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UKLadies who lunchby Dorothy HowsonJust as I was about to start my diet, I received an invitation to have lunch on the Orient Express. It didn’t take much persuading (well none at all, actually!) to postpone my diet for yet another week. (Diets always have to start on a Monday!) I arrived at Victoria’s Platform 2 to see the familiar brown and cream carriages of the British Pullman that I had often seen on the holiday programmes. Each of its carriages is decorated inside with polished wood panelling of rosewood, ash, mahogany and exquisite marquetry. Everything inside, including the carpets and upholstery are as they were back in the 1920s when it was new. They are still the most luxurious railway carriages in the world. My boarding card directed me to ‘Phoenix’ carriage, which I later found out had been a favourite of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. It had also been used by General de Gaulle and other visiting heads of state. Stepping inside was like going back in time. I wondered how it would have felt to have been one of the gentry, lucky enough to travel in such style and luxury. The tables were beautifully laid with crisp white linen, floral table decorations, glass and silverware. I wondered who else had sat in the sumptuous seat where I was now! The champagne poured and we slowly pulled out of the platform. The set meal consisted of five courses and was everything I had hoped it would be. They had taken the trouble to find out if there was anything I didn’t like in advance, so I had no worries that I’d go hungry. If you want a special treat and something a little different, this would be a perfect choice. The British Pullman operates all year to Bath, Leeds Castle and Stratford-upon-Avon. Prices start from £150. Some trains are still steam-hauled for a truly nostalgic experience. I thoroughly enjoyed my day on the Orient Express, cocooned in my bubble of luxury--and the thought stayed with me in a secret smile as my South Central train jostled me back to East Grinstead. No, rail travel hasn’t lost its romance!
Why not Wales? by Charmaine Hallmark
Just a few hours from the hustly-bustly south of England is Wales! A perfect retreat for a weekend getaway, good food, great countryside, and a guaranteed wind-down from daily stress. If you're looking for somewhere to stay, try Milebrook House in mid-Wales's county of Powys. Just on the border, this eighteenth century house is a haven of peace and tranquillity surrounded by delightful herbaceous gardens and lawns that gently slope to the river Thame below. Here, you can fly-fish for brown trout, pony trek or even paraglide! We just took our wellies and went for long walks, enjoying the fresh country air and working up our appetite for a scrumptious evening meal. On Saturday, we visited nearby Knighton, steeped in history dating as far back as the stone and bronze ages. We didn't find anything quite so old, however, as we browsed the curios shops that afternoon. Powis Castle and Welshpool are not far away. Monday is market day and the sleepy town comes alive as farmers and their livestock congregate, buying and selling as they have done for generations. But mostly we enjoyed the setting of our retreat, rolling marches landscape and the mountains and moorlands of Wales. Too soon it was time to wend our way back home, but if you feel the need to "escape"--go west to Wales, you're guaranteed a warm welcome.
To Bath and back in a day
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