Moving to the country

March 20, 2010

Wellie boots by the back door

posted by emily

Photo of Wellington boots stood on a balcony with view of terraced houses in background

We do have a back door right now, but it leads to this balcony, which leads to nowhere.

I’m currently obsessing over the prospect of being able to keep my wellies by the back door of my new home.

These days, after I have used my wellies on a country walk or holiday I bring them home and leave them in a plastic bag, either getting in the way by the front door or on the balcony for a few days/weeks. Eventually I’ll clean off the mud in the kitchen sink and put them away in a cupboard until the next time I manage to break out of the orbit of our mudless city streets.

When we live in the country, my boots will be in constant use, so they will live by the back door ready to be stepped into at any moment. If I do need to clean them, I’ll just wash them off under the garden tap or hose pipe.

And that will be magic.

March 10, 2010

Location: Middle of Nowhere

posted by emily

middle of nowhere.pngOkay. You see, this is why I had to stop shopping for places to live when I’m not actually in the market for renting a place for another 6 months. I keep finding totally amazing houses. At least I think they are until I see the next one.

As I said, I have officially stopped looking, but I was just writing up a well overdue blogpost about our first Recce and I happened to be fiddling around on the Globrix website when I accidentally clicked on this little beauty. I just love the description of the locality: “middle of nowhere”. Perfect. And its true – check out the map.

Funnily enough this looks like it is less than a mile from where we went walking on our 2nd recce the other weekend. The nearest village seems to be Wormleighton which is where we parked the car.

Let’s just hope we find something as good as this available in 6 months time.

wormleighton-hill.png

March 8, 2010

Recce 2: Window shopping, a walk and a pub

posted by emily

On our second recce of the area (I have yet to write up the first 1st Recce here) we went window shopping for rental properties. I don’t mean we went looking in the windows of estate agents. We actually went looking in the windows of houses which we’d seen advertised in the area on the Globrix website.  We also made the most of a day out in the countryside by taking a short walk and sampling the local ales and food.

Since we don’t have a car (yet!), my parents offered to drive us out to the Banbury area to have a sniff around. They’re curious to see where we might be moving to and they also enjoy country walks and pub lunches :)

I found a fairly easy 4 mile walk on the Ordnance Survey website in the right area – a circular route between the villages of Wormleighton and Priors Hardwick – on the south-eastern edge of Warwickshire.

The drive up from my parents house in Ealing took about an hour and 15 minutes and it was drizzling most of the way. Happily it was starting to brighten up by the time we were ready for our walk.

Photo of 3 people walking into a snowy field seen from behind

We parked the car in Wormleighton, a beautiful old village with a church that still has parts which were built in the 1200s – and set off on our walk.  The sun came out and helped keep us warm. The walk took us through some very soft, clingy-soil fields which stuck to our boots so much we could barely lift our feet up. Much hilarity ensued.

Photo of 2 sets of mud laden boots on the end of legs

A large part of the route took us along the Oxford Canal, which was partly iced over. According to the couple on a narrow boat moored up who stopped us to ask for a weather report (did they not have a radio?!), driving the boat through ice should be avoided at all costs. This didn’t seem to bother the drivers of the other 2 boats which passed them by.  I think they were just enjoying the tranquility of that little spot.

Oxford Canal from the bridge

On our way back to the car through the last field we caught up with some local (dog) walkers. They mentioned a couple pubs we could try for lunch (one we’d scoped out already) and were very enthusiastic about the area when we told them we were thinking about moving there.  The first pub we tried in Lower Boddington wasn’t serving food because the chef was ill, so we headed back up to the Hollybush in Priors Marston which we’d driven by earlier.

After a very satisfying sunday roast and pint of Hooky Bitter we got back in the car to go an have a look at a couple houses I’d spotted on Globrix. Globrix is like the Find-a-property website particularly designed for the countryside, because it lets you browse by map, which is vitally important (at least to us). I’d started looking on another website, by location, for ‘places near Banbury’ but then I’d have to sift through all the places actually in or near the town, which we’re not interested in. But with searching by map, I can just move around the map area between the towns to find the more rural/small village locations.

Screenshot of a map showing a popup box with a thumbnail image of a property

The first place we looked at was a lovely old semi-detached cottage in Charwelton.  Nice converted loft with sky lights, garden and old style finished kitchen. My only hesitation with it would be that it was surrounded by houses on all sides – it just felt a bit ‘built up’.

The second one we looked at was a less ‘characterful’, modern house, but in what looked like -and turned out to be- a perfect location.  It is right on the edge of the village of Upper Boddington overlooking animal grazing fields. It’s a detached house with gardens on 3 sides and the driveway on the fourth.  It was pretty basic looking inside but I think I’d be too busy looking out the windows (facing out in 2 different directions in most rooms in the house) to worry about the interior design!

I have to say shopping for houses in the country is so much more fun than in the city. You can’t go peering into windows of potential flats in London (a) because you don’t know which house/flat/building it is until you’ve arranged to see it with the estate agent and (b) because its rarely going to have one (let alone 3) window(s) accessible to the street/public.  In the country they tell you what street it is and give you a photo and you know exactly which one it is because they all look a bit different (and there aren’t that many on the street!).

Just before new year 2010, Emily and North decided to leave London and Move to the Country.

We run a small design agency in Hackney, east London. It is called whitespace design. This is the view out our (home) office window.