Sunday, June 7, 2026

Chinsegut Hill; Stewardship, Accountability, and the Questions That Remain


My dear mermaid darlings of the Stillwater Petticoat Society,


There are certain places that settle so deeply into one’s affections that they cease to feel like buildings and begin to feel like old companions. Chinsegut Hill has always been such a place for me. Some houses occupy land; others occupy memory; and every so often, one encounters a place that gathers stories, hopes, disappointments, history, and possibility until it becomes something rather greater than the sum of its walls.

For many years now, Chinsegut Hill has occupied such a place in my thoughts.

I have written about her often. I have wandered her grounds beneath the oaks, studied her history, attended meetings, read reports, examined records, and imagined what might become possible if such a remarkable property were entrusted to thoughtful stewardship and careful restoration. Yet there is one part of this story I have perhaps never fully explained.

Many people know that I have written about Chinsegut Hill, far fewer realise that I spent more than six years attempting to become involved in her future.

Long before a proposal process existed, I was developing educational programmes, preservation ideas, horticultural plans, workshops, historical interpretation projects, and ways in which the property might once again become a living place of learning and community. When Hernando County eventually invited proposals for the future stewardship of Chinsegut Hill, I did not remain upon the shoreline watching the tide. I submitted a proposal of my own.


Unlike many of those involved, I did not have consultants, grant writers, institutional partners, university affiliations, a preservation organisation, or a committee standing behind me. I had years of research, a profound affection for the property, and a willingness to undertake the work because I believed participation ought to matter when citizens are invited to participate.


The experience was not without challenges. Certain procedural requirements became fully apparent only as deadlines approached, leaving precious little time to assemble what was required, and there were moments when I felt rather like a guest invited to supper only to discover the menu after the meal had already begun. Nevertheless, I completed the proposal because Chinsegut Hill deserved every serious effort that could be made on her behalf.


What remains remarkable to me is not that my proposal did not prevail.


It is that a single citizen working largely alone received approximately 42% of the available points, whilst an established preservation organisation supported by numerous individuals, advisors, volunteers, and resources received approximately 73%.


Those figures tell an interesting story.


Not because they suggest the outcome should have been different, but because they demonstrate that devotion, preparation, and commitment are not always measured by the size of an organisation or the number of names appearing upon a letterhead.


Indeed, I have often thought that stewardship may depend less upon structure and more upon affection; less upon administration and more upon whether one is willing to devote years of one’s life to a place without any guarantee of reward.


Yet even now, my thoughts return less to the outcome than to the purpose of the process itself.


Citizens were invited to participate. Proposals were assembled. Research was conducted. Plans were developed. Scores were assigned. Rankings were published.


Yet the institution that ultimately awarded stewardship did not itself participate in that same proposal process.


I mention this not out of anger, nor out of any desire to diminish the efforts of others, but because certain questions seem to arise naturally whenever public assets, public processes, and public trust meet at the same table.


If proposals were requested, what role did those proposals ultimately play?


If scores were assigned, how heavily were they weighted?


If citizens devoted months and years of their lives to participating in the process, what influence did that participation ultimately carry?


These do not strike me as hostile questions; they strike me as responsible ones.


There is another question that deserves equal attention.


Over the past several years, more than half a million dollars has been directed toward Chinsegut Hill through various agreements, partnerships, management arrangements, and operational structures, and that figure does not include the current year’s budget. At the same time, we have repeatedly been told that operations remain in the red.


I know this because I have taken the time to read the reports, review the documents, attend the meetings, and speak directly with those involved in managing the property.


This ultimately leaves me wondering what many citizens may reasonably wonder, and where are the measurable results?


Historic houses possess a remarkable honesty. They care very little for announcements, administrative arrangements, partnerships, presentations, or carefully crafted statements. They reveal stewardship through outcomes.


One expects to see restoration, completed projects, and visible progress that correspond to years of investment and effort.


That is not criticism, it is accountability.


