"There must be dales in Paradise
Which you and I will find.."

Friday, 27 May 2022

 


Old Byland to Nettledale and Scawton


8 miles                 Overcast, some drizzle


In The Walker's Guide to the Hambleton Hills, Tom Scott Burns describes this walk as embodying all the charm of Ryedale as it passes through the villages of Old Byland, Scawton and Cold Kirby. 

Today's walk from The Walker's Guide to the Hambleton Hills



We approached Old Byland from the B1257 Bilsdale road via Rievaulx village and parked our cars in the village, at the roadside close to the green.

TSB relates that in 1143 the Norman Baron Roger de Mowbray granted land in Ryedale to some wandering monks from Furnace Abbey in Lancashire.  They moved about the dale for a few years before finally settling on a site they called Bellalanda, or Byland.   

We walked through the pretty village and saw the C12th Church of All Saints almost hidden from view behind houses in the north west corner of the village. The church was unlocked so we went inside for a look around.

Old Byland

The church is hidden behind these houses

Weather vane in Old Byland

C12th Church of All Saints

Grasscutters in the graveyard

'The winter of afflection is past, The storm of affliction is o'er, The struggle is ended at last, And sorrow and death are no more'  Cheerful epitaph at All Saints

C15th timbered ceiling


Saxon font

Looking to the rear of the church


Early Norman dragon

Norman head


The church is very interesting to browse but it was time to get walking and we emerged into a fine drizzle to walk through the village. Just as we exited Old Byland we turned left through a gate into the woods of Low Gill.  The track here is very overgrown and slippery with a dangerous drop of 100' or so to the right.  We proceeded with a great deal of caution until we dropped down to Ashberry Pasture.

Enormous sycamore on the village green

Houses in Old Byland

Old Byland Hall

Turn off the road here

... and enter Low Gill Wood

The path is slippery in places with a steep drop to the right


We reach Ashberry Pasture


Ashberry Pasture is a wild-flower sanctuary maintained by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and is a lovely unspoilt valley to walk through, almost 2 miles without a road or buildings.

Eventually we emerged onto the Rievaulx to Old Byland road just below Ashberry Hill and followed it to a junction next to picturesque Ashberry Farm.

Bluebells in Ashberry Pasture

Wild garlic in flower


Ashberry Farm

Duckpond at Ashberry Farm


Bucolic scene at Ashberry Farm

We turned right over the bridge at Ashberry Farm and followed the Scawton lane past Hagg Hall.  We left the lane at Bradley Bank to follow a woodland track that meanders through Nettle Dale.  Three large man-made lakes are to the right stretching along most of our track through Nettle Dale.

Can't decide what these yellow hedgerow flowers are, a type of dandelion?

Hagg Hall


We join the Cleveland Way

The first lake

The second lake

Just past the third lake we reached a footbridge and Cleveland Way sign on our right. We turned left here and walked uphill into Spring Wood where a steady half mile climb took us to tarmac and the road into Scawton.

Through the gate ...

.. and a long climb alongside Spring Wood


A strong smell of aniseed as we pass Sweet Cicely 

Vicarage Farm, Scawton

Cottages in Scawton

The wind was blowing too strongly to sit on the village green bench so we entered the churchyard and sat on the grass behind the wall to enjoy our coffee and scones.

Replete, we explored the church which was open to the public.

Church weather vane on houses opposite the church

St Mary's Church, Scawton








Norman lavatorium


Looking to the rear of the church



Memorial in porch to Free French aircrew



The church was built by the Cistercians of Byland Abbey, 'owing to the divers perils and fatigue which the parishioners underwent in coming from Scawton to Byland.'

Leaving the church we returned to the village green and crossed the grass to an overgrown path behind the village telephone box.  The box isn't operational and is in poor repair. A couple of years ago, being curious to discover why the box has a wooden door we googled for further information and discovered it to be an early K6 model which always had a teak wood door.  It is a shame the village hasn't made arrangements for cleaning and painting the box.

Our path runs left between the phone box and the green footpath sign



It would appear that the next section of today's walk is not being used by other walkers and the fields show no sign of tracks.  There are waymarks on field boundaries and we aimed for these as we crossed several sheep fields.

We kept to the path by using the yellow way-marks posted on field boundaries until we descended back into Flassen Dale, which has been recently deforested.  On reaching the bottom we turned left onto a broad path then almost immediately climbed steeply up the other side of the dale.

Busy sheep fields


Descending into Flassen Dale

... and straight up the other side!

We now crossed more fields to reach the village of Cold Kirby 
where almost the first building one encounters is the Church of St Michael, which Tom Scott Burns explains was rebuilt in the 1800s.  It originally dated back to the 12th century when the parish was administered by the Order of Knights Templar. It was unlocked so we entered the building to find an unusual purple colour scheme.

Cold Kirby Village Hall

St Michael's Church


Looking towards the altar


The purple interior complements the purple in the windows


We looked into the village briefly and then followed the Cleveland Way sign to rejoin our path for the steady descent back to Nettle Dale.  As we walked into Nettle Dale we were impressed by a new clubhouse for shooters that includes a bar and archery butts as well as stands for clay pigeon shooting.


Periwinkle in Nettle Dale

Ancient trod into Nettle Dale

New build, no-one at home


Clay pigeon butts

At Nettle Dale we parted from the Cleveland Way as we reached the lakes, turning left into a field and crossing to a gated bridge over a stream.  We now had a steep climb out of Nettle Dale through Calister Wood, until we reached fields on the other side.  Our path now ran straight across these field boundaries to Old Byland, first descending and crossing Low Gill's woods again.

The lakes of Nettle Dale

We leave the Cleveland Way just before the lakes

Cross the bridge...

... and a long climb up the side of Calister Wood

... to reach a field path

.. which we followed to Old Byland

.. via Low Gill's tricky path

We return to Old Byland


We watch fascinated as a robot grass cutter negotiates the verge

Back to the village green

Sadly there is no pub in Old Byland or Rievaulx, the next village, but we did stop at a hostelry on the drive home to enjoy a well earned pint and discuss today's pretty walk.

Debrief

A lovely walk but the paths in Low Gill are not maintained and are slippery with considerable drops and require care.