Saturday, 22 February 2014

Postscripts from The Peak District (36) - Matlock

Thursday 13th February 2014

Les & Jamie had booked into Cafe Central in Matlock to learn how to make macarons so I was given the honour of looking after Abner for the afternoon!

The plan had been to do a little geocaching while I was waiting for them to arrive, then take Abner for a walk in the pushchair while he went to sleep (a couple of times round the Park), finishing off in Wetherspoon's while we waited for their cakes to cool!

Didn't quite work out according to plan as Abner wasn't interested in sleeping & then wasn't very well.... so we spent a lot of time cuddling & never made it to the pub.... & Abner likes pubs!



This is part of the colossal Cawdor Quarry which finally closed in the late 1990s but which still dominates this part of Matlock






Despite the above date I found references to it being used as a public tip 'for the last 50 years' & a local rock-climbing club refer to trees showing 'at least 40 years growth'!
The land was originally bought by Sainsburys & there's a new store & petrol station here: it was then sold on for housing & new homes stand all along the top of the quarry-edge!
Views are impressive from here - they must be fantastic from up there!

Monday, 17 February 2014

Postscripts from The Peak District (35) - Barlaston, Wedgwood, Trentham, Meaford

Monday 10th February 2014

Dubious forecast & I did get a bit of a soaking half-way through the day.... but I do have itchy feet if I don't fit any walking in for a few days!

The plan was to capture the Staffordshire LQ geocache sited on the outskirts of Stoke, at Trentham (see Postscript 32)

No intention of driving there, though, when there's a perfectly good canal I could stroll beside! Took the strolling a little too seriously on my return journey & wandered as far as the edge of Stone!

Parked beside Downs Banks Brook at Wash Dale & wandered upstream before climbing the western Downs with this view across the valley
Potential for superb views all round but rapidly disappearing in rain clouds!
Brindley's canal runs from the Mersey, near Runcorn, to the Trent, near Shardlow &, while I have walked several sections before, this would be the closest to home!
He had already completed one major canal for the Duke of Bridgewater, finished in 1759, when Josiah Wedgwood approached him with the commission for what became 'The Grand Trunk Canal'!

I'd walked through Barlaston & passed the old Wedgwood factory by the time I arrived at the first acknowledgement of The Potteries, close to Trentham Lock

Lots of interesting plaques beside the canal offering a variety of information & most of them, thankfully, are graffiti-free

Included this photo to show just how 'close' to home it is & to show how our local Caldon Canal fits into the scheme of things

You may have to click on the image to read the small-print but Leek & Ipstones are just beyond where the blue stops (top right)!

If you're looking for the bit I'm walking here..... I've just squeezed on to the bottom of the map!
Walked about as far as the yellow 'Museums' dot to secure the 'Ancient Oasis' geocache, nestled in Hem Heath Woods, before heading back to Barlaston & New Pub No.8, 'The Plume of Feathers'!


Friendly people & fine cider but rather bare & cold inside... lacked atmosphere
Nevertheless, comfortably ahead of schedule now!


Best canal-walking of the day, however, was the stretch south of Barlaston
The above photo was taken just beyond a row of cottages & beside a huge carved stone announcing Barlaston Boatyard
Further along I passed through the old site of Meaford 'A' power station where huge cooling-towers once stood..... they were demolished in 1982 but nature seems to have won this particular battle without a great deal of apparent effort!

Meaford Locks
Far enough for me today! If I didn't turn around now I wouldn't get back to the van before dark!
Besides, around the corner at the bottom of this flight & I'd be in Stonefield, a suburb of Stone!

Postscripts from The Peak District (34) - Tissington Trail : Alsop-en-le-Dale

Friday 7th February 2014

Good weather forecast & Jamie was keen to get out walking with Abner.... so it was back to the push-chair friendly firmness of the Tissington Trail, a little to the south of last week's snowy outing! (Postscript 31)

Had been geocaching our way northwards from Ashbourne, collecting 'The Tissington Tales' series of caches with Jamie & Abner, since before Christmas but some of those outings are still waiting to be featured in 'Catch-Up' blogs!

'The Tissington Tales' tell of Tissy, a mouse, making her way along the trail to meet her friend, Parsley! Have a feeling I'll have to do this again with Abner when he's old enough to understand the story!

