One thing we are not short of here in England is picturesque villages. You may well think that some of the hilltop villages of southern France or Tuscany provide lovely views, but I would suggest that for pure chocolate box prettiness only English villages will do. You will find them right across the country, from the Isle of Wight to Northumberland, from Cornwall to Norfolk. Some of them have featured in the television dramas of the Midsomer Murders series, much of which was, I believe, filmed in Buckinghamshire. But it is the area known as the Cotswolds, a part of southern central England containing the rolling Cotswold Hills, that is particularly associated with chocolate box villages. Among these is Bibury, which the nineteenth-century artist and craftsman William Morris called the most beautiful village in England. Bibury is noted for the cottages made from honey-coloured stone under steeply-pitched roofs. In particular, Arlington Row, a row of cottages that was built as a wool store in 1380 and converted into a row of cottages for weavers in the seventeenth century.
Picture by Saffron Blaze via Wikicommons |
This delightful row is possibly the most photographed row of cottages in England and is visited by tourists from across the globe, anxious to take home with the perfect picture as a souvenir.
But photographers have complained about the little yellow car "photobombing" their pictures. It seems that the resident of a cottage in Awkward Hill, leading off to the right in the picture above, has no garage and the only place he can park gets in the way of many of the photos.
Photo: SWNS |
3 comments:
Nuts. It's like moving close to a church and complaining about the bells. Aren't other people bonkers? It's a tough responsibility being among the few reasonable people in the world.
You're quite right, Mike. It's a huge responsibility we share...
If I ever go to visit, I'll want to make sure I get the yellow car in my photos!
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