
Find your inner peace.
Retreat you your happy place.
Have somewhere you can recharge, rejuvenate and take five.

Find your inner peace.
Retreat you your happy place.
Have somewhere you can recharge, rejuvenate and take five.

Set your self one goal, one thing to aim for.
As you reach the end of the month, reflect on how well you achieved the resolutions you set yourself at the end of last year.
Did you succeed? How can you keep that momentum into the new month?
The longest of journeys begins with one small step, so don’t feel disappointed with yourself if you fell off whatever waggon you set yourself on on New Year’s Day.
Try again, knowing that you can do what you set your mind to.

Be energetic.
It is all to easy, in current times, to fall back on lethargy and apathy, but these will get you nowhere.
Be focused on your physical fitness, and your mental wellbeing will follow.

Preparation is key.
Knowing where you are, and with an idea of where you are going is vital to the journey you are yet to embark upon.
Before taking that leap into the wild blue yonder, take a step back, survey the scene, and plan ahead.

Live today seems all about instant gratification.
While it’s good to have a quick hit, satisfactions only really comes from the thrill of the chase, the hard work put in to achieve the result.
Be focused, be determined, think of the long term rewards.

You are free to do whatever you want to.
There is no ceiling to the heights you can achieve.
Take a deep breath and a leap into the unknown.
The world – and the skies – are yours for the taking.

Stand out from the crowd.
Just because everyone else is doing things one way, it doesn’t mean you have to follow suit.
You are an individual.
You are you.

Things may seem at their harshest, but they will not stay that way.
You will persevere and you will succeed.
There is always triumph to be had in the face of adversity.

At the foothills of the Mendips, on the main road between Wells and Weston-super-Mare, lies the quiet, unassuming village of Rodney Stoke. Owned by a number of families over the years, Stoches (old English for ‘settlement’) has been known as Stoke Whiting, Stoke Giffard and Stoke Rodney over the years, before the name settled on Rodney Stoke.
With a population of close to 1,500 people, you would expect the village to be a bustling affair, but settled as it is – along three lanes leading downhill from the A371 – it has an altogether quieter feel about it.






The lanes are lined with cottages built for former farm workers. Some former outbuildings have been converted into newer residences while other parts of the village are much newer properties, albeit still in keeping with the history of the village.



At the bottom of Stoke Street lies a farm, while the former manor house stands proud above the surrounding fields.


The parish church – St Leonard’s – is, unsurprisingly, place next to the manor house and, while hidden from most of the village, it can be clearly seen on the skyline from the south, standing tall and proud against the dramatic escarpment of the Mendips.


Normally, when I visit the local villages, I spent time in the churchyard looking for Commonwealth War Graves. However, Rodney Stoke stands out as one of the county’s Thankful Villages.
Fifty-three parishes in England and Wales are commemorated as having sent servicemen to war between 1914 and 1918, all of whom returned at the end of the conflict. These Thankful Villages stand out, particularly given that there are tens of thousands of towns and villages across the country.
Somerset has the highest number of Thankful Villages by county, with Rodney Stoke counting as one of nine. This is celebrated by a window in the church, giving thanks that “All glory be to God, whom in his tender mercy has brought again to their homes, the men and women of Rodney Stoke who took part in the Great War 1914-1919”.
(As an aside, Rodney Stoke sadly doesn’t fit into the category of being Doubly Thankful, having seen all of their service men and women return from both world wars. Four local residents – David Cooper, John Glover-Price, Denis Thayer and James Williams – perished in the 1939-1945 conflict.)


A second memorial to Rodney Stoke being thankful is situated in the Village Pound.
Since Norman times, strict controls were in place about where and when animals could graze on common land. The Pound – a walled area on the main road – was a place for straying animals to be kept until their owners paid the due fine.




As with other villages I have visited for this alphabetical journey, Rodney Stoke is definitely worth stopping by for. To the north of the village lie the Stoke and Stoke Woods Nature Reserves , and the village pub – the Rodney Stoke Inn – must also be worth a visit!


Viewing a situation from a different perspective is sometimes the only way to see the way forward.
Reaching out for a new viewpoint, you can identify the solutions to problems and the route you should take.
Soar like an eagle, and get the bird’s eye view that you need.
Commemorating the fallen of the First World War who are buried in the United Kingdom.
Looking at - and seeing - the world
Nature + Health
ART - Aesthete and other fallacies
A space to share what we learn and explore in the glorious world of providing your own produce
A journey in photography.
turning pictures into words
Finding myself through living my life for the first time or just my boring, absurd thoughts
Over fotografie en leven.
Impressions of my world....