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Finishing The St Saviour Parish Walk (10/30/25)

Thursday is house cleaner day, so we tend to schedule our outings for later in the day, as the cleaner comes late afternoon and stays for 2 hours. Yesterday, we decided to do the portion of the St Saviour walk that we hadn’t done before, which is the very narrow bit that runs to the coast.

The book of parish walks that we have been using states that each parish was required to have a bit of seafront access for the collection of vraic (seaweed) for the fields. St Saviour has the smallest stretch of shoreline, the Dicq, squeezed between St Helier and St Clement.

Our walk started along the busy road near our house. When we could (as sidewalks abruptly end here), we switched to the side with a bit more protection from the road.

The wider sidewalk with space between the sidewalk and the road

Ironically, for the portion of the walk that was dubbed “more urban,” as it goes into the town center, we began our descent into the town of St Helier via a country road with both rural and urban views.

We had been close to the four “high-rise” residential buildings when we did our St Clement parish walk.
The narrow country lane
Sheep
And a hungry goat

One of the sites that we wanted to see on the walk was Howard Davis Park which is used for some town festivals. The park is on land acquired by entrepreneur TB Davis where his boyhood home used to sit. He demolished his former home after acquiring the land and created a park named in memory of his son who was killed in WW I.

The main entrance to the park
A small bandshell and gazebo and a view into the town center
Howard Davis Hall in the park dedicated to Howard Davis
A statue of George V
Another view of the large lawn area
Pretty landscaping near the park cafe
The flagpole is made from the spinnaker pole
from TB Davis’ yacht, The Westward
The rose garden

Walking out of the park, we began to make our way to the coast.

St Luke’s Church, one of the island’s 10 ‘chapels of ease’
(chapels to serve those living far from their main parish church)
built in the mid-19th century
A pretty hotel
Le Dicq Causeway, St Saviour’s portion of seashore
(total of 100 meters)
Looking towards St Clement
The rock named Le Rocher Des Proscrits (Exiles’ Rock)
by Victoria Hugo when he lived in St Clement
as an exile from France from 1852-55.

Having reached the end of our walk, we headed back to the Five Oaks Pub near the house for a drink before heading home to a cleaner house.

Jersey Preparatory School for Girls
A marker noting our change in parishes as we walked back
Bob with his Carling in the pub
We watched (though not understanding the game)
India beat Australia in the semi-final
of the Women’s Cricket World Cup

How can it be that we leave early Monday to fly back to the States?! We have definitely enjoyed Jersey, just like we did Guernsey, and would love to visit again.

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People Who Pray in Glass Churches… (10/29/25)

It has been quite the rainy Wednesday here, but with a feels-like temp in the high 40s F and little wind, it still made for an okay day for a walk. One of the sites in Jersey that they stop at on the bus tour that we hadn’t seen yet was the Glass Church. It is free to visit, so after a breakfast at the local pub (Wednesday is discount day, so we thought we’d treat ourselves.), we headed out to see the church.

I didn’t take many photos on the walk as one, it was raining, and two, we had done most of the same walk on the day that we went to the Artisan Market in St Brelade. But, a couple of things caught my eye. The first one was a park near a church that we had seen on our bus ride yesterday.

St Andrew’s Park with St Andrew’s Church on the back right
Just a flowering bush that caught my eye

Now for the Glass Church, which is not made of glass but does have a lot of glass features. It is St Matthew’s Church was built as a modest chapel in the 1840s at the foot of Mount Felard to keep parishioners from having to walk up the steep hill to the parish church. In 1934, Lady Trent (widow of Jesse Boot of the Boot Pharmacy chain) commissioned Rene Lalique to decorate the renovated church with glass features, including an illuminated cross, a glass font, and glass screens adorned with the Jersey lily motif. The Glass Church is the only surviving Lalique commission of its kind, making it a unique and globally significant work of art.

