Posts Tagged ‘ travel ’

Cultivate your Imagination

Hopelessly overgrown topiary presents a challenge for perfectionists. This week’s mission, as garden volunteers at the National Trust’s Chastleton House, was to bring back a bloated, bushy, box hedge to its former state as a strutting peacock. We would have had better luck transforming Mr Blobby into Kate Moss.

Simon turns stylist for the Chastleton peacock

In this case, the only way forward is to exercise your imagination. Think of it as horticulture’s answer to cloud watching, a whimsical art-form eloquently explained by Britain’s eccentric Cloud Appreciation Society. Allow your mind to grant these misshapen forms another life as a bald eagle, a moor hen, or a generous-hipped bumble bee. No wonder Chastleton House’s best garden is always such a talking point.

Don’t forget to stroll along the vegetable patch where foodies visualise summery recipes for succulent cabbage, marrow, brussels sprouts, yellow courgettes and all manner of loveliness springing from the soil. Plump peaches line the lichen-clad walls of the kitchen garden that is fringed by fruit trees bearing apples and plums. Combine that with delicately-scented English roses, and a little birdsong, and your senses have really sampled the sights, sounds, smells, and tastes of this potent season. Peruse this selection of photographs to get your creative juices flowing:

Glorious Gardens at Chastleton House

One of the finest Jacobean country houses in England

Take a wander outside these honeyed walls

Chastleton House gardens, near Moreton-in-Marsh, guard atypical topiary, manicured croquet lawns, fragrant fruit trees and a well-tended vegetable patch.

Visitors strolled around its chief botanical attractions – including a lovely show of lavender and scented roses – at the annual NGS open day last Sunday.

Take a peek at some of Chastleton House’s horticultural highlights in the heart of the Cotswolds.

BBC News Website: Mexico’s Copper Canyon railway

A photographic train journey through northern Mexico’s stunning network of six canyons. Straddling the states of Sinaloa and Chihuahua, collectively these mountainous ravines are four times bigger than the Grand Canyon.

Click here to visit the gallery.

Travel+Leisure: Liverpool lifts its voice, April 2009

Four decades after The Beatles released their last album, Kate Joynes-Burgess finds a city not only loaded with musical history but pulsating with melodic innovation.

Click here to download the Spanish original pdf.

Click here to download the English text.

Travel+Leisure: Nicaraguan Retreats and Revelations, January 2009

Among the Americas’ most celebrated colonial cities, competing openly with Chiapas’ San Cristobal de las Casas, Granada is an ideal base for exploring Nicaragua’s unique natural beauty. Kate Joynes-Burgess shares her discoveries.

Click here to download the Spanish original pdf.

Click here to download the text in English.

Travel+Leisure: Three Flavours of Veracruz, December 2008

The port of Veracruz on the Gulf of Mexico is finally developing a food scene. Kate Joynes-Burgess discovers three gastronomic offerings to satisfy the most demanding of palates.

Click here to download the Spanish original pdf.

Time Out: Mexico City and the Best of Mexico December 2008

Kate Joynes-Burgess led Time Out’s resident team helping visitors get the best out of Mexico’s vast, vibrant capital.

Click here for the Festivals and Events chapter.

Click here for the Mexican football feature.

Travel+Leisure: La Riviera Alternativa, November 2008

Dotted among the colonies of new developments Kate Joynes-Burgess discovered uncommon natural beauty, great gastronomy, stylish shops and delightful accommodation – from Bohemian luxury to complete blow-out – at Mexico’s newest beach destination.

Click here to download the Spanish original pdf.

Click here to download the text in English.

The Spectator: Thanks for the Memories, 22 November 2007

Every year on 19 November, the Garifuna community, which accounts for just 6.6 percent of Belize’s bijou population of under 300,000, becomes the face of the Central American country as it prepares to commemorate Settlement Day. I witnessed the 2007 year’s celebrations in Dangriga Town, known as Belize’s capital of culture and a heartland of the Garifuna people.

Click here to visit the article.