25/07/2012

Little Hayfield

LITTLE HAYFIELD, PARK HALL WOOD, MIDDLE MOOR, WILLIAMS CLOUGH, KINDER DOWNFALL, KINDER LOW END, TUNSTEAD HOUSE, BOWDEN BRIDGE, KINDER LODGE AT HAYFIELD, CALICO WAY, SETT VALLEY AND LANTERN PIKE INN
Distance: Nine Miles.
Difficulty: Moderately strenuous.
Weather: Dry with cloud and sunny spells.
Walkers: Alan Hart and George Whaites.
B walker: Lawrie Fairman.
C walker: Tom Cunliffe.
D walkers: Geoff Spurrell and Mike Walton.
Non-walking drinkers: Frank Dudley, John Eckersley and Tony Job.
A leader: Hart. Diarist: Hart. Driver: Hart.
Apologies: Peter Beal (Covering Olympic Games), Colin Davison (romantically involved), George Dearsley (Turkish hols), Jock Rooney (Austrian hols) and Ken Sparrow (domestic duties).
Starting point: Car park of Lantern Pike Inn, Little Hayfield.
Starting time: 9.43am. Finishing time: 2.40pm.

We welcomed a new member to our group in the shape of Mike “Wally” Walton and the return of a lapsed member in the portly form of Lantern Pike landlord Tom Cunliffe. The latter’s lack of fitness created a new genre of C walk, thus demoting our B walkers into an even lower category.
It does not seem that long ago that all the Wednesday Wanderers walked together, but at least we have been able to adapt to our varying strengths and weaknesses as the ravages of time take hold. Significantly, we can all get to a pub.
Lawrie announced at the outset that an infection from which he was not fully recovered would prevent him from going all the way up Kinder. The start was delayed while Tom, doing a passable impersonation of Billy Bunter, stuffed himself with tea and toast.
From the Lantern Pike we turned right towards Hayfield and then crossed the road opposite Slack Lane to enter Park Hall Wood. This brought us to a gate leading to Middle Moor (7mins). We walked uphill through the gorse and bracken until we reached a drystone wall where we turned left (22mins) towards the white shooting lodge.
At a public footpath sign (28mins) we turned right towards Edale and where the path forked soon afterwards we headed left. Tom joined Lawrie for the shorter walk, heading down to Kinder Reservoir while George W and your diarist set off up Williams Clough. We paused for pies and Tia Maria en route (72mins) and reached the summit (91mins).
After admiring the view back down across the reservoir and valley we turned right along the ridge until we reached and crossed Kinder Downfall (122mins). We had now walked into the clouds and used a row of cairns to guide us we continued along the path with the valley on our right. A carpet  of stone flags marked the point where our path joined Jacob’s ladder. The left fork headed for Edale and we turned right towards Hayfield (159mins).
After a steep descent we went through two gates to enter and leave a field which marked the exit from Kinder Low End (181mins). By following the well-trodden path through fields downhill we left the Kinder Estate by crossing our first wooden stile of the walk (195mins).
The path took us round Tunstead House on our right, straight ahead at crossroads and reached Bowden Bridge on our right (209mins). We chose not to cross the bridge and risk the temptations of The Sportsman, passing a campsite on our left and following a wooden public footpath sign marked Hayfield and Sett Valley Trail.
We exited Valley Road into Fishers Bridge (222mins) and crossed the main road diagonally right to enter New Mills Road with Kinder Lodge on the corner (224mins). There we found Geoff and Wally, who had arrived an hour earlier and were fully refreshed. They had caught the bus to New Mills and walked some four miles along the Sett Valley Trail to Hayfield.
Lawrie was also present, explaining that as he had led Tom from Kinder Reservoir towards the Mermaid’s Pool half way up Kinder, the terrain had become progressively more difficult and Tom progressively more knackered. Tom had decided to return and had last been seen passing Kinder Reservoir in the direction of the Lantern Pike, where we found him later.
After quaffing pints of excellent Timothy Taylor Landlord at £2-70, the A walkers were rejoined by Lawrie for the final journey back to Little Hayfield. We walked a few paces up New Mills Road before turning right into Station Road, with the bus terminus on our left. We went into Wood Lane and picked up a sign for the Calico Trail on our right (229mins).
This took us over a footbridge across the River Sett and into a park where we stopped for lunch (235mins).  After leaving the park to the left we turned right up Bank Vale Road (239mins) with Oaklands on our left. At Bank Vale Farm we followed a public footpath sign on our right for Little Hayfield (244mins). This led us via Slack Lane back to The Lantern Pike (255mins), where the Derbyshire county flag was flying from the pole. Here the Timothy Taylor Landlord was also in excellent form, although at £3-22 a pint it was a little harder to swallow.