Rene Lalique (1860-1945) was a French jeweler, medalist, and glass designer known for his creations of glass art, perfume bottles (notably in collaboration with Francois Coty), vases, jewelry, chandeliers, clocks, and automobile hood ornaments.

St Matthew’s Church
A closer view of the entry
A framed lighted glass piece in the foyer
The glass font
A view of the sanctuary
The Lalique glass windows
“The Sword of the Spirit” by Louise Ramsay. It depicts the Sword of the Spirit being planted in the sea
between Jersey and Guernsey.
Lalique figures in the side sacristy at the front of the sanctuary
A Lalique screen
The illuminated cross and pillars at the front of the church
Looking towards the back of the sanctuary
“The Rock” by Louise Ramsay.
It depicts a worshipper standing on a rock
while a turbulent sea crashes around him.

Louise Ramsay was born and educated in England but now lives and works in Jersey.

Looking down on St Saviour Parish
before we descend a series of steps
after having come back up Mount Felard from St Lawrence Parish

We haven’t included photos of the cats recently. They are both sweet cats with perhaps the strongest interest in food of any cats we have cared for. Although you can see, they can also be sweet snugglers as well.

The very sweet Bella. She is either on your lap or a bit aloof unless she thinks you are going to feed her.
Lu is very active and playful,
but likes to get close if he’s slowing down for the day.
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Devil’s Hole (10/28/25)

Bob and I walked downtown today to catch the number 7 bus to the Devil’s Hole (a natural crater in a cliff along the sea coast) on the north coast of the island. We hadn’t made it to the north coast before, and it did not disappoint—amazing rugged cliffs, lovely blue sea, and truth in advertising, a devil as well.

There is a bus stop in the parking lot of an inn/pub where the footpath down to Devil’s Hole begins.

Not the prettiest sign, but it got us started in the right direction.
This was one of the first things we saw along the path.

Devil’s Hole used to be called the Spiral Cave. One possible reason for the current name stems from a shipwreck of a French boat in 1851. Its figurehead was thrust straight into the hole by the tide, and a local sculptor transformed the torso into a wooden devil. This is that sculpture. It sets a mood.

Our first glimpse of the sea
on the short walk down to the viewing platform
If you enlarge this photo,
you can see land just to the left of the the rocks.
Not sure if that is France
or other smaller Channel Islands near Jersey.
Looking down the path, which circles around this cliff
Selfie along the north coast
More of the coastline and rugged cliffs
The Devil’s Hole, hard to capture the steepness of it
The Priory Inn and Pub, which was not open while we were there

The bus only runs hourly, so we had some time to kill before walking back near the La Mare Wine Estate where we needed to catch the bus heading back to St Helier. There was a posted footpath nearby, so we followed that for a bit back towards the sea.

Lovely scenery on that walk too.

This is the continuation of the Cliff Path that we were on.
We turned around here.
Another cave formed in the rock
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A Plan B Day (10/27/25)

After a windy, rainy start to the day, the sun came out, and we decided it looked too good to stay inside. We had been talking about doing a half-day bus tour of the island, so we decided maybe today was the day. The website said no tickets were available, but we didn’t know if that was because the tour was full or they don’t sell tickets online for same day tours. We had other things that we wanted to see in St Helier anyway, so we thought we’d walk down to Liberation Square to try to get tickets for the tour, and if not, we’d see more of St Helier.

A cute mural on a building on our walk to Liberation Square

Turns out that no tickets were available because it is the end of the season, so the half day tours are no longer on offer. There is a full day tour option available on Wednesday of this week. We went to our Plan B for today. Bob wanted to walk some of the promenade along the water in downtown St Helier, and I wanted to see the Maritime Museum (just for a photo) and a steam clock.

