strangeparticles:Some fun trips through Great Britian:1. Start in Milford in last week of July. Go f
strangeparticles:Some fun trips through Great Britian:1. Start in Milford in last week of July. Go from there to North Wales. It’s difficult territory for a large group of people, so reduce the number of your followers. Arrive at Conway Castle with no more than six people.2. Once at Conway, start wandering restlessly from castle to castle. The accommodations may not be what you are used to, but you will just have to make do. Make sure to be back at Conway Castle around mid-August. If you meet old acquaintances, trust them, they wouldn’t lie to you.3. Accompany them to Flint Castle on August 16th, maybe you will meet family there. From Flint go to Chester on the same day. Stay a few days, it’s a beautiful old town (probably). Arrive in Nantwich on August 21th, go from there to Stafford (August 22nd and 23rd), to Lichfield (August 24th and 25th), to Coventry (August 26th), to Daventry (August 27th), Northampton (August 29th), Dunstable (August 30th), St. Albans (August 31st), arrive at the Tower of London on September 1st. That is a pretty stressful trip, so, you know, stay a while. Maybe get rid of some responsibilities while you are there.4. Leave London in late October, see some more of the country, visit some castles. It may be the last time you get to do that. Start with Gravesend, then maybe Leeds Castle in Kent. Then go North, early December is a good time for that. Go all the way up to North Yorkshire, see Pickering Castle. And Knaresborough Castle. And finally, Pontefract Castle. I’ve heard the accommodations aren’t great, and the food rations are small. Well, bordering on non-existent, actually. But you know what they say. You only live once.(Probable routes taken by Richard II in 1399, according to x, y, z.)Chester IS a lovely town. Nantwich as well. I live in Crewe, which didn’t exist in 1399. And is not in any way lovely… But it does lead to pretty much ever-present Richardfeels. Even more than I would normally have, I mean. -- source link