Woodbridge Library Reading Challenge awards

On the morning of Sunday 18th September all the young Circus Star readers who have managed to complete this year’s Reading Challenge will be turning up at Woodbridge Library to get their medals and certificates.

And this year they are particularly lucky, because the well-known children’s author Jonathan Allen (I’m NOT cute, Wolf Academy and many others) is coming to meet them and show them a bit about how he works .

Click  for the poster with full details – and one of Jonathan’s pictures which he has drawn  specially for this event:  carolinelibrarycircus

Why not come along, and see for yourself how many young people have been enthused by this excellent scheme,  by all the volunteers who help run it?

Cumberland Street Cyclists

Last week I had an email from a Woodbridge resident who cycles daily from the Thoroughfare down Cumberland Street.  He tells me:

I have done this on numerous occasions over the past couple of months but last week I was shouted at by an irate elderly lady who said that I was cycling down a one way street the wrong way and that Cumberland Street “is categorically a one way street”.

This has probably happened to  most cyclists using this route at one stage or another. It has certainly happened to me.

Yet these people who shout at Cumberland Street cyclists are  completely and unequivocally wrong.  Cumberland Street, Woodbridge  is – and has always been – a two-way street  for cycles.   The signs at the Cross Corner  entrance forbid entrance, but only to motorised vehicles.

This does not therefore include bicycles, horses and carts, cycle rick-shaws, or any other form of non-motorised vehicle you may care to think of .

In fact – as everyone  in WOodbridge knows once they think of it – Cumberland Street is  only one way for motorised vehicles at the point of Cross Corner. Cars etc can’t cross over from the Thoroughfare, nor turn left as they come up Quay Street.  Everywhere else in Cumberland Street, the vehicles travel freely in both directions.

After  the recent road works at Cross Corner,the street signs  have taken far too long to be replaced but they have now been installed.

But signage alone will not stop people on bicycles getting shouted at. When the  previous signs showing  there was no entry for motorised vehicles were there, it did NOT prevent the occasional mistaken individual laying down the (wrong) law to cyclists.   Until this is firmly in the mind of  everyone in Woodbridge , I suggest the only thing for a cyclist to do is to stop and inform the complainant kindly but firmly of their Hideous Ignorance .

If they need further proof they can be pointed in the direction of this blog.

Back in harness…

I spent  my leave backpacking through Yunnan, a southwestern province in China, travelling by train and bus and foot and bicycle.  Yunnan is very rural, very mountainous – and bigger than two Frances joined together. Despite this they are working hard on improving transport links, building huge railways and roads in tandem through the ancient paddy fields and up, round and through the mountains.

Although  more and more people have more and more expensive cars, most people still travel by bus – and these buses are not always motorised:

The bus in Naguzhen
Bus travel in Yunnan - oh, and none of that 'only working hours' malarkey!

The other very noticeable thing was that when towns have paved old streets like we do in Woodbridge, only the very foolish or the incredibly pigheaded use a car at all, because its clearly so impractical.

Exit the Dragons: the Tonghai TaiKwonDo class make their way home

There were plenty of Dragon mothers, but not one was in a car. Something to learn, maybe?

I was going to tell you some very interesting things about the trains – but unfortunately I’ve got to negotiate for more space on this blog for pictures so I can’t show any photoes of the lovely crowded trains on which we travelled in great comfort for up to 26 hours at a time, gorging on meals cooked on the spot over flaming burners for the thousands of travellers. From fresh ingredients. Oh, and when we were once 10 minutes late (over 26 hours) the embarrassment and apologies were immense..

On second thoughts, maybe you won’t want to hear about this. It might break your hearts.. and anyway, 山 高 皇 帝 远

Great: I got some more blog memory and so here’s the train pic..