Looking west along the coast
Looking east
A fun local fact posted on the sea wall
Looking back along the promenade towards the town
The Freedom Tree sculpture unveiled
by The Queen on May 9, 2005,
to commemorate the 60th anniversary
of the liberation of the islands
The tide is at least partially in, and there is water under the boats.
Walking out on the pier that leads to the causeway
that you could walk across (when low tide) to Elizabeth Castle
Looking back across the marina towards town

There had been an art show for paintings in the arches of the pier. The time for the exhibition was officially over, but the paintings were still there. Here’s a couple.

In another marina, this statue stands in commemoration
of the 60th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth’s reign.
Each bench along the marina was inscribed
with a letter of the naval phonetic alphabet and semaphore
Maritime sculpture and signage
Other benches along the harbor identify vessels built in Jersey during its maritime history
Cute signage to the Maritime Museum
The Maritime Museum
The Ariadne Steam Clock erected in 1997
to commemorate the island’s rich maritime history
and the innovative spirit of the Victorian Era.

The steam clock apparently actually releases steam at regular intervals, but we weren’t there at the right time. We were quite happy with our Plan B day — and the weather.

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Oh Girl, What A Walk to Mount Orgueil Castle (10/26/25)

Bob suggested a walk to Mount Orgueil Castle today, as no rain was in the forecast until late tonight. It was a 3+ mile walk that was pretty along the way and even better at the end. Who would have thought that our best view of the trip to date would be in a village called Gorey?

We walked from St Saviour Parish east into St Martin Parish and ultimately to the east coast of the island.

The 16th Century Christian Chapel
built above a Neolithic passage grave at La Houge Bie
We are now experienced road walkers
on these lovely tree-shaded lanes
The houses and landscaping along the route were impressive.
Also, some pretty fields and farmland
Queen’s Valley Reservoir with a walking trail around the water
More great landscaping
Pretty little cottage along the walled road
Loved the fall colors
An impressive gate to a large estate
Gouray Church, which sits high over the bay
overlooking Gorey Village and the harbor
Looking down a steep stairwell down into Gorey Village
Our first view of Orgueil (Gorey) Castle
and the colorful storefronts below

The current structure of Mount Orgueil Castle was built in 1204 when the Channel Islands became a front line between England and France. It successfully withstood several French assaults. It was refortified in the 16th century, but it was eventually replaced by Elizabeth Castle on the south coast of the island due to the invention of cannons.

During World War II and the German Occupation, the castle was used as a barracks and observation post, and the Germans added concrete fortifications.

Looking south along the Bay of Grouville
Another view of the castle and very low tide in the harbor
Some nice homes overlooking the bay
A boat sculpture and lovely landscaping along the promenade
Some of the businesses below the castle
at the end of the promenade
A pretty coffee shop/cafe

It was all downhill into the village, so up on the way back.

We had a view of the bay through someone’s parking terrace
Grouville is the parish immediately south of St Martin
A fun find in a wall along our walk back
A marker showing the division
between St Martin Parish and St Saviour Parish
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Jersey Government 101 and a High Street Walkabout (10/25/25)

One of the initial brochures that we had picked up on Jersey had a listing of local events. One that caught my eye was a Royal Court and States Chamber Tour. You were to purchase tickets on Eventbrite. When I went to the site, there were no tickets on offer, so I reached out to the contact person to see if there was another site I needed to go to. She kindly opened up 2 more spaces, and Bob and I walked the 40 minutes to Royal Square this morning for the 2 hour guided tour.

One view of Royal Square with a statue of George II
and a couple of the 200+ year old chestnut trees
The current Royal Square was formerly the market place
and was also the site of the Battle of Jersey,
when the British successfully defended the island
from an invasion by France
A local stonemason put the V in the pavement
during the occupation. Fearing punishment,
he claimed it was in reference to the Red Cross ship, SS Vega.
The 3 buildings that we toured — the former library
(brown stone building in forefront),
the Royal Court (pink building),
and States Chambers (cream building at the end)

The former library, with a pretty domed room and chandelier, is now used as an overflow courtroom when needed or to hold state dinners or other functions.

