Tuesday, 5 September 2017

Twenty One - Essex - Chrishall Common (147m)




Footpath marker



Highest point is a clearing the
other side of the woodland



Corner of field a few metres ahead
is approximate highest point



Church at the start and finish of walk



Twenty - Cambridgeshire - Great Chishill (146m)




Village sign -
highest in the county



Locked gates - highest point is just
inside - water board covered reservoir



View from in front of locked gates -
flat farmland not exactly  a summit!



Monday, 21 August 2017

Nineteen - Cheshire - Shining Tor (559m)


Cast iron footpath sign - with the main "Cat &
Fiddle" trans-Pennine road behind.




Errwood Reservoir




Looking back towards Pym Chair. Stone wall
marks boundary between Cheshire (LHS)
 and Derbyshire (RHS)




Looking back to Cat Tor. Flagstones make
going across the peaty bog much easier.




Step through the gate from Derbyshire and into
Cheshire. Trig point at Shining Tor adjacent
to the highest point in Cheshire.




Yikes! - Fine sentiment, but hardly rolls of the tongue! 




Stone plaque on the wall of the (unfortunately
closed) Cat & Fiddle Inn.


Eighteen - Staffordshire - Cheeks Hill (Axe Edge) (520m)

First of two highest points reached today. A fairly short uninspiring slog across boggy marshland (wet feet within three minutes of setting off) - but at least its another county-high crossed off! Misty and grey, but dry. For the first time ever, Taffy our Border Terrier wasn't with us, which as it happens was lucky - as dogs aren't allowed across the heathland due to ground-nesting birds.


Start of footpath across the bog -
("No dogs allowed").


The high point for Staffordshire is against the county border with Derbyshire at the north-western edge of the Peak District. Featureless with exception of dry-stone walls, the intersection of which forms a sheep fold at the highest point in Staffs.

Highest point - a sheep fold - where the
county boundary walls intersect.


Wednesday, 9 August 2017

Seventeen - Gloucestershire - Cleeve Hill (330m)


Pringle sweater in waiting! Slightly
 surreal golf course with grazing sheep.

Well this was a slightly weird one. Called in on the way back from visiting family in Norfolk, and Cleeve Common is a lovely spot, with views down into Cheltenham with its racecourse, and across to the Malvern Hills. We parked next to the golf club and as we ascended we negotiated a golf course, sheep, park benches and mushrooms. The hill is also known as Cleeve Cloud.


Lifting heavy rain clouds. The view across
the Vale of Evesham to the Malverns

However, to get to the summit (330m), you bear south west, away from the views and across a somewhat scrubby looking plateau, past a car park and some transmitters and then to the rather hollow prize of a nondescript looking trig point. Having done this, we cut straight back in the direction of the golf club (lots more scenery and sunshine now), and back to the car.

Transmitters near the summit

Trig pillar by barb wire fence. Bit of an anti-
climax after such good views on the climb up

Friday, 14 July 2017

Sixteen - Somerset - Dunkery Beacon - Exmoor (519m)


National trust sign -
Start of climb up to the beacon

This was a pretty easy walk – not really “on our way” home from our trip to Devon, but we decided to fit it in anyway. At 519m, the views from the top are amazing, and the walk up there doesn’t prepare you for the fact that the Beacon overlooks the Bristol Channel and that most of the south coast of Wales can be seen sparkling (or smouldering , in the case of Port Talbot) in the distance.

Well defined path to the large
stone mound at the top

Plaque at the beacon

At the summit is a large and sturdy cairn, perfect for climbing, with a memorial plaque commemorating the donation of the Beacon to the National Trust in 1932.

View from the top across the Bristol
 Channel to the South Wales Coast

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Fifteen - Cornwall - Brown Willy (420m)


Showery Tor

The day before had been tumultuous rain and we’d had to resort to skulking in coffee shops and pubs in between dragging the dog (who seemed to have soaked up his entire body weight in water) around a variety of quaint Cornish villages. This was okay as far as it went, but one day was plenty, and we were pleased to get out in the sunshine and climb up to Rough (pronounced “Row”) Tor, via the sculptural Showery Tor and Little Rough Tor.

Little Rough Tor

It’s an excellent walk, dipping down from there and then up and onwards to glorious Brown Willy (420m), which is privately owned with permitted access. The farm and land have just been sold, and the Daily Mail in April were speculating that its new owner could be Prince Charles (so it must be true...)

Rough Tor

WWII memorial on Rough Tor


Trig pillar on Brown Willy
(although not highest point)

Large precarious cairn marks
highest point

We cut straight back to the car park via Showery Tor again and various groups of wild ponies. We got a bit sunburned on the way down, not having expected quite so much sunshine.

Wild ponies on Bodmin Moor

(In the afternoon we also walked from Tintagel to Trebarwith Strand for a pint at the Port William, and then back along the coast path, (making about 11 miles in total for the day),followed by a barbeque on the top decking at “our” cottage. Perfect.)