Moonshadow’, ‘Moonlight’ and new for this year is ‘Moonshine’.

We look forward to welcoming Joe and Sophie back to the Arcade in the near future.


For all the latest news, go to our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com

Hungerford Arcade is lucky in that we have a wide range of people visit us from all over the world.  This particular visitor, Frederick Bowerman drew my eye immediately, not only was he immaculately dressed and wearing lots of gold, but he was sporting the most fabulous pair of crocodile skin shoes that I have ever seen.  

DSCN0540Frederick is married to Councillor Joyce Bowerman who was the Deputy Mayor of Tameside from 2013 to 2014.  Frederick and Joyce live in the beautful countryside of Tameside, Lancashire and were in Hungerford enjoying a few days holiday.

It was great meeting you both (and the shoes!)
Rita

For all the latest news, go to our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com

Wednesday 8 July 2015

Hungerford Arcade -Walks Around Hungerford

We are very fortunate here at Hungerford Arcade to have a very skilled author whom most of you know, Stuart Miller-Osborne.  Stuart writes only for our blog and solely for your enjoyment.  Sit back with a nice cup of tea and enjoy a beautiful stroll in the English countryside.

Rita

We are lucky that we live in one of the most beautiful but least visited parts of Southern England. All around Hungerford there are some of the most picturesque landscapes, I believe, in the country.


Whilst the Lake District and the South Downs are much celebrated, (and so they should be) the areas on the West Berkshire/Wiltshire borders are often overlooked.  We have the soft gentle landscapes of Berkshire blending into the harsher Wiltshire landscapes and the effect is quite startling.


If one for instance, drove from Hungerford to Salisbury, a distance of about thirty miles, then as one left the town, they would be faced with the rolling West Berkshire/Wiltshire countryside. But, within let’s say fifteen miles, this would grow harsher and more barren as you entered the areas around Salisbury Plain.  


If you catch a train from Hungerford to Westbury, you would soon see the landscapes change especially after Pewsey.  You would pass the spectacular Westbury White Horse which is well worth a visit (at any time of the year;  my wife and I have visited the beast both in high summer and in the deep of winter (with a handy flask of scotch).


It is true we cheated by catching a train to Westbury and then walking the few miles to the horse. If we had tried to walk from Hungerford, then I would imagine that we would still be within our journey.  But this would not have been a problem to the most famous of all our poets, William Wordsworth (1770-1850) who De Quincey estimated had walked some 180,000 miles by the time he was sixty-five.


There is a lovely story about the poet who when living at Racedown (near Crewkerne), rode his horse to Lyme Regis but when returning, forgot he had a horse and walked back to Racedown which was a considerable distance away.  What the horse thought about it was not recorded, but I would imagine that it just spent a comfortable night in its stable reading a copy of Daniel Martin.

 

Looking at walking in antiquity, the Greeks and the Romans were never recorded as going on walking tours.

The French poet Pierre De Ronsard was noted as extolling the virtues of walking but only around wonderful gardens and the like.  


In years past the consideration of walking was seen as a social limitation. It meant that you could not afford to ride. 

 

The Grand Tours undertaken by the wealthy were done so in carriages. Walking was seen as a poor method of travel.  But gradually this began to change.



The philosopher, Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), was an early enthusiast who often walked considerable distances, making notes of any ideas that passed through his mind.


The ill-fated Marie Antionette (1755-1793), was another who favoured walking and often travelled by foot around the private parks attached to the royal residences at Versailles and Fontainebleau. She also favoured walks around the grounds of Le Petit Trianon a smallish chateau given to her by her husband.



Wordsworth and a friend (Robert Jones), undertook a walking tour on the continent in 1790 and this carried on throughout his long life and influenced all around him, including his sister, Dorothy and his fellow poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge.


When we think about walking today, I think that we would set a limit of about fifteen to twenty miles a day.  My record is thirty-two miles with my wife, but this was because we became lost due to the lack of a decent map and had to double back on ourselves (and yes, I still have not been forgiven).