The Royal Court is the judicial arm of the state, with many trials decided by appointed or elected jurats instead of a jury.

The State Chambers holds the State Assembly or legislative arm of the state government. The Assembly is made up of 49 elected members, 12 Constables (one for each parish) and 37 Deputies, each representing about 3,000 Islanders, with less-populated parishes being combined to make for more equal representation.

We were not allowed to take photos during the tour,
but we got this goodie bag at the end so we have proof
that we did actually do the tour.

After the tour, we walked to their high street, or main shopping area. The street goes by a few names including Queen Street and King Street. It was busy on a Saturday.

A look down the pedestrian-only street
De Gruchy, a higher end department store
An old mill wheel (I think) in the middle of an intersection
A pretty clock
The far end of the high street
The Toad Monument erected in 2004 in commemoration
of 800 years of the island’s allegiance to the English crown
and in memory of the presence on the site
(between 1698 and 1811) of the island’s prison.

The words on the column of the sculpture are extracts from the Code Le Geyt of 1698 concerning crimes and applicable punishments. The toad on top of the column is the Jersey toad, which the dune covered and marshy island had a lot of when initially settled, so Jersey islanders have the nickname of toad.

From the high street, we walked towards the Opera House, as we had wanted to see that.

A war memorial
The statue of the Scottish born Sir George Don,
who among other things served
as the Lieutenant Governor of Jersey
from 1806 through the Napoleonic Wars (ending in 1815).
A war memorial in Parade Gardens
A portion of an old wall retained
in front of Jersey General Hospital
The Opera House
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A Bit of Trinity Parish (10/24/25)

We continue to have very changeable weather with wind and bouts of rain and occasional sun. Today was much better than yesterday when the winds were positively Orkneyesque. So today, we headed back out to explore a section of another parish walk. This time we headed northwest of St Saviour Parish to Trinity Parish, the most rural of Jersey’s parishes, with only 84 houses per square kilometer.

We were most interested in seeing 2 of the sites — the Jersey Zoo and the Eric Young Orchid Foundation, one for a photo op and one to visit. It ended up being about a 6.5 mile walk with a little more rain than had been predicted on the weather app, but we were prepared.

Bob got us to the zoo, which was just a bit over an hour walk.

Chateau Vermont, there is some $$ on this island
Bob and I were just commenting on how pretty the walk was when we came upon this humble brag sign.

Besides big heads, Bob likes to photo fungus. We found a few interesting mushroom patches on the way to the zoo.

The attractive entrance to the Jersey Zoo
Another view of the entrance

We chose not to go into the zoo purely on cost considerations. It would have been $55 for both of us to go, and there are other activities that we want to do, and most things here have an entrance fee. From what we have heard though, it is a good zoo with a conservation focus.

From the Jersey Zoo, we then began following the Trinity Parish walk route to the Eric Young Orchid Foundation.

Me carrying the parish walk guide that describes the routes
and what you see along the way
This is a memorial to Bernard Scheidhauer of the French Air Force who crash landed near this spot on 11/18/42.
He was taken prisoner by the Germans,
but in March 1944 he escaped along with 75 other prisoners. Sadly, he was captured by the Germans
5 days later and murdered.
A better photo of a reproduction of a painting of Bernard
by a local artist
The entrance to the Eric Young Orchid Foundation

Eric Young was a local man with a passion for orchids that led him to build a collection of world status. The Foundation is his legacy. We have been intrigued with these plants after a housesit in the heart of Texas, where we were tasked (Bob took this on) with the watering and care for over 600 orchids.

Some photos of the orchids and other plants at the foundation.

These make me smile, but we don’t know what they are.
A marker showing the division between parishes
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Ooh, La La Mare (10/22/25)

Bob and I decided that after our long parish walk on Tuesday, we’d treat ourselves to a visit to the La Mare Wine Estate Wednesday afternoon— before a storm was to blow through Wednesday evening. We purchased tickets for the 3:30 tour and tasting.

