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Tag Archives: Kynance Cove

Guest blogger again!

Hi, It’s LiveWire 3 again! This time we arrived spontaneously because we love coming here and take every chance we get to come to Cornwall and see our family! Today we had a magical beach trip to Kynance Cove which was unimaginably beautiful. It was like being in Spain or Italy! The water was bluer than sapphire, it was like a matching outfit, the sky as a shirt, the sea as trousers. It was absolutely idyllic!

 

In the evening, we traveled up the ferny hill to a castle, but not just any castle, a restaurant! The castle floated over some massive rocks and it felt like we were royals in the 16th century! We walked up the stairs and sat down, surrounded by stones and sunshine. It was so cosy – especially with the candles! Our food was so delicious and I don’t think the plates even needed to be cleaned after we’d finished!

 

We watched the sunset through the windows and as we left everything was orange so we stood behind those massive rocks and just immersed ourselves in the sunlight.

 

 

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Housel Bay Day 3, Colours of Kynance and Lichen

Our third day and we had a walk around Kynance Cove before heading for home. Kynance has always been a family favourite and today the colours were as lovely as ever even though the sunshine of the last few days had disappeared. We liked the lichen patterns too.  This is the view from our room this morning.

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The sea is always turquoise here.

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The Serpentine is very beautiful in this Cove.

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These three days have been just wonderful – totally challenging and I ache all over the place – but just think – two years ago I couldn’t even have contemplated these Cornish coast path walks. Two new hips and two years on and I can do it! I can do some really challenging walks and survive!

 

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Shoreline at Kynance Cove

Two more wonderful and very moving performances of the Shoreline production, this time at Kynance Cove, where the sun smiled on us all afternoon and evening.  Our audiences were amazing and very complimentary.

Beaches in Cornwall change tide by tide and Kynance is no exception. An enormous pile of seaweed had been washed up on the beach just where our ‘stage’ was to be so our warm up was a beach clean so that the dancers could dance safely and we, along with the audience could move across the beach without hazard. 

Here are some views of this very beautiful cove and one photo of the dancers in the water, courtesy of our friend David. Tomorrow sees the last two performances.

 
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Posted by on July 13, 2016 in Beauty, Cornwall, environment

 

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Unexpected

Meeting these two beauties last September in the National Trust car park for Kynance Cove in Cornwall, was certainly unexpected!

What a surprise to meet these two in the car park!

What a surprise to meet these two in the car park!

Find others in the challenge here.

NaBloPoMo

 
 

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Baby Eye, The Museum of Us and Split Serpentine

1   Grand-baby B loves her black and white images and her Mum and I were delighted to see the reflection of the images in her eye.

Black and white images reflected in B's eyes

Black and white images reflected in B’s eyes

Grand-baby B looking at her black and white pictures

Grand-baby B looking at her black and white pictures

Several of my readers asked about the earlier photos I posted of Baby B ‘reading’ her Art for Baby book. Neurologists say that newborns are only capable of focusing 8 to 10 inches from their face. They also prefer black and white, high contrast images to colour graphics. There is a very interesting article here if you’d like to find out more. The following is included in the article.

Hannah Lazenby, 29, a maternity nurse from Harrogate, has looked after dozens of babies over the past 10 years, usually from the day of their birth. She believes a simple black and white image can soothe any crying baby: “It gives them something to concentrate on when they’re bombarded by so many different images after the calm of the womb. This is something very simple that they’re transfixed by – they can’t take their eyes off it. I have had children who have been fractious or had colic and found myself thinking, ‘You poor thing, I don’t know what else to do, I’ll give you this to look at.’ And it does seem to work.”

2   I spent a fascinating morning at the Royal Cornwall Museum, learning about Wildworks’ new project, The Museum of Us. The cabinet in the poster will be filled with objects that local people are asked to bring to the museum.

The Museum of Us

The Museum of Us

We, the volunteers,will be finding out the stories behind the objects and why they mean ‘Cornwall’ to the owners.   We each had to take an object and mine was a rock!

Family rock

Family rock

3    1989 was my parents’ Golden Wedding Anniversary and the family collected together from Yorkshire, Germany, Atlanta and Arizona for two weeks in Cornwall where Mum and Dad still lived. We spent one happy afternoon picnicking and playing on one of our favourite beaches, Kynance Cove.  Our eldest daughter found a beautiful piece of Serpentine, pale green on its fractured side and with red veining underneath.   About half an hour later one of my nephews found a beautiful piece of Serpentine and we were all amazed to realise that the two pieces fitted together! They were one rock which had split. Now I know one shouldn’t take rocks from the beach but these were too special to leave behind. Our piece came home with us and Lael’s piece went home to Prescott, Arizona with that side of the family. The rocks are part of a whole. The rocks mean Cornwall and family and togetherness to us all.

 

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The Lizard, Ann’s Pasties and Kynance Cove

We’ve had another day of showing P some more of Cornwall’s treasures. I’m going to tell the story and show you all the beautiful things of the day through a Gallery. Just click on any photo and it will enlarge and you can move on to the next one.

The day was rounded off with choir practice and learning a beautiful Lebanese song from a Lebanese friend of Claire’s who is visiting Cornwall.

 
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Posted by on September 17, 2012 in Cornwall, environment, postaday2012, sculpture

 

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