Showing posts with label Warwickshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warwickshire. Show all posts

Monday, 14 July 2014

50 things to do before you're 11 and 3/4s at Packwood House

Good afternoon Positively Packwood readers! I do hope you enjoyed a lovely weekend of sunshine and visiting some of the many gorgeous special places that the National Trust has to offer.

I was back at Packwood this week after another week off (for work rather than holiday unfortunately…darn jobs cutting into volunteering time!) It was fabulous to be back and there were a few changes to see; the dining room is now fully open for visitors to wander round and plan their fantasy dinner parties…well that’s what I do!?

I met some fantastic visitors again and had lots of lovely chats about small beds, antique Delft tiling, conservation awareness and the many and varied explanations for why cutlery was placed ‘face down’. We still don’t have a definitive answer, fun to discuss though.
So today’s blog is dedicated to the little people. There were some fantastic kids at Packwood this weekend; I particularly enjoyed the two girls who accompanied me on door duty; complete with their own dragons! They were terribly inquisitive as to how I could possibly be married…but without children!? I’m used to fending these questions off from my family…not so much two very persistent, small strangers!
I am always impressed with a good idea. The 50 things to do before you are 11 and ¾’s is a blooming brilliant idea. Childhood memories captured in a list it is a clever and beautiful thing. I’ve met many children conscientiously carrying their books around Packwood looking out for things to be able to tick off. So I thought I’d give them and their ‘handlers’ a bit of a head start and let you in on what of the ‘50 things’ can be ticked off at Packwood.

First off...weather gods we would like more of this please...possibly without the cloud!?


With the summer holidays so tantalisingly close we’d best get going…

  1. Climb a tree – check out the Welly walk & woods and get climbing! You might even find a special something hidden away in the woods…
6. Run around in the rain – Most definitely possible! This is the British Summer remember!
11. Go on a really long bike ride – With Baddesley Clinton within cycling distance perhaps you could complete this one and see 2 amazing properties in one day
12. Make a trail with sticks – Why not make a trail in the woods with sticks, then get your big humans to follow it?
13. Make a Mud Pie – The Welly walk provides PLENTY of mud after a few rainy days
15. Play in the Snow – Perhaps not until next year…
17. Set up a snail race – I’m sure the kitchen gardener’s could point you in the direction of a couple of snails; they’d be glad to give them a job other than eating our lettuce!
24. Go on a walk barefoot – In the Yew garden…what an experience! Don’t forget your shoes when you’re done though!?
25. Make a grass trumpet – With the long grasses from the meadow or round the lake
31. Hunt for bugs – There are plenty of creepy crawlies and mini beasts to be found in all our gardens, leave the digging to the gardeners though please, you can always offer to help.
32. Find some frogspawn – In the lake
44. Go bird watching – Lots of birds call Packwood home. See swifts flying over the house and our resident robin


Ready for your barefoot walk

And why isn't hosting your very own Teddy Bears Picnic one of the 50 Things?! 

Of course there's lots to do at Packwood that are far too specific for the 50 things...

You can also...

  • Hunt for Dalmatian dogs hidden throughout the house
  • Lie on a carved 4 poster bed in a field
  • Host a Teddy Bears Picnic
  • Find a hidden beehive (or 3)
So what are you waiting for? We'll see you there!

Here some links to more info on The fantastic '50 Things' campaign...




And don't forget to tell us on Twitter when you complete your adventures! 

@NTPackwood
@VolunteerJessie
@NationalTrust

#50things


Tuesday, 1 July 2014

How do you spend yours?

What is well spent or hard earned? What will heal all things?  What can’t you get back once it’s gone? What is wasted, squandered or well managed? What is there never enough of? What is lost and can be made? What can you be in or out of? What cannot be held back? How do you spend yours?

We expect a lot from our time.

We pride ourselves on being ‘good time keepers’ and yet this is the ultimate misnomer. Time marches on regardless of our perceived control of it. It never truly stands still (although it can feel that way at times!).

