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

Thursday, 16 April 2015



Kildale to Baysdale and its Lost Abbey





9 miles                                       Sun and Cloud




Today we decided to revisit one of our favourite walks which we last did in February 2014.  We parked in Kildale at the side of the road and left the village towards Little Kildale.


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

Tom Scott Burns informs us that Kildale is a village of great antiquity.  There are several 'Kildals' in Norway and the village was probably named by the Vikings.  It was called Childale in the Domesday Book.   In 1156, where the church now stands, was a wooden castle built by the Percys, Earls of Northumberland.  Walking through the village we turned off the road towards Little Kildale and passed through a couple of sheep fields before reaching Little Kildale Wood and then on to Warren Farm, where Clive had spent a happy summer holiday when a schoolboy.

Walking towards Little Kildale Wood

Punk sheep sporting a Mohican cut

Little Kildale Wood


Following our path past Warren Farm we came to a large square chimney as we descended to Leven Vale.  This is the remains of an ironstone mine which was operational between 1866 and 1874.  Crossing the River Leven, whose source was just to our right, we started a climb up through meadows towards Kildale Moor.  All along our path were mole traps, each identified by a white wooden stick.  We soon came to several that had been sprung and investigating by pulling one out we found the poor victim, not yet stiff but very dead.


Crossing fields towards Kildale Moor

Old ironstone mine

Mole trap

Trapped mole
Poor chap




Looking back to Warren Farm. Each white stick marks a mole trap


We climbed steadily to Kildale Moor and then having reached the top at 900 feet, we started to descend towards Baysdale Beck, soon reaching the remains of an old barn where our path turned sharp left.

Moor gate

Descending into Baysdale

Sharp left at this barn

"What happened to your tail?"

Our track, which runs parallel to Baysdale Beck, is an old lime road that carried limestone from Commondale into Cleveland which we followed for 1.5 miles until we reached a tarmac road. Turning right here we followed the road down to Hob Hole where a large stone provided a table and seat as we enjoyed our coffee and scones.  A chaffinch joined us, taking scraps away presumably to feed its young.

Old lime road alongside Baysdale Beck

We reach tarmac, turn right!

We share our scones

A water-less water splash

Upstream from Hob Hole

Hob Hole was supposed to be the haunt of a mischievous hobgoblin who taunted weary travellers and TSB reports a Canon Atkinson speaking of Padfoot, sometimes visible and sometimes not, padding quietly behind a traveller and then uttering a roar in his ear.  Fortunately our coffee stop was untroubled by Padfoot and leaving Hob Hole we made a steep climb up the tarmac road until we turned right into John Beckon Road.  After half a mile our path turned right off the road onto a heather track and returned us back along the opposite side of Baysdale Beck, passing a memorial to Alan Clegg 'Who loved these moors'.  We arrived at Great Hograh Beck where there is a small stone footbridge and a wooden memorial seat.  We feel the seat is a little out of place here.  TSB says that the bridge was built in 1938, according to an inscription, and was the work of Rowland Close, of nearby Low House Farm.


Trap near John Breckon Road

Looking from John Breckon Road towards Westerdale

Turn right onto a heather track

We follow Baysdale Beck back on the other side of the dale

Memorial

Approaching Great Hograh Beck

Footbridge over Great Hograh Beck

Memorial Seat

Shortly after the stone bridge we turned right onto a wide track and followed the path across the moor.  We walked downhill and passed by the above mentioned Low House Farm and then walked along the valley bottom to Baysdale Abbey. 

 
Down to Low House

Low House

Low House resident

Walking towards Baysdale Abbey

Baysdale Beck


We passed through Thorntree House Farm before reaching the Abbey and were amused to see a vehicle identified as a 'sheep shower.'  Perhaps the sheep are prettied up before going to market?  As we walked through the farm we were spotted by a pen of sheepdogs who raised a cacophony of noise.


Rinse or perm?

Noisy reception

A short walk took us to the side of Baysdale Abbey.  The original abbey was occupied by 9 or 10 nuns from 1190 to 1539.  We were interested to see a bat box on one of the abbey buildings and then walked away from the buildings across a quaint stone bridge which is apparently the only substantial remnant of the original abbey.  Crossing the bridge we followed the road to a footpath sign where we turned right to climb steeply through fields, all the way to the dale top, at a height of 1050 feet, where we paused to admire the view back to the abbey and collect our breath.


Baysdale Abbey

Old bridge at Abbey

Turn right and go straight up!

Nearly there, abbey in distance below.

We joined a tarmac road and turned right to follow it.  After a few minutes walking on this road we saw a stone memorial to the crew of a second world war plane that crashed on Kildale Moor; sadly the crew died from exposure before they could be rescued.


Memorial on Kildale Moor


We now had an hour's walk on tarmac back to Kildale but the weather was fine as were the views, so it passed pleasantly enough.  Looking down to our left we could see Battersby Junction and to our surprise saw the mole catcher at work, setting traps in another field.  A little further along we surprised a lapwing as it took a drink and I was able to get a nice photo of this shy bird.  Finally we reached Kildale and our car.
A very enjoyable day's walking.

Looking right to Little Kildale, Warren Farm and the Ironstone mine chimney

Looking left to Battersby Junction

We know what you're up to!

Lapwing

Fine ram

Approaching Kildale Church





Thursday, 9 April 2015



Tripsdale to Bransdale from Chop Gate



12.5 miles                                    Hot and sunny




The weather forecast was for sun and little wind so we decided it was time we tackled one of Tom Scott Burns's longer walks.  We parked at the village hall car park in Chop Gate and walked south along the B1257 until we saw a footpath sign indicating William Beck Farm where we turned off the road.

