Monthly Archives: February 2007

A Valentine’s Treat

I had a great Valentine’s treat this week-end, it was early I know but better early than not at all.

I was treated to a 3 course dinner at one of my favorite places The Lifeboat Inn at Thornham.

I have been there many times but never to eat so was a real treat for me.

In the restaurant they do a special 3 course dinner menu, a sample can be seen here

For starters we had,

 Platter of fruit with mascaponi cheese and honey and ginger syrup

Brancaster mussels steamed with lemongrass and ginger served with coconut milk

then main course,

Strudel of wild mushrooms, goat’s cheese and capsicums dressed with croquette potatoes, crispy spinach and a warm kumquat marmalade

Roasted sea bass served with pan fried vegetables and potatoes

and desserts were,

Cranberry and Ricotta cake with a cranberry and orange compote

Blackcurrant sorbet

all washed down by a bottle of saddle creek Semillon chardonnay, which has gone straight to the top of my favorite wine list.

The waitress was nice and friendly, the restaurant warm and cosy ,food delicious and  company fantastic, what more could a girl ask for…….

The Queen and Permissive paths

 As a very keen walker and member of the Ramblers association

 I would like to know why the Queen does not make a permissive path alongside or on the coastal defences on her Sandringham estate that runs along the Norfolk coast.

 At the moment it is impossible to walk (legally) the last bit of coast from Snettisham to Kings Lynn, without having to walk along the A149 , which may be one of the most scenic roads but it also has a very high accident rate too.

 “Roads in Norfolk that fell under the ‘one star’ listing – with a high accident rate – were the A149 (King’s Lynn) and the A12 (Lowestoft-Great Yarmouth).”

It is hard to see how this would affect her privacy or that of her pheasants. Perhaps the RA should start a campaign to open up the last bit of Norfolk coast to Ramblers.

Sunday at the Coast

 Woke up to a glorious sunny day so decided to go up to the coast.

We decided to go to snettisham and see how far along we could walk towards Kings Lynn.

When we walked through the Caravan site we could see what damage had been done by the strong winds we had a few weeks ago. A few caravans completely destroyed.

We got through the Nature Reserve and started walking along the sea defense wall ,all was going well. We then cut inland to head towards wolferton.

While walking across to Wolferton we polightly got told we were not  on a permissive path. We asked who the land belonged too and it was the Sandringham Estate. 

We then went through the wolferton estate , round Dersingham Bog, down to the dismantled railway and cut back along the tracks to the sea defense wall.

The information from my pedometer was…..

 10.2 miles

 21,172 steps

 1,134 cals

Sally’s Afternoon Walk

I don’t often get to walk on a Saturday as well as a Sunday, but this week-end I had the opportunity.

I was put in charge of planning the route and leading the way.

A big risk for Geoff as I have been known to get lost, but he bought his GPS along just in case I needed help.

Glad to say I needed no help and as you can see from the map we did a nice circular walk , keeping mainly off road.

I forgot to take my camera, which was a shame as we walked by tons of pigs , with pens full of squealing piglets.

The information from my pedometer was…..

10.8 miles

22,603 steps

1,220 cals

Happy Groundhog Day

Did you know today was Groundhog day and that it always falls on February 2nd

Groundhog Day History

“According to Stormfax it all started with Candlemas Day. This day originally came from the Germans and was the mid-point between the first day of the winter and the first day of spring. Legend said that if this day was fair (sunny), then the second-half of winter would be stormy. In their native land of Germany, the Germans looked at a badger to see if they could see his shadow. When they settled in North America in Pennsylvania, the local Indians had a great respect for groundhogs so they substituted a groundhog for the badger. And as they say, the rest is history and now every February 2, everyone looks to a small town in Pennsylvania for a weather prediction! “

So the rules are….

If the groundhog sees his shadow, we have 6 more weeks of winter.
If the groundhog does not see his shadow, winter will end soon”

 

In Norfolk today its been Sunny but cold so does that mean we are in for 6  weeks of winter weather………

GPS v Pedometer

How accurate is a Pedometer compared  to a GPS

For measuring distance  over flat ground I think a pedometer can be just as good.

Take my walk yesterday as an example,

my pedometer said 19.4 miles walked over 5 hours 22 min’s

Geoff’s GPS said 19.1 miles in 5 hours 10 min’s.

Whether it would be so accurate over the hills I don’t know.

It has also been discussed here  with some interesting opinions.Â