Saturday, 30 December 2023

 

This blog posts dates from 31 January 2014. It will be ten years since in a month’s time. I have walked the Erewash Canal a few times since and I am planning to do so again during 2014, together with the Nottingham Tram and my beloved 35 Nottingham City Transport History Bus. I will be 80 in May and I want this collection to be a marker of mine, about what I love about where I live and what I love about life. It is all here.

 In January 2014 we were still living on Devonshire Promenade in Lenton, our last cat, Markeza, having died in October, three months before, which prompted our decision to move to Beeston or Chilwell, and to look for a new home somewhere along the line of the Nottingham Tram of the Toton Lane extension, which was then under construction. We found our house in Beeston Fields the day before my 70th birthday, in the middle of May, after several failed attempts elsewhere. In the event, the gods were taking care of us and we have been happy in our new home since the day we moved in in November 2014. My map isn’t bad, but it doesn’t show Trent-Barton’s ‘My Local Fifteen’ bus route, which weaves in and out of the Erewash Canal between Gallows Inn and Tamworth Road. My 2024 map will correct the omission (as a fewer other maps have already done).





Erewash days of delight

I spent over half my life crossing the Erewash valley without even knowing its name as anything other than that of a borough council or a river; somewhere to be crossed when going to and from other places. Long Eaton and Sandiacre were not more than names. Ilkeston I knew because of the Co-op and the town's lovely museum.

Eastwood is also part of the Erewash valley, even though it is in Nottinghamshire, so it is a town I know a little better, as much for its D H Lawrence Birthplace Museum as anything else.

The River Erewash forms part of the boundary between Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire and I knew about the Erewash Canal because I crossed it so many times on trips to Derby or Ripley and saw it from a bus at the point where the Tamworth Road and Canal run alongside one another as you leave Long Eaton heading towards Sawley and Castle Donington.


 A Skylink bus approaching Long Eaton town centre along the Tamworth Road, which for about half-a-mile runs alongside the Erewash Canal, on its way to Nottingham.

I always wanted to walk the Erewash Canal – something I finally managed in 2012 and 2013. Walking its seventeen miles  gave me a whole new appreciation of the Erewash valley and its importance. I did my walk in four chunks and have been back since on a couple of occasions. I am in process of creating a separate Erewash page and have created the map beliw to show how easy it is to reach from Nottingham and the buses you can catch. All run frequently, except the 20 (Sundays only) and the 21 (Monday–Saturday). These buses run every sixty minutes.


The northern end of the Erewash Canal at Langley Mill, where it joins the Cromford Canal. It also used to be where the Nottingham Canal ended.




The southern end of the Erewash Canal at Trent Lock, where it joins the River Trent. in the background you can see Ratcliffe-on-Soar Power Station. To see more photographs and information about the Canal, go to the Erewash Canal page in the left-hand column.


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Saturday, 19 August 2023

Box cube template and instructions

I met a lady in a cafe in Nottingham city centre who was creating embroidery patterns and we got chatting. I promised to share my cube box template with her and that I would do it here. I had thought about selling the cube template but I don't want the hassle at my age (79) of dealing with the Inland Revenue — hence my decision to make the template freely available. Robert Howard🐰

NOTE: Each full square is 8x8cm. laid out A3.





Thursday, 20 July 2023

Full Nottingham City Centre map is not all on the Nottingham Cube for space reasons.

 The Nottingham Cube goes no further south than Nottingham Railway Station:



The original Cube extends further south and includes The Meadows and small parts of Wilford and West Bridgford on the south bank of the River Trent:

CLICK ON THE MAPS TO ENLARGE.


Three cube boxes for you to see.

The past year has been less than kind to me healthwise,which explains why there have been no posts. I now describe myself as 'a half-day person' full of good intent but not the energy to do all I want to do after I have undertaken my 'chores'. On the plus side I have updated my first ever cube, which was of Nottingham City Centre in 2017, and added two more: the Beeston and London (Underground) cubes:


They are all on sale in Plane Tree, a not for profit arts and crafts gallery/shop, on Beeston High Road (https://planetreenotts.com). I print and make the cubes in return for £1 to cover part of my costs, as I have no desire to have the taxman knocking on my front door. Coming up to 80, I do not want the hassle!