Christmas has been a bit extended for me this year, as it’s only just come to an end this past week with my trip to see the famous Palladium Pantomime for the first time, complete with a touch tour and audio description. And it ensured that I ended the festive season in style, because it was an amazing, hilarious, musical, magical experience.
Continue reading “Palladium Pantomime – Peter Pan”Category: Arts & Culture
Doctor Who At 60 Review – Radio Celebrations
Welcome to the second part of my trilogy celebrating 60 years of Doctor Who. Having reviewed the specials and the Blu-ray steelbook, I’m now going to talk about the various radio programmes I’ve been listening to on BBC Sounds, which have been a great mixture of documentaries, interviews and music. Then next time I’ll conclude with the various TV shows I’ve been watching in the Whoniverse on iPlayer.
As usual, none of this is sponsored by or affiliated with the BBC or anyone else connected with Doctor Who, and these are just my opinions as a big fan, so I hope you enjoy!
Continue reading “Doctor Who At 60 Review – Radio Celebrations”Christmas In Devon
It seems hard to believe that it’s well over a year already since I was made redundant from my previous job in Torquay, and that the first anniversary of my new job in London is just a month away. But I still keep in contact with my former colleagues and friends down in the Westcountry, and last week I popped down there to see some of them again for a Christmas catch-up. So I thought I’d do a little write-up about it, as I have some festive photos and video clips to share as well.
Continue reading “Christmas In Devon”Christmas 2023 Favourites – Part 1
Seasons greetings, I hope your preparations for Christmas are going well, November always feels a little bit festive, but for me it was even more so than normal this year, because I’ve already explored a variety of London’s displays, seen a bunch of snowmen on a sculpture trail, and had a free Christmas dinner courtesy of a PR invite. On top of that I’ve also seen a couple of theatre shows, while at home I’ve been enjoying some more TV and music as always.
Consequently it makes sense to treat this as a festive Favourites post and video, and spread the joy over 2 months. It’s not too early as far as I’m concerned. So with the usual disclaimer that all opinions are my own, including for the free food, let’s crack on with it, and I hope you enjoy!
Walking With The Snowman
Christmas wouldn’t be Christmas without The Snowman on TV. The animation, based on the book by Raymond Briggs, is such an adorable and moving story, brought to life with wonderful imagery and music, that it quickly became a perennial favourite for millions of people, and last year it celebrated its 40th anniversary.
And now you can see the iconic character in person, courtesy of a sculpture trail called Walking With The Snowman. It began in Salford in 2018, and then in every year since then (except 2020 when nobody could go anywhere) it’s been at multiple locations over the festive period. So this year the trails are taking place at Hillsborough Castle & Gardens, Knole House and the Fleet Street Quarter. And I recently explored the latter in London.
It’s been put together by Wild In Art, who were also behind Morph’s Epic Art Adventure that I enjoying looking at in the summer, and indeed 7 of the artists from that trail have contributed to this one as well, alongside a few others. So here we get a dozen snowmen, themed around the Twelve Days Of Christmas, each one painted in a beautifully distinctive and interesting way.
The sculptures will be in place until 5 January 2024, so there’s still plenty of time to see them. I went on a midweek afternoon, so it was nice and quiet, but I imagine there will be a lot of children keen to see them at weekends and during the Christmas holidays, which might make it harder to take photos of them.
There is a PDF map on the website, but it’s more about pretty design rather than accuracy, so it only gives a very rough visual sense of where each statue is. I found it a lot more reliable to use the list of statues in the bottom left corner, typing each road or place name into Google Maps to find them. And even then, there are some major roadworks going on in one particular area that added to the confusion and sent me off track slightly. But I did find them all in the end, it took me about 2 hours to do the whole trail. People with full sight would be able to do it much quicker I’m sure, but it’s very rewarding in any case, as they do look great.
So here’s a little gallery of the Snowman sculptures in central London, and you can click on the pictures to look more closely. This isn’t sponsored or affiliated by anyone involved with the project, I just enjoyed hunting them down, and I hope you enjoy looking through them!
Continue reading “Walking With The Snowman”October 2023 Favourites
Hello again, and welcome to my latest little roundup, at a time when I know that things are far from cheerful news-wise. The war in Israel and Gaza is horrific to say the least, and like everyone else I can only pray for peace and express my solidarity with the innocent civilians affected on all sides, just as I do for the ongoing Ukraine conflict. Then there’s the Covid Inquiry, stormy weather and other stuff. But on the plus side, the plans to close railway ticket offices have just been scrapped (for now at least), which I had a little rant about in my July post, so well done to everyone who campaigned against it.