For one cannot speak endlessly of preservation whilst avoiding conversations concerning benchmarks, timelines, restoration goals, public reporting, and measurable outcomes.


Perhaps these questions matter because Chinsegut Hill does not belong to a university, an organisation, a commission, or an administration.


The county of Hernando serves as the steward and leaseholder, but ownership ultimately rests with the people of Florida. The property is held in trust for future generations who have yet to walk her grounds, sit beneath her oaks, or discover her history.


Stewardship, at least as I understand it, has never been a matter of contracts or control. It is a matter of responsibility.


And perhaps this is also the appropriate moment to say something I have rarely stated quite so plainly.


I did not devote six years to Chinsegut Hill merely because I admired the view from the hilltop. I spent those years preparing because I hoped one day to help steward her future.

I hoped to see the manor carefully restored and the retreat centre brought back to life as a place of learning, preservation, horticulture, craftsmanship, history, and community. I imagined workshops filling the rooms once more, gardens flourishing beneath attentive hands, educational programmes welcoming visitors, and the property becoming not merely a monument to the past but a living part of Hernando County’s future.


That vision was never rooted in ownership. It was rooted in stewardship, and my darling stewardship is not possession; it is service.


It is the quiet promise to leave a place stronger, healthier, and more meaningful than one found it.


Perhaps that is why I continue writing about Chinsegut Hill after all these years. Not because I seek conflict, nor because I cannot accept that others may see things differently, but because genuine care rarely departs when circumstances become inconvenient. It remains attentive. It watches. It hopes.


Long after contracts expire, administrations change, committees dissolve, and organisations move on to other priorities, Chinsegut Hill will still stand upon her hilltop overlooking the county she has watched for generations.


Future citizens will not judge us by the number of meetings we held, the partnerships we announced, the reports we published, or the responsibilities we transferred from one entity to another.


They will judge us by whether the house was preserved, the history survived, or the stewardship proved worthy of the trust placed within it.


And in the end, that is the only measure that truly matters.


And if you should wish to follow the continuing story of Chinsegut Hill, I do hope you will visit me here upon the blog, where I endeavour to share developments with honesty, care, and as much transparency as the circumstances allow. I also keep a dedicated corner for the manor at ChinsegutHill.com, where records, observations, and updates may always be found gathered together.


For those who cherish the beauty of the old estate as I do, you may also enjoy my illustrated books and watercolour paintings inspired by Chinsegut Hill itself; its winding paths, ancient oaks, quiet rooms, and the enduring spirit that lingers upon the grounds. Over the years, I have sought not merely to document the place, but to preserve something of its atmosphere upon paper; a small remembrance of a Florida treasure that has captured my heart for many years.


You may also find further conversations, walks through the history of the estate, preservation discussions, and countless reflections upon the manor and its future upon my YouTube channel, where I have devoted many hours to sharing its story.


However, the next chapter unfolds, I shall continue to keep a faithful watch upon the hill, and should you care to follow along, I would be delighted to have your company.


For more than six years, I have dedicated myself to studying Chinsegut Hill, and I intend to continue following her story with the same care, curiosity, and commitment that first drew me through her gates.


After all, stewardship begins with paying attention.


Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, LR

Saturday, May 30, 2026

The Soul of a Town Lives in Its Old Houses

My mermaid darlings of Stillwater Petticoat Society,


There are moments whilst wandering the old roads of Brooksville when one comes upon a house standing so quietly beneath the trees that it almost appears to breathe. Time settles gently upon her porches; vines gather at her hems; the paint softens beneath years of rain and Florida sun; and still she remains dignified somehow, as though she remembers herself even whilst others begin to forget.  


I have often thought England understands this sort of thing rather beautifully. There, they do not always cast aside an old building merely because she has grown weathered or inconvenient. Entire villages gather round ancient cottages and centuries-old inns with a kind of familial devotion; and sometimes they will even lift an entire structure from the earth itself and carry her elsewhere rather than allow her to disappear entirely. One senses a reverence there, not merely for architecture, but for continuity.  