Next week’s walk will start at 9.40am from Dane Bridge, just beyond The Ship Inn at Wincle, near Macclesfield. We intend to take refreshment around 12.30pm at the Rose and Crown in Algreave and finish around 2.20pm at The Old King’s Head in Gurnett, Macclesfield. Your diarist is awaiting return calls from these pubs to confirm they will be open.

18/07/2012

Disley

DISLEY, BOLLINHURST RESERVOIR, DRAKE CARR COTTAGE, MILLENIUM WOOD, BOLDER HALL FARM, BLACK HILL, BLACK ROCK RIDGE, OWLS’ NEST, BYROM HOUSE, PEAK FOREST CANAL, HIGGINS CLOUGH SWING BRIDGE, GOYT VALLEY, HAGUE FOLD FARM, THE FOX AT BROOK BOTTOM, STRINES STATION, STRINES HALL, HAGG BANK FARM, THE DANDY COCK AT DISLEY

Distance: Nine miles.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Weather: Dry with cloud giving way to blue skies and sunshine.
Walkers: Peter Beal, Alan Hart and George Whaites.
Non-walking drinker: Geoff Spurrell.
Leader: Hart. Driver: Whaites. Diarist: Hart.
Apologies for absence: Colin Davison (stranded in Scillies), George Dearsley (Turkish hols), Lawrie Fairman (Campervanning), Tony Job (attending granddaughter’s graduation), Jock Rooney (Austrian hols), Ken Sparrow (household duties).
Apologies for presence: Tony Job (wrongly identified as being a non-walking drinker last week when actually attending his grandson’s graduation).
Starting point: Free car park at Disley rail station.
Starting time: 9.18am. Finishing time: 2.08pm.