So as always I hope my posts are a pleasant distraction from things like that. And for me this has been a pretty relaxing month really. I didn’t go to any theatre shows this time, but I did revisit a couple of my favourite museums, explored a couple of sculpture trails, and had a nice Halloween tour with my friend and colleague Emily. Plus I got my Covid booster, had a few other nice walks, and went to a retirement party (all the best Pauline if you’re reading this!), but I don’t need to write about those little bits here.
So let’s crack on with this month’s post and video, in which nothing is sponsored or gifted as usual, and I hope you enjoy!
September 2023 Favourites
Hey there! Following my very busy birthday month – and thank you again to everyone who sent good wishes for my 40th – September has unsurprisingly and deliberately been much quieter and more relaxed.
I did see an amazing theatre show and had a lovely afternoon tea though, which I’ll be talking about here, but otherwise my outings were either for health appointments or general walks. And at home I’ve been watching a few things on TV and working as usual.
So there isn’t a huge amount to cover in this month’s post and video, but I hope you enjoy what I do have to offer!
40th Birthday Favourites
Here we go, the big four-o,
These two score years have not gone slow!
Amazing how the time has flown,
And since my youth how much I’ve grown.
I had to celebrate, you know,
With food and drink and West End shows.
So with my friends and on my own,
I’ve really marked this milestone.
There’s stand-up stars who made me laugh,
Musicals well-choreographed,
Eating blind and on a cruise,
A 9-course feast and rounds of booze,
A major rock star’s prized possessions,
Art displayed with cool projections.
An action film with audio description,
And shows I’ve seen on television.
Come see how I’ve spent my time,
I promise it’s not all in rhyme.
Here’s why I’m feeling all aglow,
Enjoy this post and video!
AD | Frameless – Audio Described Tour
Note: I was given complimentary admission to this tour, for feedback and review purposes, but all opinions are my own.
For many people, art is already what they would consider immersive. A carefully considered and expertly crafted painting on a flat canvas has the power to draw you in, so that you’re totally absorbed by its people, places, fashions, creatures, scenery, history, objects, shapes, patterns, colours, messages, emotions, etc. Galleries with framed paintings on their walls have been successful for centuries with good reason, and will rightly continue to be so.
However, there is always scope to experience and enjoy the medium in alternative ways. Not only can it give even the most regular and fervent art connoisseurs a new perspective, but there are a lot of other people for whom it’s nothing short of vital to approach it differently, because they need assistance, encouragement or inspiration to fully appreciate and lose themselves in the masterpieces being presented to them.
For instance, as much as I love a good gallery, the fulfilment I can get from them as a visually impaired person tends to be very limited, hence I don’t go to them very often. On the few occasions I have wandered around such spaces on my own, where accessibility hasn’t been fully considered by the venue, it’s in the unfortunate knowledge and reluctant acceptance that I’m missing out on the full context of the pieces and cannot appreciate the finer details they contain.
I have, therefore, been delighted to take part in audio described tours at several museums and galleries since moving to London, which have really opened up this world to me and enabled me to engage with it more thoroughly.
But in late August I had a descriptive tour of Frameless that took it to another level, with its use of cutting-edge technology that showcases artworks in a way that I’ve never personally encountered before. The buzzword ‘immersive’ is being bandied around a lot in the cultural sector at the moment, and not always accurately judging by the reviews for some attractions, so I have felt uncertain about visiting such places. But for me Frameless very much lived up to that billing. And they have more audio described tours coming up, so I wanted to give some insight into what it’s like.
Continue reading “AD | Frameless – Audio Described Tour”Roaring Successes – The Lion King & The Wizard Of Oz
August was a very busy birthday month for me, as you’ll soon discover in my upcoming Favourites post. But in amongst it all I went to another couple of audio described musicals – one gifted to me by a friend, the other I paid for myself – both of which involved lions in a big way, as well as touch tours. And they were fantastic experiences. So I hope you enjoy this little journey across the Pride Lands and along the Yellow Brick Road with me as I tell you about them.
Continue reading “Roaring Successes – The Lion King & The Wizard Of Oz”

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