I'd had to pop into Cheadle first so drove out to Alsop in the van while Les went in the car to pick up Jamie & Abner
Aiming to meet in the Tissington Trail car-park but I was a bit early so nipped down to the village for a nearby cache!


Ridiculously muddy & slippery on the way down so I retuned up the lane & walked back along the railway to meet them!
Cracking views today This is looking west towards Narrowdale & Wetton Hills


Alsop Moor Brick & Lime Works Quarry which closed shortly after World War II & is now home to a Camping & Caravanning Site!
Those dark clouds brought a brief & totally unnecessary hail shower!


..... though still lovely to the West!

There's a quick route down to Dovedale below those trees but I imagine it might be a bit too quick in these wet conditions!
Surprised to discover I don't already have a photo of this stashed away somewhere!
Recycled from old railway bits - even the low wall was part of an old track-side building!

Successfully geocached along to the edge of Biggin Moor, though one of the earliest had disappeared in an apparent cull of over-hanging trees, before deciding it was close enough to Abner's lunchtime to warrant a turnaround!
Above photo taken looking west from near Coldeaton



Almost back to the start & this is the bank that I'd slithered down to reach the tiny Alsop-en-le-Dale.... not sure I'd do it again!

Lovely, sunny end to the day at the 'Coach & Horses', Fenny Bentley
New Pub No.7!

Built in the 16th century as a box-framed half-timbered house, it became an inn about 1760

Enjoyed a good pint of Abbeydale's 'Moonshine' - apparently the brewery's best-selling beer though I hadn't come across it before!

4.3%, a pale bitter, it was Yorkshire's Champion Beer in 2012!

Friday, 14 February 2014

On Tour! - Lincolnshire (1) : Fiskerton

Thursday 6th February 2014

Diane's birthday (my sister) on Friday so popped over to Lincoln to go out for lunch with her - returned late afternoon when a boat may have been more use on the Belper-Ashbourne road!

Couldn't resist nipping out to Lincolnshire's 'Little Quest' geocache (see Postscript 32), only a few miles along the River Witham from her home!

All of which led me to collecting New Pub No.6, slightly ahead of schedule!



Never been to Fiskerton before so lucky to stumble across such an excellent pub!
Food very good & I enjoyed a couple of pints of Belhaven's 'Grand Slam' - very drinkable! Bit sad that the carpenter seems to prefer tea!


The river makes its quite regulated way through a flat landscape all the way to Boston & The Wash, an area I've walked more often than this.... but which looks to be worthy of further geocache exploration!

A bit of exploration a little further afield may also be in order. Fiskerton was the site of an Iron Age settlement, as evidenced by several archaeological digs: the 'Witham Shield' can be seen in the British Museum while 2 boats & a variety of weaponry are on display in Lincoln, found beside the 2500 year old remains of a wooden causeway. Seems these modern methods of land management might not be as modern as we think....!

Postscripts from The Peak District (33) - Long Rake, Monyash, Lathkilldale, Over Haddon

Monday 3rd February 2014

Out walking 2 days in a row - now there's a treat! Very windy & cold on top of the moor but positively balmy in the shelter of Lathkilldale!

Another geocaching venture & this, in part, was to finish off bits I'd intended to do last week from the Tissington Trail (Postscript 31) before snow drove me home early

The other part was to visit the source of the River Lathkill before the waters subsided (more on that in a moment), but while the rest of the Dale was walkable.... after 2 dry days I thought that might be possible!


Parked at Parsley Hay again & walked along the Long Rake road towards the quarries passing, en route, the site of Arbor Low stone circle - no time for a closer inspection today!



