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Cheltenham Racecourse
JUMP-RACING hearts skip a beat at the mention of the Cheltenham Festival, although a meeting at the track on any day of the season is special enough.
Squirrel wars and straying sheep
The pine marten is proving a mixed blessing in the task of restoring wildlife
Showing at Tattersalls by Robert Polhill Bevan
Charlotte Mullins comments on Showing at Tattersalls
Wild Britain faces ticking time bomb'
Transforming urban spaces in order to benefit Nature, such as at Waterloo Millennium Green (above), is vital to help Save Our Wild Isles
Take a pew in the choir stalls
The idea of becoming a cathedral-choir chorister, often with a significant reduction in school fees, seems to have fallen slightly out of fashion with parents, yet it offers a wonderful education for life, believes Andrew Green
Heads and their hobbies
The extra-curricular interests of a head can be surprising, as well as beneficial, discovers Tessa Waugh
Let's hear it for the Arts
Curriculums and A-level choices may be gravitating towards science and technology, but the Arts still have much to offer in terms of life lessons, balance and presentational skills, finds Lucy Higginson
Children both seen and heard
Author Nicholas Orme reveals parallels between childhood in Tudor times and the present day
Out of the ordinary
A sale of the macabre contains eclectic items, not all of which appeal, a new auction room gets off to a good start and there is interest in the effects from a Northumberland country house
The 'firework' master
As at home on a theatre set as he was before a canvas, John Piper pioneered abstract art in many materials, from stained glass to textiles, and even choreographed the Queen’s Silver Jubilee firework display, says Peyton Skipwith
Life-changing gardens
VISITING a friend in hospital recently, I came across what passed for a garden.
A cut above
Nothing beats homegrown flowers for beauty, variety and scent. Tiffany Daneff asks three British growers for the best advice on starting your own cutting garden
Edward or Edwin
The early 20th century saw a golden age of living and architecture
Splendid isolation
Two gems in East Anglia come garnished with history, space and privacy
The designer's room
A fragment of handpainted chinoiserie set the scene for the decoration of this bathroom at Keythorpe Hall, Leicestershire
The writing's on the wall
Early on a bright and frosty February morning, John Lewis-Stempel sets about trying to repair a dry-stone wall in the hope of keeping his horse, and other livestock, away from his prized roses
Go ahead, jump!
Once a symbol of fertility and more recently a figure of fun, the frog has always loomed large in folklore, and not only as a means of finding a prince. Now, however, some species’ future is uncertain, finds Ian Morton
An encyclopaedia of architecture
Winchester College, Hampshire, part I The Warden and Fellows of Winchester College In the second of two articles, Jeremy Musson offers an overview of the wealth of boneyes created by Winchester College from the Reformation to the present
Beauty is in the eye of the brush holder
Ever since Leonardo da Vinci followed curiously featured people in the street to capture their likeness on canvas, artists have been fascinated by the grotesque and unusual, says Michael Prodger
Kilvert's Diary
THE poet and novelist William Plomer, when working in his role as principal reader for the Bloomsbury publisher Jonathan Cape in 1937, excavated from a pile of manuscripts two bound Victorian notebooks sent in by the descendants of an unknown country clergyman from the Welsh borders.
Churches join race to net-zero
CHESTER CATHEDRAL has installed 206 roof-mounted solar panels, the most ever fitted to a British cathedral, it was announced earlier this month.
The glory of the gratin
A no-nonsense feast to gird the belly and quicken the heart, the gratin–whether it be slathered over meat, fish or vegetables–is all about an indulgent excess of cream topped by crispy cheese, says Tom Parker Bowles
The glory of the gratin
A no-nonsense feast to gird the belly and quicken the heart, the gratin—whether it be slathered over meat, fish or vegetables—is all about an indulgent excess of cream topped by crispy cheese, says Tom Parker Bowles
Inspired by birds, informed by science
The British Trust for Ornithology, a charity that prides itself on its scientific approach, is celebrating its 90th birthday. Jack Watkins reports
Brighton Rock
GRAHAM GREENE divided his fiction into two categories, namely serious literary novels and what he described as ‘entertainments’.
Aberystwyth is so bracing
Walking along the cliffs in Ceredigion tempts one to tackle Wales's entire coastal path
Medici masterpieces and Chinese camels
A look ahead to Maastricht, where star attractions include panels from the Medici workshops and a pair of Tang camels
Away with the fairies
She first took up painting as solace from disease, yet Cicely Mary Barker’s whimsical illustrations—most notably her flower fairies—still hold great appeal 50 years after her death, observes Claire Jackson
Nothing to get in a flap about
Often dismissed as ‘rats with wings’ or avian fly-tippers, few birds inspire as much hatred as pigeons. But, if we knew them a little better, we’d love them more, says Vicky Liddell
Juicy fruits
GRAPEFRUIT used to be rare and exotic.