"There must be dales in Paradise
Which you and I will find.."
Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hiking. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 May 2025

 


Eston Hills Circular from Flatts Lane

5.5 miles     


Bank Holiday and we are dog sitting so this local TSB walk is ideal being fairly short and quiet, and especially as we haven't walked it for nearly five years.

We approached Flatts Lane via the A171 and parked in the public car park that is built on the site of the old Normanby Brick and Tile Company, which was established in 1883.

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

From the car park we walked along the field to a stile which took us on to Flatts Lane, emerging opposite Rose Cottage. A sign directed us over the road to go up new steps to a footpath running alongside the cottage which leads to a path into Ten Acre Bank, where we immediately left civilisation behind.  

Leaving the visitors' centre

Across a field..

.. to Flatts Lane. Carole points at the footpath opposite

Entering Ten Acre Bank

A short climb brought us to a T junction where we turned right and followed a pleasant path parallel to Flatts Lane until we turned left over a stile and into a meadow that leads to Mill Farm and then Claphams Wood. 

On Ten Acre Bank




This is a lovely path and we were surprised that it is so little walked and in fact we didn't see another soul until we reached the Nab monument.  It was difficult to believe that we were not far above the main Guisborough road. Gorse was in full flower and made a nice contrast with the white flowers of hawthorn and blackthorn trees.



Blackthorn and gorse flowers on Ten Acre Bank

Looking across at Roseberry from Ten Acre Bank

After walking through fields for a mile we reached Mill Farm which we skirted to reach Claphams Wood. A walk through dense trees and bushes led us to a sharp left turn and the beginning of our uphill climb.

Mill Farm

First stile at Mill Farm is obvious

The second is harder to spot.  

Into Claphams Wood

Timber bridge is very slippery

Beginning the climb alongside Claphams Wood

View looking back towards Roseberry

A steady climb alongside the wood on little walked paths, thick with  brambles, brought us to Moordale Bog and TSB tells us that here, hidden among the undergrowth, is the ruins of Upsall Pit, run by Bolckow, Vaughan and Co from 1866 and then Dorman Long and Co until 1945.  The shaft was 564 feet deep and in all 63 million tons of iron ore were extracted from these hills between 1850 and 1949. 

We turned right into trees again and after a short time came to a wooden memorial to a German WWll bomber which had crashed here.  The writing was indistinct but a Google search revealed:

German bombers often flew over the Eston Hills while heading for targets further inland, such as Manchester. On 30 March 1941 a Junkers Ju 88 was shot down by two Spitfires of No. 41 Squadron, piloted by Tony Lovell and Archie Winskill, over Middlesbrough. The aircraft dived into the ground at Barnaby Moor, Eston; the engines and most of the airframe were entirely buried upon impact.

In Claphams Wood

Memorial



We continued with our walk, climbing 
steadily uphill, passing the location of the now hidden deserted village of Barnaby, once the home to a small community of miners.  TSB says that the foundations of two rows of cottages can still be seen, as can the capped well.  Provisions for the village were brought via the underground mine railway. 

Another climb took us onto Wilton Moor where we came to a convenient bench with a view across to Roseberry Topping, an ideal place to sit and enjoy our coffee.

Climbing on to Wilton Moor

The first of several burnt out cars we saw today

"Pleasant but not a strong smell"

Coffee!

After coffee our path headed north west across Eston Moor where TSB says early man built barrows and left flint tools dating from 6000 to 2000 BC, until we reached a cluster of transmitter masts. 
Here we found a strong smell of smoke and discovered the remains of what must have been a large fire.  In fact the next mile would reveal several more sites where fires have been set, as well as burnt cars and a burnt quad bike, showing that although very quiet today, this area is not far from bandit country.

Bramble smells smoke!

Sad sight

The transmitter masts

We walked on towards the Eston Nab Monument where we paused to read the bronze inscription.  At this spot a beacon tower was constructed in 1808 during the Napoleonic Wars.  After 1815 it was used as a house and from 1884 was the home of a David Helm and his wife until 1933, when the body of 80 year old Mr Helm, who had outlived his wife by a year, was carried by horse drawn cart down for burial at Wilton churchyard.  In 1956 it was finally demolished and the present monument was built by ICI, using the stone from the original beacon.   We stood and enjoyed an amazing panoramic view of Teesside and beyond.

The area around the monument was once an Iron Age hill fort dating from 550 BC.  TSB says that it probably served as a refuge for surrounding settlements and calcined bones have been found at the site which prove that cannibalism took place, possibly when ancient warriors were besieged on the nab.

Trig point and beacon


The old ICI works and sea beyond

The Tees River and the Transporter Bridge are just visible in the distance




The only other walkers we saw today

Eston and Ormesby below



We followed the path along the escarpment and reached Carr Pond.

Following the ridge path

Quad bike

Carr Pond

How do they get them up here?!

Starting the descent


We now started the descent to return to Flatts Lane and our car.  We agreed that it had been an interesting walk with great views in the clear weather, and it was good to get an unfamiliar view of familiar places so close to our home.

Back at the Visitor Centre





Saturday, 17 August 2024

 


Rievaulx Abbey and Caydale from Murton

9.7 miles                      Fine and dry


Leaving the B1257 Stokesley to Helmsley Road at the Hawnby turn off we parked by the roadside near to the buildings of Murton Grange, overlooking the village of Hawnby below.

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


Murton Grange

Tom Scott Burns explains in his 'Walker's Guide to the Hambleton Hills' that the township of Murton was given to Byland Abbey by Hugh Malebisse in the 12th century.  A grange was constructed by lay brothers and was basically a well organised farm with a small chapel.