Some people like to walk (or stroll) five or six miles whereas, others look to cover larger distances. Caron and I do not fall into any category, we just decide at the time and definitely do not ramble, walking in whatever we are wearing that day.


We take our time and are always on the lookout for things of interest.

I had spoken to people in pubs who, in some ways, think it is a route march and want to set themselves challenges.


I would like to walk to Bath in a day 

We were up before day break and have covered over fifty miles


These could have been the conversations heard. I remember bumping into one chap near Reculver in Kent who was obsessed in making it to Margate before the sun relaxed. He had walked from Sheppey. His poor wife/girlfriend just wanted, I believe, to have a cool glass of white wine and no more. I just hope she got her wish. She reminded me of a contemporary of Wordsworth, a lonely woman named Ellen Weeton (1776-1849), who led a rather sad life but derived an intense pleasure from walking.


In those days it was not seen fit for a woman to walk alone. But she did so noting that “I choose to go alone, in places unfrequented by those of my own species, that my thoughts, as well as my feet, may ramble without restraint”. In her Journal of a Governess (now almost impossible to find), she recounts that how at the age of thirty-five she walked 203 miles in just over three weeks on the Isle of Man. One must remember that much of this was hill and mountain walking. Once in London sightseeing, she covered 538 miles in eleven weeks which is some going to say the least. I often imagine passing the ghost of Ellen when out on a walk. She smiles and wishes me safe passage and I pass comment that, the walks in her Heaven must be just as nice as ours.

But away from this fancy what really has this to do with antiques?

Well if you are slightly older or have suffered an injury then a walking stick is a great idea, and that is one thing you will be able to find easily in the Arcade and other similar establishments. They are incredibly useful when those pesky nettles bar your path or if you are climbing up a steep slope or just for leaning on for a moments rest and contemplation.

 

Maps are really useful and again, whilst everything seems to be on an app these days, it is fun to spread a map out (the older the better) and wonder why you are so close to a place you were not really heading for. Again you can pick these up in the town. There are many walks around Hungerford and in the next few paragraphs I will give you some bite size chunks of information which might help or, more likely hinder you.


We have the lovely Kennet and Avon Canal running through the town and this is great for walking along and the towpath is very well cared for. If you approach the bridge from the town and turn right.  you can then walk to Kintbury which is about three miles away. Kintbury is an interesting village, not much changed with a lovely church (which serves cakes and tea in the summer). The village also has connections to Jane Austin.



Beyond that and about another seven miles away is Newbury, a rather nice although slightly modernised town which has a good shopping centre. Caron and I often walk to Newbury to shop and catch the train back. Beyond that there is Thatcham, Midgham and Aldermaston which are all interesting places. You could also visit the astonishing church at Theale a few miles away which is about ten minutes away from the canal. Then comes the unlovely Reading which I would avoid as it has been spoilt.





But back Hungerford if you turn to your left at the bridge, then about four miles down the canal path, there is the peaceful village of Bedwyn with its simple church and a rood screen which has connections with the family of Jane Seymour. All the time you are on the edge of the Savernake Forest. About one and a half miles from Bedwyn there is the Crofton Pumping Station which is well worth a visit and if you take the roman road (the one that leads away from the railway crossing up a chalk slope) you will soon find Wilton Windmill which was built in the 1820s but has been restored and is in working order (and often hosts open days).


If you carry on past Crofton then you will find the Bruce Tunnel and the remains of not one but two Savernake railway stations. One of which still retains the shell of a signal box and a water tower as well as the station building which is a private residence. If you carry on then you will find the Bruce Tunnel and the remains of not one but two Savernake railway stations. One of which still retains the shell of a signal box and a water tower as well as the station building which is a private residence. If you carry on then you will find Pewsey and then Devizes, but we are talking serious walking of fifteen to twenty miles.


As noted, Bedwyn is about four miles from Hungerford, Crofton another one and a half and the Bruce is, I would estimate, another two(ish) miles distant. Which in my view, is the limit of a day’s walk, especially if you are walking back.


