Author Archives: Amanda Hutchinson Blue Badge Guide

Chelsea Congratulations and an Invitation to Australian Garden Lovers to discover The Garden of England

We’re having a really fun week taking a private group from North America around some of our favourite gardens in South East England before they visit the Centenary RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London on Friday.

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On Sunday we went to Great Dixter where we were treated to a dazzling display of spring colour and came away vowing to be far more courageous with tulips in the future.

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We also explored Great Dixter’s historic Oast House before taking advantage of Sunday’s warm sunshine to lunch in the picturesque ‘Antient’ Cinque Port town of Rye.

JadeVineYesterday we were at the fabulous RHS gardens at Wisley where everyone found their favourites: from magnificent azaleas and rhododendrons on Battleston Hill, acres of Fruit Fields in full-blossom and exquisite spring alpine displays, to the rare and very special treat of seeing the extraordinary Jade Vine in full aquamarine bloom in the Glass House for the first time in eight years.

Today it’s the splendours of Leeds Castle and Vita Sackville West’s dreamy Sissinghurst then on to the castle gardens of Nymans, Scotney and Hever Castle later in the week.

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The success of Australia’s magnificent Trailfinders Australian Show Garden, presented by Flemings, which won a Gold Medal plus the coveted ‘Best in Show’ at the Chelsea Flower Show earlier today, may even bring more visitors from Australia to Chelsea next year.

Many congratulations and we will look forward to showing you around the best of the glorious gardens of ‘The Garden of England’ while you are here!

Meanwhile I’ll be relaxing during my own visit to the Chelsea Flower Show on Friday.  The past few years I have been lucky enough to work on various (Gold Medal winning!) Show Gardens so it will be a change to see the Show from a visitor’s perspective.

Amanda Hutchinson               Amanda sig first name

Queen Elizabeth’s Quiet Birthday before the Official Celebration in London in June

queenAs Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her 87th birthday today we understand she will be enjoying a quiet celebration with her family at Windsor Castle.

Her Majesty may also be drinking a toast to her horse Sign Manual which she watched win during a private visit to Newbury racecourse yesterday. See the link below for her delighted reaction and spectacular smile! http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2311913/The-Queen-celebrates-visit-Newbury-winner.html

Meanwhile in London today the London Marathon is taking place noisily outside The Queen’s home at Buckingham Palace. This year the start of the race was marked by a 30 second silence in honour of the victims of the bombings at the Boston Marathon earlier in the week. Many of the 35,000 participants chose to wear black ribbons on their vests in front of record crowds. Virgin London Marathon has pledged to donate £2 for every runner who finishes the event to The One Fund Boston set up to raise money for victims of the explosions.

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The Mall will also see the Queen’s Official Birthday celebrations in June. She celebrates two birthdays each year: her actual birthday on 21 April and her official birthday which will be celebrated on Saturday 15th June at the spectacular Trooping the Colour parade which goes from Buckingham Palace along The Mall to Horseguards’ Parade.

Trooping the Colour

Meanwhile traditional gun salutes will be fired in London tomorrow – because this year the Queen’s birthday falls on a Sunday.  The salutes will take place at midday with a 41 gun salute in Hyde Park and a 62 gun salute at the Tower of London. There will also be a 21 gun salute in Windsor Great Park.

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Why do they fire 62 rounds at the Tower and only 41 in Hyde Park? The calculation at the Tower is as follows: 21 (standard Royal) + 20 (it’s a Royal Palace) + 21 for The City of London = 62  - so now you know!

The most rounds fired in a single salute is 124  ie a Double Royal when the Queen’s official birthday coincides with the Duke of Edinburgh’s birthday (June 10th – the day after mine so I always remember that one!). This last occurred in 1967.

Amanda Hutchinson   Amanda sig first name

Once a Light Blue always a Light Blue? A mother’s Boat Race dilemma…

When my son got in to Oxford University one of the first observations from other family members was “Well of course you’ll be supporting Oxford in the Boat Race now.”

