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

Friday, 19 July 2024

 


Kilburn White Horse Circular Walk

   5.5 miles               Fine and warm


A busy week for me with Monday and Tuesday in the Lakes and then this TSB walk on Thursday.  My injured foot is much improved!

This walk is one of the few times where we beg to differ with the start point of a Tom Scott Burns walk.  He suggests parking at the pay and display car park at the information centre at the top of Sutton Bank but we prefer a car park just below the White Horse on Low Town Bank Road, shown as the P below the White Horse in the map below.  This gives a better balance to the walk, we feel, with Gormire lake being reached at the half way point.  The car park is now also a pay and display costing £2.50 for the day.

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

The White Horse from Low Town Bank Road

How the Horse looks from the car park

From the car park we crossed the road and joined a track through woods that then runs steeply downhill, parallel to the road we had just driven up.

At the bottom of the hill the track rejoins the road and here we crossed over to go through a gate with a footpath sign.

The road is to the right of our path

Lots of Himalayan Balsam here

We followed this farm track through the charmingly named forestry plantation of Happy Valley with views up to the cliffs of Roulston Scar on our right. 

Walking through the trees of Happy Valley



Eventually we came to a stile and way mark on our right.  We left the trees here and the path now enters fields and runs alongside a new barbed wire fence. Progress was easy as we headed towards Hood Farm, directly ahead.

Turn right at the way mark and cross a stile

The path leads directly to Hood Farm


Looking over at Roulston Scar from the path

The imposing building of Hood Farm appears derelict with broken windows. There were cattle in the fields and outbuildings however, so the farm must still be in use.

Hood Farm

Cattle on our path but too hot to bother us

Tucking in at Hood Farm

Walking along the farm track towards the A170 we saw a neatly tended grave and memorial stone and next to it a smaller plot, marked with a horseshoe, which one presumes must belong to a much missed pet.



Reaching the busy A170 we crossed to the entrance of High Cleaves Farm, and almost immediately turned right into a field track.  This leads to the little valley of Butter Dale, which TSB says was cut out by the last Ice Age.

High Cleaves Farm


Butter Dale

Following the footpath over a stile, a sharp climb took us to the first lake, at Gormire Rigg.  At the end of this lake we turned right and climbed through trees, soon reaching the waters of Gormire.

Paths are little walked


Cross the stile

We reach Gormire

We followed the lake round its southern shore and came to a perfectly placed bench made from railway sleepers that is ideal for anyone who might want coffee and scones.  
Gormire is indeed a very peaceful spot, possibly because it takes some effort to reach. We enjoyed our break and the only life we saw was a pair of ducks who soon joined us at the bench.  

Time for a little something

A peaceful view

"May we join you?"

Mmm, scone!

There are two terraces around Gormire and TSB explains that these were once shorelines when the lake was much deeper.  It is often described as bottomless but is actually about 27 feet deep in the centre and covers around twenty six acres.  Tradition has it that a town stood here which was destroyed in an earthquake, but the lake is actually the result of a glacial overflow channel being blocked by a landslip, hence its position up a hillside.  No streams flow from it and its waters are mainly supplied by rain and diminish with evaporation.  A major landslip happened here on the 25th March 1755 which was described by Rev John Wesley as 'like many cannons or rolling thunder'.

Leaving the bench we followed the lake path anti-clockwise.  It was at this spot six years ago that we saw a rare Golden Pheasant. Despite our quiet approach, sadly there was nothing to see today and we soon reached the steep climb to the top of Whitestone Cliff.

Golden Pheasant in 2018
Starting the long climb

About half way up..

Looking across at Hood Farm and Hood Hill from the climb

After twenty minutes we reached the top and turned right on the path, signposted Sutton Bank.  We now had a ridge walk of about 1.5 miles along the top of the escarpment and in today's clear skies were able to enjoy good views into the Vale of Mowbray. 

Clive cooling down after the long climb

Looking back down to Gormire and the Vale of Mowbray


We reach the A170

Where the old path has been diverted

Health and Safety

The Battle of Byland took place here


Looking across at Roulston Scar from the cliff top walk

WWII Memorial

Looking back, Gormire now distant

TSB explains in The Walker's Guide to the Hambleton Hills that during the last Ice Age, glacial sheets unable to override the Cleveland Hills swept round both sides of the moors, carving out the great cliffs at Gormire and Roulston Scar.  

To our left we now watched the activities of gliders at Sutton Bank.
A small plane towed the gliders up, one after another.



There goes another one..

We walked past the Yorkshire Gliding Club and then past Roulston Scar to reach the top of the White Horse.  The car park lay just below and we descended steps alongside the Horse to reach it.

On top of Roulston Scar


The top of the White Horse

Steep descent to the car park


A short drive took us to the Forresters Arms in Kilburn, which is open all day and where we sat outside in the sun to discuss the short but pleasant walk.

New bench at Kilburn

To the White Horse!














Saturday, 11 July 2020

Coxwold and Beacon Banks from Kilburn





10.5 miles               Mostly Drizzle



Tom Scott Burns starts this walk from Kilburn but we can no longer park at The Forresters Arms in Kilburn, following a fire in early 2019.  Consequently we decided to start today's walk from Coxwold, where parking can easily be found on the High Street.


