First,
we drove a short way past the city centre down to the riverside, and viewed the
mud-flats – redolent of Dickens and Victorian fiction rather than the
twenty-first century, despite the renovated paved walk.
Low tide, mud...
Next, we
went beneath a trio of bridges where we found the city’s farm. Again, some
unusual views. Ouseburn farm is in the Lower Ouseburn Valley, about a mile from
the city centre, and has been established here as a charity since 1976.
Originally called Byker City Farm, it was created by local people to encourage
youngsters to work with farm animals. It was closed in 2002 and reopened and
renamed in 2009. The farm is a charity and its website is http://www.bykerbridge.org.uk/farm/aboutus.html
Ouseburn farm, Newcastle
This
time last year, Newcastle was voted by the readers of the
Guardian ‘the UK’s favourite city’, an accolade handed out at that newspaper’s
annual Travel Awards. Which city will take the award this year? Maybe it will
be Edinburgh yet again; particularly since it has won more than 12 UK best city
awards in the last eight years. Though there’s no reason why Newcastle can’t do
it this year too.
Newcastle
has excellent shopping facilities, a wide choice of restaurants, bars and
hotels and then there’s their attractive quayside and cityscape. Not forgetting
the legendary warmth and personality of the people.
Pulitzer
prize-winning author Jane Smiley visited Durham and Northumberland and in a
travel item in the New York Times, she
was effusive about Newcastle’s Grey Street, commending its graceful elegance
and blend of old and new.
A
quotation from the Guardian of last November sums up the place, perhaps:
“Newcastle’s atmosphere of almost pathological friendliness and good humour
stems from one simple thing: all Geordies believe themselves blessed to have
been born here. Theirs is the boisterous self-confidence of a chosen people.”
And
since almost twenty million people now visit Newcastle and Gateshead annually,
quite a few would seem to concur.
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