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I was astounded! My answer was immediate and unequivocal, rejecting all their pre-suppositions and expectations of parental support: Absolutely no way!  Once a Light Blue always a Light Blue!

So this Easter Day for the first time a sporting event, the 159th University Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge, will, in our household, be followed keenly but firmly from opposite sides of the fence or River.

Cambridge oar Oxford oar

My son, possibly in a desperate attempt to sway me, has taken up rowing for Trinity College (the dark blue one), with accompanying mother’s-heart-strings-tugging freezing 6am starts on the Isis, punishing training schedules and extraordinary fridge-emptying food consumption.  There’s even the added emotional enticement of a 2012 Olympic medal winning member of his college, Constantine Loulondis, rowing in the Oxford Boat, plus the memory of last year’s Oxford crew’s traumatic loss, which they will be desperate to rectify.

Fortunately said-son will be keeping his distance standing somewhere on the (freezing) banks of the Thames this afternoon while I will be watching in front of a warm fire.  The main thing is that now he is at Oxford he completely understands my point of view.

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Meanwhile, away from the sporting rivalry, I love both Oxford and Cambridge as two very beautiful, very different places to visit. And as a Blue Badge Tourist Guide qualified to take groups to Oxford, and as an Alumna of Cambridge able to take guests back there too I enjoy sharing the best of worlds…

… apart from today. Although in my heart of hearts, having now seen the work and commitment my son puts in to row at college level,  I am just totally in awe of the sporting ability and dedication of both crews.

Besides, whatever the outcome in the rowing,  Cambridge won the Varsity Football yesterday…

Amanda Hutchinson   Amanda sig first name

We are so proud to be part of the UK’s tourism success story!

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Highlights of The Tourism Alliance’s UK Tourism Statistics 2013 make great reading for us as Blue Badge Tourist Guides in London and South East England!

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Tourism accounted for over one third of all new jobs created in the UK in 2012.

Tourism is the UK’s third biggest employment sector, employing nearly 3 million people.

The UK is the world’s seventh most important international tourism destination both by visitor numbers and visitor expenditure.

Tourism is also the UK’s sixth largest export earner, accounting for nearly 5% of total exports.

A study commissioned by VisitBritain and its partners in the GREAT campaign suggests the UK’s sporting and cultural credentials have significantly improved thanks to the hosting of the London 2012 Games.

For the first time ever, Britain has made it into the top 10 of most welcoming nations in 9th place.

Amongst the studies, 63% of respondents now want to visit Britain with 75% looking beyond London.

Sandie Dawe, Chief Executive of VisitBritain said:  “London’s hosting of the Games, the amazing opening and closing ceremonies and the warmth of welcome shown to our international visitors have combined to boost our global image.”

White Cliffs Cruise ShipAnd finally…according to Travel Mole a record number of cruise passengers visited the UK during 2012.

CruiseBritain said more than 100 ships from 47 cruise lines visited the UK last year bringing a record 723,000 passengers on day trips, a rise of 11%.  2012 also saw 962,000 passengers begin their cruises at a UK port, a 10% increase on 2011.

Here’s to a great 2013 for everyone in the UK’s fantastic tourism industry!

Amanda Hutchinson         Amanda sig first name

Thanksgiving greetings to all our American friends!

Thanksgiving Greetings from Kent, also known as ‘The Garden of England’ to all our friends and clients across the USA.

Here are some pictures of some of the wonderful Kentish Harvest: apples, hops and grapes from The Garden of England!

Kent is home to Canterbury Cathedral; The White Cliffs of Dover; Chartwell, home of Sir Winston Churchill; Hever Castle, home to King Henry VIII’s second wife Anne Boleyn and Vita Sackville West’s Sissinghurst Gardens, to name just a few of our beautiful and historic county’s ‘must see’ sights.

Check out our website to plan your guided visit to the beautiful South East of England and all its historic treasures.