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

Houses bear the Fauconberg crest on the High Street

The Fauconberg Arms, open for business again

We were pleased to see that the Fauconberg Arms is open for business once more and resolved to give them some of ours at the end of the walk.  We booted up and continued along the High Street to a crossroads where we turned right to commence a steady climb out of the village.  After a couple of hundred yards we passed an old signal box which has been lovingly restored, and noted where the old railway line had crossed the road.



The old signal box

Leave the road at this sign

Cross the bridge and turn right into fields

After half a mile we entered a field at a wooden sign, crossed a bridge over Mill Beck and began to climb, following field paths until we reached a stile and High Leys Farm.


Looking back at Coxwold as we begin to climb

Almost hidden stile near High Leys Farm

Looking back from High Leys at Coxwold and the White Horse top left

High Leys Farm bearing the Faucenberg crest

Entry to the last field before the farm is over a stile which is almost completely hidden in the tall hedge. After crossing the field we followed the fence until we reached another stile into the farmyard, where ducks and hens run free.

At the yard we turned right onto the farm track for 100 yards or so, before returning to fields at a sign, and following the ridge of Beacon Bank Wood, noting the OS Trig Point has also nearly disappeared into the hedge.  Once a fine view would have been had from this ridge but saplings have taken it.



Turn off the road 100 yards from the farmyard...

... at this sign

OS Trig Point

There should be a wonderful view to the right

At the end of the ridge we came to Suncliffe Beacon Farm where we paused to admire their alpacas.



Alpacas




Leaving the alpacas we walked past imposing Lists House and then dropped to the pretty village of Husthwaite where we decided to stop at a bench near the church for our coffee and scones.



Husthwaite from Lists House


1690 above the old shop door

Houses in Husthwaite


St Nicholas' Church

Forget us not o land for which we fell,May it go well with England still go well, 
Keep her bright banners without spot or stain, Lest we should dream that we have died in vain

A convenient bench

Church weather vane

St Nicholas' Church appears to be in excellent condition but the door was firmly locked so we were unable to look around the old church and sat on the bench outside to enjoy our coffee and scones.  The nicely carved front main porch dates from 1140 and the tower from the 1400s.  


'Praises on tombstones are but vainly spent, a mans good name is his best monument,
 Rest precious dust till Heaven your worth reveal, Your judge will publish what your friends conceal'

'The dead are like the stars by day, though hid from mortal eye, 
They're not extinct but hold their way, in glory through the sky'

After Husthwaite we passed through the remains of an old railway embankment and entered Ings Lane, which we followed north for a mile.  We walked by a tractor garage and shop, with an enormous selection of farm machinery.  


Dreary weather but we think the whitewash applied only last year has already faded on the White Horse


Track to Ings Lane

Clive looks disapprovingly at Himalayan Balsam taking over the stream bank

Himalayan Balsam

Ings Lane

Tractors!

Walking down to Carlton Husthwaite

Poppy fields



Blacksmiths

Walking through Carlton Husthwaite


We rejoined the road at Carlton Husthwaite next to a blacksmith's forge and walked along the High Street, pausing to examine a sculpture, obviously the work of the blacksmith.


Blacksmith's forge

Iron flower 


Detail from sculpture


We left Carlton Husthwaite turning right into Croft Lane then left to join Common Lane.  

House in Carlton Husthwaite

The Old Hall

The (not so) White Horse from between Carlton Husthwaite and Kilburn

We passed a pigeon fancier's lofts

Nearer and drearer

As we walked from Carlton Husthwaite to Kilburn we had the White Horse in view most of the time and we were disappointed to see that it looked so faded, especially as it was only repainted last year.

A walk through fields and muddy lanes eventually brought us back to Kilburn where we passed the defunct Forresters Arms to reach St Mary's Church.


Wet, muddy....

... and overgrown.  Difficult tracks today.

A tree in Kilburn



The Institute at Kilburn

Houses in Kilburn


A sad sight

Mousey Thomson has been here

St Mary's at Kilburn

Leaving the church we soon reached a road that took us uphill to High Kilburn where attractive houses surround a village green.  Tom Scott Burns tells us that there once was a duck pond in the village green but all that remains of that is the old village pump.

St Mary's at Kilburn


Old gate at High Kilburn

High Kilburn

Village pump
We passed an old barn with a curlew weather vane and Fox Folly Farm, always tidy, before entering fields once more to follow our path to Coxwold.

Curlew weather vane at Weatherill Barn


Broken stile at Kilburn Thicket

Walking through Kilburn Thicket

Enormous fungus


Fox Folly Farm

Shortly after Fox Folly Farm we re-entered fields for the last leg of the walk and found that our path around field margins was unwalked and waist high.  The undergrowth was sopping wet and we were glad to be wearing waterproofs.

Leaving the road to enter a cow pasture

The residents are indignant

Fortunately the bull shows no interest

From the cow field across the bridge..

Our path is very overgrown

Entering the village we passed by the author Lawrence Sterne's house, Shandy Hall, and Coxwold's fine church where Sterne was once the parish priest. Boots were quickly removed and we soon found ourselves reflecting on our walk in the Fauconberg Arms.



Entering Coxwold

Shandy Hall 



Vicarage



Vicarage Door

St Michael's Church, Coxwold

Nice to end a walk properly again!