Anyone from Cornwall?
- gordonartist
- Posts: 434
- Joined: Wed Apr 05, 2006 11:55 pm
Anyone from Cornwall?
You're in the Oak Room, sir
It's the UK's most unusual B&B: a treetop hammock suspended 50 feet above the Cornish countryside. A nervous Nicholas Roe checks in
Sunday April 23, 2006
The Observer
Like a seaside landlady directing me to the dodgiest room in the house, Bethany Stock pointed to the upper branches of a gigantic oak at the edge of a field in Cornwall. 'That's where you'll be sleeping,' she said. 'Can you see?'
I could. Wasn't sure I wanted to, but I certainly could. Strapped up high between gnarled branches that jutted from the main trunk at a rakish angle, a full 50 feet above the ground, my bed for the night trembled in the breeze. You know those holiday moments when you review what you've booked and think, 'I chose this?' That's the thought that passed through my mind as I prepared to experience one of the most radical, evocative and downright uncomfortable nights of my life.
For £140 to £200, the Mighty Oak Tree Climbing Company, run by Bethany and Alan Stock, provides an al fresco dinner at tree-stump level, then up you climb by rope to spend a night in a hammock - or 'treeboat' - amid the leaves and wind and loneliness. In the morning, your breakfast is cooked for you in the treetops.
Ecolodges around the world are competing to boast the greenest credentials, but surely this - a tree - is the ultimate. Here in this wood on the Boconnoc Estate near Lostwithiel, I peered up and wondered whether, from up there, that little hammock felt as high as it looked from down here on the grass and sheep poo. I would find out soon.
First Alan, who is a qualified tree surgeon, literally showed me the ropes, strapping a groin-crushing safety harness to my midriff and telling me about tree-climbing using slip-knots and stirrups. 'It's the calm and the peace up there that people want,' he explained before showing me a scar caused by a chain-saw accident seven weeks ago, which nearly took his arm off. Gulp.
The wind blew. I practised climbing, enjoying myself no end while Beth made dinner of barbecued lamb-kebabs (was it my imagination or were the sheep in the surrounding field eyeing us balefully as we tucked into their brethren?). Then as the moon rose, it was finally time to climb - quite literally - into bed.
Gordon.
It's the UK's most unusual B&B: a treetop hammock suspended 50 feet above the Cornish countryside. A nervous Nicholas Roe checks in
Sunday April 23, 2006
The Observer
Like a seaside landlady directing me to the dodgiest room in the house, Bethany Stock pointed to the upper branches of a gigantic oak at the edge of a field in Cornwall. 'That's where you'll be sleeping,' she said. 'Can you see?'
I could. Wasn't sure I wanted to, but I certainly could. Strapped up high between gnarled branches that jutted from the main trunk at a rakish angle, a full 50 feet above the ground, my bed for the night trembled in the breeze. You know those holiday moments when you review what you've booked and think, 'I chose this?' That's the thought that passed through my mind as I prepared to experience one of the most radical, evocative and downright uncomfortable nights of my life.
For £140 to £200, the Mighty Oak Tree Climbing Company, run by Bethany and Alan Stock, provides an al fresco dinner at tree-stump level, then up you climb by rope to spend a night in a hammock - or 'treeboat' - amid the leaves and wind and loneliness. In the morning, your breakfast is cooked for you in the treetops.
Ecolodges around the world are competing to boast the greenest credentials, but surely this - a tree - is the ultimate. Here in this wood on the Boconnoc Estate near Lostwithiel, I peered up and wondered whether, from up there, that little hammock felt as high as it looked from down here on the grass and sheep poo. I would find out soon.
First Alan, who is a qualified tree surgeon, literally showed me the ropes, strapping a groin-crushing safety harness to my midriff and telling me about tree-climbing using slip-knots and stirrups. 'It's the calm and the peace up there that people want,' he explained before showing me a scar caused by a chain-saw accident seven weeks ago, which nearly took his arm off. Gulp.
The wind blew. I practised climbing, enjoying myself no end while Beth made dinner of barbecued lamb-kebabs (was it my imagination or were the sheep in the surrounding field eyeing us balefully as we tucked into their brethren?). Then as the moon rose, it was finally time to climb - quite literally - into bed.
Gordon.
- Betty Boop
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- Location: The end of the World
Anyone from Cornwall?
Hehehehe Theia - shall I book you and Weeder in for a night?? It'll be May so you'll be safe with the weather surely!??


Anyone from Cornwall?
Betty Boop wrote: Hehehehe Theia - shall I book you and Weeder in for a night?? It'll be May so you'll be safe with the weather surely!??

Careful, Betty, careful...don't push it too far with the woman who holds the map :sneaky:

Careful, Betty, careful...don't push it too far with the woman who holds the map :sneaky:
Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answers...Rainer Maria Rilke
- Betty Boop
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- Joined: Sun Mar 27, 2005 1:17 pm
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Anyone from Cornwall?
theia wrote: Careful, Betty, careful...don't push it too far with the woman who holds the map :sneaky:
Who needs a map!! I've printed off the route from a routemaster!! hehehehe
Who needs a map!! I've printed off the route from a routemaster!! hehehehe
- chrisb84uk
- Posts: 11634
- Joined: Wed Aug 10, 2005 6:29 am
Anyone from Cornwall?
:wah: Hahaha well I'm hoping to be at Raven's house by 5pm, and by the sounds of it I'm certainly going to be there a lot earlier than the pair of you are!!! :p
- Betty Boop
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Anyone from Cornwall?
chrisb84uk wrote: :wah: Hahaha well I'm hoping to be at Raven's house by 5pm, and by the sounds of it I'm certainly going to be there a lot earlier than the pair of you are!!! :p
Ye of little faith! :p
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!
Ye of little faith! :p
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!

- chrisb84uk
- Posts: 11634
- Joined: Wed Aug 10, 2005 6:29 am
Anyone from Cornwall?
Betty Boop wrote: Ye of little faith! :p
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!
Somehow I feel as though I can't argue with you on that one! :p :wah:
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!

Somehow I feel as though I can't argue with you on that one! :p :wah:
Anyone from Cornwall?
Betty Boop wrote:
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!
I second that, Betty
We'll be in Scotland hours before you!

I second that, Betty

Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answers...Rainer Maria Rilke
Anyone from Cornwall?
Betty Boop wrote: Who needs a map!! I've printed off the route from a routemaster!! hehehehe
Never trust anything with "master" in the title
Never trust anything with "master" in the title

Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answers...Rainer Maria Rilke
- chrisb84uk
- Posts: 11634
- Joined: Wed Aug 10, 2005 6:29 am
Anyone from Cornwall?
Hehehe well when you reach Scotland, please give my regards to our Scottish FG members, and I shall do the same to the rest of us down South. 

- Betty Boop
- Posts: 16988
- Joined: Sun Mar 27, 2005 1:17 pm
- Location: The end of the World
Anyone from Cornwall?
theia wrote: Never trust anything with "master" in the title 
hhhmmm you could be right there Theia, wonder if theres a 'routemistress' :wah:

hhhmmm you could be right there Theia, wonder if theres a 'routemistress' :wah: