Taking the bus for a walk!

Walkers of Hastings who rely on public transport to get to the meeting point, and home again.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Why not - stroll along to the Pier on March 12th 2011

...................We are organising the programme to take this forward and the first big public consultation event will be on 12th March, aimed to be at the same time as our Party on the Prom. We are keen to get as many people involved in the consultation about the future design of the Pier. All ideas and thoughts are welcome......................

Our Party on the Prom is part of a nationwide event organised by the National Piers society (Party on the Pier) Unfortunately, because we don’t have a useable Pier we will hold ours on the Prom.

Please come along and join in the party with us and have a say in the future of the Pier. We will be posting more details of both events on our website.

Our website is www.hpwrt.co.uk

DRMM’s website is www.drmm.co.uk - appointed architects



Friday, January 21, 2011

Rye Town Walk - Tuesday 18th January 2011

This is the Land Gate
We had a beautiful day, cold but bright and sunny; we have been so lucky on our walks so far. Jill, the day's leader, had a number of guide books dating from 1950's - 1970's, which gave us really interesting information.


Note the pestle and mortar, above what used to be the Apothecary. (Well, it still is but it serves coffee now.)

The Church in the centre of Rye (don't miss the water cistern, although the photos of it were rather dull, hence not included!) Also here is the sign for Fletcher's house, Fletcher being (as no doubt you all know) one of the most successful dramatists of the early 17th century. A collaborator with Shakespeare, most famously on Henry VIII, he succeeded the Bard as house playwright for the King’s Men. Fletcher also had a long-running writing partnership with Francis Beaumont, with whom, on one account, he lived in scandalously close quarters on Bankside, with “one wench in the house between them”.

The house with the crooked chimney, Rye.
In EF Benson's tales of Lucia and Miss Mapp, Lucia lived in Lamb House, behind this house. In one of his books, there was much debate by these characters who were painting this scene, whether to paint the chimney as it is - crooked - and have people who did not know the area think one had got it wrong, or to paint it straight, in the knowledge that people from Rye would know it should be crooked.
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Friday, January 07, 2011

Rye Town Walk - Tuesday 18th January 2011

No - your eyes do not deceive you.
This is a last minute amendment, for which many apologies.

We will meet on the 344 bus, (leaves Hastings Station round about 9.30 a.m. allowing people to join at their convenience.