And here in Florida, I think of Cracker Country with much the same affection; the little schoolhouse, the church, the mercantile, and those weathered homes gathered carefully together so another generation may still walk their wooden floors and understand something of where they came from. Someone once loved those places enough to preserve them, and because of that devotion, children may now place their hands upon history rather than merely hear its whispers secondhand.  


I understand fully that restoration asks much of people. Old homes require patience, craftsmanship, vision, and, oftentimes, money that feels difficult to justify in a hurried world increasingly devoted to disposability. Yet I cannot help believing this is precisely where our boys and girls learn stewardship. A young soul taught to mend an old window, restore a porch rail, oil worn timber, or repair an ancient roof does not simply learn labour; they inherit care itself. They begin to understand that beautiful things need not be discarded merely because they have weathered a storm or two.  

I often think Elizabeth Robins herself would have smiled knowingly at such thoughts. Even within her letters regarding Chinsegut Hill, one finds traces of the endless balancing act restoration demands. She once wrote to Florence with amused exasperation regarding workers more interested in making music than tending properly to the roof or her workroom, and somehow I find comfort in that small humanity crossing through the years. Old houses have always required people willing to love them beyond inconvenience.  


Perhaps that is why places such as Chinsegut Hill and the old homes scattered quietly through our town matter so deeply to me. They are not simply structures of brick, pine, plaster, and paint. They hold memory, grief, laughter, ambition, supper conversations, summer storms, and the temperament of a people. Once lost, something vanishes with them that no hurried replica may faithfully return.  


And still, I remain hopeful. I believe there are many tender hearts quietly longing to see these places cared for properly again. Sometimes a town needs only to remember that preservation is not the refusal of progress; it is the gracious carrying forward of what was once worthy and remains worthy still.

 

Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, Lady raquel

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Slow Mismanagement of Chinsegut Hill

There comes a moment in every old town when silence ceases to be grace and instead becomes permission.


I have thought upon this often whilst standing beneath the oaks at Chinsegut Hill; not merely with frustration, though Heaven knows there is enough to stir it, but with the peculiar sorrow reserved for watching something beloved handled by those who do not truly love it. A manor house cannot survive upon contracts, committees, and ceremonial announcements alone; nor does heritage revive itself by endlessly passing through the same familiar hands whilst the public is assured that restoration remains just beyond the horizon.

For years now, stewardship of this estate has drifted in circles; institutions exchanged for institutions, management handed politely from one office to the next, all whilst the manor itself lingers in uncertainty and the taxpayers continue funding the experiment. One grows weary of grand promises attached to shrinking results. The public has poured substantial sums into the keeping of this property for the better part of a decade, yet the grounds increasingly bear the marks not of preservation, but of administration without vision.


There is a profound difference between occupying authority and possessing devotion. One may hold the keys to a historic place and still never understand its language. Such estates speak softly, through weathered fencing, through brick left honest and unpainted, through pathways and markers that ought to feel as though they belong to another century entirely. They do not ask to be modernised into submission for convenience, branding, or institutional vanity. They ask to be listened to.

And so it becomes difficult not to notice the curious pattern that emerges whenever stewardship is discussed. Opportunities circulate amongst the already acquainted; positions shift within the same protective orbit; and those with genuine historical knowledge, artistic understanding, preservation training, and long-standing personal investment are expected to remain politely outside the gate whilst watching their heritage slowly altered by people with neither skin in the game nor reverence for what the place truly is.


The tragedy is not financial alone, though the public has every right to question why so much money continues disappearing into a property that remains unable to stand fully restored with dignity after so many years of expenditure. No, the deeper loss is cultural. It is aesthetic. It is spiritual. It is the slow erosion of authenticity beneath layers of modern intrusion disguised as improvement. A historic marker quietly displaced for contemporary signage may appear a small matter to some, yet such decisions reveal an entire philosophy. One either understands stewardship or one does not.