Just past the Grange we turned into Ox Pasture Lane to walk along a muddy track alongside Deep Gill Wood.  We followed this lane for nearly two miles, eventually leaving the woods at a farm gate and crossing fields to an old barn.
Mole traps left on the gate at Ox Pasture Lane

Clive demonstrates how they work

Turning in to Ox Pasture Lane


Deep Gill Wood

Partridges lead us through the wood

Follow the track for two miles

We pass cattle en route to...

... the Old Barn

It's had some repairs to keep out the weather since we saw it last

We passed to the left of the barn then through a gate to descend to Barnclose Farm, where the path goes through the farm yard before turning right onto the farm track. 

Bear right through the gate..

... and descend to Barnclose Farm

Leaving Barnclose Farm we had a steady climb on tarmac to reach Tylas Farm, today almost hidden from view by foliage, and which TSB tells us was built by the monks of Old Byland as a grange and tile house, hence its name.  

We passed Tylas Farm and continued along the tarmac lane to Oxendale until reaching a gate on our left, where we turned off the road to gradually descend to the River Rye.

Through the gate

.. and into Oxendale


Boardwalk alongside the River Rye

The path now leads through the valley of Oxendale, the River Rye on the left.  We followed a pleasant grassy track until we reached the river and our path became a boardwalk over areas that obviously suffer from flooding.

We emerged onto tarmac and almost immediately crossed the river at Bow Bridge, originally built by the Cistercian monks of Rievaulx.  A short walk on the road brought us to a sign pointing to our path across fields to Rievaulx Abbey.  We left the road at a wooden Inn Way sign and soon the Abbey came into sight.


Bow Bridge

Turn off road at Inn Way sign

Also now sporting the new blue St Aelred's Way sign

Remains of the canal built by monks

Rievaulx Abbey comes into view

Our route across the fields follows the traces of the old canal built by monks in the 11th century to carry stone for the Abbey from the nearby Penny Piece Quarry, so named because quarrymen were apparently paid a penny a day.  The river was dammed here and water diverted into the canal. 

As we walked through fields towards the abbey we were rewarded with a fine view of the ruins.  Tom Scott Burns says that Rievaulx Abbey is undoubtedly a place to walk to, rather than from.  He explains the name Rievaulx is from old French for Valley of the Rye.  Under its third abbot, Aelred (to whom the walk signposted earlier refers), the monastery had 640 men dependent on its Cistercian order.

We approach the Abbey ruins

Coffee break

We walked uphill through the village and stopped at a public bench to refresh ourselves with coffee and scones, before resuming the climb to reach the Slipper Chapel of St Mary's.  This was a place where pilgrims would remove their shoes and put on soft slippers or socks to enter the holy buildings of the Abbey.  It was renovated early in the twentieth century.  

We found the church unlocked and entered to find a neat, well kept building with a fine altar window. 

St Mary's Church

The new St Aelred's Trail opens next month

Towards the altar

Towards the rear

Altar window


The house opposite the church has an interesting sundial

'The shadow shows/demonstrates the light'

We set off once more, down through the village and past the Abbey ruins to Rievaulx Bridge.  TSB tells how Wordsworth's sister, Dorothy, who, arriving here during a July afternoon, described how she "could have stayed in this solemn, quiet spot till evening without a thought of moving, but William was waiting for me."   

TSB explains that the Abbey sits in a natural amphitheatre which was granted to the Cistercian monks by the Lord of Helmsley, and  building began in 1132.  Because of the Abbey's site between a hill and the River Rye the church faces North - South instead of the usual East - West.  By 1200 there were 140 monks and 500 lay brothers but like nearby Byland Abbey, it was suppressed in 1538.

House with character in Rievaulx

Recently renovated Abbey Cottage and side view of the abbey ruins

Village house


Views of the Abbey

We walked past the Visitors' Centre to reach Rievaulx Bridge which we crossed, following the road to pretty Ashberry Farm.  Here the path turns behind the building and immediately starts to climb Ashberry Hill.  

Rievaulx Bridge

Old Yorkshire North Riding sign for Rievaulx Abbey

Approaching Ashberry Farm


Go through the gate at the rear of the building

Now on the cold and shady side of the valley we followed the wooded path through Lambert Hagg Wood from where we had an occasional view of the Abbey through saplings and above, the Ionic Temple built by a local squire in 1758.

Climbing behind Ashberry Farm

Memorial seat near Ashberry Farm

View from the seat

Folly - Ionic Temple above Rievaulx Abbey

We left the wood on the same road that we had followed on our outward route, past Tylas Farm.   We left the road just before reaching the farm, turning left onto a rough track that runs along Birk Bank.


Leaving the road just before Tylas Farm

.. and follow the track

The path meanders in and out of trees from about the midway point of Birk Bank until, after about 2.5 miles it finally reaches Caydale Mill, almost unseen in the trees below.

New sapling growth has made the path difficult


Eventually the track opens out near to Caydale Mill

Major works going on at Caydale Mill

Just beyond the mill we reached the road and a ford where we washed the mud from our boots.  

Cars using this lane must drive through 100 yards of water, but walkers cross by a bridge and can avoid getting wet feet, rejoining the road at the other side of the ford.

We passed by the entrance to the mill which has become a site entrance for the time being, and immediately began the long steep climb out of Caydale.

The road becomes a ford

Entrance to Caydale Mill

Looking along Caydale

We begin the climb

A red kite flies hopefully above

The lane becomes a very steep (1:4) climb for about half a mile, before eventually levelling out. After nine miles of walking this final climb is a test for the legs!  Eventually the  buildings of Murton Grange appeared in the distance and we reached the end of our walk.

We pass three fine bulls near Murton Grange



We reach the end of our walk

Murton is just above the village of Hawnby and a few minutes later we could be found sitting in the grounds of The Owl to discuss today's walk over a well earned pint of beer.

Cheers!