Having nearly called off this week’s walk because of forecasts of dreadful wet weather, our reduced ranks decided to sally forth regardless and were rewarded with ideal conditions. Although it has been a woeful summer thus far, the Met Office predictions have been unnecessarily gloomy.
Time and again walkers would have stayed at home and battened down the hatches only to find they had missed out on drier conditions than those predicted. Small wonder that holiday resorts are complaining about this negative information.
The only plus point is that we have been pleasantly surprised by the actuality, and delighted that we chose to ignore the voices of the so-called experts. In the late morning a few spots of rain fell, but Peter B had only to take his waterproof jacket out of his rucksack to scare it away within seconds.
From Disley rail station car park we walked past the front of The Ram’s Head and turned right. Just before The White Horse we turned right up Ring o’ Bells Lane. This led us to the former pub of that name, now a Quaker meeting house, and turned right in front of it (3mins). We headed left through a gate marked with a yellow arrow and walked up wooden steps with a cemetery on either side.
At the end of the cemetery on our left we turned diagonally left through a field, headed left along a lane and immediately right over a wooden stile (8mins). By walking diagonally right across the field we were aiming towards Lyme Cage in the distance. After crossing a wooden stile to exit the field we walked ahead down a lane and then turned left through a gate to the left of Bollinhurst Reservoir (15mins). On reaching the reservoir wall we kept it on our right as we walked towards a wood at the end of the water. We entered it via a wooden stile (25mins) and exited through a metal gate.
Our route took us straight ahead towards Drake Carr Cottage, crossing the Gritstone Trail signs (31mins). Just before the pretty cottage we turned left into Millenium Wood. This led us to a road where we turned right (36mins).
We passed South Hale Farm (which is for sale) and Bolder Hall Farm on our left before turning left over a wooden stile marked with a footpath sign (40mins). By carrying straight on at a footpath crossroads (44mins) and then turning left at the second crossroads (45mins) we were able to take a more gentle, easier and quicker route up Black Hill to reach the ridge at Black Rock (56mins).
Our brisk pace had enabled us to reach the summit in record time. With heavy rain forecast for 11 am, your leader-diarist was anxious to reach the ridge, admire the views and leave, before the heavens opened. In the event we had clear visibility back over Bowstones, Lyme Cage, Bollinhurst Reservoir and far beyond.
Turning left, we gently descended the ridge, crossing a ladder stile and passing through a gate into a field (63mins). To our left we passed Owls’ Nest, the outward bound accommodation used by pupils of Manchester Grammar School during their holidays. We went over a wooden stile into a field occupied by three Shetland ponies, leaving it and them by a wooden stile to the right of a farm.
Crossing a road (70mins) we went to the left of Byron House, through a gate marked with a yellow arrow and turned left downhill down a rocky path often covered in nettles at this time of year. The heavy summer rain had caused the path to become covered in ferns, nettles and other weeds but as there were none in shorts among our trio, it presented no problems.
At the end we turned right passing Pear Tree Cottage (74mins) and watching two rabbits hopping downhill in front of us at a furious pace. We chose the alternative permissive footpath to the left of the rocky road and emerged at the A6 (85mins). We crossed into Lower Greenshall Lane and went under a bridge. When we reached the Peak Forest Canal on our left we turned left and stopped at a bench next to Bridge 27 for pies and tia maria (88mins).
As we resumed with the canal on our left, the forecast of rain appeared to be accurate. With dark clouds massing overhead as the clocks struck 11, a few spots fell and we feared the worst. But by the time Peter B had dug into his rucksack to remove his jacket, the danger had passed and we saw no more rain for the rest of the day.
We walked under Bridge 26 and at the next, Higgins Clough Swing Bridge, we turned right down a track marked Path 45 (100mins). There were two well-trodden blind alleys either side soon after the start, but we discovered by trial and error that the middle path was the right choice. Eventually we spotted a yellow arrow to confirm our decision and crossed a footbridge over a stream (113mins).
After crossing a wooden stile we turned right up a flight of wooden steps, over a wooden stile into a field. We  swung left and reached a car park for Disley Tissues (119mins), exiting to the left and heading right uphill. There was a path to the left marked with a wooden footpath sign and a yellow arrow which could have led us down to the River Goyt and right back to the road and route we wanted. But with two choices of path down, and having chosen the wrong one at the first attempt, we opted for the road and a hairpin bend at the junction with Lower Greenshall Lane at the opposite end to where we had been almost an hour earlier.
With Waterside Cottage on our left (129mins) we carried on over a road bridge across the Goyt (131mins) and the Manchester-Sheffield railway line (136mins). After passing a children’s playground and Mouseley Bottom Wood on our right, we crossed a main road into Hague Fold Road.
This was the start of a steep climb, swinging left before a row of cottages and then right again before we emerged on the road from New Mills to Brook Bottom. On our left was a memorial bench to walker Eric Burdekin (147mins).
After turning left and walking gently downhill for 200 yards, we arrived at The Fox at exactly 12 noon (149mins). The doors remained shut for an agonising four minutes until we were allowed in, purchasing our two pints of Robbies’ bitter and one of mild for £8 just moments before a party of ten women walkers arrived to discuss the various merits of food and drinks they were going to order.
We commented on our good fortune in beating them to the punch after retiring to a side room to escape their inane chatter. Sadly the bitter, at £2-70, was deemed to be not up to its usual high standard by Peter B and George W. It was not so bad, it has to be said, to prevent them having second pints.
Resuming, we left by the back of the car park to take the stony path downhill passing first Strines Station and then Strines Hall (164mins). We crossed the Goyt (166mins) and left Station Road to cross Strines Road (169mins) and head up a gritty path before pausing for lunch on a bench on the right (171mins).
We continued and went left over a wooden stile just before reaching an aqueduct carrying the Peak Forest Canal. The path led to a gap stile which brought us to the bank of the canal. We turned left with the canal on our right (175mins).  After ignoring the Wood Ford Lift Bridge on our right (186mins) we continued to Higgins Clough Swing Bridge (192mins) where we turned right over it.
Turning left immediately along a lane, we passed Hagg Bank Farm on our right (196mins) and walked through a tunnel under the Manchester-Sheffield railway line (198mins) before emerging from Hollinwood Road by the side of The Dandy Cock (201mins).
We crossed the A6, turned right and returned to the car park to de-boot. Back at The Dandy Cock, where Geoff was the sole non-walking drinker, we enjoyed pints of Robbies’ bitter for £2-60 and mild for £2-50. The beer, whose poor form had cost our patronage since 1996, was proclaimed excellent.
Next week’s walk will start at 9.40am from the car park of The Lantern Pike at Little Hayfield. We intend to take a stroll up Kinder, calling at The Kinder Lodge in Hayfield around 1.20pm, and finishing back at The Lantern Pike about 2.15pm.





