Saturday, July 28, 2018

Wedding between the showers

Saturday 28th July 2018

Before and after the wedding  --  but since I was officiating no photographs by me during other activity!
As St Cuthbert's Corsenside  has no electricity (and therefore organ or lighting), it was a good thing that the sun came out between showers just in time for the service.

Friday, July 27, 2018

Wedding rehearsal

Friday 27th July 2018
Off to St Cuthbert's Corsenside in the middle of farmland for a wedding rehearsal...

...much to the interest of sheep watching the comings and goings along the farm road.

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

High summer

Wednesday 25th July 2018

Early morning mist on the fell...


...blazing hot afternoon in the valley...
and lots of work behind the scenes on wedding preparations and legalities.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

Wedding

Saturday 21st July 2018
All Saints' church, Woodburn before the wedding

After the wedding and before the reception, guests assemble for a group photograph and the photographer...

...relies on an usher to provide a vantage point from a JCB

Friday, July 13, 2018

"Rural strand"

Tuesday 10th July 2018
A day in Wooler for a church conference looking at hardship in rural communities 

and admiring the entrance to Butler Court (named after the Northumberland social reformer Josephine Butler)

Friday, July 6, 2018

Schools and bicentenaries

Friday 6th July 2018
Looking down from Thorneyburn church over the Tarset valley to see if the school are on their way...


...and, chattering in excitement, here they come  ...  for a morning at St Aidan's:
We started by wondering why the church had been built in the middle of nowhere and then searched the graveyard for the oldest headstone we could find.  1838.  (Some were too worn to read.)  So the church must have been here for at least 180 years.  Inside, recalling that every parish church is supposed to have a Bible on its lectern (so that all parishioners have access to Holy Scripture), we worked out from the Roman numerals on the title page that the church was dedicated in 1818.  We noted the naval coat of arms which gave us a clue as to the origin of this building:  it was built along with the neighbouring rectory to provide a living for a naval chaplain demobilised after the Napoleonic Wars.   
     After looking at the font, the altar, the tapestry depicting Jesus' Last Supper with his disciples (when he instituted the practice of Holy Communion) and at the paten and chalice used for the bread and wine of Holy Communion, the children and accompanying adults knelt for each of them to receive a blessing before they went on their way happy and calm.
     The two hundred years of St Aidan's will be marked in the bicentenary celebrations at the beginning of August.
    
     Meanwhile Otterburn First School is celebrating its bicentenary this weekend.  So I made my way from Thorneyburn to Otterburn to enjoy their exhibition and the children's excellent singing.

Wednesday, July 4, 2018