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


Leaving the road

A pleasant walk along the farm track brought us to William Beck Farm, long established according to TSB, who informs us that in 1160 it was named Willelmesbec.  The footpath bears right at the farm building and then climbs steeply to the moor gate.  Pressing straight on we soon dropped down Black Intake into the uninhabited and hidden dale of Tripsdale.  On the 12th February 1943, during World War 2, a Wellington Bomber returning to Croft after being hit over Holland crashed on Black Intake, killing all six crew and bits of wire and metal are still to be seen scattered in the heather.  

Moor gate

Looking back at William Beck Farm and Chop Gate

Access track down Black Intake

Ahead of us we could see the ugly scar of the shooters' track up the other side of Tripsdale heading towards Bransdale but first we thought we would divert to look at the Ship Stone, so called because the front of the stone looks like the prow of a ship.  We reached the beck and turned right for a hundred yards or so and found the Ship Stone which looks insignificant as one approaches but is enormous from the other side.  On the stone is a Latin inscription which translates as "All things are full of the Creator. John Hart, a man of Bilsdale 1849".


Following Tripsdale Beck

The Ship Stone doesn't look much from this side

Clive examines the inscription



'All things are full of the Creator' - John Hart a man of Bilsdale 1849

We walked back towards the bulldozed shooters' track passing the ruins of a dwelling which TSB explains was the home of an old cobbler who used to sell clogs and shoes outside the Fox and Hounds Inn at Seave Green on Sundays, as the congregation came down from Urra Church.  There were numerous traps set around this building but nothing had been caught.

Trap near ruins of cobbler's hut

Cobbler's hut. Traps set on each of the wooden poles

Looking back along Tripsdale from the Cobbler's Hut


We climbed out of Tripsdale onto Hagg Moor, a 'hagg' being a wood or coppice grown on broken ground, and then crossed Todd Intake Moor.  After walking for about a mile we came to two huts on the right hand side.  In the mid-90s I took shelter in one of these huts in a storm and found Tom Scott Burns had left leaflets on the table, advertising his Walker's Guides, intended to be picked up by passing hikers.  Nothing so interesting today however, but we decided it was time for a little something as we had been walking for a couple of hours.

Hagg House Moor

Huts

House martin's nest and fire break shovels

Sheep's skull doesn't frighten us off

Coffee break

We continued along the moor track for another mile or so and came to the remains of Stump Cross and, shortly after, the almost hidden turn off to Bransdale.  We would have missed this without the GPS., but once descending the track there was a reassuring cairn every hundred yards or so, to prove it wasn't just a sheep track.  We soon came to a fine view down into Bransdale.

The remains of Stump Cross

Watching us pass

The GPS says turn left here!

A track soon appears

Looking down into Bransdale

The track led us down into Bransdale, crossing a small road, and to Colt House Farm, which is marked as Bransdale Castle on old maps.  From the farm we followed way marks across several fields and descended to reach an old sun dial above Bransdale Mill.  This seemed an excellent spot for lunch with fine views in all directions.


Descending to Colt House Farm

Farm residents watch us pass

Bransdale Lodge

Sun Dial and old mill below

Inscription on sun dial warns us we'd better get on with lunch

Clive checks Tom Scott Burns' walk notes

Lunch over, we walked down to look round the old mill, which appeared to completely deserted today. On the front of the building was an inscription stating that it had been rebuilt in 1842 and the wall ties 'W' and 'S' stand for William Strickland who rebuilt the mill after moving from Farndale.  Round the back we saw a Greek inscription which was apparently the work of Strickland's son, who became curate at Ingleby Greenhow and  is responsible for a number of inscriptions in the area.  TSB says that this one means, "Rejoice evermore Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks."


The Old Mill

Rebuilt 1842


Hebrew and Greek! See text above

Looking back at the mill as we climb out of Bransdale

A steep climb out of the dale brought us first to Cow Sike Farm and then up alongside a conifer plantation, to eventually join the ancient roadway of Rudland Rigg, which runs from Kirby Moorside to Turkey Nab above Ingleby Greenhow.   On the right of the roadway we came to a large standing stone which TSB says was 'erected by primitive hands'.  This is known as the Cammon Stone, derived from the celtic 'cam' meaning 'bank stone'.  A Hebrew inscription translates as "Hallelujah", almost certainly the work of Emmanuel Strickland from Bransdale Mill!


Walking up to Rudland Rigg

Rudland Rigg

The Cammon Stone

Hallelujah



Rudland Rigg took us to the old Rosedale Railway track at Bloworth Crossing and the Cleveland Way.  We left the railway shortly after, heading west to Botton Head, the highest point of the North Yorkshire Moors, at 1500 feet.  Here we left the Cleveland Way and headed westwards across Urra Moor, dropping off the edge to descend a lovely moor lane to Bilsdale Hall.  A short time ago we walked the other way along this lane admiring snowdrops.  They have now been replaced by a fine display of daffodils.   We passed through Seave Green and then joined the B1257 for a walk along the pavement, back to Chop Gate.  We were pleasantly surprised to find The Buck Inn open and spent a happy half hour sitting outside in the evening sun before returning to the village hall and our car.


Near Bloworth Crossing

Bloworth Crossing


Descending towards Bilsdale Hall

Moor lane

We are standing on the pavement of the B1257, this cow is happily watching cars zoom by just a few feet away!

The Buck Inn.....  and it's open!

"To short walks and long drinks!"