White Peak Walks: The Southern Dales. Mark Richards

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу White Peak Walks: The Southern Dales - Mark Richards страница 2

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
White Peak Walks: The Southern Dales - Mark  Richards

Скачать книгу

       Walk 13 Hollinsclough Moor, Washgate Bridge and Hollins Hill

       Walk 14 Parkhouse Hill, Chrome Hill and Dowel Dale

       Walk 15 High Wheeldon and Pilsbury Castle

       Walk 16 Sheen, Pilsbury Castle and Carder Low

       Walk 17 Beresford Dale, Wolfscote Dale and Biggin Dale

       Walk 18 High Peak Trail and Tissington Trail

       Walk 19 High Peak Trail, Aleck Low and Tissington Trail

       Walk 20 Tissington Trail, Biggin Dale and the Dove

       Walk 21 Narrowdale, Wolfscote Dale and Milldale

       Walk 22 Four Peakland Peaks

       Walk 23 Shining Tor, Hanson Grange and Hall Dale

       Walk 24 The Eastern Edge of Dove Dale

       Walk 25 Dove Dale, Ilam Rock, Air Cottage and Bunster Hill

       Walk 26 Thorpe Cloud and Thorpe

       Walk 27 Tissington Trail, Thorpe and Mapleton

       Walk 28 Tissington Trail and Parwich

       Walk 29 High Peak Trail and Roystone Grange

       Walk 30 Harborough Rocks, High Peak Trail, Roystone and Ballidon

       APPENDIX 1 Route summary table

       APPENDIX 2 Recommended reading

       APPENDIX 3 Useful contacts

Image

Image

      Dove Dale from Bunster Hill

      There is a pleasure to be gained in walking pastures old as well as new, as I have found this last year while retracing past expeditions. At the same time I have discovered many new aspects and exquisitely beautiful faces of the White Peak landscape. For all the subtle changes one thing remains the same: the quality of the walking experience.

      The two editions of this guide span both a generation and monumental changes in guidebook production and in the world of communication. Thus it is that I am able to offer a new kind of guide, one that can enable you to share with others your own best walk experiences through the author’s website www.markrichards.info. Go to Peak Park & Stride within Walk Free for a bigger picture of the author’s own wanderings, and Contact Me for entries to MagaScene, where readers’ images and reflections will be displayed. Through this website this guide can bring readers closer together and also provide information about route problems or changes, with a view to improving future editions.

      Gone are the handscribed pages and the intimate, if indulgent, line drawings of the first edition. No longer is the guide set in stone: the 30 structured walks offered here provide new horizons of shared enjoyment to a constantly unfolding story.

Image

      View back across the upper Hamps valley to Lower Green (Walk 2)

      National parks have their cultural origins in the US with Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, established in 1872. Yellowstone – managed for, and on behalf of, the American nation – was the first of over sixty major tracts of virgin natural heritage land purchased before Western-style despoliation.

      Traditionally in England, by contrast, all land has been privately owned, until first the National Trust and then later the Peak Park Authority began to purchase particular areas of countryside for the public good and the welfare of the wild land itself.

      In 1951 the Peak District – 555 square miles of breathing space between the cities of Manchester and Sheffield – became the first National Park in the UK and rightly so. It has everything a truly national landscape should: cultural integrity, geographical variety and vitality, treasured wildlife habitats and a diversity of recreational opportunities. In short, it is a landscape of the emotions, to treasure and inspire for the health and wealth of the nation. It is also ideally situated for the recreation and well-being of a huge ‘doorstep’ population.

Image

      Swallow Brook valley and Chrome Hill from the summit of Hollins Hill (Walk 13)

Image

      Bunster Hill and Thorpe Cloud from the path rising from Mapleton (Walk 27)

      This much-loved upland marks a major landscape transition. Suddenly the placid woods and pastures of middle England are exuberantly transformed into modest mountainhood. Soothing ridge and furrow farmland turns to high rolling pastures and enchanting craggy dales. It is here that the North is born upon the swelling slopes of the emergent Pennine chain, the distinctive spine of England. The oldest folk name for the area is Peakland, ‘land of the peac-dwellers’. Derived from Old English, it captures the characteristic pointed hills of the area known as the White Peak.

      The White Peak takes its name from the underlying limestone, in contrast to the flanking scarpland moors of millstone grit, expressively known as the Dark Peak. The core carboniferous limestone formed in a tropical sea some 350 million years ago was ringed by coral reefs, the basis of such amazing little peaks as Parkhouse Hill and Thorpe Cloud. The millstone grit that once overlaid the limestone was scoured away by glacial erosion. Where it remains, this coarse rock dominates the near eastern, northern and western horizons of the White Peak in the form of escarpments and heather moorlands. Some of these feature in this book and its companion volume The Northern Dales as they make patchwork incursions and offer fascinating viewpoints and perspectives into the plateau.

      Almost every hilltop in the incised plateau of mountain limestone at the centre of the Peak District is crowned by a Bronze Age burial tumulus, locally known as a ‘low’. (Both the highs and the lows of the Peak are elevated and uplifting!) Man has always found a sustainable living and ancestral inspiration in this special land. Stand upon the summit of Mam Tor or in the midst of Arbor Low stone circle and you feel the enduring magnetism this rolling hillscape exerts. Faintly traced over the limestone uplands are hints of a long agricultural past. The grey-lichened irregular enclosure walls chequering the plateau eloquently express that continuing sense of longevity, proof that man and nature have succeeded in finding a durable common cause.

      Despite the damp climate, the permeable carboniferous limestone bedrock has given the capture and year-round availability of water a heightened importance for human settlement and farm livestock. All White Peak and even some Dark Peak villages keep alive the ancient practice of well dressing, founded on the perennial fear of a loss of life-giving water.

Скачать книгу