After breakfast we packed up again and drove to Richmond where we found street parking that, coincidentally and appropriately, was directly in front of the Richmond Theatrical Society offices. From there we walked the short distance over to Georgian Theatre Royal where we found ourselves with a private tour of the theater. Was kind of funny to hear the operators having the same challenges as any other theater company – we shared some of our experiences with our guide. When we finished there were a half dozen folks in the lobby who had arrived to take the tour immediately after ours.
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| The backdrop corresponding to the flats. |
Pre-trip planning really paid off for Durham. In late June I realized that our plan for the Castle and/or Cathedral required parking in a place where there’s, frankly, no parking. Darn those tiny little medieval lanes! So I quickly reviewed their websites and concluded that the best solution was to use Durham’s Park and Ride system which is designed for just this issue. Basically, the city runs three different parking sites, one of which (the delightfully-named Sniperly Park and Ride) was very close to The Kingsbridge Inn, where we were planning to stay while overnight in Durham. So we’d park the car upon arriving in Durham, grab the bus that ran every 15 minutes, and make the short ride to be dropped off at Durham Market Square at the north end of the peninsula where the good stuff was. We’d have about a 10 minute walk to the Cathedral, but since we’d be getting to the area around lunchtime it was a good excuse to stop at Bell’s Fish Shop for our only (officially) scheduled F&C luncheon.
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| The building labeled "Town Hall" is apparently the town hall. See how I'm using context cues to draw conclusions as to what is around us? |
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| A closer look at Charles Vane. I assume he's the dude, but maybe he's the horse? |
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| Heading toward the Cathedral (and College) after lunch. Even on this narrow street there were a small number of cars working through the crowds. |
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| About to enter the Cathedral. It is about 110P and we have a ticket for a tour that is slated to start at 130P. |
During the tour the guide happened to make a passing comment that implied that student housing at Durham College was a challenge for everyone. It happened to be an Open House for students on the day we were there – or perhaps it was move in day? We weren’t sure. But it was an interesting thought to wonder how housing was handled.
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| We wandered a bit aimlessly in the 15 minutes prior to our tour, so this was a pretty window that I have no information about. |
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| There were a lot of people milling about, but I wouldn't call the Cathedral "crowded". By going in mid-September we managed to avoid a lot of the tourist crush. Nice! |
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| A memorial found in a random aisle. Everywhere you go you see (at least) a memorial to World War I, and most places have multiple memorials. |
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| Part of the pipes for the great organ. There are apparently more than 4600 pipes. |
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| This is the newest window. It was installed in 2019 as a memorial to a university student who had died unexpectedly. |
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| In tribute and memorium to the Durham Light Infantry |
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| A better view of Neptune, taken on our way back to the park and ride bus stop |
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| Our room |
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| A view of the car park from our room. This was, by far, the largest onsite car park we had access to. |
Post-dinner we popped into a Tesco Express store that was next door and bought two varieties of biscuits to take back to the room with us. E got some kind of Lemon Ginger sandwich cookie while I got milk chocolate covered sugar cookies. As we were walking out of the central dining street where we’ve just eaten we were struck by how dark it is. Another US/UK diff – in the US this whole street would have been brightly lit and all the restaurants would have been spilling light onto the street, even if subdued. Here, if you aren’t paying attention you could easily think your restaurant is closed.
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| A view from the bridge over the river. Whether or not the water feature back there was functional or purely decorative was unknown. |
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| And now here's the Cathedral peeking over the ridge as we're walking to dinner. Once again, it isn't registering on my brain that our walk is taking us right back to where we'd spent the afternoon. |































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