Saturday, May 02, 2020

In plane view

Once Mrs H had returned from her early morning supermarket shop where all was good, despite some slight queuing to get in at 7am, and everything obtained except that essential commodity, cardomon pods (that's another story) we decided to take our daily exercise.

As usual, we headed up through the estate on a little used path, crossed the A4050 Port Road and via short walk through the Cardiff and Glamorgan Memorial Park and Crematorium grounds ventured onto Wenvoe Castle golf course.

With no golf being played, but the groundsmen keeping the place ship-shape, it looked pristine and I can't wait to getting back to hacking my way around a course. Normally we do a circular route around the "back nine" but today we ventured over to the front nine for the first time. It's a spectacular course, with lovely views out across the eastern Vale towards Rhoose. From the 6th tee I took the following photo which showed a row of furloughed British Airways planes sitting on the tarmac going nowhere in this lockdown.

BA planes at Cardiff Wales Airport
Since I retired I started playing golf, and normally play with a friend at the Vale Resort. I thought that was hilly, but it plays into insignificance compared with the front nine at Wenvoe! You'd need to be seriously fit to play this course regularly and/or use a golf buggy. If I played here I might need to invest in an electric trolley - pulling my Dad's old manual trolley ups and down these fairways would give me arms like Popeye!
Wenvoe Castle Golf Club - 8th Fairway - the green is down in the dip
 There were a one or two other couples and a couple of dog walkers on the course, but that part, we had the place to ourselves. It was lovely to find a bench at strategic points and sit and take in the views, sunshine and sound only of birds tweeting.

Wenvoe Castle Golf Club - 10th fairway
There are some fabulous trees on this course, The tall evergreens in the photo above are huge and spectacular , whilst there are a few of the what I think are copper beeches shown in the photo below dotted around the course. This was spectacular in today's sunlight.
Beautiful copper beech
Walking back through the crematorium grounds, we heard a plane, and I spotted this Airbus A400M Atlas that we have quite often seen over this area in the last few months doing some sort of training exercise. It's a big old pain and can carry a 37 tonne payload over 2,000 nautical miles and can accommodate 116 troops. You can even get a Chinook inside it apparently! This was about the extreme range of my zoom, so the quality isn't the best.

Airbus A400M Atlas over Barry
 Rather than take our normal path back, we wandered into Pencoedtre wood, a small wooded area at the top of our estate, bordered on two sides by the aforementioned A4050 Port Road and the A4231 Barry Docks Link Road. We'd never ventured into it before, despite having lived within 5 minutes walk for the last 15 years. As woods go it was fairly ordinary, although some of the bluebells we spotted were almost purple. We also spotted a standard squirrel. With only a vague idea that we needed to keep going down and keep the sun on our right, we followed one of a number of paths before appearing out of the trees opposite Lidl, and just a few minutes from our house.  A pleasant 4 miler or so in the sunshine. Just in time for a cup of tea and some cake.

Arty trees and sky photo
Until tomorrow....

#isolationlife
#stayhomesavelives

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