I'd picked up a couple of 'Sites of Meaning' (S.O.M.) caches whilst walking out this way before & was interested to find more



Carved marker-stones were placed at the 17 possible entry points to the Middleton & Smerrill Parish as a millennium project
This one bears the inscription:
Time, you old gipsy man;
Will you not stay;
Put up your caravan;
Just for one day?
: taken from a Ralph Hodgson poem & suggested by a local man, one of whose grandfathers farmed Arbor Low while the other was station-master at Parsley Hay. In his childhood there was a small quarry here & a gipsy caravan would visit each year, parking in the quarry


Part of the Long Rake inscription which reads:
A dull sky, Feel the cold.
Touch the snow, A lonely landscape.
Hear the wind, See the hills.
It’s freezing cold, And empty

:written by 2 children from Youlgrave Primary School after a visit to the project


'The rakes and spoils of man’s hard toil, has shaped this land'
: composed by ladies who work for the quarry company just across the road from this stone set into the ground beside a stile



Last one of my first 'walk of the day' reads:

'Bright Under Green Limestone Edges. With Queen Ann Lace
and Cranesbill in her Hedges'




:this uses the initial letters of the Parish's newsletter 'Bugle', whose editor sponsored the stone

Off to Monyash where the wind was wild!

Came to look at the old village Pinfold which I'd never noticed before & then  wandered along The Limestone Way to the top of the moor


Returned to the village to pick up clues for a multi-cache which, it turned out, was on my afternoon route!


This is Upper Lathkilldale, easily accessible & less than a mile east of Monyash - from here, southwards, is one of my favourite bits of the whole Peak District!





Hadn't walked the length of Lathkilldale (Postscript 10) since Easter 2008 when I walked the Peak District Inn Way.... & I need to do that again!


The waters of the River Lathkill drain from Flagg Moor, just to the north of Monyash, but this is the first point at which they can be seen - flowing from Lathkill House Cave.... & this is what I'd come to see!

I've walked here in Winter before, in 2008 it was after a reasonably heavy snowfall, but I've never seen as much as a trickle! Like the Manifold (Postscripts 2 & 27), it happily flows underground through the limestone & often doesn't 'rise' until half a mile or more down the valley!
This, though, was quite spectacular & did make me wonder if I'd be able to walk the whole of the Dale!




One possible escape route! Over the splashily accessible footbridge & up through Cales Dale back to Monyash!





Climbed to the upper reaches of the Dale, that's where my mystery multi-cache was hidden, before returning to the Lathkill!


Further downstream the river widened to almost fill the valley-floor in places but there was no way I was going to turn back now!

Remains of the Mandale Mine, one of several very profitable lead enterprises in the Dale
This closed in 1851 after years of flooding problems! An old aqueduct & traces of various leats can still be clearly seen


Beyond the old mill below Over Haddon the valley is wider, the river gentler & the path easy to walk
I carried on to the medieval Conksbury Bridge before taking to the road for my rather lengthy walk back to Monyash.....

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Postscripts from The Peak District (32) - Riber, Cromford & Wirksworth

Sunday 2nd February 2014

Glorious day & just right for a spot of geocaching in places with views!

Particularly wanted to visit Riber to pick up one of the 'Little Quest' series - just heard about these & it seems that there is one LQ cache in each of 46 English Counties. The challenge is to collect them all & then to add up a series of numbers to locate the 'Bonus' which, I suppose, could be anywhere!

Were then going to walk between Cromford & Wirksworth but got lazy & did 2 separate 'circulars' with the car to help in the middle!


The Heights of Abraham & its cable car above Matlock Bath

A tourist attraction since 1780, the cable car was installed in 1984 so you can miss out on the exhilarating climb!

View over Matlock from Riber Castle with Beeley & Longstone Moors in the distance

Not much choice, I'm afraid, no cable car here!



There was once a wildlife park at the castle but it's now in the long & rather dull process of being turned into apartments


Cromford is best known as the home of water-powered cotton-spinning, the site of Richard Arkwright's 1771 mill - well worth a visit at any time but particularly busy on a fine Sunday after all the poor weather!
Mills, cottages, the canal & High Peak Trail (see last Postcscript!), an old market-place & Arkwright's Mill Pond, built in 1885 to store water & maintain power
The crocodiles, I suspect, were released from Riber Wildlife Park... & there's a story to research there if you're interested!


Rather fewer sunny Sunday walkers in Wirksworth's quarries... but I know which I preferred!
Wirksworth developed around lead-mining & stone-quarrying, also sitting beside the High Peak Railway at Middleton Top
This is a spectacular view of part of Middlepeak Quarry which closed as recently as 1991


Another footpath sign for my collection! This one recognising the Ecclesbourne Valley Line, the modern name for the old Midland Branch line from Duffield which terminated at Wirksworth

Primarily used for shifting stone from Dale Quarry, via a tunnel cut beneath the village, the line finally closed in 1949

Reopened in 2002 as yet another Heritage Railway which seem so popular around here!

