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

Friday, 22 July 2016



Caydale and Noddle End from Murton

7.5 miles                           Fine and warm



We returned to Murton Grange (from which we walked to Rievaulx last week).  Once again we took the Hawnby turn-off from the B1257 Stokesley to Helmsley road and parked on the verge near to the white buildings of the Grange.

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

Walking alongside Morton Grange

We set off along the tarmac road next to Murton Grange and branched right through an open gate onto a rough track. Pheasants ran ahead of us keeping to the hedgerow and eventually our track dropped down into the pretty valley of Caydale.



Pheasants run along the hedge

Caydale ahead

As we descended into Caydale our route turned left off the broad track into thick undergrowth where it was barely discernible. Ahead of us we saw a strange scarecrow-like figure leaning against a gate but as our path went off to the left we didn't get a close look at it. It looked a bit creepy and we wondered what purpose it might serve?


There's a path here somewhere!

Scary figure

Tom Scott Burns tells us that the last wild cat in England was shot at this spot in 1840, by a Charles Harrison.  It is still a wild place and an uninhabited valley and as on previous visits, we saw deer disappear into the trees, startled by our noisy arrival.

Our faint track took us down to the bottom of the valley where we crossed a bridge over the beck and started the long climb up the other side, passing the remains of the 'Captain's Seat', as shown on the map above.  

Who the captain was and why he sat at this remote spot we have been unable to discover but our Google search revealed that in the 1740s a Joseph Ford of Kirbymoorside perfected a system of tapping into springs and channeling water in open 'rills' some 12 inches wide.  Water was diverted by this method through Caydale from King Spring to the village of Old Byland. The rills are still to be seen and their water looks clean and pure.

 
Caydale

The remains of the Captain's Seat

Reaching the top of the valley we paused to look back over Caydale and could see our outward route and Murton Grange in the distance.


Caydale


Looking over Caydale to Murton Grange in the distance

Leaving the climb and Caydale we crossed several fields to reach the tarmac of High Leir Lane where we turned right and walked through shimmering heat to pass tidy Weathercote Farm with its novel 'cat and rat' weather vane.



Weather vane at Weathercote Farm

After a mile on the road we reached the junction with Cleveland Road which we crossed to follow field paths for another half mile until we reached the high ridge of Boltby Scar.  


Field path to Boltby Scar

Reaching the Cleveland Way at Boltby Scar



We now followed the Cleveland Way along Boltby Scar past the old quarry workings and the ruins of High Barn, briefly crossing the tarmac of Sneck Yate Bank and on through the trees of Boltby plantation.


Boltby sits below

Ridge walk, High Barn in the distance

High Barn

Sheep near High Barn

Entering Boltby plantation

We notice a sign for High Paradise Farm



We emerged from the trees above Low Paradise Farm and continued to climb until we reached High Paradise and its cafe.  Although awkward to reach for motor traffic High Paradise is a little oasis for cyclists and walkers and we found the cream scones and coffee to be superb.



High Paradise Farm

We settle down to refreshments

Just what the hiker ordered!

Much refreshed, we continued past the farm to reach Sneck Gate and the old Drovers' Road, which we crossed into Daletown Common.  We paused here to watch the antics of a young sheep, which we suspected to be a male, chasing the other sheep in circles.  Occasionally one would stop and turn and there would be a clash of horns as they butted each other.  We watched for about five minutes but the young sheep showed no sign of tiring, he must have been driving the others mad.  In the end we turned back to our path and crossed Daletown Common to reach the barn at Noddle End.


Sneck Yate


Young sheep on left was making a nuisance of him(?)self

Lapwing

The barn at Noddle End

When we reached the barn we paused to enjoy a nice view down into Gowerdale, before following the path down to reach the ruined farm of Gowerdale House.


Down to Gowerdale

Gowerdale House

"Look around and get out!"

Gowerdale House

This area was the site of what was once a medieval village, long abandoned.  TSB speculates whether the Black Death visited this secluded valley.  Gowerdale House has no road or track leading to it and we walked in front of the house, which has the bleak message "Look around and get out!" painted on the front door, and then followed a rising path through the yard of Dale Town Farm.



