We did go to Guernsey on Tuesday. It was touch and go when I
got several emails and texts informing me that the Poole ship was in dock and
we had to go to Weymouth for the 8 am ferry. The last ones told us to go to the
Poole port by 6 am for a coach to take us to Weymouth. So that’s what we did.
Daughter and I got up at 5 and woke granddaughter at 5.30 by which time the
chauffeur (hubby) was drinking coffee and getting ready to take us to the port,
leaving 2 dogs on their own for half an hour, before chauffeur became dog
minder.
The fog was thick as we left Poole and several times on the voyage
the captain warned us that he was going to have to use the fog horn. St Peter
Port was much as I remembered it from previous trips and by the
time we disembarked at around 10.45 the fog had lifted and the sun was out. We
mooched around the shops and bought Eryn a pair of high top trainers in a sale
at a bargain price. Then we collapsed at
an outside table at a Thai restaurant with a birds’ eye view of the harbour and
an ice cold bottle of vino in a bucket.
After one authentic Thai meal, a large cheeseburger and
chips and a crab salad because Eryn wanted to try some crab meat, we headed
back to the harbour wall and ambled along hoping to have ten minutes on a beach,
but a) the tide was in and b) it was too far to walk in the time we had left.
So we sat around watching people play boules on the side of the harbour and
then went to check in for the journey back.
We all agreed that we’d enjoyed the visit but it wasn’t long
enough (on the last day trip that Hubby and I had done from Weymouth, we’d left
at 7 am and got back around midnight –
that day had impressed us so much we’d gone back to stay for a few days a
couple of years later, and thoroughly enjoyed seeing more of the island).
Unfortunately this week it took about 45 minutes for the coach to get out of
the car park to get us back to Poole and we were all pretty fed up and
knackered on arrival, and the sight of our steadfast chauffeur pulling in ahead
of the coach was very welcome indeed.
The photo is of The Little Chapel, one of my favourite places in Guernsey. It is in a village south of St Peter Port, and really is a tiny chapel on two floors, built by a monk who completely covered every one of its surfaces with decorative shells.
3 comments:
Sounds like a wonderful outing and that chapel has such a quaint character and feel to it. Would love to see it in person.
Thanks Jo. Hope you get there some day.
A lovely place. I went to a shell house in Jersey, which was also fascinating. My grandmother lived on Guernsey in her early married life and often spoke fondly about it but I never got there myself. Or haven't done so yet, anyway!
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