August
... or nothing in particular. Celebrating anything and everything that is distinctly Saltburn (its Sunday name!), the local area, or simply English.
It's time to get fit. Why not join the craze for cycling!
In its heyday, Bartholomew Fair was one of the four great fairs of England, and for centuries it was famous nationwide as a major place for entertainment of all kinds, high and low. Mainly low!
Lee Gap Fair, in the parish of Woodkirk, West Ardsley, near Leeds, is one of the surviving horse fairs that still attract a strong gypsy prescence, and its organisers claim it to be the oldest chartered fair in England. A charter granted from King Stephen in 1136, confirming an earlier one, does indeed grant two fairs to the parish of Woodkirk, in August and September, and there are still two Lee fairs: Lee Gap Fair on 17 August, and Latter Lee on 17 September.The sheep are being shorn and the hay is being reaped.
July is the seventh month of the year in the Georgian Calendar.
6th July Thomas Moore executed by Henry VIII
Birthstone Ruby Red
Birthflower Larkspur
Horoscopes Cancer and Leo



Can you find this Green Man in Saltburn?From left to right the buildings are Rokeby Villas, Balmoral Terrace, the Zetland Hotel and Britannia Terrace.
In the foreground we can see the Halfpenny Bridge and to the left of the image is the Albert Memorial which was once the portico of Barnard Castle Station. The paths are well laid out but clearly visible as the planting of the grounds is in its infancy.
Fashions in gardening have changed and evolved over the centuries, and also in recent years. Simply the best for me is the inspiration of just walking freely amongst wooded glens and meadow land. Who wants a manicured garden, sterile lawn , flanked by clipped hedges and shrubs? Not me. You can successfully create the beauty of 'wildlife-friendly gardening' by trying a few new ideas. You might try:
What do the place names Rambsbotton in Lancashire, Ramsden in Essex and Ramshott in Suffolk have in common? They are all places named after the ramson or 'wild garlic'. The plant itself has some rather unusual names, including gypsy's gibbles and gypsy's onions in Somerset, ramps in Lancashire and Cumberland, stink plant in Lincolnshire and rommy and roms in Yorkshire.
In Spring, the ground of a bluebell wood becomes a carpet of azure as the bluebells intermingle and become a carpet of blue.


During National Mills Weekend, a large number of the UK's remaining windmill and watermills, are open to the public.
Also known as Horngarth this is believed to be the oldest surviving custom in Britain. An annual custom, unique in its continuity, it involves the Hutton family who rent farm land at Fylingdales near Whitby.