The wine estate is 8 miles from the house. We decided to walk the 40 minutes to the downtown bus station for a bit of a mobile outing and then catch the number 7 bus for the almost 30 minutes to ride to the winery.

Bob found us a new route into town, so we could see some new sites. Some scenes from our walk.

“Les Jongleurs” sculpture donated to the Parish of St Helier
by the Jersey Public Sculpture Trust.
An attractive building being used by a medical office
St Helier Parish Church
A colorful pub

The 2:40 bus towards the winery was fairly full. We arrived at the La Mare stop a little before 3:10 and then had a short walk down a country lane to the winery. Our timing was good, as we had just gotten checked in for the tour and sent to the cafe to await the start when the rain started. It was really coming down when we went to leave at about 5:15ish, but we had already decided that we would call a cab for the trip back.

Walking onto La Mare property. It is called a wine estate,
but they make wine, cider, and liquor
as well as homemade chocolates and biscuits.
The landscaped parking lot
A ticket hut that must be used during busier times of the year.
We were directed by sign to check in at the shop.
The very colorful chicken that greeted us on the way in and out
The attractive cafe
The view of some of the vineyards from the cafe
The sign on the women’s restroom.
I prefer this to the usual image.
A muselet (champagne cork wire cage) styled chair

There were only four of us on the tour, as their season is winding down. Only their store will be open as of November 1. Maybe because of this we seemed to get a lot of extras. The tour description stated a tasting of 3 wines and their apple brandy cream liquor. We did get those, with the cream liquor served in small handmade chocolate cups, but we also got a small taste of their (hard) cider, a half a biscuit, a handmade cream-filled chocolate, and a small taste of fudge with another different chocolate. Crazy! The staff was very friendly, and it was a nice, relaxed tour with some very short films to explain more about the different processes. We highly recommend.

Their event room where we had our wine tastings
and watched the short (few minutes each) films.
The distillery room

The cab ride home was an event onto itself, with a very friendly, very chatty driver, who seemed to be able to navigate the narrow roads in the rain at a good clip even while not apparently looking in the direction of travel. I was happy to jump out of the car to feed the cats and let Bob finalize the payment and conversation when we got back to the house.

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Parish Walk: St Clement (10/21/25)

St Clement is the smallest parish on the island, but it’s location on the sheltered south coast and proximity to St Helier have made it a popular place to live. St Clement was Bishop of Rome in 92 AD and is the Patron Saint of Sailors, having achieved martyrdom when he was thrown into the Black Sea with an anchor tied around his neck for providing water to fellow prisoners.

St Clement Parish is southeast of St Saviour. It was about an eight mile walk, but since we walked to the start and then back again, it made our mileage total for the day about 11 miles. We had a bit of everything on our walk — sun, cloud, and rain, but it was definitely less windy than yesterday.

A garden center and tea room we hope to visit
not far from the house
Walking down a country lane
A view over the parish to St Clement’s Bay
Lots of fields before we got closer to the coast
Another country road towards the coast
A residential building on the coastal road across from the bay
Low tide allowed us to walk on the beach for a bit
Looking the opposite way up the beach
One of three lighthouses in the parish.
This one offers safe passage
for shipping into St Helier harbor.
There is a lighthouse across from this in the bay
for the same purpose.
Modern homes along the coast road
and some high residential buildings behind.
These are the only ones we have seen so far.
A stone noting the unsuccessful escape attempt
by young Jerseymen during the occupation
Looking across the beach to Green Island,
so called as it stays green all year
Stones commemorating two individuals who successfully swam around the island of Jersey in 2000. Helen did it faster!
An 18th century Jersey Round Tower,
one of the 19 remaining from the 30 built
as a defense against the French
La Hougette lighthouse on the top of a hill in the parish
St Clement’s Church, dating from at least the mid 11th century
Our walk had us sharing the road with cars on quieter rural roads
Formerly, Grouville Windmill, which was converted
into a lookout tower during WWII
A view of the medieval Mont Orgueil or Gorey Castle
Approaching St Clement’s Church and Caldwell Hall,
the original parish hall in St Clement
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A Museum Kind of Day (10/20/25)

