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Archive for the ‘Wessex Tours’ Category

Why a guided tour is an ideal family vacation.

Taking the family on holiday can sometimes be a real balancing act.  If there are a range of children’s ages and interests to take in to consideration, not to mention the desires of the adults in tow, conflicts can sometimes arise.  Everyone gets excited about holidays and expectations run high – so what is the best way to make sure nobody is disappointed?  One option is to book a family guided tour to explore and learn more about the holiday region.  This may not be an immediately obvious idea, but there are many positives to recommend this often underrated type of excursion to families who are travelling together.

Give yourself a break

Holidays are supposed to be restful, but more often than not parents find them exhausting.  A guided tour hands over the reins to someone else that will entertain, animate, and direct proceedings for a while.  It is often the case that children absorb information far better from those other than their parents andthe enthusiasm of tour guides could inspire a real interest for the history and legends of the area in them.

See places off the tourist trail

Guided tours enable the less obvious sights of the area to be seen.  One of the main advantages of having an expert guide introduce the area is that they will know how to avoid the busy times when tourists flock to the big attractions.  They can help minimise the hassles that most people experience when travelling in unfamiliar areas and maximise the pleasure of the group.  Sometimes they will be able to negotiate price reductions for entrance fees to attractions.  There will be no arguments over map reading or the satnav sending the car up dead end lanes; the tour guide will know the area like the back of their hand and will be keen to extol its virtues.  They will be familiar with great places for lunch like the picture postcard pub with roses around the door, serving ploughman’s lunches outside at a garden table and chairs overlooking the West Country.  They will tell funny tales and give interesting facts that make the surroundings come alive.  They will have the inside story on the local area and with this privileged knowledge they will make the day unique and special.

Strengthen family bonds

In today’s modern world families increasingly spend time interacting more with computers and gaming devices than they do interacting with each other.  A guided tour offers a family the chance to bond by providing a shared experience likely to live on in their memories for a long time.

Weather proof

The weather in the United Kingdom is notoriously unreliable; however, most guided tours will not be too affected by rain.  If a day on the beach is ruled out by poor conditions, why not keep warm and dry on a guided tour of the region by minibus or car?

Do something different

Sometimes we are guilty of doing the same things year in and year out while on holiday.  We are comfortable with going to the same places, doing the same activities, and seeing the same faces.  By pushing the boundaries and doing something completely different, who knows what amazing new discoveries we could make?

Histouries UK
Mystical Landsape, Magical Tours

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Read the story of when The Beatles came to Wiltshire to film scenes from their second film Help! on Salisbury Plain in 1965.

The Beatles on the Help! album cover

The Beatles on the Help! album cover

By May 1965, The Beatles truly ruled the world. Topping the charts for the seventh consecutive time with ‘Ticket To Ride’, America well and truly conquered and massive success for their first film A Hard Days Night, the year before.

This had been little more than a fun fictional account of the adventures of four lads in a pop group, shot at a few London and provincial locations and filmed in black and white, for a budget of around £200,000.

But now their second film, Help! (provisional working title Eight Arms To Hold You) was to be a much grander affair.  Double the budget, in colour, with filming at such exotic locations as the beaches of Nassau, the ski slopes of Austria and… Salisbury Plain.

The simple storyline revolved around Ringo Starr and one of his many rings. Unbeknownst to him, it was a mystical ‘sacred’ ring from the Far East, which its real owners wanted back.

Cue the movie with Ringo being pursued all over the place by the ring-chasers, with all sorts of madcap stunts surrounding their efforts to retrieve the ring from his finger. And that was about it!

In the movie, The Beatles need to do some more recordings. However, Ringo isn’t safe anywhere, so they decide to make their next record in a place of absolute military security . Where else? Salisbury Plain!

So, late in the evening of Sunday 2nd May 1965, The Beatles checked into the Antrobus Arms Hotel in Amesbury, their home for the next three days whilst on location.

Ringo and George filming 'Help!' on Salisbury Plain

The filming took place at Knighton Down, near the Larkhill army base, where the Beatles were to be shown recording their latest song.

In fact, the Salisbury sequence in the film sees them miming to the George Harrison song ‘I Need You’, which of course, he took the lead vocals for. Ironically for George, this  was never a Beatles single, only appearing on the movie soundtrack album.

The lads were ferried from the Antrobus Hotel to Larkhill each day, in a black Austin Princess limousine, with their departures and arrivals attracting huge crowds of teenagers, blocking the street through Amesbury.

Amazingly, the limo was left unlocked in the hotel garage during the day and the Salisbury Journal reported that fans looted it of Beatle caps, various items of Beatle clothing and even emptied the ashtrays for Beatle dog-ends!

The Journal also said the group were besieged, mostly by girls and had to endure some pretty dismal Salisbury Plain weather, despite it being late Spring.

The army ‘security’ for the film storyline, came via troops from 3 Division, Royal Artillery who were on exercises there at the time.

The army even kindly supplied tanks for the Fab Four to climb over and have scouting around whilst they made their recording!  It’s hard to imagine that happening today, but back then The Beatles had all doors opened for them, such was their celebrity.

On the afternoon of Thursday 6th May, with the location filming completed, The Beatles checked out of their Amesbury hotel, heading back to London.