Windsor Castle – why royal pony hair is so much better than chicken wire

It was lovely to enjoy a day at Windsor Castle last week being guided rather than guiding.  At a special Blue Badge Guides update event we were taken on a wonderful tour of parts of the Castle that are not always included in a standard visit itinerary.

After a leisurely wander up from the car park (having left my Coach behind for the day!), and a warm welcome from the team at the Admissions Centre, our first stop was the exhibition on King Edward III in St George’s Chapel.

This month marks the 700th anniversary of the birth at Windsor of this great medieval monarch. who, in 1348, founded the Order of the Garter and The College of St George at Windsor where the Knights of the Garter, headed by Her Majesty the Queen, still gather each June for the Garter Ceremony.

We were then taken by Miss Charlotte Manley, Chapter Clerk, on a very special tour of the medieval Canons’ Cloister which is reaching the end of a huge restoration project.  We learnt how the 1960′s restoration involving concrete and (rusty) chicken wire has been replaced with the traditional method of construction, proven over centuries,  using chestnut wood lathes covered with layers of lime and horse hair render, the latter incorporating a symbolic contribution from ponies in the Castle’s Royal Mews!

We felt incredibly privileged to be taken into one of the original 26 one-up-one-down bays built to house the canons and priest-vicars whose role was to pray daily in St George’s Chapel for the 26 Knights of the Garter, and (with the removal of some interior walls), still housing some of the Chapel’s canons today.

The next part of our visit took us through the State Entrance Hall of Windsor Castle’s State Apartments (literally treading in the footsteps of Monarchs and heads of State from all over the world over hundreds of years) with a spectacular view through the State Entrance portico along the three miles of Long Walk to the equestrian statue of King George III on the horizon.

Windsor Castle from the Long Walk

Our visit to the Great Kitchen started in the crypt under St George’s Hall which was ‘re-discovered’ after the Windsor Castle Fire nearly twenty years ago on 23 November 1992 when 1.5 million gallons of water were poured onto the castle over a period of 15 hours. Apparently only 9 rooms in the Castle were badly damaged by the fire, but 100 were affected by water damage. The crypt has been drying out ever since but is now back in use as a multi-purpose area.

Passing under the Lantern Lobby we saw another reminder of the fire in the exposed scorched stones, before arriving in the spectacular Great Kitchen, which has been in continuous use as a kitchen for 750 years!  It will be in use again later this month for a State Dinner for 160 people in honour of the State Visit of the Emir of Kuwait. That the main kitchen clock is deliberately kept 5 minutes fast indicates the precision of these events with nothing left to chance. At least the use of lifts nowadays to transport the food up to the serving area reduces the risks of droppage for which eventuality a few extra plates are still prepared…

Windsor Castle is one of our favourite places to take groups of visitors who never fail to be both amazed and delighted. The winter months are my personal favourite time for a visit with the Castle bedecked for Christmas as it was in the time of Queen Victoria, the glorious Semi-State Apartments open to the public for a few months and no crowds at all!

After last week we will have even more stories to tell our visitors, and for those with enough time a visit to the Great Kitchen will be a special treat.  At the end of the tour I treated myself to look at Queen Mary’s Dolls House – on a November afternoon it was completely empty and a real treat to be able to relive childhood visits without having to keep track of a group of very excited visitors!

       

Blue Badge Tour Guide

The Many Delights of Skyfall

South East Tour Guides spent a blissful evening at the Odeon in Tunbridge Wells last night in the company of good friends watching the long awaited film Skyfall. As always the latest Bond movie had something for everyone: exciting chases using an extraordinary range of vehicles, plenty of drama, tension and emotion, a globe trotting range of locations and, for me and all other Daniel Craig fans, an exceptionally generous and blissful amount of on-screen time for the immaculately be-suited (most of the time) man  himself.

Spoilt for choice for favourite moments the men chose the opening chase sequence whereas in the somewhat biased (unanimous) opinion of the female members of our group it didn’t get close to the bath towel moment….

