Sunday 24 June 2012

Parents BBQ Sat 16th June


The layout – location parent’s new cottage and garden

(I)                 BBQ area 


(II)               House for the comfy beds

(III)             Eating and seating area 




(IV)             The tent area 



 Nicks first attempt at a birthday cake for mum 


 Afternoon and the BBQ in action

Charlie tries to steal another beer/ or pop another pebble in the water 
 Family photos:

Charlie with his dad Tom 

Mum and Dan having a drink 

Gale and Mum with Charlie Photo 

Tom and Alfie
Mum, Kathy and Harry 


Around the camp fire in the evening 




 
Happy camppers at breakfast time


Friday 15 June 2012

Brighton trip June 2012 – Diamond Jubilee weekend: Nights out


Day time entertainment at we all pulled out the flags for the Diamond Jubilee 


Watching the drag act in the Queens Arms



The Queen pops out to party at the Charles Street bar:



 Vavavoom bar: one of the smallest gay bars in Brighton this bar stands out as a cosy drinking den, located next door to the Revenge club. It has a modern, stylish interior with plasma screens for the modern equivalent of duke box disco hits. This bar is ideal for pre-club warm up drinks, or like us for drinks late into the night; chatting to the new people we meet. The bar staff were all very friendly, and in our opinion were some of the best looking bar staff Brighton had to offer J  






 Friendly staff and all knowing balloons pointing out the facts were ever they floated 





Made so friends in this bar, again the balloons helped with labels



 
 Local Entertainment – Miss Jason was definitely the most entertaining act seen while staying at Brighton, in fact maybe our favourite we have ever seen. Miss Jason, seems to be able to deliver a wicked but never vicious sense of humour upon the audience :)

 




Thursday 14 June 2012

Brighton trip June 2012 – Diamond Jubilee weekend: Out and about II


(II)                  Out and about in Sussex 

Birling Gap: is a coastal hamlet situated on the Seven Sisters not far from Beachy Head and is owned by the National Trust Coastal erosion has already removed some of the row of coastguard cottages built in 1878, and those that remain are still inhabited. There is a tea room run by The National Trust, and a large metal staircase leading down to the enclosed pebble beach and the Seven Sisters chalk cliffs. It is likely that soon it will no longer exist because the amount of erosion is so large that all the houses will have to be demolished before they fall into the sea. 


 
Seven Sisters from Birling Gap, Sussex, UK:



Beachy Head: is a chalk headland close to the town of Eastbourne, immediately east of the Seven Sisters. The cliff there is the highest chalk sea cliff in Britain, rising to 162 m (530 ft) above sea level. The peak allows views of the south east coast from Dungeness to the east, to Selsey Bill in the west. Its height has also made it one of the most notorious suicide spots in the world.




Newhaven Fort: was built on the recommendation of the 1859 Royal Commission to defend the growing harbour at Newhaven, on the south coast of England. It was the largest defence work ever built in Sussex and is now open as a museum. The fort was originally armed on the Eastern side in the in the 1870s with two 9-inch rifled muzzle loading guns, on disappearing carriages, the only such arrangement in the UK.





From about 1906 the armament consisted of two modern 6-inch Mark VII navel guns and two OF 12-pounder guns for defence against torpedo boats. The Army vacated the fort in 1962. Restoration began in 1982 following a failed commercial redevelopment venture, and 6-inch Mk VII guns have been re-installed in the fort to approximate the 1906 - 1941 armament. The fort is preserved and maintained by Lewes District Council.

Dan steps into the wrong place to stand: 



Dan trys his spooky look down in the cellers; where ghost are meant to reside


Recovering from the Ghost walk, dan stops for light lunch: 


Lewes: is the county town of East Sussex, and historically of all of Sussex. It is a civil parish and is the centre of the Lewes local government district. The settlement has a history as a bridging point and as a market town, and today as a communications hub and tourist-oriented town. Lewes Castle stands at the highest point of Lewes on an artificial mound constructed with chalk blocks. It was originally called Bray Castle.