It’s interesting that we humans use a lot of currency language when related to time. Perhaps it began when we started to place a monetary value on our time by the hour. What is one hour at work worth to you? Of course your time alone is not what you’re paid for, it is your skills, knowledge and expertise; it is what you DO in that hour that determines your value.

So what of your ‘own’ time, the time that is not paid for by your boss or your customers? Your ‘free’ time, I would argue it is the time with the most value. I would argue that it is anything but free. If we were to continue with our familiar linguistic metaphor of currency, this time is the invaluable time. This is the time where you create your ‘money can’t buy’ existence. In this time memories are made. It is what you DO with this time that determines the value of your life.

This is the time we can make choices about; choices that have the greatest impact on our emotional and physical well-being and of those around us. We can choose to ‘spend’ time doing things that enhance and enrich our lives. We can choose to ‘invest’ that time in our relationships and ourselves. We can allow ourselves and our values to determine where and with whom we cash in our ‘time cheques’.

Awareness of my time is something I take seriously.  I, like everyone else have to make enough money to pay my bills, eat, buy vintage cowboy boots and headscarves (you know that sort of thing) but I have found that when balancing my monthly ‘life statement’ if I have spent enough ‘paid time’ to earn enough money whilst being able to also ‘donate’ time to a cause or organisation I love and have ‘time of my own’ for things like reading books, walking in woods, calling friends, listening to music, cuddling dogs and having dinner with my husband then my ‘happiness/time bank balance’ looks pretty healthy.

Time unlike money cannot be banked. Regardless of our stupid terminology it cannot be ‘saved’ we can’t get back last Thursday because we didn’t use it. Time 'saving’ devices don’t in fact ‘buy us time’ they just mean that the time it used to take to do a job is now reduced. How we choose to spend that ‘extra time’ is still up to us. Time does not know it is ‘extra’, it is just time.

Packwood House is a place where I choose to spend time. It is a place where I have invested and donated time. I am not alone; many like me dedicate regular time to this special place. But of course it is not just our time we invest here. It is ourselves. We spend our time helping you get the most out of yours. Our garden teams work tirelessly for you to enjoy your ‘free time’ walking in our tranquil gardens. Our house teams share stories and knowledge to enhance your time spent in the property. Time is ‘managed’ by our leaders to make sure for us there is ‘always time for cake’ and for you always someone on hand to answer a question, help find a hidden dog or just to give you a smile. Our visitor reception teams help you to ‘plan’ your time so you can know you’ve got all the information to ‘get the most value for your time’ and our conservation teams manage the effects of time in preserving these special places for visitors now and in future generations.


Yes Packwood along with many National Trust places is a ‘step back in time’; a chance to indulge your inner historian and reflect on ‘times gone by’. Or to put your own time in the great timeline of humanity and gain perspective. Packwood’s ‘timeless quality’ allows you to ‘lose a few hours’ but again I would argue that rather than experiencing loss what you gain in those ‘lost hours’ is a sense of calm and peace that in todays often frantic world is time well spent. 


Tuesday, 20 May 2014

A picture speaks a thousand words...

Hello and greetings my lovely Positively Packwood friends! I shall say it in the most hushed of tones for fear that I will jinx the weather permanently but might it really be time to pack away tights for a few months? Oh joy oh rapture!

Packwood House was looking very much like the best place to be on a sunny day for most of this week. I made an extra visit on Thursday as on a Sunday I'm too busy, well, room guiding and talking to you lovely lot to get outside and take photos.

The saying 'A picture speaks a thousands words' has never been more apt. I bloomin' love this place (not new information!) and can extol it's every virtue to you on a weekly basis with ease but the following really do say everything I could tell you. Together with the happy faces of all the visitors I met on Sunday I can confirm Packwood is THE place to be on a sunny day...Here's to many more!


























Next week is the opening of our new 'Packwood Follies' a series of art installations by artist Hilary Jack. I'm really excited to bring you more news of that next weekend along with some 'hopefully' **prays for dry weather** pictures! 

