So - and this is the first drop of fine rain since I started : I'm on the bus from Crediton to Bow and I'm thinking "what's going on here?". I'm handling this and better than in the main. I've had five minutes here and there with umpteen people in a way in which most people just don't do and yet I'm not sitting down with people comfortably for much longer. Perhaps that is just my way. Too big thoughts go through my head. I am being a Palin or a Portillo or a Self? I have to say and it isn't in any way an easy thought that it is Self which rings the greatest truth not that there are any similarities other than it accentuates the unpredictable and slightly bizarre. Next I am in Bow. Five minutes walk from the bus stop, outside the White Hart in Bow to be precise. And I'm pretty gutted that on the sign it says it is closed all day on Tuesdays. I thought that I might be an hour ahead of lunch but with this I am bitterly disappointed. At least, I tell myself, it is still there. And then I decide just to walk round the back of it. I look at its garden. Where the troops once stayed in tents, there are tents with signs showing that they have recently had a cider festival. Then all of a sudden a woman appears with a fearsome dog and asks me what I am doing there. My opening words were not the most promising - "I'm 55, my mother is 88". "Yes" she snapped. How the hell we got any further I do not know. But then I went into the history of it and she completely changed. "Oh you must come in" she says. "We are closed today but my husband will be happy to show you all of it and he'll let you take as many photographs as you want to have".
So next I am through the gate and past the dog - "he's ok really; he just doesn't like people with rucksacks" - and I am in the bar which is totally empty except for them and me and I'm having to declare that I don't actually have a camera. He gets out his super mobile phone while I ramble on about darts and it is "where would you like to pictured?" Three are taken and then I give my e-mail address with instructions. "It won't be the same" they say "because that bit was blocked off when old Bill Freeman lived here" and I'm saying "yes, yes, yes, that was the name, Freeman, my Mum's friends". As bizarre scenarios go, I couldn't have wished for better....it was virtual delirium". Back at the bus stop, I am chatting to two blokes and they say "oh yes Bill Freeman he was there until at least the 1970s" so the links there were wholly maintained. Back at Crediton station, I decide a need a cup of tea to celebrate. And I walk into what is perhaps the most remarkable railway station tea room in Britain. It has only been in its current form for four weeks and given that this is the back end of nowhere it is an artistic grotto/masterpiece of art work made by autistic people in a wider voluntary scheme. It is absolutely stunning. There are three posh arty women at the table saying how wonderful it is, an old dear who is much more than an old dear because she is clearly very committed and been instrumental in setting it up and a mouthy geezer walking in and out with the intention of winding everyone up, telling me that I am not going to get very far without wearing a "f-----g" watch. It was one of the best hours I have ever had.
Well, anyhow, I moved on to Ilfracombe for Days 6 and 7 after that and I will leave these until tomorrow. The sad thing is that the photos haven't come through yet. I rang them tonight and they say they will chase him up on it but I was also told at the bus stop they are handing on the White Hart after 13 years this week so they'll be busy. I caught them on the cusp.
So next I am through the gate and past the dog - "he's ok really; he just doesn't like people with rucksacks" - and I am in the bar which is totally empty except for them and me and I'm having to declare that I don't actually have a camera. He gets out his super mobile phone while I ramble on about darts and it is "where would you like to pictured?" Three are taken and then I give my e-mail address with instructions. "It won't be the same" they say "because that bit was blocked off when old Bill Freeman lived here" and I'm saying "yes, yes, yes, that was the name, Freeman, my Mum's friends". As bizarre scenarios go, I couldn't have wished for better....it was virtual delirium". Back at the bus stop, I am chatting to two blokes and they say "oh yes Bill Freeman he was there until at least the 1970s" so the links there were wholly maintained. Back at Crediton station, I decide a need a cup of tea to celebrate. And I walk into what is perhaps the most remarkable railway station tea room in Britain. It has only been in its current form for four weeks and given that this is the back end of nowhere it is an artistic grotto/masterpiece of art work made by autistic people in a wider voluntary scheme. It is absolutely stunning. There are three posh arty women at the table saying how wonderful it is, an old dear who is much more than an old dear because she is clearly very committed and been instrumental in setting it up and a mouthy geezer walking in and out with the intention of winding everyone up, telling me that I am not going to get very far without wearing a "f-----g" watch. It was one of the best hours I have ever had.
Well, anyhow, I moved on to Ilfracombe for Days 6 and 7 after that and I will leave these until tomorrow. The sad thing is that the photos haven't come through yet. I rang them tonight and they say they will chase him up on it but I was also told at the bus stop they are handing on the White Hart after 13 years this week so they'll be busy. I caught them on the cusp.
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