Too much risk of revealing spoilers to describe the film in any more detail here, but with my Blue Badge Tourist Guide hat on I also enjoyed spotting the film’s often surprising camera shots of some of London’s most iconic views and buildings. In addition to Olympic Games venues there will definitely be plenty of scope for including some of the locations featured in Skyfall (albeit often being put to somewhat different uses) on future tours of London.

It was also fun to see a painting we focus on at the National Gallery appearing in the film,  although sadly Daniel Craig has  yet to sit down in front of Turner’s Fighting Temeraire any time I’ve been there.  Already voted the ‘People’s Most Popular Painting’, the bench in front of it will no doubt now be in the running to become ‘The People’s Most Popular Bench’.

      

Fourth of July greetings to all our American friends!

Fourth of July Greetings from Kent, The Garden of England to all our friends and clients across the United States of America.

Based in Kent, England, South East Tour Guides look forward to welcoming you to our own very special part of the UK during our 2012 Diamond Jubilee and London Olympic Games year.

Kent is home to Canterbury Cathedral; The White Cliffs of Dover; Chartwell, home of Sir Winston Churchill; Hever Castle, home to King Henry VIII’s second wife Anne Boleyn and Vita Sackville West’s Sissinghurst Gardens, to name just a few of our beautiful and historic county’s ‘must see’ sights.

Check out our website to plan your guided visit to the beautiful South East of England and all its historic treasures.

    


Ringside at the Diamond Jubilee Thames Pageant

When a friend texted to invite us for lunch in London on Sunday 3 June at first it didn’t click.  Then it dawned on me that this was a very special invitation indeed. Our friend lives overlooking the River Thames just to the east of Tower Bridge and the date in question was Diamond Jubilee Thames River Pageant Sunday.

As Jubilee fever and excitement grew last week, every location I took groups of visitors to vied with the last in terms of yards of bunting, numbers of Union Jacks and often spectacularly imaginative red, white and blue shop window displays.

The group I took to visit Windsor on Saturday were en route from their cruise ship at Dover to Heathrow airport to catch flights home. Caught up in the atmosphere in Windsor some were on the point of changing their flights so they could stay for the Jubilee Weekend and join in the celebrations.  They were persuaded to make do with the wonderful exhibition ‘Sixty Photographs for Sixty Years’ in the gallery at Windsor Castle.

Sunday dawned with a dodgy weather forecast and long queues to buy tickets at the station.  Eventually we reached London Bridge and joined the costumed crowds that thronged Tooley Street, Tower Bridge and Shad Thames.  As we walked into our friend’s apartment I nearly fell into the river with excitement. I’d heard that the Royal Barge would ‘draw alongside HMS President’ and now discovered that we would be able to watch the whole flotilla from a point immediately opposite.

It was an amazing experience and we felt incredibly lucky – not only in terms of our viewpoint-in-a-million but in being able to shelter from the rain.  From the first sight of the specially built ‘Gloriana’ with Olympic gold medallists Sir Steve Redgrave and Matthew Pinsent at the oars, to the flotillas of hand-propelled craft and Dunkirk ‘Little Ships’…


…to the unforgettable sight of Tower Bridge fully raised in a Royal Salute and the rousing Last Night of the Proms-style renditions of Rule Britannia and the National Anthem at the end, accompanied by the floating orchestra and drenched choir, it was a day filled with unforgettable spine tingling moments.

Yesterday evening’s Diamond Jubilee Concert outside Buckingham Palace was another spectacular feel-good occasion even though we could not manage Royal Box-style seats for this one…  So many memorable moments – from 64 YEAR OLD Grace Jones’ unbelievable gyrating hoop to Sir Tom Jones, Sir Cliff Richard, Dame Shirley Bassey,  Sir Elton John, Sir Paul McCartney and the legendary Stevie Wonder. With so many iconic stars in between, not forgetting lovely Gareth Malone conducting Commonwealth and Military Wives choirs in ‘Sing’, and the breathtaking firework finale.

