Staying at the Vicarage
with Jeremy and Clarissa Hummerstone
(This page is not quite
finished.)
Some of these photos are taken from the Church Newsletter
To read it and learn more about great Torrington Church
go to this website:
http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/torrington/index.htm

Palm Sunday - Clarissa leading the donkey through Torrington Square,
with the Procession following behind

Caption from the Newsletter:
There was quite a party of visitors from Roscoff at Mass this morning,
and we were serenaded afterwards with the bombard & bagpipes

Waiting for the carnival to come (May fair),photo taken from outside
the Vicarage

Clarissa and her youngest daughter, Bridget,
Friday evening, June 9th

Bridget and Clarissa, in the garden with the puppies

Excerpt from the Church Newsletter, the week that I finished the walk
From the Church Newsletter:
"4 June
2006
Sermon The Holy Ghost is
our advocate, enabling us to
bear witness to
the Resurrection.
Christine
Lovelock Writes During my tour of
the many
proposed wind farms
sites in Devon I stayed at Bradworthy, and am now even more worried
about what
may happen to Torrington.
Since the three turbines were put up at Bradworthy, there is now a
proposal for
four more, much larger ones (410 ft high) on the other side of the
village.
There is also one for three more at Crimp, to the west of Bradworthy,
with the
possibility of a very large wind farm being added to that as a “Crimp
extension”.
The villagers at Bradworthy now face the possibility of being
surrounded by
turbines, with all the attendant problems of noise, infrasound, shadow
flicker,
watercourse damage, etc. Once the Torrington
landscape has been degraded with the three turbines at Higher
Darracott, we are
likely to suffer the same industrialization. Our economy is already
fragile and
will get worse, as visitors are deterred and the bed & breakfast
trade
declines.
Come
to the Plough on Thursday or Friday (8—9 June)
to see The
Wind Thing,
by Henry Lewis, a musical farce about windfarms by a
playwright
who loves country walking, and hear the debate afterwards between Ricky
Knight
of the Green (pro-windfarm) Party and John Constable, descendant of the
landscape artist. There will be a small exhibition by Artists Against
Wind
Farms in the meeting room at the Plough (Wednesday 7th—Friday 9th). "
The Vicarage - it was surrounded by scaffolding while I visited as it
was being repainted (it does not normally look like this!) This
Vicarage has been a welcome place for so many people in need over the
years, and I hope that it always stays as Torrington Vicarage.

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