If you walk over the canal bridge and survive crossing the Bath Road, then one can cross over the river bridge and head through Eddington there you will see St Saviours church on the left (closed in 1956, a private house since 1977) where the writer and poet Alfred Williams (1877-1930) was married in 1903.

 

 

I visit its graveyard quite often as it is incredibly peaceful and has views of Hungerford Common and is a pleasant place to write and think.


 

Another walk I would recommend it that to Littlecote House which is about two miles away. If you survive crossing the Bath Road, then one can cross the river bridge and head through Eddington.  There you will see St Saviours church on the left (closed in 1956, a private house since 1977) where the writer and poet Alfred Williams (1877-1930) was married in 1903.

 

I visit its graveyard quite often as it is incredibly peaceful and has views of Hungerford Common and is a pleasant place to write and think.


Another walk I would recommend it that to Littlecote House which is about two miles away. If you turn left at the T junction of the Bath Road and the Salisbury Road and then cross the road and follow the Swindon road (next to the old cottage to the right), then you will find Littlecote House which is well signposted. It is a great place to spend an afternoon with memorable gardens an a Elizabethan manor house. But be very careful when walking along this road as the pavement is very narrow and passing traffic does tend to speed by.   In my view, it is not suitable for children.


You could walk up the hill through Hungerford along the Salisbury Road towards Ham (of Bloomsbury Group fame), but I would not recommend it as a lot of this would be along the grass verges as there is no pavement and again, people's driving leaves a lot to be desired. Another walk is that to the nearby downs (which can be seen from the common).



 If you walk across the common towards Inkpen Gate and just follow the road, you will find yourself in the tiny village of Inkpen and beyond that there are the wonderful Downs where on a clear day, you can see for many many miles. It is a round trip of about ten to twelve miles and obviously a steep climb of about six hundred feet, but it is quite spectacular. This said, the roads although lightly used, are a challenge and one has to keep their wits and ears sharpened. For some reason, the standard of driving here seems better than on other walks, almost as if walkers and cyclists are expected to appear.

These are just a handful of the walks around our small town, so armed with a sturdy walking stick and an antique map, I challenge you to enjoy yourself as you explore the wonderful countryside of this area. And, if you do pass the ghost of Ellen, do pass on my regards and assure here that her book is at last beginning to find a bigger audience.


Happy Walking   

Stuart Miller-Osborne   


For all the latest news, read our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com



HUNGERFORD ARCADE BLOGS

As I said a few days ago, we now have our own Blogger on our website at www.hungerfordarcade.com 

We have decided to keep this Blog site live as we have so many people from around the world who read it.  In future, we will be publishing the same Blog on both sites so you do not have to worry if you did not want to change.

Thank you very much for reading our blogs, it means a great deal to us which is why we are going to keep this site.  You can now read all of our blogs past and present on both sites.
Rita

Hungerford Arcade Atwell Motor Museum MkI & MII Jaguar Show

Hungerford arcade is very proud to have The Friends of the Atwell Wilson Motor Museum as our friends.  They will be back at the Arcade in September with the West Berkshire Classic Vehicle Club for another great show.  Don't miss the Jags on Sunday, 12th July.  It will be an amazing show.
Rita



"The Friends of Atwell Wilson Motor Museum
Annual Classic Motor Show"

"CELEBRATING MKI & MKII JAGUARS"



SUNDAY, 12TH JULY
www.atwellwilson.org.uk


Wednesday 1 July 2015

Hungerford Arcade New Blog Spot on our New Website

Hungerford Arcade has used this Blogger for many years but now we have a new website, and our very own Blog spot. You can read all our blogs, old and new by clicking on this link which will take you directly to the Blog page. 
www.hungerfordarcade.com/blogs/

Whilst you are there, you might like to browse through our new website where you will find many interesting themes about the Arcade, our monthly Newsletter,  Hungerford and much more. Or, you can go there direct by clicking on this link

www.hungerfordarcade.com

We look forward to welcoming all our wonderful customers and readers, old and, new from the UK and around the world.