Showing posts with label Yorkshire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yorkshire. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 December 2016

Hebden Bridge on the Pennine Way in Yorkshire

Taking you to Hebden Bridge today. This town sits on The Pennine Way The Pennine Way was the first, and is probably now the best-known of all the UK’s National Trails. This long-distance footpath begins in the heart of England, the Peak District, and weaves its way north through the Yorkshire Dales, the Cheviots and onwards to the border with Scotland, forming what is often described as the "spine" of England.


Being born and bred in Lancashire this was a well known place to me in my teenage years.


The town developed in late medieval times as a river crossing and meeting point of pack horse routes.
Textiles have always been important in the area for centuries, but it was not until mechanisation and steam power were introduced from the late 18th century, that Hebden Bridge began to grow significantly.
The arrival of the canal and railway attracted industry to the valley bottoms, but with limited flat land and a growing army of textile workers, dwellings were ingeniously built on the valley sides, giving the town it's characteristic "double decker" housing.  




Local bus stop








There are foot paths with signs like these all across England and when walking on them I have always thought of the generations of folk that have walked on them for centuries, especially when these were the main routes across the countryside.


A dry stone wall falling down - very unusual







The sign Haworth seen here is the town where The Bronte sisters lived





So another virtual walk thanks to son Peter


Saturday, 15 May 2010

50th Anniversary Coming to an End

Our Golden Wedding Anniversary seems to have gone on for a long time. Large party on December 19th (the actual date) then not taking up gift vouchers until the Spring has spread the celebrations out somewhat.



Having recently enjoyed our High Tea at M*ulberry House it is now time to take off this week (Tuesday for 2 nights) to Aldburgh in Suffolk. We have used our gift voucher (from a number of friends) to book the best room in the hotel for a night and then added another night as our gift to each other. We will be enjoying a large room with a bay window overlooking the beach and sea, furnished with a comfortable sofa for doing just that. There will be designer toiletries and a welcome tray as just 2 of the extras for this room. The hotel has also been closed from New Year until Easter for a complete refurbishment so everything is new and the decor is very different.


Aldburgh is not your usual seaside place but a place to walk and relax and take in the bracing sea air from the North Sea. We stayed at this same place to celebrate my 70th birthday and if you were not around at that time or are interested in revisiting then click these links. http://ramblingsfromanenglishgarden.blogspot.com/2008/11/aldeburgh-pt-1.html


http://ramblingsfromanenglishgarden.blogspot.com/2008/11/aldeburgh-pt2-cottages-and-more.html


For now I will leave you with some views of the City of York. These photos were taken in 2004 before I was a 'blogger' and it shows! And photos were printed on my old printer.


Our Hotel (a Marriott)



Which backed on to the race course seen here in the early morning mist



The centre of York with the Minster towering over the area








A freeze artist on the right with his umbrella. These guys will not move for hours and one has to put money in the dish for a front view photo. They are usually students wanting to earn some money. Alan on the left (with the red backpack) looks as if he has frozen too.



Across the roof tops where the Minster fills the horizon




And a nice place to eat lunch
There is so much to see in York and some of the finest museums (Railway, Viking, Life in centuries gone by), lots of excavations, the Castle, the City Wall and of course York Minster itself with it's amazing vaults and underground excavations. If we do visit again there will be lots of pics.

Thursday, 2 October 2008

Ripon Cathedral,Yorkshire Pt.19

Scenes from Ripon Cathedral. Walked to the cathedral to have a quick look around before lunch, after which it will be Homeward Bound. We have had a great holiday but certainly not a rest! From the comments it looks like you have all enjoyed my 19 posts on Yorkshire. I have re-lived it all through posting some of the 370 photos. I love Yorkshire but I am ready now to move on to other subjects, so stay tuned.




Indoor photos blurred. There was a service in progress in one of the small chapels so I was asked not to take photographs, hence my quick shots.









There had been a weekend flower arranging festival and these exhibits were the winners. It would be very hard to say which one I liked best as they were all so different.






















On our way home now. It is only late afternoon but have just driven through a storm.


It's now 7.30 pm (we stopped at Cambridge for tea) and we are turning off the M25 at our home junction. The storm followed us.




Tuesday, 30 September 2008

Beningbrough Hall & Gardens,Yorkshire Pt.18

When mentioning in my last post that I would be posting next on Ripon Cathedral, I had momentarily forgotten that our friends and hosts took us to Beningbrough Hall after lunch on Saturday.



To get there we had to cross this privately owned Aldwick Toll Bridge. At least it saved us an extra 25 mile round trip by doing so. It is a reminder that in the past our whole country was criss crossed with toll bridges. We take if for granted now that we can drive everywhere free, (apart from major toll crossings.) We see here part of the cottage that is the home of the toll keeper. The bridge is more like a wooden gangway with a kind of chain link planks of wood that make quite a loud clinking sound as one crosses over. The keeper said that I could go on to it to take photographs but as there was a steady drip of traffic I shot a long view only.












Beningbrough Hall is a grand red-brick mansion which was built in 1716 for John Bourchier, a Yorkshire landowner. Today in partnership with the National Portrait Gallery, it offers a unique attraction with over 120 outstanding portraits of famous eighteenth-cenury figures. These are hung in furnished period rooms with important furniture and porcelain collections.








The hall is set in six acres of show gardens. The Walled Garden has over 20 varieties of apple and pear trees and is used as a venue for events. You are welcome to walk with me in the garden and I don't think I have to tell you that you will get wet, after all it is a Summers day in August!


















Everybody is opting to take tea inside today



A 19th century potting shed