My mermaid darlings, old houses remember. They remember who restored them with tenderness and who merely used them as another rung upon a political ladder. Brick remembers. Land remembers. Communities remember. One cannot endlessly treat heritage as possession rather than trust without eventually revealing the emptiness beneath the performance.


I believe many citizens feel this unease now. They perhaps struggle to articulate it without fear of sounding troublesome; yet love for one’s town is not troublemaking, and asking questions about public stewardship is not rebellion. It is a responsibility.


And I suspect the season of passive observation is nearing its close.


Because there comes a point when people stop merely lamenting decline and begin insisting upon restoration with clarity, structure, scrutiny, and resolve. Not through spectacle; not through bitterness; but through persistence, documentation, public accountability, and the steady refusal to allow incompetence to continue disguising itself as stewardship.


Those long accustomed to comfort often mistake gentleness for surrender and cannot imagine that a quiet voice may yet unsettle the machinery protecting mediocrity.



I would advise against such assumptions.


For there are still those amongst us who understand the difference between controlling a historic place and truly serving it, and once the public begins recognising that distinction clearly, many arrangements once considered immovable begin to look remarkably fragile indeed.


Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, Lady Raquel

Friday, May 22, 2026

The Performance of Refuge

There was a time when I believed what unsettled me was the sight of so many women suddenly returning to gardens, breadboards, linen aprons, little ones beneath their feet, hymnals upon the table, and the old rhythms of homekeeping that the modern world once laughed nearly into extinction. Yet as the years have softened me a little, I do not believe the gardens themselves ever vexed me at all. I think what wearied my spirit was something quieter and far more difficult to name.


You see, my mermaid darlings of the Stillwater Petticoat Society, I belonged to that life long before it acquired a title, a category, or an algorithm. I stitched children’s clothing by hand because there was need of it. I baked bread because families must eat. I planted flowers because grief had nearly swallowed me whole, and I required beauty to remain tethered to the earth. I did not arrive at old-fashioned living through trend forecasting or marketability; I arrived there rather like a woman stumbling through fog toward the glow of a cottage window somewhere upon the moors.


And perhaps that is why the present spectacle feels at times so curious to me.


For I observe women speaking earnestly of “traditional womanhood” whilst simultaneously performing their lives for thousands of strangers beneath studio lighting and affiliate links; measuring their worth by visibility; studying one another endlessly for cues; comparing kitchens, figures, husbands, children, land, sourdough starters, dresses, and morning routines as though domestic life itself has become a pageant to win rather than a sanctuary in which to rest.


It is not my wish to speak cruelly of them. In truth, I believe many began sincerely. The longing itself is real. One can feel it plainly beneath the surface of it all; women ache for slowness now. They ache for belonging; for continuity; for the comfort of stirring soup whilst rain gathers at the windows; for husbands who return home at dusk; for children whose childhoods still smell faintly of grass and sunshine rather than screens and urgency. The longing is not false.


Yet somewhere along the way, the camera often becomes the centre of the room.


And there lies the contradiction that so many cannot yet perceive.


A truly old-fashioned life was never designed for constant observation. It unfolded quietly, almost invisibly at times. Women kept homes; no one photographed them. They mended garments, but no audience applauded. They preserved peaches by lantern-light and swept porches before sunrise without once considering whether the moment appeared beautiful enough to be consumed by strangers.

The irony, I think, is that many modern women now seek refuge from performance whilst simultaneously performing refuge itself.


I do not say this with bitterness anymore. Once, perhaps, I did. There was a season when imitation pricked me sharply because I remembered too clearly the laughter that met these ways before they became fashionable. I remember being thought peculiar for wishing to live gently; for speaking romantically of old houses and hand-sewn things; for desiring candlelight over brightness and meaning over spectacle. Then, almost overnight, the very world that mocked such yearnings began selling them back to women in cream-coloured squares and carefully curated reels.


