Only a few days ago I mentioned to my dearly beloved that I would like to try some tools to see if they would fit my hand. Having had some Niwaki secateurs for a few years now, yes it is six years now, it is not surprising that I wanted to try a Hori hori. This Friday our day out was to Niwaki Head quarters. This is situated in a beautiful corner of Wiltshire close to the border of Dorset. it was a lovely drive down through the now greening up countryside. There was a hint of autumn in the hedgerows with the haws on the hawthorns turning red.
The shop is beautifully laid out with the full range of tools and other items from Japan from workwear to attractive screen printed handkerchiefs.
The tools are well finished and well balanced. The assistant was really helpful but also gave us plenty of space and time and facility to try things. If only I had bought these tools many years ago!
In the shop you also get a nice bag to fit each item. Mr S has already fixed up a system so that I can hang the bags to store my tools. I had also taken my secateurs and some snips. The snips has started to stick and the assistant sorted those out whilst we browsed, and it was nothing more tricky than removing some of the rust and applying a little Magnolia oil. I already have the mini clean mate and when I got home I carried out similar cleaning to my secateurs have brought them back to as tip top condition.
We had a short drive to Pythouse Kitchen Garden where we thought we might have a light bite, but they were serving lunch with a number of small dishes only. We turned back and retraced our steps to the Compton McRae on the same site Chaldicott Barns where Niwaki is situated. We had a lovely large bowl of really delicious squash, miso and sage soup and a couple of thick slices of a delicious focaccia bread.
Fortified and warmed up we then drove to the English Heritage site of
Old Wardour Castle. The roads were the sort of narrow roads where you note and count the passing points and just hope you don't meet anyone coming in the opposite direction! The effort was well rewarded.
We each had one of those self guided audio guides which took one round the castle with interesting narration about the history of the construction and people who lived there in context of the times.
The weather was remarkably changeable, at times we needed to find rooms with ceilings to shelter from the heavy downfalls, only venturing further once it was clear.
After the castle was damaged during the civil wars and the New Wardour Castle built, the grounds including the 'Romantic Ruins' formed part of the Georgian pleasure gardens on the Wardour Estate.
This banqueting house was built in the eighteen century to entertain The Arundells and their guests as they toured the grounds.
The views of the lake and trees are beautifully framed and each one has a slightly different angle.

In the grounds is an eighteenth century grotto, which was partly built from stones from a nearby ancient stone circle. Having recently visited the stone circles at Stanton Drew it was interesting to make the link and start to understand that over the last centuries stones such as these would have been moved by land owners to be reconstructed for such follies.
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Looking out from one of the grotto chambers |
We were to have had a long circular walk that goes past the New Wardour Castle, but the rain had delayed us, and we decided set off back home instead. I found a way to catch a glimpse of the Palladian Mansion's grandeur through this short video presented by Jasper Conran before he sold his apartment there.