11/07/2012

Rowarth

ROWARTH, ANDERTON HOUSE, COWN EDGE, CHARLESTOWN, GNAT HOLE FARM, WORMSTONES, HARRY HUT, THE GROUSE AT CHUNAL, MATLEY MOOR FARM, THE LITTLE MILL INN AT ROWARTH
Distance: Ten miles.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Weather: Dry with early cloud giving way to sunshine.
Walkers: Peter Beal, Lawrie Fairman, Alan Hart, Jock Rooney with Tips, and George Whaites.
B walker: Geoff Spurrell.
Non-walking drinkers: Frank Dudley, John Eckersley and Tony Job.
Apologies: George Dearsley  and Ken Sparrow (hols).
Leaders: Beal and Fairman. Driver: Whaites. Diarist: Hart.
Starting point: Car park of The Little Mill Inn at Rowarth.
Starting time: 9.40am. Finishing time: 2.49pm.

Once again the warning by weather experts of heavy showers proved to be unduly pessimistic, and we were rewarded when light rain stopped as we arrived in the car park of The Little Mill Inn. Later on the cloud dispersed and we were able to glimpse blue skies. Towards the end of the walk we even spotted a yellow ball in the sky which those of us with long memories identified as sunshine.
 Peter Beal made a welcome, if fleeting, return from his narrow boat trip along Britain’s waterways prior to his engagement at the 2012 Olympics. Peter will be leading a group of Press Association hacks in Howden, Yorkshire, who will be providing coverage of the London Games.
He showed his leadership qualities during the walk, occasionally wresting the yellow jersey from Lawrie as we charted familiar territory by different routes.
From the car park we turned right facing the pub and right again after a cottage. A lane led us uphill past scruffy farm buildings and two ancient jalopies parked on the stony path which was our route. As the path swung left so did we past a row of cottages (7mins) which ended with Anderton House, built in 1792.
We turned right and after 50 yards turned left following a footpath sign for Cown Edge. After crossing a wooden stile we reached a footpath sign containing a memorial to Norman Ings, (1910-82), a keen local walker (15mins).
Following the sign for Cown Edge, we crossed a wooden stile and ignored a path on our left near the fence to continue walking slightly uphill. After crossing another wooden stile (35mins) we went through an open gate and turned right uphill (50mins) with a broken drystone wall, then a wood, on our left .
We reached a path by a wooden stile (55mins) and turned left along the ridge of Cown Edge before descending by a path on the right. After crossing a road (65mins) we continued downhill through a gate towards some trees. Just before a stone step stile we paused for pies, port and brandy (67mins).
Resuming, we crossed the stile and headed to the right of the trees before descending again. We reached a lane and turned left downhill (83mins). We reached a road in the village of Charlestown (93mins) and turned right along the road, passing the O Sole Mio Italian restaurant on our left.
After crossing the road we headed down a gravel track towards the delightfully-named Gnat Hole Farm (101mins). We then followed a footpath sign uphill (105mins) until we reached a lane where we turned left and right over a stone step stile (111mins). After the stile we walked left uphill and over a ladder stile leading to moorland (120mins).
A group of rocks on a ridge on our left were identified by Peter B as Wormstones (128mins) beyond where we reached a Trig Point called Harry Hut (141mins).  From here we continued on a path which was slightly to the right and soon saw our immediate target, The Grouse, in the distance.
The path took us to a lay-by (161mins) where we turned left, passing a mobile cafe before reaching The Grouse at Chunal on our left (165mins). Refreshed by pints of Thwaites’ Bomber cask bitter at £3-10, we turned left out of The Grouse and crossed the main road from Glossop to Hayfield. We turned right up a road (169mins).
Having heard the call of peacocks in fields behind The Grouse, we now heard the sound of curlews circling ahead. We took the second left (175mins) at a public footpath sign along a stony track, taking the left fork where the path divided and stopping for lunch on a stone wall (183mins).
Continuing, we went left off the track to a drystone wall and over a wooden stile (190mins). This brought us to a T-junction  at a wooden footpath sign where we turned right (192mins). We passed a farm and turned right along a wide path (195mins). This took us through a gate to a road (205mins) where we turned left.
We passed Matley Moor Farm on our left and went straight ahead through a gate (210mins). After crossing a swollen stream by stepping stones we then took a path on the left (213mins) and crossed two wooden stiles to avoid the stream on our left (222mins). We emerged by a red phone box by the side of the cottages we had passed at the start of our walk.
We turned left and retraced our bootsteps back to the car park (229mins). Waiting for us were the non-walking drinkers and Geoff, who had walked some five miles from the Shiloh Road coming within sight of The Grouse but deciding that it was tantalisingly out of his range.  
While drinking pints of Banks’ cask bitter at £2-70, we decided that next week’s walk would start at 9.25pm from Disley rail station. After reaching the ridge at Black Rock we would be descending to cross the A6 and head uphill for The Fox at Brook Bottom, intending to arrive at 12.15pm. The walk would finish with drinks at The Dandy Cock, Disley, around 2.15pm.