Their website says they should have been open today... but there was no sign of life! Think they missed a trick!

Actually followed a geocaching trail around 'Historic Wirksworth', not the railway walk at all, & ended up at Stoney Woods, a fascinating millennium woodland planted on the site of the old Stonecroft Quarry


Interesting sculptures, a maze, a fire-pit &, best of all, Stardisc, 'a 21st century stone circle'!
Need to come back & photograph that at night!

Finished off at New Pub No.5 - an establishment over-looking Wirksworth's market-place that I'd never really noticed before

Built in 1839, this is a Listed Building which has endured a lot of argument over its name & sign in recent years

The sign was initially removed before returning in 2010 - a further campaign led to its final relegation to a wall in the bar

Personally, I'd like to see it reinstated as a constant reminder of how pompous, stupid & condescending we were.... though I can see the problems with that






Arguments aside, this is an excellent little pub with Real Ales & a roaring fire - we'll be back!

Tuesday, 11 February 2014

Postscripts from The Peak District (31) - Tissington Trail : Parsley Hay

Thursday 30th January 2014

Bitterly cold & blowing a gale but nothing untoward forecast until later in the day so I took the van up to the old Tissington railway line where it crosses Hartington Moor - Les was off visiting Abner & enjoying herself again!

No sooner had I started walking than it began to snow.... quite heavily! The ground, obviously, is very wet & the snow was unlikely to cause a serious walking problem but it quickly began to lay on the road & paths

Wandered for a couple of hours but when a blanket of mist settled around me I decided it was probably time to go home....

 If it wasn't for the fact that I still have quite a few 'Catch-Ups' to do there would be a string of references to previous outings along this line!
Its solid surface has proved a blessing for pushchair walks during the wet weather!

An Istrian 'Kazun' - a gift from Croatia to the UK in recognition of their accession to the EU in July 2013

Built by Istrian dry-stone masons using limestone from just up the old railway!


The site was chosen because of the geological similarities & the similarities in both areas' building traditions

Interior of the Kazun's corbelled roof (the sandstone was imported from Huddersfield!)

Most of Croatia's were built in the 18th & 19th centuries to provide shelter for animals & workers alike
Couldn't resist trying out the seat inside.... & sheltering from the wind for a while!
Much more tourist-friendly than similar buildings I've seen, particularly on Orkney, where there's just been a rough earth floor to rest upon!


They'll be installing drinks' machines next!


The Tissington Trail follows the route of the old Ashbourne to Buxton railway line as far as the 'station' at Parsley Hay, where I parked


Built in 1899, it was the last Peak District railway to be constructed

At Parsley Hay it linked with the High Peak line, opened 70 years earlier & much more industrially important as it linked Cromford & its canal with Whaley Bridge & the Peak Forest canal (see Postscript 14 & LeJog Day 43!)

You don't have to stop at Parsley Hay, though, so I didn't!

Ironically, the line was most popular with tourists, especially walkers, as it offered relatively straight-forward access to Dovedale

Its other main use? A daily 'milk' train running all the way to London & picking up supplies from Waterhouses & the Manifold Line
(Postscript 27)


The High Peak Trail is not quite as gentle.... but then it is all downhill to Cromford & rather steep in places!







The point at which the Trails meet - the Pennine Bridleway joining in for good measure!


It can become rather busy up here in fine weather!

Today? A cyclist & a handful of walkers!


New pub No.4! Its address is Hartington but it's beside the main Ashbourne to Buxton road
Passed it lots of times when I've been out walking this way but, invariably, it's been closed!
Slightly disappointing pint of 'Life of Riley', the first Wincle beer I've had that hasn't been spot-on.... perhaps that's why I was the only one in the pub!

Wednesday, 5 February 2014

Postscripts from The Peak District (30) - Cresswell's Piece, Roughcote, Caverswall & Dilhorne

Monday 20th January 2014

Forecast for thick fog for much of the day, it was a lovely surprise to wake to a hard frost & a clear blue sky! In fairness, I wandered in & out of dense patches for much of the day... though Ipstones stayed above it!

