nine . an interview & a giveaway

hi everyone,

i am delighted to have been invited to participate in the NINE interview series – the brainchild of the lovely liz who I had the pleasure of meeting at squam last september.

you can see my answers to her beautiful questions here.

to celebrate this lovely interview, i would like to offer all my readers a giveaway:
the chance to get yourself (or a friend, if you already have a copy) the recently published book of photos & poetry all of a sudden…

to enter, simply leave me a comment giving me your answer to liz’s question #2.
you can use words; or leave a link to an image, or a story, or a song, or a blog post, or…. let your imagination run wild!

  1. entries are open to everyone, so tell your friends
  2. winner will be drawn at random on monday 3rd may and notified by email

arohanui (big love) to you wherever you are and whatever you love.

-leonie

postcards from polzeath

dear friends,

last weekend saw me returning once more to the coast.

it’s my retreat. my place to re-charge. a place where i can be quiet and still, re-connect with the earth and myself.

i took a mermaid rock away with me which simply says LET GO. it’s only a small rock, yet it’s big message kept whispering itself to me as i was away. in the quiet moments i would think of all the things i hold on to that i don’t need. these things will be thanked for their service, then gently removed from my life over the coming months.

i stayed in this pretty little shepherd’s hut, close to polzeath surf beach
the shepherds hut

with these beauties as my neighbours.
(there’s nothing quite like having a hand licked by the rough warm tongue of a cow. it’s exquisite)
.

on friday, i went for a good long walk (6.4 miles /10.3 kilometres) along the coastal path from lundy bay
lundy bay

to the rumps
the rumps

An odd name for a headland, but one pertaining to the twin knolls that overlook the many earthworks that are a feature of this grassy, cliff-bound, peninsula.
- Martin Hesp

around pentire point
pentire point

to polzeath beach (over in the distance)
polzeath

then back up the road to the car and home with some fish & chips and a bottle of locally produced cider.

saturday, before picking up my beloved from the train station, i took another walk along the coastline between rock and daymer bay
coastal path

i swear that this place reminds me so much of some places in new zealand that i felt a longing for my homeland, whilst also feeling completely at home
daymer bay

sunday, nic and i took the black tor ferry over to padstow
padstow harbour

and had a delicious lunch at rick stein’s seafood restaurant (we think he might own half the town), pairing our lunch with a delicious bottle of local bubbly, made just down the road at camel bay winery
rick steins seafood restaurant

before catching the ferry back to rock and spending the afternoon lying on the beach in the glorious sunshine
rock

monday, after a quick drive to padstow to pick up something for lunch,
fresh cornish crab rolls

we returned to london where i feel both completely relaxed after my time away and totally overwhelmed by the noise, the crowds, life. i feel somehow part of everything yet also removed from it.

with love to you wherever you adventures are taking you,
-leonie

p.s. more photos up on flickr and polaroids to come…

postcards from the canterbury coast

dear friends,

yesterday was a day for exploring another area outside of london. we were headed for herne bay, however we stopped at whitstable on a friend’s recommendation. i’m so pleased we did, it’s such a pretty township and the seafood stores along the marina boast a great selection of fresh seafood.

fish suppers - spectra
polaroid spectra

10% off mon-thur

whitstable

we drove around the coast towards herne bay, stopping to admire the three rows of beach huts facing out towards the sea below marine parade at tankerton.

tankerton beach huts

love shack

the herne bay we visited here in the uk, is so very different from the herne bay we know and love in new zealand, so we actually didn’t stay there long, choosing instead to go check out…

the 12th-century towers of the ruined church at reculver,

12th-century towers of the ruined church at reculver

st augustine’s cross (just for you carol ::grin::),

st augustine's cross

and the stone chapel at faversham – the only christian building in england to incorporate within its fabric the remains of a 4th-century romano-british pagan mausoleum.

stone chapel at faversham

with love,
love lane

-leonie

p.s. more photos on flickr

happy easter

a weekend full of adventure plans and adventure planning…
trips to amsterdam, copenhagen, cornwall, herne bay, morocco, montreal, northern ireland and winchester on the cards over the next couple of months.

tonight we have friends coming over for dinner. the table is adorned and ready.

happy weekend everyone