04/07/2012

Disley

DISLEY STATION, DISLEY GOLF COURSE, STANLEY HALL, THE ROMPER, PEAK FOREST CANAL, GOYT VALLEY, ROMAN BRIDGE,ROMAN LAKES, BOTTOMS HALL, LINNET CLOUGH, MELLOR AND TOWNSCLIFFE GOLF COURSE, MARPLE CROSS, COBDEN EDGE, NEW MILLS GOLF COURSE, THE FOX AT BROOKBOTTOM, STRINES HALL, PEAK FOREST CANAL RE-VISITED, WHITE HORSE  AT DISLEY
Distance: Ten miles.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Weather: Cloudy, mostly dry with brief light shower of rain.
Walkers: Lawrie Fairman, Alan Hart and George Whaites.
B Walker: Geoff Spurrell.
Non-walking drinkers: John Eckersley and Tony Job.
Apologies: Peter Beal (poorly), Colin Davison (gone Scilly), George Dearsley (working), Frank Dudley (hospital appointment), Jock Rooney (Isle of Man).
Leader: Fairman. Driver: Whaites. Diarist: Hart.
Starting Point: Free car park at Disley rail station.
Starting time: 9.26am. Finishing time: 2.13pm.

Despite the usual pessimistic forecasts of heavy thundery showers, our trio of A walkers enjoyed a largely dry walk and some decent views from the high ground at Cobden Edge. We took in three golf courses, three historic halls and several pints of excellent Robbies’ cask bitter in what continues to be a poor apology for a summer.
There was none of the heavy rain which had been predicted, but that which had fallen in previous days caused us to tiptoe around some unseasonably muddy fields. On the wildlife front we saw a hunting kestrel being chased away by a belligerent magpie. We also saw a veritable menagerie of animals in the names of the pubs we passed and visited.
The route Lawrie had chosen proved to be a rollercoaster of climbs and descents with a happy ending – walking downhill from The Fox to the White Horse for the final three miles.
From Disley station car park we crossed the A6 and walked left uphill at the traffic lights opposite The Ram’s Head, turning right into Stanley Hall Lane (8mins). This led us into the grounds of Disley Golf Course, where we swung left to pass Stanley Hall on our right (13mins). This mock Tudor building seems to be in a state of decay and our leader surmised this could be a ploy by club members to let a listed building collapse and avoid costly renovation.
The hall, a 16th Century farmhouse with a 19th Century exterior, was classed as a Grade 11 building by English Heritage in 1983. This seems to have sounded its death knell.
We swung right downhill (16mins), followed a footpath sign across a fairway and exited through a wood. Beyond the trees we walked uphill with a chimney on our right (23mins). This brought us through a gate to a succession of wooden stiles and muddy fields, passing a farmhouse on our right (30mins). A stone step stile led us to a lane where we turned left (33mins).
Emerging from the lane called Turf Lea, we reached a road and turned right (35mins). This brought us to The Romper, a pub restaurant, which is for sale leasehold. We passed the pub on our left and instead of swinging left with the road we carried straight ahead into Hollinwood Lane (39mins). This took us past Clough Bridge Cottage and over a bridge to the far side of the Peak Forest Canal (44mins).
We turned left with the canal on our left until we reached a path on our right (53mins) which left the towpath and came out on the main Marple-New Mills road. We crossed the road and turned right along the road. Just before a left bend, we turned left at an easily-missed public footpath sign hidden by foliage (58mins).
This led us down wooden steps to the River Goyt. The steps were slippery, as George W found to his cost. Happily the rucksack broke his fall and there was no blubbing.
On the bank of the river we turned left and soon crossed right over Roman Bridge (64mins). We turned left with the Goyt now on our left and followed the signs along The Goyt Way for Roman Lakes. The path took us under the viaduct holding the Manchester-Sheffield railway line (69mins) and we turned right into Roman Lakes Leisure Park for Pietime (73mins).