Next day they were back in a proper film studio at Twickenham, as the making of Help! continued.

The movie had its world-premiere on 29th July 1965 at the London Pavilion, in the presence of Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon, and with the title song already sitting at number one in the UK singles chart.

It opened at 250 leading cinemas across the country on August 11th and went on to win first prize at the International Film Festival in Rio de Janeiro that September.

There was talk of a third film, but sadly, this didn’t happen. The filming of the making of the album Let It Be in 1969 being a fly-on-the-wall documentary, not  a proper scripted movie.

The Beatles never returned to Salisbury, but they left behind a multitude of memories for those who either saw, met or even worked with them, during those three days in May, 1965.

But one thing’s for sure; that bit of Salisbury Plain was certainly immortalised for all time, by the biggest musical phenomenon the world has ever seen.

Geoff Barker – Rock and Rill Wiltshire – http://www.bbc.co.uk/wiltshire/history/rocknroll_wiltshire/

Mystical Landscape, Magical Tours
HisTOURies UK – www.HisTOURies.co.uk

 

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Tour: Fri 31st Aug – Sun 2nd Sept 2012
Henges, burial mounds of all shapes and sizes, causewayed camps, early field systems and ‘cursus’ monuments are scattered everywhere in Wessex, forming a landscape which hints at its past, but whose story is unintelligible to the untrained eye.

Our experts have been introducing people to this, one of the richest prehistoric landscapes in the world, which lies on our very doorstep, since Andante’s inception.

Day One
Meet in the evening for an introductory lecture and dinner together in a local restaurant. Overnight in Sarum College in the beautiful Cathedral Close.

Day Two
By coach to Avebury for a full exploration of the huge Neolithic henge, so large that part of the village lies within it. It is one of the largest and best preserved of 1300 stone circles known in the British Isles. Morning walk around the henge and along the ceremonial Avenue.  We approach the stones of Avebury just as one would have done in prehistoric times.

Afternoon circular walk (2 hours) past Silbury Hill, the largest man-made mound in Europe.  The most famous of its excavators crawled into an earlier excavation chamber and recorded later:
“the sides of the open chamber provided one of the most astonishing sights that I have ever seen…it was clear that this innermost mound had been covered by a series of conical shells or cappings…the effect was of finding oneself in an enormously complicated and highly coloured layer cake of gigantic size..”
The walk continues to the Long Barrow at West Kennet and a chance to explore the chambered tomb within.  This kind of monument is the earliest known to have been built in Britain – in commemoration of the dead. Continue to the ‘Sanctuary’, a small, complex timber and stone circle on the top of Overton hill. Walking in our ancestors’ footsteps helps us try to understand their motives and methods.

Day Three
Stonehenge for an early (7.30am) visit inside the stone circle before the public arrives. This will be followed by a walk (2 hours) through the wider religious landscape – the cursus, King Barrows and Stonehenge Avenue.
A short drive takes us to Woodhenge, where the remains of wooden post settings have been found – now marked by concrete. From here there is a good view over the huge henge at Durrington Walls, site of exciting recent excavations which revealed the settlement which may have housed the builders of Stonehenge.

Return to Salisbury Museum for a visit to the Stonehenge and Prehistory Galleries. We have arranged a private demonstration of flint-knapping in the gardens here, which is not only much enjoyed, but adds considerably to your understanding of the way in which our prehistoric forebears were able to fashion all manner of implements and tools from our good local flint supplies.  In a world without metal technology this was a critical and highly sophisticated art.
Disperse about 5pm.

Should you choose to arrive earlier or stay later, you might like to visit Old Sarum, the hillfort to the north of Salisbury which was later chosen as the site of our first cathedral, or, of course,  our beautiful Gothic cathedral – straight in front of the College.

NB Most of every day will be spent walking, and you must be prepared for this, with suitable footwear and weatherproof clothing. You will also have to carry your own water, and negotiate a variety of stiles.

  • The original Andante Tour – accept no imitations!
  • We have been introducing guests to these monumental prehistoric landscapes for 26 years
  • Accommodation spectacularly situated within Salisbury cathedral close
  • Bring your hiking boots!
  • Several good cross-country walks

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The Banksy of the river: Elusive artist’s latest work appears by a quiet countryside waterway.  Crossover graffiti artist Banksy has unveiled his latest work next to a quiet countryside waterway

Firstly, if I was the editor of the local paper, my headline for this piece would be:

“Tales of the River Banksy”.

The artwork appeared in February 2012, but this great little secret has taken a little time to surface. Still today I am not 100% convinced its the real deal, maybe because Lyme Regis seems a very distant, quiet little place for a Banksy piece to appear, but then it makes the perfect location, as it takes a while to surface…

The meaning… well your guess is as good as mine, but I like the idea it symbolises the birth of a child.

I won’t give away the exact location, although the cover  was blown on twitter a little while ago. I will just say “its by the river in Lyme Regis”…

Coincidently there are lots of rats that swim across the river just at this point, and I see them daily. So maybe that helped to inspire the location, following Banksy’s famous Rat characters…

Another great reason to visit Lyme Regis…

HisTOURies UK Tours
Needless to say we offer tours including Lyme Regis and the West Country

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