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Weird and wonderful bell towers (2 of 2)

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Manage episode 271740291 series 2485960
Content provided by Cathy Booth. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cathy Booth or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Following on from last month’s edition, podcast host Cathy Booth reveals another dodgy dozen or so weird and wonderful towers. WARNING - this podcast contains details of hair-raising ringing environments, definitely not for the nervous ringers amongst you!

Enjoy another litany of trapdoors, spiral staircases, beam scrambling, comedy pulleys and 17th-century ladders.
We now have a whole new list of things to watch out for – bizarre ringing circles, ropes arranged around the organist, and, erm, falling concrete! And as lovely as weddings are, Cathy discovers these can be the source of much distraction. Please do be careful not to lasso a bridesmaid!
Lastly, and most importantly, always be EXTREMELY cautious if you accept an invitation to ring a quarter peal at a church whose bells are described as “rung from cage above chancel crossing”.


Featured towers:


St Mary Magdalene, Cottingham, Northamptonshire


St George’s, Great Bromley


Pershore Abbey

St Peter, Great Livermere


Crowland Abbey

Inveraray

  • Steve Johnson read a story recalled by Roy Le Marechal about a failed quarter peal attempt at Inverary.


St Wilfrid’s church, Hickleton, Derbyshire

  • St Wi

Sponsor: This podcast is sponsored by the Association of Ringing Teachers (ART). To find out more about learning to ring, learning to teach or other resources to support your ringing go to bellringing.org

Podcast team:
Anne Tansley Thomas
Emily Roderick
John Gwynne
Emily Watts
Cathy Booth
Ringing by:
The Cambridge Youths (supplied by David Richards) and for later episodes, The Liliputters Guild (supplied by Simon Edwards).

  continue reading

78 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 271740291 series 2485960
Content provided by Cathy Booth. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Cathy Booth or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Following on from last month’s edition, podcast host Cathy Booth reveals another dodgy dozen or so weird and wonderful towers. WARNING - this podcast contains details of hair-raising ringing environments, definitely not for the nervous ringers amongst you!

Enjoy another litany of trapdoors, spiral staircases, beam scrambling, comedy pulleys and 17th-century ladders.
We now have a whole new list of things to watch out for – bizarre ringing circles, ropes arranged around the organist, and, erm, falling concrete! And as lovely as weddings are, Cathy discovers these can be the source of much distraction. Please do be careful not to lasso a bridesmaid!
Lastly, and most importantly, always be EXTREMELY cautious if you accept an invitation to ring a quarter peal at a church whose bells are described as “rung from cage above chancel crossing”.


Featured towers:


St Mary Magdalene, Cottingham, Northamptonshire


St George’s, Great Bromley


Pershore Abbey

St Peter, Great Livermere


Crowland Abbey

Inveraray

  • Steve Johnson read a story recalled by Roy Le Marechal about a failed quarter peal attempt at Inverary.


St Wilfrid’s church, Hickleton, Derbyshire

  • St Wi

Sponsor: This podcast is sponsored by the Association of Ringing Teachers (ART). To find out more about learning to ring, learning to teach or other resources to support your ringing go to bellringing.org

Podcast team:
Anne Tansley Thomas
Emily Roderick
John Gwynne
Emily Watts
Cathy Booth
Ringing by:
The Cambridge Youths (supplied by David Richards) and for later episodes, The Liliputters Guild (supplied by Simon Edwards).

  continue reading

78 episodes

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