September 20, 2017 - On Day 10 of our UK trip, we drove from Salisbury to Bath, and we
were both a little stressed dealing with the driving situation again. It wasn’t
a long drive, just under 45 miles total, and most of it was out of any city
limits. Due to my slow navigation skills, and Dan having to focus on the road,
we missed a few key turns, and instead of driving straight to the hotel, as
planned, we ended up in the middle of downtown Bath…Oops! We finally made it to
the hotel, and after getting checked in, took off on foot to begin our tour of
Bath.
I liked Bath a lot! Not as small or quaint as
Salisbury, it still had a comfortable feel to it, and I really liked the City
Center, the small downtown hub for tourists, shopping, and dining, with Bath
Abbey, a centuries old Anglican church, the towering centerpiece of the town.
The main attraction in Bath, is of course, the Roman Baths, and the city is
also well known for its particular style of architecture. Everything was
walking distance from our hotel, making our stay here very convenient.
One of the reasons we had rented the car was so
we could drive into the Cotswolds, a rural area of south central England,
defined by its rolling gills, medieval villages, churches, and stately homes
built of distinctive local yellow limestone. The 102-mile Cotswold Way walking
trail follows the Cotswold Edge escarpment from Bath in the south to Chipping
Campden in the north. Our plan was to drive maybe 30 miles into the area and do
a day hike on part of the Cotswold Way. As it turned out, we were both so done
with the car, and it was raining and not conducive to hiking, so we turned the
car in early and ended up getting just a peak of the Cotswold Way from where it
terminates (or begins) in Bath.
We spent time walking around downtown and along the River
Avon. We found an old church and cemetery, saw people living in their river
RV’s, aka houseboats, walked along a lot of cobbled streets, tried a Cornish
pasty, admired the unique Bath architecture, had lunch at a vegan/vegetarian
restaurant called Green Rocket Café, and picked up some dinner supplies so we
could have dinner in our hotel room. This consisted of a loaf of sourdough
bread, a carton of hummus, pre-packaged salad dressed with soy sauce and lemon,
and a bottle of wine. Simple food, just what we were craving, and so
satisfying!
We spent the better part of one afternoon touring The Roman
Baths. This complex is a major tourist attraction, receiving more than 1
million visitors a year. Visitors are not allowed to enter the water, but if I
could time travel, I would love to go back in time to the heyday of the Roman
Baths and enjoy the full spa experience!
The maze of bathhouses constructed above Bath's three
natural hot springs come out of the ground at a steady 115°F. Situated
alongside a temple dedicated to the healing goddess Sulis-Minerva, the baths
now form one of the best-preserved ancient Roman spas in the world. The heart
of the complex is the Great Bath, a lead-lined pool filled with steaming,
geothermally heated water from the Sacred Spring. Though now open-air, the bath
would originally have been covered by a barrel-vaulted roof.
More
bathing pools and changing rooms are situated throughout, with excavated
sections revealing the hollow spaces beneath the floor that formed the
system that heated the bathing rooms. According to what we learned during
our tour, a visitor to the baths might spend most of the day in this facility,
enjoying many spa services. After luxuriating in the hot baths, they might have
reinvigorated themselves with a dip in the circular cold-water pool,
enjoyed a massage, had body hair tweezed off by spa attendants (no thank you on
that “service”), and spend time with others catching up on gossip.
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