2025: The Year in Review - part 1

So another year has gone by and I find that one of the benefits of ageing (yes, there are some!) is being aware that time is running out.  I say it is a benefit for I don’t find the thought at all depressing, instead it gives an urgency to achieve what I can whilst I can.  There is so much more to do, to see and to learn in what time is left.  It is possible that I may live to be a hundred for many of my family have lived well-into their nineties and beyond but even allowing for that, it still doesn’t give me too many years to waste.

Time waits fir no man – or woman!!

One of my ancestors, Richard Beauchamp died at the age of 57, which although not a great age by modern standards probably wasn’t too bad for someone dying in 1439.  He had a busy and well-documented life but perhaps his biggest achievement was carried out after his death.  In his will he left various bequests, the largest portion to the Collegiate Church of St Mary in the town of Warwick for the building of a chapel.  Upon its completion his body was transferred there to lie beneath his splendid gilt-bronze effigy.  The effigy, along with the chapel’s medieval stained glass and other decorations are considered to be the finest in Europe.  In March, I finally visited the tomb where both he and his parents lie, a remarkably emotional moment perhaps because nothing had prepared me for the chapel’s magnificence.  To judge for yourself, click on the link here which will take you to numerous photographs as well as the story of my ancestral grandparent’s lives.

Richard Beauchamp, my ancestral grandfather lying in the splendour of the chapel he commissioned for the benefit of his soul
detail of the tomb of Richard Beauchamp dating from the 1400s

Spring arrives late in our part of the Cotswolds for the secret valley, although very beautiful, nestles in a ‘frost hollow’.  As a result, the bluebells that flower at the foot of the ancient hedgerow than borders our lane are always a couple of weeks later than in many other places.  However, when they do bloom, the intensity of their colour never fails to delight.  Pretty as they are, they are nothing compared to the bluebell woods of the Cotswolds and the Chilterns, the range of chalk hills where I was raised and lived until I moved here twenty-five years ago.  In May, when the bluebells had reached their peak of flowering, I wrote a blog In Praise of Bluebells.  Apart from photos of the bluebell woods (including one of me as a much younger man with my two Scottish Deerhounds), I explored the bluebell in history and poetry, link here.

the magnificence of a bluebell wood in May
Occasionally, a white or even a pink bluebell appears

In June, on my Facebook page, I had a casual discussion with a follower about mentors and mentoring.  She asked me if I’d ever had any mentors and my answer was ‘yes’:  two couples, both of whom came from very different backgrounds to one another as well as my own.  She wanted to know more and so I promised to write a blog about them, a post which would honour their contribution to my life and demonstrate the great enrichment such mentors can give.  Mentors – part 1 (link here) tells of my chance meeting at the age of sixteen with Dick and Lorna French, who farmed on Exmoor, a National Park in England’s West Country.  The farm is very isolated, and the post explores how I ended up living with them after turning up one day unannounced on their doorstep.  Regular visitors to my blog or Facebook/Instagram pages will know what a love they imparted on me for this wild and rugged landscape, a place I still visit very frequently.  The blog has numerous photos including some of me from early childhood to that gangly sixteen-year-old that Lorna and Dick first knew.

My first mentorsDick & Lorna French of Brendon Barton, Exmoor
Exmoor National Park: Aged 16, I suddenly found myself living and working in remote countryside

Find out about my other pair of mentors, Cyril and Pamela Heber Percy, who came from privileged upper-class families in 2025: Part Two (yet to be written but coming shortly!).  The blog will also explore what happened in the last few months of 2025

Cyril & Pamela Heber Percy







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