Visiting Watership Down

elodieunderglass:

birdandmoon:

A couple of days ago, I did something I’ve always wanted to do: I visited the real life Watership Down.

When I was a little kid, I won a copy of this book. I was hooked right away and I re-read it every year. I know many people saw the Watership Down animated movie way too young and were traumatized. It’s too bad, because the book, while dark in places, is a ripping adventure story with fun characters and a lot of natural history and environmentalism woven in. It’s like if Moby Dick starred the whales.

Like a lot of fantasy books, this one begins with an intricate map. But unlike a lot of fantasy books, Watership Down is 100% set in a real place.

I followed this route. Here’s what I saw.

At the base of the down, sheeps abounded!

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There’s no official sign for the path up the Down. Someone has helpfully written “Watership Down” on the path sign in sharpie. Note the Hazel-Rah tag on the left.

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There was a lot of wildlife. I saw red kites, deer, pheasants, partridges, wood pigeons, and a hare. No rabbits, but apparently they come out in the evening.

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The hike up was wet and muddy. But the view from the top was so, so beautiful.

“Come and look! You can see the whole world.”

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Though many of the wildflowers had passed, I found all sorts of plants that inspired the names in the book. Just watch out for stinging nettle and hogweed beside some of the paths!

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At the top of the Down, there’s a baby hazel tree surrounded by a small wooden fence with a plaque honoring the author, Richard Adams. It’s nothing fancy that might detract from the wide, green, breezy place. Just perfect. Bigwig had even taken a moment to tag it, which was also perfect.

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I don’t think I’ve ever geeked out this hard. Watership Down was EXACTLY like I pictured it, and I spotted a lot of the places mentioned in the book. If you loved this story as a kid, and you have a chance to visit, do it.

Ohhhh so lovely!

Sometimes I think about writing a Geek’s Guide to Britain. It would have walks along Tiffany Aching’s Chalk, and rambles ‘round the Shire, and Watership Down. The right place to camp in Dartmoor for a “hound of the baskervilles” spookin’, and some funky secrets of London, and that one place in Cardiff where there’s a real Dalek prop nailed to the ground and you can pose with it. Idk. Might be fun.

ETA: and Lyra’s bench at Oxford! And just Puzzlewood, generally! Omg.

annlarimer:

grammarmancer:

gluemanofficial:

homoquartz:

tag urself I’m the millennials’ morbid fascination with death

I have never heard anyone, regardless of age, say “my phone’s battery has gone”

“My phone’s battery has gone” sounds like what you’d say to a small child you don’t trust to understand the concept of death.

My phone’s battery went to live on a farm with a bunch of other batteries. 

vintagehomeplans:

United States, c. 1940: #827

A simple art moderne house with porthole and bump-out corner windows on the front. The living room is large for a house this size.

Deluxe Small Homes by L. F. Garlinghouse, c. 1940. (Topeka, KS, USA) —from my library

This is the original house plan that I based my Sims 4 speed build on. There are some great plans for small houses on this vintagehomeplans tumblr and I’m going to snag some more of them as inspiration.