I have uploaded a new post to Around-England.co.uk. Here’s an extract along with a link to the full article.
" This was intended to be a much more extensive post but problems with my desktop computer mean that I seem to have lost the images from photo sessions at Sawley and Ribchester. Here, though, is a recent picture of the much "younger" Ribble at Gargrave. Hopefully I"ll recover the others and expand"
The River Ribble
Quick Notes from Around England
Friday 21 August 2015
The River Ribble - on "Around-England"
Thursday 23 April 2015
Ravenstonedale - Twixt Eden and Lune - on "Around-England"
I have uploaded a new post to Around-England.co.uk. Here’s an extract along with a link to the full article.
"
I"m still trying to get a decent photograph of the Howgills from the top of Ash Fell. Somehow the weather or the time of day (sun angle) always seems to defeat me. Anyway, here"s my latest and despite its inadequacies I"m using it here to illustrate "Twixt Eden and Lune".
The Eden and the"
Ravenstonedale - Twixt Eden and Lune
Saturday 24 January 2015
The Howgills: The Less-Trodden Cumbrian Fells - on "Around-England"
There's another interesting Cumbria post at Around-England.co.uk. Here is a short extract along with a link to the full article.
" The Howgills are much less well known than many of the Cumbrian fells, and yet they"re more accessible than most, being close to the M6 motorway and the towns of Sedbergh and Kendal. Their western slopes are right alongside the motorway as it passes through the Lune Gorge between Junctions 37 and 38. ..."
The Howgills: The Less-Trodden Cumbrian Fells
The photograph here was taken looking west from the Sedbergh to Kirkby Stephen road at Cautley. It shows Cautley Spout in the distance as a dark gash in the snow-covered fellside. Cautley Spout is England"s highest cascade waterfall above ground, tumbling for 198 metres (650 feet). The stream then joins the River Rawthey, a tributary of the River Lune which flows down the western side of the Howgills range.
Tuesday 6 January 2015
Interesting Days in East Lancashire - on "Around-England"
I have uploaded a new post to Around-England.co.uk. Here’s an extract along with a link to the full article.
" In my last post here I announced the planned resurrection of the "Around-England" sites after a year"s unavoidable hiatus. Today, then, we start an "East Lancashire season" by referring briefly to a few of the area"s many interesting places in which a visitor (or for that matter a local) can ..."
Interesting Days in East Lancashire
Sunday 30 March 2014
Lowther Castle Gardens - A Great Project
Yesterday I paid a short visit to Lowther Castle near Penrith, Cumbria, between the Lake District and the Eden Valley. Lowther is like a fairy tale castle set in magnificent parkland in the valley of the River Lowther, a tributary of the Eden. Sadly though, it has been in ruins for decades. The financial impact of the extravagant lifestyle of the Lowther lords led to its closure and substantial dismantling in the mid-20th century, not helped by being taken over by a tank regiment during WW2.
Now managed by a charitable foundation (distinct from the Lowther Estates) a major regeneration project has been in progress since 2012.
The courtyard looks very different from three years ago, and this weekend is the location for a plant fair. After looking at the stalls, browsing around the shop in the old stable block, and downing a cup of tea in the splendid new cafe I didn't have time to explore much further, but am planning to return.
On another visit, which I intend to be very soon, I must look at the work going on to re-create the garden areas. This is an enormous venture and will take years, with hard graft and many thousands of plants. However, Lowther Castle deserves to have its gardens restored to match the beauty of its location.
Wednesday 15 January 2014
The Yorkshire Dales and a 3D Map
Earlier this month I mentioned visiting Skipton Castle. We went around it on New Year's Day before staying overnight in the town.
We used to know Skipton fairly well in younger years but had not been in the town for quite a number of years as the main A59 and A65 roads bypass it and we always seem to have been on the way to somewhere else.
Skipton is an excellent point from which to explore the Yorkshire Dales, especially Airedale and Wharfedale. Spots by the River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey and Burnsall are especially popular and deservedly so.
This is beautiful countryside which, although now living further away, we have been fortunate to be able enjoy quite conveniently for most our lives. (The photo above was taken in 1979). However, many people find it quite difficult to picture how the various river valleys relate to one another in the Yorkshire Dales landscape.
One answer to this had been found by the owner of the B&B hotel at which we stayed this time. In the hallway was a map of the Dales but instead of a flat map on paper it was made of a moulded plastic composition showing the hills and valleys in three dimensions.
The lady said that this Yorkshire Dales 3D map was very helpful in explaining the shape of the countryside to her guests. I can truthfully say also that, although I know the area quite well, there some points that I picked up that I'd never noticed from even the best of normal contour maps.
One of these would make a great memento of a visit to the Dales, maybe instead of an artists's print to hang on a wall.
Saturday 4 January 2014
Skipton Castle
Skipton is a small town in the Yorkshire Dales and home to possibly the best preserved medieval fortress in the North of England. In the 17th century after servere damage from its "slighting" following the Civil War its then owner and occupant, Lady Anne Clifford, the Countess of Pembroke, had it very thoroughly repaired. Cromwell was not enthusiastic about this but Lady Anne was a tough character and got her way, although one condition was that the roof had to be weaker than before so as not to take the weight of cannon.
She also restored her castles further north in Westmorland - in Brougham, Brough, Appleby and Mallerstang (Pendragon) - although with the exception of Appleby these fell into ruin again in later centuries.
Skipton Castle has survived exceptionally well. After being bought in the 1950s by a family with long business connections to Skipton many needed repairs were carried out, and today while the later Tudor section is a private home the medieval castle is open to visitors - with a fully intact roof so that even on a damp day one can wander round the rooms at leisure, guide book in hand.
Visitors to the Yorkshire Dales, on days when not out walking in the splendid nearby Ribblesdale, Airedale and Wharfedale countryside, are well advised to take some time out to visit Skipton Castle.