But age does a peculiar thing to a woman when she allows it to ripen her rather than harden her.


One day, she ceases competing entirely.


She no longer requires the crowd to misunderstand her correctly.


And so now I observe, rather like an old Brontë heroine seated quietly near the fire whilst the storm exhausts itself outdoors. For what I seek no longer resembles performance at all. I do not wish to construct a life merely aesthetic enough to be envied; I wish to inhabit one honest enough to sustain the soul.


There is a difference.


One asks constantly to be seen.


The other remains beautiful even unwitnessed.


And perhaps that is the truest distinction of all.


Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, LR

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Quiet Returning

My mermaid darlings of the Stillwater Petticoat Society,

The older I grow, my mermaid darlings, the less I believe steadfastness arrives in one glorious sweeping transformation, announced by trumpets and followed by a perfect string of disciplined days. It seems, instead, to enter quietly through the side door whilst a woman is occupied with ordinary things; lighting the lamp at dusk, rinsing teacups beneath warm water, pinning linen to the line before supper, returning once more to the life she has chosen even after the mood to do so has drifted out to sea.


I think many of us were taught to look for dramatic evidence of becoming. We wished to wake one morning entirely changed; suddenly organised, suddenly fearless, suddenly free from comparison, hesitation, distraction, and the strange little rebellions of the spirit that leave half-finished projects strewn about like abandoned ribbons after a fête.


Yet I have begun to suspect that a woman alters herself in much quieter ways than this.


Not through performance; through returning.


There is something rather sacred in the woman who continues gently onward without requiring each day to feel enchanted before she begins it. She rises; she tends what belongs to her; she keeps a few small promises; she places one foot before the other even whilst the heart remains soft and uncertain. In time, these tiny repeated acts begin gathering about her like threads upon a loom until at last a life appears where once there had only been longing.


I have noticed, too, that comparison loses much of its authority once a woman becomes occupied with the keeping of her own little world. One cannot simultaneously tend the roses and continually count another lady’s blooms across the hedge; eventually, the hands choose where they shall remain.


Perhaps this is why I no longer wish to build my days around sudden bursts of inspiration alone, lovely though they may be. Inspiration is a charming visitor; steadfastness keeps the hearth warm through winter.


And so lately I have been teaching myself a gentler form of devotion; not harsh discipline, not punishment, not the endless scolding of one’s own nature, but a quieter constancy. A return. An appearance. One honest offering placed upon the day before sunset.


Perhaps devotion reveals itself in smaller ways than we once imagined; in the reel quietly filmed though no grand wave of inspiration arrived beforehand, in the page written whilst certainty still lingered somewhere beyond the horizon, in the garden watered despite no eyes admiring it, and in the faithful lighting of the lamp simply because evening had come at last.


There is, I think, a hidden dignity in such things.


The world often speaks of strength as though it must harden a woman in order to prove itself real, yet I have found the opposite to be true. Some women grow softer as they become strong. Their voices lower; their movements steady; they cease performing urgency and begin inhabiting their own lives fully at last.


I should like to become one of them.


And perhaps, my dears, that is all steadfastness truly is; not the dramatic reinvention of the self, but the quiet faithful returning to what one loves long after applause, mood, and novelty have wandered elsewhere.

Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, LR

Monday, May 4, 2026

The Paper, the Brush, and What Follows

My mermaid darlings of the Stillwater Petticoat Society,


There are mornings when one does not so much begin a thing as return to it, and I found myself thus today, with the small and faithful instruments of my work laid quietly before me—the papers of a gentler grain, the paints of a softer temper, and those dear, newly gathered pieces that feel as though they might have once rested upon the table of some English lady, long acquainted with both patience and delight.









I had meant only to arrange them, to see how the light might take to their surfaces, yet it is rarely so simple; for in the placing of a brush or the smoothing of a page, something begins to stir of its own accord, and one senses—without announcement—that a story has come near again, not in any hurried fashion, but as a tide that knows precisely when to return.