To celebrate the opening, visitors to Packwood on Saturday (24th May 2014) can enjoy all the usual Packwood delights with additional storytelling, poetry and more fun activities throughout the day. The National Trust is also holding a wildlife drawing competition for children so this might be a good opportunity to get out and be involved with that. 

After seeing these pictures I'm sure you'll agree Packwood is too good to miss! 

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Why the Baron Ash story?

Hello glorious Positively Packwood readers. My baby brother got married last Saturday and what an incredible day it was so needless to say with the lead up to that and all the emotional and practical energy that was required I haven’t had a huge amount of time for writing. There is also a lot of ‘back line’ work going on at the moment with future blogs being planned and the logistics of this set up.

I was however (of course) at Packwood on Sunday, feeling slightly tired and emotional admittedly! I was meant to be doing a shorter day (Tea Relief – and who isn't relieved by tea!?) but I ended up staying on until after 5 pm – looks like I’ll have my 50 hours volunteering by the end of this month!

This week I was pleased to be covering Queen Margaret’s bedroom again (a favourite) and the Ireton Bedroom – the room with our fantastically ostentations Deco en-suite bathroom, with our famous antique Delft tiling. The Ireton bedroom also gives the opportunity to talk about some of the house’s earlier history as it is named for General Henry Ireton who it is believed slept in this room before the battle of Edgehill in 1642. Both the panelling and the bed are Jacobean and this week I was asked several times about the secret door…which I’d never spotted before and had to look up in the oracle!? In my defence…it’s very dark in there!? Not really an excuse haha I rather like that Packwood still holds some surprises for me!

Why the Baron Ash Story?
I thought I’d take the opportunity to also explain a question that we get asked a lot at Packwood. Why focus on its most recent owner and most recent history when the property itself dates back so much further?

The answer to this is two fold.

  1. On the one hand we don’t…but it depends who you talk to! If you go on the tour of the property (outside) our guides will take you through all the changes to the house from it’s beginnings as a timber framed house of the late 16th Century through the additions made by John Fetherston in 1670 to the more modern additions made by Baron Ash in the 1920’s and 30’s. They talk extensively about the Fetherston family who owned the property as yeoman farmers for over 200 years. Also certain rooms that remain mostly unchanged like the Ireton give more opportunity to talk about the house’s earlier history. Obviously I appreciate that those with mobility issues may miss out on both of these opportunities.
  2. Part of the agreement the Trust made with Baron Ash when he gave Packwood to us in 1941 in memory of his parents was the ‘Memorandum of Wishes’ which dictates that the rooms are to stay as he had arranged them. It is also the reason why we have fresh flowers arranged in every room, every day. It is a credit to the Trust that we continue to display his home as he wanted it displayed ‘not the house he lived in but the house he felt should be viewed by visitors’.


You can see that this gives Packwood a unique quality – you are viewing a man’s home and in fact arguably his life’s greatest achievement in restoring this medieval manor house to its full glory using a conservationist view, bringing parts of other buildings and collections together here at Packwood. His ‘stamp’ is all over this property from the ‘new additions’ of the long gallery and Great Hall to the rooms made ready for his ‘Royal Visitor’ in Queen Mary’s bedroom and the drawing room that contains her teacup and the chair she sat in. 


However it does mean that to make sense of the house, its collections and its architecture we have to tell you his story. He makes sense of Packwood as you are looking at it now, made every decision about what is here...and what isn't. Perhaps he knew that by asking this of the Trust and in knowing they would honour their agreement he had found, as a man who died with no offspring a way of preserving his story long after he had gone. I always say Packwood was his baby and like any proud child, it tells the story of its father.



Thursday, 24 April 2014

Wolfgang Breny

So charging onwards with our next post (see what I did there?!) ah the heritage jokes are always the best!