Jersey is having an unsettled weather week per the weather people on tv and what we are experiencing. Apparently, a series of fronts are coming through, so we’re having rain off and on with lots of wind. We thought it made for a good day to visit the free-to-enter Jersey Museum, and we took the #3 bus each way. We did, however, walk back and forth to the gym this morning.

Looking up at an old fort and the top of a leisure center
built in the 1970s
The outside of the Jersey Museum and Art Gallery.
The Visitors Center is also located inside here.

The museum covered a range of topics about Jersey, and we spent 90 minutes there. We started with a 20 minute intro film, which provided a quick history from Neanderthal times to current day. This is a scattershot of items that I found of interest.

An example of a pamphlet (for sale) of an execution,
including the last words of the condemned individual
A staging of a treadmill punishment
for male prisoners in Jersey beginning in 1836.
The treadmill ground wheat for bread for the prisoners.
A skeleton of a red deer found on Jersey.
The exhibit noted how the red deer evolved
to be smaller (island dwarfing),
so they could survive on an island with limited food.
A photo of Victor Hugo after his exile from France to Jersey
when he denounced Napoleon.
He was forced to flee Jersey for Guernsey after 3 years
after supporting a newspaper that had criticized Queen Victoria for her close links with Napoleon.
Court entries from the 1585 record
of the witchcraft trial of Jeanne Le Vesconte.
Between the 1560s and 1660s,
there were 65 witch trials on the Channel Islands
which led to 33 executions.
“Our Hands,” by Adam Perchard.
This piece remembers the 65 people tried for witchcraft in Jersey. Sea-worn limpet shells mark the hands of those who were killed or banished— an ancient Jersey symbol of healing.
The charter issued by King Richard II in 1378
confirming the liberties and privileges granted to Islanders
by King Edward III in 1341. The charter still stands.

When we researched “our” parish of St Saviour the other day, one of the main claims to fame was the actress Lillie Langtry. There were a few items in the museum related to her.

“A Jersey Lily,” 1878, Sir John Everett Millais.
The exhibit noted that while the painter and Lillie
are both from Jersey, she is painted holding a Guernsey lily.
An ornate toilette case given to Lillie
by wealthy New Yorker Freddie Gebhard,
with whom she had a relationship
Mitch Courland a local, who has received an MBE
(Member of the Order of the British Empire).
He received his for services to the community,
especially the Jersey Honorary Police and Young People in Jersey.

There was a whole section devoted to the almost five year German occupation and then liberation and rebuilding. It was interesting the views of the different ways Jersey residents spent the war and the impact during and afterwards. There were Island residents who left the island before the occupation because they didn’t want to live under German rule. There were the Islanders who stayed and lived under the occupation, and then there were Island residents who were sent to German prisoner of war camps because they were not native Islanders (born in UK, France, etc.). Hard feelings arose in trying to get everyone back in a hard economic climate and a shortage of housing.

But first, the celebration!

And some happy new unions…

The wedding clothes for a couple
who met briefly in Jersey before the war.
They met again at a dance after the liberation and were married at St Saviour Church in 1947.
A poster to promote tourism to Jersey after the war
“Jersey, My Childhood Home, Layla May Arthur, 2019.
Scenes of Jersey in 12 panels, one for each of the parishes.
We identified the St Saviour parish panel
after being here less than a week
Looking up at the mast atop the hill, which is flying the Jersey flag and a gale cone to indicate a gale warning. I
t is operated by a team from Jersey Heritage
at the Maritime Museum.