Looking back to Gowerdale House and our descent through the trees

Cattle watch us pass but can't be bothered to come closer

Dale Town Farm, Hawnby Hill behind

We walked straight uphill from the farm, turning left along Peak Scar Top and soon reaching Murton Bank Road and our car.  A short drive took us to the Inn at Hawnby where we enjoyed a pint in the garden and reflected on an enjoyable day's walk.


Hawnby Hill and Easterside Hill

"To Tom Scott Burns!"

Friday, 15 July 2016


Rievaulx Abbey and Caydale from Murton

 

8.5 miles            Warm and mostly sunny




We left the B1257 Stokesley to Helmsley Road at the Hawnby turn off and parked at the roadside near to Murton Grange.




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

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 run farm with a small chapel.

We walked past the neat white buildings of the grange and after a short distance turned into Ox Pasture Lane which we followed to the top of Deep Gill Wood.   Ahead of us trotted dozens of young pheasants, determined not to take to the air, until a dog running alongside some horse riders ran towards them barking. 


Ox Pasture Lane

We have company along the lane

Leaving Ox Pasture Lane to walk along the edge of Deep Gill Wood

We emerge onto meadows


Our path ran alongside the wood for some time before reaching fields which we crossed to reach an old disused barn before descending to Barnclose Farm.




Approaching the old barn

Clive goes for a look around

Descending to Barnclose Farm


We walked through the farm and then had a steady climb on the road to reach Tylas Farm, which TSB tells us that the monks of Old Byland built as a grange and tile house, hence its name.  We passed the farm and continued along the road to Oxen Dale until reaching a gate and way-mark on our left where we turned off the road and gradually descended to the River Rye.
 
The road to Tylas Farm

Our turn off is almost hidden by bracken

Walking through Oxendale
Our path now led through the valley of Oxendale, the River Rye to our left. We followed a pleasant grass track until we reached the river and our path became a boardwalk over areas that obviously suffer from flooding.
 
 




The River Rye from our path
Looking back at an old sign to Hawnby

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.  Our route followed the traces of the old canal that the monks had built 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.
 
Remains of the old canal
Leaving the road near Bow Bridge


Walking towards Rievaulx Abbey



We soon arrived at the village and the road and decided to leave our route for a while to visit the church of St Mary's which could be seen uphill to our left.  

Apparently the church was originally a 'slipper chapel' to the abbey, a place where pilgrims would remove their shoes and put on soft slippers or socks to enter the holy buildings.  It was renovated early this century.  

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


The Church of St Mary's, Rievaulx

Hen weather-vane

Looking from the door towards the altar

The altar window

Window commemorating the Earl of Feversham, who died at the Somme


Just outside the church is a heavy wooden cross erected to the memory of the Earl of Feversham and inside we found the following explanation for its presence.



The cross, made from wood recovered from the Somme battlefield

Memorial on the cross to the Earl of Feversham

We retraced our steps downhill and came to a bench where we sat and enjoyed our coffee and scones, looking down on to the village. 
Refreshed, we walked down to view the abbey from the road as we walked towards Rievaulx Bridge.


TSB tells how Wordsworth's sister, Dorothy, who, like us, arrived 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."   


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.


Walking through Rievaulx



Rievaulx Bridge

We crossed the bridge and followed the road to pretty Ashberry Farm where our path turned behind the building and immediately started to climb Ashberry Hill.  As on previous visits our view was not the magnificent one enjoyed by TSB in the days before it was spoiled by new growth, however at one point a gap in the trees gave us a view of one of the Ionic Temples built above the abbey by a local squire in 1758.


Old York North Riding sign near Ashberry Farm

Ashberry Farm

Tuscan style temple above the Abbey

We followed the wooded path through Lambert Hagg Wood and left the wood on the same road that we had followed on the way out, past Tylas Farm.  This time we left the road before the farm, turning left to climb onto Birk Bank on the other side of the valley. 


Walking back through Oxendale

Looking towards Tylas Farm

We saw tiny frogs crossing our road

The trees of Birk Bank

A mile of walking along this woodland track took us to Caydale Mill below us, and just beyond we reached the road and a ford where we washed the mud from our boots.  Cars on this route drive through 100 yards of water, but walkers cross by a bridge and avoid getting wet feet.  

A long steep climb up this road took us back to Murton Grange and our car.  A short drive later we were relaxing in the Buck at Chop Gate where we discussed an enjoyable walk over a pint of Ruby Red ale.


Washing boots in the ford


Murton Grange