Friday, October 5, 2012

Cross the road and continue to avoid gate in the hedge on the right. You can easily recognize an ea

16 Amersham - Chalfont St. Giles Chalfont & Latimer by 'Patrick walks London
Leave the station
through the main entrance Amersham and down the access road to the main road where it passes under the railway. Cross the line and turn right after about an easement along the foot of the embankment and back into the forest. Just before you reach the top, turn left on one of two paths shown through the trees. motherhood prayer
Along the ridge which at first along a street, motherhood prayer then down through the woods on a path paved. One goes to the left through the trees to the edge of the field and find the path paved by turning right along the wood. The latter route offers views more.
The paved path leads you to the church of Old Amersham. The city is old (it was the domain of the Queen during the invasion of William the Conqueror, and received the right to market since 1200) but the church some old windows.
I enjoyed the visit even if for a few tombstones motherhood prayer and bronze plates (I wonder why we often see in English churches, and never on the Continent - probably a result of the wars enforcement metal melting). After going to church, joining the main road in the hall.
The street is very special compared to other cities outside London, with a very wide main street with large doors to allow stagecoaches and wagons to turn easily - it is a small model towns of the Wild West!
The facades of houses is quite odd, but many houses still have walls from the 14th century overlooking the courtyards. It seems that the walls are decorated with frescoes often. The city is valid enough for you to turn (in hostels) scenes from the hit film "Four Weddings and a Funeral." If you have time, walk up the main street to the water mill is very nice.
There are paved areas in front of the house is part of the sidewalk and belong to their owners in the housing is used to display merchandise. The hall dates to 1682 and was forced to move the clock (too visible from the pub opposite the church, which focused
on how workers) and arches block to remove the homeless. During my visit, motherhood prayer there was an exhibition of art in the upper room of the hall, but the building is mostly outdoors.
Turn left into the main street for a few hundred meters to the roundabout which gives access to the shopping center. By the way, you can see a small old house on the right side bearing an inscription of the year 1811 threatening beggars fun, musicians homeless on the street, and sing to the fullest extent of the law.
Pete left, you will pass the small garden around the monument to the dead, used to say that the last woman hanged in England is buried in Amersham, and we are also burning heretics in September 1521 (under Henry VIII did not like Protestants in his kingdom - the only Anglican rift reason at the time was the desire to have a male heir and seizure of property to the church, Henry was a great need in the event of war against Francis I ).
At the end of the street, go around the roundabout, through the mall entrance and the main road from the station, turn left along it. After a few meters, finding the right one farm entrance marked by a sign "Public Footpath". Put this input is actually being accessed by a dirt road that goes through the meadow to a piece in the deviation.
Cross the road and continue to avoid gate in the hedge on the right. You can easily recognize an easement that goes in the middle of the large field to the corner of a small wood. Follow the track straight across the field and grove Wood Rodgers, then let the right farm (Quarrendon Farm).
Wood follows (Wood Day), the right of way adjoining meadow and takes slightly to the right before returning to the original address, will ultimately lead to a sunken road that used to go to the right ' Upper Bottom House farm horse at the bottom of the gorge. motherhood prayer In front, a paved country road up the other side of the gorge, and is divided into two branches

No comments:

Post a Comment