Alice Temperely

10 Sept 2013



It's New York fashion week and I'm not there.  I've never been, but would like to "get involved or get invited" one day.

When I watch it on the telly I find it all a little stressful.  Woman, lots of woman having a silent clothes war.

"Do I look nice in this?  No do I look nicer than you in this?"

That's the impression I get, but I'm sure it's not that bad.

So instead, here's my offering.  A sneak peak at a designer I love.

 

There's more to gawk at here.

Burgh Island - a trip to the art deco hotel at the tip of Devon

4 Sept 2013

  

"Like the sea birds you can fly over to mingle with the work-a-day world when you like, 
but you can also fly back when you like your noiseless, dustless island Sanctuary. "
                          - travel writer S.P.B Maise.

When you are standing on Burgh Island looking across the thin stretch of sand that links it to the mainland - you can’t help but feel the eerie magic. 
  
The white 1930s art deco hotel stands gloriously isolated.  The wind blows hard enough that I’m too scared to stand at the edge.  I’m terribly aware of my mortally as the grey tainted sea lashes below against the rocks and threatens to cut us off from civilisation – if we forget the time.  So I stand a little closer to my other half, which I guess makes this trip to my Devon dream a little more romantic.
 

The building in brochures looks magnificent.  The black and white photos of opulent days gone by adds r to its glamor.  For a while now, I’ve wanted to see the place where these elegant people holidayed way back then - where the famous in their hay-day made the most of Burgh Island hotel in its hay-day.
 


Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot mystery Evil under the Sun was filmed here in 2000.  It helped set the scene of murder most foul in beautiful surroundings.  It provided the secluded bay, the unearthed tunnels, the shade and the light.
 


It’s difficult to infiltrate this hotel unless you have money.  Rooms start at £400 or so a night and Sunday lunch costs £48 a head.  I decided to close my eyes and book the Sunday offerings because sometimes in life when your pockets always feel empty – I wanted need to remind myself that once in a while I deserve to treat myself.

It was booked and then cancelled due to a wedding – so after I sent heartfelt email with heavy tones of begging scattered through it - they agreed to make us a one off afternoon teas.

“We don’t normally do this,” they said and I said “I was very very grateful and very very happy.”

Burgh Island is the full stop at the end of a little village called Bigbury-on-Sea.  Getting there was easy because we were already in Devon.  We traveled on a long country road that presents you with the view of the island when you drive over a crest and start descending towards it.  Like an old friend, it felt like she had been sitting there waiting for us.
 

Exciting.

We opted to stroll along the beach rather than the hotel driver picking us up.  I just wanted to take pictures and have a little more time to absorb my surroundings.

From first contact it’s made very clear this place isn’t just for anybody.  It’s for anybody with money and when like us you don’t have that sort of cash - it feels a little special, unsettling and weird.  We lingered around the gate trying to figure out how to get in, trying to look like we were supposed to be there not some wannabes lurking around. 

 

Once we stepped through the front door - all the allure, mystic and expectations melted away. 

Everything looked tired.  I know if I had lavished my money on a room for a night – this wouldn’t do.  The paint peeled down the sides of the 1930 art deco mirrors in the toilet.  Rather than reflecting decadent surroundings, I could see the damp patches staining the walls.  


The main foyer offered some grand elegance, but the furniture in the conservatory had been bleached by the sun.  The garden was minimally tidy.  It felt forgotten – void of green finger loving and creative care.   The appreciation of the view was interrupted by thoughts that the building desperately needed a new coat of paint. 


We sat outside on a weary looking bench. The other half shouldered my disappointment, as I silently felt guilty for bringing him here - for talking him into driving miles to get me here - for making him sit and help me decide what I should wear for such a special day - because in my excitement I had left no room for this hotel to let me down.


It was our first holiday away together - so there was still time to make the most of this trip and be happy. Teas were £25 per person arrived.  The sandwiches were light – the cakes fresh and the staff ever so polite.  I sipped my peppermint tea and read lines from The Great White Palace by Tony Porter – a true account of how it all came to be.  


Teas done, scones with clotted cream eaten, sandwiches munched, photos taken - a stroll down to the secluded swimming pool in the naked rocks completed - it was time to go.
 

The Pilchard Inn pub shares the island and is nestled at its base, so we popped in for our farewell drink.  As guest of the hotel the bar staff let us sit on the other side – for guests only. 


In our last moments of VIP ism we sipped our local ale in the darkness of this tiny inn and stared out at Bigbury-on-Sea. Part of me wanted the tide to come in, get cut off from the rest of the world and escape on the infamous sea tractor that straddles the waves and is the last and only link to the island. 


The other half asked if I’d come back. I considered this and said “only if we could stay for free and after it had been refurbished.” 

He smiled.  “Oh Miss Miller, I guess that means no?”

I sadly guess it does.

The trouble is

1 Sept 2013


I love this dress.  I'd love it better without the new handbag strap stain across my chest, but hey ho - nothings perfect.  I bought it during a wonderfully cheap trip to Paris with my friend Caroline.  

This is the back of it taking at some other time in my life. 


Anyway.

Today it was worn on a trip to Brighton.  We wondered the streets, got a little sun on our backs and had a cook off at Jamie Oliver's recipease place.  Two of us shared the hob. After an hour and a bit we sat down with our creation of chilli pork street food.  Tasty.  Even tastier because of the two for one deal.  So a whole chef, plus ingredients, plus the cooking, plus the lesson and a chilled glass of wine cost £35.


It felt like such a coupley thing to do - but if there is ever a next time -  I think I'll drink more wine during the cook off - there's something pleasant about cooking and slurping wine, listening to music and being too merry to eat or even care to eat the final product - the pleasure being all in the making.

But we laughed lots, chopped lots and I threw a few extra cheeky ingredients in when the chef wasn't looking - happy days me thinks.


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