Thursday, Dec. 6, 2007
Leck Hall, England
Read more about the English countryside in International Living Postcards--your daily escape
Forget the Cotswolds, Cornwall, or anywhere else in England’s south. Although it rains more up here in the far northwest, it’s prettier, less crowded, and has better food.
Read OnThe dollar situation is looking gloomy at the moment with the euro trading at $1.41 dollars. But there is always a sunny side…I worked the British economic crisis (in the 1970s) to my advantage, pocketing a fortune by jumping on the property wagon.
Read OnWith chicken tikka and sweet and sour pork ranking as two of the most popular dishes in England, you’d be forgiven for thinking that we have no native cuisine.
Read OnBut most visitors to Cambridge today know nothing of the region's remarkable waterway history.
Read OnThe best thing about my day is the drive through Richmond Park. Joggers and dog walkers greet me from the pavement. Riders and their mounts canter along the horse lanes that parallel the road.
Read OnPorlock Weir, a tiny medieval harbor in west Dorset, England’s southwest, with three shops, a 16th-century coaching inn, and a busy hotel, is the end of my road.
Read OnI figured she was bringing us to England, but didn’t know where or why. She said we were going to spend a day at the Jane Austen period dress museum. Oh boy.
Read OnThe house where the Brontë sisters lived and worked is located at the summit of a long, narrow, steep cobblestone road. This street is lined with quaint little gift shops, 19th-century stores, and tea houses.
Read On