Last Sunday (Easter Sunday) was another fabulous and busy day at Packwood. I got to spend some more time in my favourite space helping some more children to become expert weavers and talking to visitors about this amazing display. I felt much more confident for having spent some time with the lovely ladies of The Weavers Guild the week before so could be assured I was giving all the correct information without having to look it up first! I also spent time in the Ireton bedroom and a new room to me, the dining room. 

Although the weather wasn't as glorious as we've had on some of the other days over Easter there were still plenty of people braving the elements to do the Cadbury's Easter egg trail and enjoy the gardens (between the showers!)

I promised you in my last post that I would share with you the details of my little personal research project. One of the first rooms I was 'introduced to' (by the lovely Len) as a room guide was Queen Margaret's bedroom. The windows in this room, like many at Packwood have some incredible stained glass. My favourite piece is a heraldic piece of a knight charging into battle. The colours are so rich and vivid even though it's dated 1598 and the painting work shows an exceptional standard of detail. 

As Packwood was 'put together' as we see it today by G.B. Ash many of the elements (including the windows) are not original to the building. Many of the items we have here can only be traced back as far as the sale where Ash purchased them. It's an exciting prospect as an amateur historian to add to the knowledge of this special place as 'all is not already known'.

This is the piece I wanted to find out more about.




And here's what I know so far:

The painter it is reasonable to assume is Wolfgang Breny (Bräni) a Swiss painter from a glass painting family in Rapperswil.

Active: 1586-1612

20 pieces are attributed to him that we know of with same WB monogram I found 2 others in a Swiss research document (see below) & another one is possibly at Nostell Priory but I am waiting to hear back from them.








Please excuse the phone 'screen shots' but these were taken from a document that did not allow the photo's to be taken off and this was the best way to show you.

The Knight - I have to attribute much of this research to my Father in Law Peter Greenhill my secret weapon in all heraldic matters!

German Gothic knight, whose war cry was Kriegen Oder Biegen which interprets as Catch or Bend. Bend in this context meaning 'Give Way'.

If you don't catch them with your lance you will yield (bend/give way) to theirs (their will)
***Modern version would be it's my way or the high way?!***

The shield being carried is Or (Gold) a Stag trippant Proper (in its natural colours). The crest being a demi stag as of the shield (ie proper) Mantled Or (ie the banderol is coloured Gold or Yellow.).

The shield shown on the rear trapper is Azure a rose bush Vert flowered Or & Argent (gold and white). The crest for these Arms being shown on the front trapper as a pair of Buffalo's horns Or (gold) mantled Azure doubled Or.
The plumes on the horses head are purely decorative and typical of the Gothic period.


The nearest identified Coat is of Arnold de Cervolle, Archpriest of Velines who fought at Poitiers wearing the Arms of the 10 year old Duke of Alencon and who was saved from certain death by the Black Prince. Cervolle's Arms were Or a stag trippant Azure. ***but we are still looking for one related to Swiss or German arms*** Pete has got the 'Big' books out so I await further information!

How was it done?

Method:

In the 16th century a range of glass stains were introduced, most of them coloured by ground glass particles. They were a form of enamel. Painting on glass with these stains was initially used for small heraldic designs and other details. By the 17th century a style of stained glass had evolved that was no longer dependent upon the skilful cutting of coloured glass into sections. Scenes were painted onto glass panels of square format, like tiles. The colours were then annealed to the glass before the pieces were assembled.

A method used for embellishment and gilding is the decoration of one side of each of two pieces of thin glass which are then placed back to back within the lead came. This allows for the use of techniques such as Angel gilding and Eglomise to produce an effect visible from both sides but not exposing the decorated surface to the atmosphere or mechanical damage. Which explains how the colours are so vibrant.


References: 

Method: Wiki, Peter Greenhill

Arms/ Colours/ Motto: Peter Greenhill

Wolfgang Breny: 

http://www.eliechtensteinensia.li/JBHV/1974/74/Die_Wappenscheiben_des_Grafen_Karl_Ludwig_von_Sulz_und_der_Graefin_Barbara_von_Sulz.pdf

http://www.answers.com/topic/master-wb-2