Walking quite close to home, around the quarrying areas on the route to Stoke, but also taking in another Heritage Railway, the Foxfield Steam Railway, at Dilhorne

Parked at Sheepwash, after having driven through an over-confident ford, & began my exploration of the intriguingly-named Cresswell's Piece - failed to find out anything about this woodland other than, beyond it, Staffordshire County Council have closed the footpaths 'cos they're dangerous! Have to have a look next time!


Lovely here but, over the river, the so-called 'green lane' was a quagmire! Found a drier route to the small village of Caverswall, noting 'The Red Lion' was not open for business!
Only came this way to pass the station-base of the Foxfield Railway where, or so I've read, there's a Real Ale Bar when trains are running - obviously, not today!
The railway was a Branch Line to Foxfield Colliery at Dilhorne: it closed in 1965 but the trains, all industrial engines, were kept running by local volunteers




Spent the afternoon exploring fields & woodland beside the railway & around Dilhorne
The frost was gone & most areas were ankle-deep in mud & water!



The tree, here, appears to be taking evasive action & is heading for higher ground!

The name 'Dilhorne' comes from the old English 'Delverne', or 'place of digging' - it was noted in the Domesday Book, almost a thousand years ago, for its coal-mining!

Pub closed in Dilhorne, too, by the time I finished - my fault, could have called in earlier!


Postscripts from The Peak District (29) - Biddulph Grange & Country Park

Monday 6th January 2014

Right! Officially, this is not a 'Catch-Up'! Vowed that I'd keep up with the Blog in the New Year before returning to 'Catch-Ups' &, despite being slightly derailed by an unresponsive computer, this is my attempt!

So, back to the beginning of the week before our 'On Tour! - North Yorkshire' jaunt & a couple of hours' walking in the north-west corner of the Staffordshire Moorlands

Les out doing something else so I drove here in the van & Country Parks are often an issue - they seem to have a penchant for height barriers! No problems today & free parking! Wandered the gardens of Biddulph Grange first before my exploration of the Park was curtailed by the forecast heavy rain.....


The original 'Biddulph Grange' was built as a rectory.... needless to say, not this model!
James Bateman bought the Grange, which included what is now the Country Park, with money inherited from his father who had made a fortune in coal & steel
He was a horticulturist & designed the gardens to exhibit his 'collection': spent up by the 1860s, he moved to Kensington, the house burned down & this 'rebuilt' version eventually became a children's hospital!

Cheshire Cottage

One of the features of Bateman's gardens - it serves as a 'tunnel', a transition from one garden to another
The design incorporates his & his wife's initials, the date of their meeting & their marriage! 

Bateman also laid out the Arboretum in Derby - England's first public park
For some reason the hospital staff couldn't find time for the upkeep of the extensive estate (!) & the whole area became neglected & overgrown


The National Trust took on the restoration of the immediate garden whilst the wider area, beyond the 'garden fence', became Biddulph Country Park


Not far from the limits of the National Trust bit & the sadly-padlocked gate, in view of Bateman's lake & boat house, I came across a 'new' Children's Woodland Trail & this splendid giant sculpted pine cone!


The whole garden is divided into interlinking areas developing different themes.... from formal layouts to apparently random stumperies!





Intrigued by this tunnel which led me from one 'garden' into a strangely-green Egypt!


And the view from 'Egypt' back to the house!

Can't help but wonder if patients & visitors to the hospital knew what was going on in the back garden!




Below the Egyptian garden steps wind around & then down through a turret to give access to 'Dahlia Walk' (below)


Best bit for me, though, was the Chinese Garden.... not least because it was so hard to find!

Having paid fancy NT prices to get in I wasn't going to fork-out for one of their official guides so made-do with their free plan of the garden!
Soon discovered some rocky paths closed because of the weather & underfoot conditions
Read about the Great Wall of China, the Joss House, the hidden entry & red dragons.... but would I ever find the elaborate tunnel system which, allegedly, led here?!

The photos prove I finally cracked it!

Loads more to see & to photograph so I've no doubt I'll be back, probably with Les when she sees these pictures, but if I was going to beat the rain I needed to be out of the garden & into the Park! There was one other feature I was determined to see today - The Himalayan Walk!

Saw it! Walked bits of it! But didn't beat the rain...which was torrential!
More details next time we visit!