And here is my other grandchild, Toby, at six months...
The two cousins, Toby and Katie, met for the first time last week.
Saturday, 29 April 2017
Wednesday, 26 April 2017
Katie aged 6 months
Ian and Helen brought Katie to visit on the day before she was six months old. Six months! I can hardly believe it...
"I've got teeth."
On the playmat with Easter Bunny.
It's 'pass the parcel' time.
Lots of smiles for Grandma.
And reading with Grandpa.
Thursday, 6 April 2017
Sefton Park - Part 2
Some more pictures from our visit to Sefton
Park in March.
The main lake is still known as the Boating
Lake even though it stopped being a
venue for boating in the 1970s when the jetty and boat hire facilities were
removed. The lake was totally emptied in 2007 for extensive renovation work and
all of the fish (which included specimen weights of carp, tench, roach, pike
and golden orf) were caught with large nets and sent to various locations
across the UK. Following its restoration, the lake was refilled in 2010.
Turtles have also been spotted in the lake.
Not only could one go rowing on the lake when GB and I were young but we
also sailed our model boats that Dad made for us.
Stepping stones on one of the pathways.
We paid a visit to the Palm House.
This is a Grade II three-tier dome
conservatory which opened in 1896. Liverpool millionaire Henry Yates Thompson
(the great nephew of the founder of Liverpool's Princes Park) gave £10,000 to
the city to fund its construction. It was designed in the tradition of Joseph
Paxton's glass houses and was stocked originally with a rich collection of
exotic plants.
During the Liverpool
Blitz of May 1941 a bomb fell nearby and shattered the glass. It was re-glazed
in 1950 at a cost of £6,163 with costs covered by War Restoration funds. A
period of decline and deterioration culminated in its closure in the 1980s on
grounds of safety. It was later fully
restored at a cost of £3.5 million and re-opened in 2001.
I liked the clever use of an old post-box as
a donation box.
Sefton Park has a copy of the bronze statue of Peter Pan in
Kensington Gardens, next to Hyde Park, London.
The exact location of the London one was chosen by
Peter Pan's author, J.M. Barrie. Barrie lived close to Kensington Gardens and
published his first Peter Pan story in 1902, using the park for inspiration. In
his Peter Pan tale, The Little White Bird, Peter flies out of his nursery and
lands beside the Long Water lake - on the spot where the statue now
stands. Barrie began planning the Peter
Pan statue in 1906. He took photos of the six-year-old Michael Llewelyn Davies
wearing a special Peter Pan costume to help a sculptor recreate his vision. In
1912, he found the man to make the statue, Sir George Frampton, and by 1st May
that year, the sculpture was in place in Kensington Gardens.
This copy of the
statue was placed in Sefton Park in 1928 and was unveiled in the presence of
Barrie.
An important feature of most Victorian parks was
the bandstand around which crowds would sit at the weekend listening to the
local brass bands.
They still played
there in my youth but I don’t know if they do nowadays. Sefton Park’s bandstand was said to be the
inspiration for the Beatles Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Another important statue in the park is that
of “Eros”. I have put Eros in quotes
because it is a replica of the statue in Piccadilly Circus commonly known as Eros. In fact both statues are not of Eros but of Anteros
– one of the Greek Gods of requited love. Physically, he is depicted as similar
to Eros in every way, but with long hair and plumed butterfly wings. He has been described also as armed with
either a golden club or arrows of lead.
Anteros
means love returned and he was the avenger of unrequited love. The original statue, in London, was created
as a memorial to the Earl of Shaftesbury in 1893 and was symbolic of the
selfless philanthropic love of the Earl for the poor. The one now standing in Sefton Park is a fairly
recent replacement for the original which was unveiled in 1932 and was an early
example of aluminium sculpture. The original
one corroded and is now on display in Liverpool’s National Conservation Centre.
Hidden away in the park is the Fairy Glen.
I hope you enjoyed your trips around one of Liverpool's parks.
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