For various reasons we were in the North East late last August, as demonstrated by the bridges. So on the late Summer Bank Holiday we decided - despite the rain - to go to the open air museum at Beamish.
Beamish celebrates and records the lost industrial and agricultural past of the North East of England. But it does so by recreating a landscape through which visitors can walk and explore. Like the confectioners above, which in addition to selling sweets from jars, has a sweet-making workshop in the back, where various flavours of boiled sweets are produced. This requires large amounts of molten sugar, pulled around like taffy and flavoured as it cools, and then cut in to lozenges for the pleasure of the customers. Hot, and amazing.
Elsewhere there are mineworkings, miners cottages, a chapel and school, actors selling things and so forth...
While Beamish occupies a big area, it is still walkable, but most people seem to want to use the trams and buses and carts that travel around the different locations on the site.
There are indoor bits (where we sheltered when the rain got too bad)...
... as did some other residents...
And of course, as you might expect, there is a little bit of heritage steam railway to have a go on.
Although to be fair, not every heritage steam railway has a replica of Puffing Billy!
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