Today’s service at St Paul’s Cathedral, the carriage procession and Red Arrows over the Mall reminded me of the Golden Jubilee ten years ago when we braved similar crowds with our then-small children. If Queen Elizabeth II’s reign lasts to 10 September 2015  she will overtake Queen Victoria to become the United Kingdom’s longest reigning monarch. Some people are already discussing how this weekend’s celebrations could be bettered at a future Platinum Jubilee. With the Queen’s Mother living to 101 fingers crossed we may find out in ten years time – who knows maybe with grandchildren in tow…  Vivat Regina!

A Tale of Two Chelseas – it was all happening at Heathrow today!

I had an unexpectedly eventful day at Heathrow Airport today.  I was there to meet and greet some visitors from the USA who were arriving on various flights for a week long tour of gardens in the South East of England (including some of our favourites at Chartwell, Sissinghurst, Hever and Wisley), culminating with a visit to the 2012 RHS Chelsea Flower Show, with which long-term blog readers may be aware I have a fond connection, having previously worked on two gold-medal winning Show Gardens.

Now I am no football supporter, but while idling away a half-hour between arrivals I flicked through a discarded newspaper and noticed that last night Chelsea had won the Champions League.  Knowing that my son, who is currently cycling through New Zealand, likes to be ‘up’ on all things sporting I texted this piece of news to him.  He replied to say that he is staying in a hostel in the north of the North Island run by ‘an awesome football mad Italian’ and that all the guests had got up at 6.30am to watch the match live.  He also confirmed that it had been a pretty amazing and long awaited victory for the Chelsea team and fans.

Thus enlightened I became aware of a number of  blue shirts suddenly appearing among those waiting for travellers to emerge from the depths of the Terminal 3 Customs Hall, together with a group of watchful policemen. I assumed some possibly over excited, rowdy Chelsea fans were expected, and tried to work out how they could have got from Munich to the various European airports from which, according to the Flight Arrivals Screen, arrivals were imminently due.

As numbers swelled, with an unusual number of ‘just pausing while passing’ British Airways uniformed staff, airport security personnel and finally a TV cameraman gathering next to me, I was able, thanks to the events of the previous paragraph, to begin to put 2 and 2 together…

I cross-examined an BAA official who would only say that they were expecting ‘a pretty busy afternoon arrivals-wise’….

Clutching my ‘Chelsea Flower Show Tour’ sign I then befriended a group of BA staff.  Given the slightly odd juxtaposition of my sign and what they suspected was going on apart from the arrival of my Chelsea Flower Show fans, they confirmed (obliquely) that an unlisted charter flight was arriving back from Munich bearing not only the entire victorious Chelsea AFC football team, management and WAGS, but the 2012 Champions League Trophy itself.

Thus, some ten minutes later, I found myself standing, unexpectedly excitedly, pointing my iphone camera at the most newsworthy footballers in the land.  Even I recognised Frank Lampard and John Terry when they strolled past a few feet away clutching the Champions League trophy between them, and I took pictures of other team members for later identification by my off-spring.  Fortunately I was right up to speed having ascertained from afore mentioned discarded newspaper that Didier Drogba, who appeared a few minutes later, had played a crucial role, and even I was able to recognize Frank Lampard’s fiancée Christine Bleakley.

A final PS for my son who is also a golf fan.  Chatting to a fellow ‘greeter’ who was clutching a BMW sign, I learnt that he was waiting for a ‘well-known’ golfer who would be playing in this week’s BMW PGA Golf Championship at Wentworth in Surrey.  As he greeted his charge I was fortunately able to recognize (my son has trained me well) Charl Schwartzel.  I played it cool and didn’t take a picture, just smiled sweetly – he was rather nice ‘close up in the flesh’…

All in all it was a ‘day at the office’, in Blue Badge Tour Guide terms, with a bit of a difference!