We continued with the main lake behind a screen of shrub on our right until we reached a T junction in the pathway. We turned right towards Bottoms Hall, built by mill-owner Samuel Oldknow in 1800. After passing the hall on our right we took the right fork towards Cobden Edge (79mins).
As we climbed this stony track we swung right and saw Mellor Church on the skyline to our left. As the climb levelled we were momentarily alarmed by the sound of arrows thudding into wood a few yards to our left where a group of toxophilites were practising their archery skills.
We passed Linnet Clough scout campsite on our left (91mins) and entered Mellor and Townscliffe Golf Course, swinging right uphill (97mins). We took a path on the left towards trees (99mins), passing a yellow arrow on a disc affixed to a tree (103mins) before leaving the course through a gap stile (108mins).
We turned left uphill passing a new building on our left called The Barn with spectacular views over the valley below and behind us. At a T-junction we turned right, with Marple Cross on our left (114mins).
As we passed The Three Chimneys Cattery on our right, we were informed by our leader that this was where Edith Nesbit had been inspired to write The Railway Children 100 years ago. This novel was later turned into a 1970 movie in which few of us will easily forget the scene where Jenny Agutter removed her knickers to flag down a train.
Where was I ? Oh yes. As we descended Cobden Edge we saw a kestrel hunting in the manner which once gave it the name “windhover.” A magpie was clearly not as impressed as we were by this aeronautical display and he drove off the intruder.
On the far side of a gap stile we saw a memorial stone to Rachel Jane Lowe (1987-2003) inscribed “Rachel you will always be loved, forever missed and never forgotten.” I was unable to find the circumstances behind her untimely death.
From this stone we headed diagonally right downhill, through a gate into a field (129mins). We continued downhill, over a wooden stile, through an open gate and right over a wooden stile (132mins). Our route continued diagonally right downhill and then leftward uphill to a gate (134mins). We walked to the left of a pond to reach a lane and then turned right downhill.
At a road we turned right (138mins) into Castle Edge Road with New Mills Golf Course on our left. Just before the clubhouse (141mins) on our left we turned right towards Shaw Farm. At a fork we bore left along the minor path (147mins) and emerged at a minor road opposite a bench in memory of Eric Burdekin. We turned right (153mins) and reached The Fox (154mins) at 12.10pm to find Geoff already settled in a window seat with a pint of Robbies’ cask bitter at £2-70.
The beer was in excellent form as usual. On leaving we stopped at a picnic table outside for lunch before descending the stony path behind the car park. This led us to Strines Hall on our left (171mins). To our right was a lake with a dovecote.
We crossed the River Goyt, left Station Road and crossed the Marple-New Mills road again to head along a stony track (178mins). This led toward a canal bridge, but 30 yards before it we turned left over a wooden stile (184mins) and squeezed through a gap stile to reach the bank of the Peak Forest Canal (185mins).
We turned left with the canal on our right until we came to Higgins Clough Swing-bridge (203mins) which we reached seconds before it was opened to allow a narrowboat to pass. A left turn took us to the end of Hagg Bank Lane where we turned right and crossed the road by The Dandy Cock (209mins). We headed uphill with The Ram’s Head on our right and The Mousetrap on our left until we reached The White Horse on our right (211mins). The Robbies’ mild was available for £2-65 with bitter at £2-70.
Next week’s walk will start from The Little Mill Inn at Rowarth at 9.40am, stopping for refreshment around 12.30pm at The Grouse on the Glossop-Hayfield road and finishing back at The Little Mill at about 2.15pm.