It being the Chas and Camilla weekend, we motored over to The Place for Plants in East Bergholt, which is partly a plant-centre but also a 20 acre garden, where you can have a longish and surprisingly uncrowded walk. The handout you get when you enter says the place is inspired by the landscape of Cornwall, though this would have passed me by if it hadn’t been pointed out.
There were ducks and bamboo and euphorbia if you like that kind of thing – and it so happens I do.
Last week it rained quite hard so it wasn’t surprising that parts of the garden were wet and muddy, though in fact some parts weren’t.
Now, I may not be the most cautious of walkers but I’m not the most reckless either. And although I understand that in the interests of heath and safety, when a garden is open to the public you may well need to put up a few warning signs, ‘Do not walk on the water’ and that kind of thing. But I thought they overdid it at this place.
It seemed fair enough that there were signs telling people to take care:
But then there were signs telling people to take extra care.
And I’m really not sure that I know the difference between taking care, and taking extra care. What would be the measure? What strategies should the extra careful walker employ, as opposed to the one who’s simply taking care?
There is possibly a philosophical walking conundrum here. We went to the tea room.
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