So I have begun, though I should not call it beginning, for it feels rather like continuing a conversation that had only paused, and in this quiet resumption, there is a kind of steadiness I have come to trust more than any grand intention.


And as these small preparations take on their meaning, I note, almost in passing, that my work now sits amongst the top twenty in my group of The People’s Artist—a circumstance I receive much as I would an unexpected letter, with a certain stillness and a gentle curiosity as to what may follow. 






It seems the matter moves forward, simply enough, by public vote, freely given, and I have left it below, just as it stands, for any who may wish to wander there of their own accord.


For now, I shall return to my table, where the paper waits, and the story—ever patient—keeps its place beside me.


Most affably yours til my next enchanting swim, Lady Raquel

Friday, April 3, 2026

On Building an English Cottage Slowly


My dearest Mermaid Darlings of the Stillwater Petticoat Society,


There are chapters in a woman’s life which are not begun with a vision of beauty, but rather with a quiet and most necessary longing for shelter, and it was in such a season that Scarlette Rose Cottage first received me—not as a triumph, nor as a finished place of charm, but as a small and faithful refuge into which I might gather myself when the world had grown too grievous to carry, for it was here, in the shadow of my boy Sawyer’s passing, that I found my hands seeking occupation in the gentlest of ways, as though instinct itself understood that where the heart is broken, it must be given something tender to tend.

I did not arrive with abundance, nor with any grand design fully formed, but with a modest allowance of means, a few coins earned here and there, and a willingness—quiet yet unwavering—to make something from what others had relinquished, and so I wandered, as one does, through humble charity shops where forgotten things rest in patient rows, selecting not what was finest, but what seemed willing to belong, a teacup with a softened rim, a chair that had known better rooms, a linen faintly worn yet still holding its grace, each object taken up not for its perfection, but for its readiness to be loved again.

In those days, I kept myself occupied with small labours, not from any pressing ambition, but because there is a peculiar kindness in the doing of simple tasks, and so I painted where I could, arranged what I had gathered, and accepted with gratitude the occasional offering Jeffrey would bring—a tin of paint, a practical provision—never grand gestures, but sufficient to continue the quiet unfolding, and though the cottage itself was no more than four hundred square feet, it asked of me a certain discernment, teaching, in its gentle constraint, that not all things may remain, and that a life, much like a room, becomes most peaceful when only what is meaningful is permitted to stay.


Even now, my darlings, it would not present itself as a finished picture to the casual eye, for there remain corners yet to be completed and plans that live more vividly within my imagination than upon the walls, yet there is a difference now, subtle though it may be, for where once there was only survival, there is at present a quiet and steady joy, not hurried, nor insistent, but returning of its own accord, as though it had merely stepped out for a time and found its way home again.


I have come, in this way, to understand something which I had not known at the beginning—that one does not commence with beauty, nor does one require it in order to begin, but rather with a certain devotion, a willingness to continue, to choose, to place one small thing rightly, and then another, until, almost without announcement, beauty consents to appear, not as something pursued, but as something that has been gently invited.


And so I remain here, not merely arranging a cottage, but composing a life that feels, in its quiet way, like a fairytale—less for its appearance than for its intention—and I hold, with a calm and settled certainty, that what has been so carefully imagined within these walls shall, in due time and without strain, reveal itself outwardly in a manner most becoming.


There is, I find, something rather difficult to convey in words alone when it comes to the laying of stone, for it is not merely the placing, but the rhythm of it—the choosing, the turning, the quiet adjustment of each piece until it settles as though it had always intended to be there—and so, rather than attempt to explain it too plainly, I have left a moving picture of the work as it unfolded, should you care to step into it for a little while.


(For those who have, in some small way, felt a fondness for what is being made here, and who have expressed a wish to contribute to The Carter Settlement, I have left a quiet place to do so below.)


“Support the Carter Settlement”
(Link to PayPal)

Most affably yours 'til my next enchanting swim, Lady Raquel

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