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Piping Up
Hours of intricate work are needed to craft a set of bagpipes, finds Kate Lovell
The Traveller's Riches
The Travellers Club, Pall Mall, London SW1 To mark the bicentenary of The Travellers Club, the oldest club in Pall Mall, John Martin Robinson tells the story of an institution and its home, a purpose-built Renaissance palace
Cupboard Love
Every good cook needs a well-stocked larder and the list of essential kitchen-cabinet ingredients has an increasingly international flavour, says Tom Parker Bowles
Desert-Island Magic - Joali, Maldives
Travel The great escape
It's A Love/Hate Thing
In fishing, there’s no accounting for people’s tastes and whether or not you like Marmite
Game Of Thrones
No downstairs cloakroom is complete without a wooden loo seat. Jane Wheatley investigates why burr walnut is always preferable to plastic when it comes to sitting pretty
Bach-To-Bach Bliss
Forget running marathons–Ysenda Maxtone Graham has become addicted to a 12-year project that aims to perform all of the composer’s vocal works
My Favourite Painting The Archbishop Of Wales
‘“Too idealistic” and “naïve”: two reactions to Strutt’s painting. It’s a “favourite” in a very particular sense: the Christian faith is, for some, too idealistic or naïve, but for those who understand Strutt’s inspiration, the painting is a metaphor for the Kingdom of God, in which innocence, gentleness and generosity of spirit triumph over division, conflict and self. The little child prefigures Christ, who embodies that Kingdom and, in his teaching, turns on its head what some see as the natural order in which might is right and self is king. Even if turning that world view on its head is idealistic or naïve, count me in!
Not Such A Bad Thing, Really
IADORE Rhododendron ponticum.
Chasing Perfection
One & Only Saint Géran, Mauritius
Water, Water Everywhere
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Better Bergenias
INSPIRED by COUNTRY LIFE’s Lutyens celebrations (March 20), I’ve been re-reading Gertrude Jekyll’s Wood and Garden of 1899.
East Is East
Eleanor Doughty writes a love letter to Norfolk, praising its charming villages, unspoilt coast and rising market–not to mention a good number of pubs
The Destruction Of Chaucer's London
London’s medieval suburb in Southwark has preserved an unusual street plan redolent of its history. Ptolemy Dean hopes against hope for a miracle to save it from the predations of developers
Of Tittypines And Tisty-Tosty
Once believed capable of banishing wrinkles and revealing fairy gold, the dainty cowslip has clung on despite agricultural upheaval, finds Ian Morton
High Kicks And High Jinks
Offenbach famously created the can-can music, but one of his lesser-known works will be premiered in Garsington Opera’s 30th-anniversary season. Claire Jackson reports
What, No Trouser Press?
An Oxfordshire pub is flying the flag for a more relaxed approach to interior design.
Pop-Up Plants
In the garden
Dig For Victoria
Victorian gardeners may have looked to the past or to other countries for their inspiration, but their influence can still be seen in gardens big and small today, says Mark Griffiths
Three-Hundred-And-Sixty Degrees Of Perfection
Louisa Jones hails a masterly design that more than matches this garden’s breathtaking panorama
It's Time To Go Primitive
The hardy, multi-talented sheep from the Scottish isles, whose wool once kept royal legs warm, are coming into their own again as their conservation credentials and flavoursome, lean meat are being rediscovered. Kate Green reports
Land Ahoy!
These three beautiful properties on the water’s edge have been tempting sailors to dry land for centuries
Turning a town into a palace
The townscape of Royston in Hertfordshire preserves the vestiges of one of Britain’s most surprising royal palaces. Simon Thurley describes the form and history of this remarkable building
The painter and the muffin man
The celebrated bird artist Audubon collaborated with a Scottish ornithologist who is often unfairly forgotten.
Our heroes of the high street
They’re the backbone, heart and soul of the community, but village stores have had to evolve to survive
Master in miniature
The tiniest estate buildings can make wonderful homes, says John Tanner, who transformed a 600sq ft gardener’s bothy at Gunton Hall
The belle of the ball
Alligators, oysters and gallons of iced tea: new direct flights to Charleston mean it’s never been easier to enjoy the jewel of the American South
The silly season goes on
The peerless panellist on self-obsessed humour, an eczema cure and Boris Johnson
I want to be in America
Annunciata Elwes selects the market’s finest Stateside properties
Making History
A high-profile film set on Guernsey has opened up the island’s charms to a new audience,