LITTLE HAYFIELD, CALICO TRAIL, RIVER SETT,
HAYFIELD, SNAKE PASS TRAIL, MIDDLE MOOR, CARR MEADOW, CHUNAL MOOR, MATLEY MOOR,
KNARRS FARM, KINGS CLOUGH HEAD FARM, LITTLE MILL AT ROWARTH, CLOUGH MILL AND
LANTERN PIKE AT LITTLE HAYFIELD
Distance: Nine miles.
Difficulty: Easy.
Weather: Occasional snow showers mingled
with blue skies and sunshine.
Walkers: Mickey Barrett, Peter Beal, Tom
Cunliffe, Malcolm Halley, Alan Hart and John Laverick.
B walkers: Tony Job, Peter Morrall and
Geoff Spurrell.
Apologies: George Dearsley (w*^king),
Lawrie Fairman (proper poorly), Jock Rooney (w*^king in South Africa, Julian
Ross (w*^king at home), Ken Sparrow (domestic duties), Colin Davison (Brittany) and George Whaites.
Leader: Beal. Diarist: Hart.
Starting point: Car park of The Lantern Pike,
Little Hayfield.
Starting time: 10.02am Finishing time:
2.40pm.
Despite the official arrival of spring, the
weather conditions were still wintry with The Peak District under a blanket of
snow. Consequently the proposed venue of Errwood Reservoir car park was
transferred to Little Hayfield, where conditions were deemed to be more
conducive to walking.
Lawrie’s
wife Wendy had informed your diarist that our Geordie boy was suffering from
reflux problems and was unable to come out to play. It was therefore agreed
that Peter B should take over the mantle of leader as a local lad who
understands the mysteries of maps.
The change involved a delayed start while
your diarist rang around informing people of the new venue.
The list of apologies shows that three of
our regulars were w*^king, a disgusting habit that most of us gave up years
ago, so our numbers were down from the record levels of recent weeks. Those who
did sally forth were rewarded with a mixture of sunshine and snow showers.
Kinder with its white mantle
From the Lantern Pike we turned right and
then right again after 100 yards into Slack Lane. We went left (4mins) at a
public footpath sign which was the start of The Calico Trail. This took us
through theMay Queen playing fields and over the River Sett (15mins) near the
start of the Sett Valley Trail.
We crossed Market Street to the right of
The Pack Horse (20mins) and passed shops which had undergone a retrospective
for filming a new six-part series called “The Village” starting on BBC next
Sunday
Arthur Lowe's plaque. I wonder who lived here??? Don’t tell him Pike!
The series, starring Maxine Peake and John Simm, and written by Bafta-winner Peter Moffatt, begins in 1914 when the first bus to stop in the village arrives to great excitement. It continues to tell the story of succeeding generations to present day. It has been filmed in Hayfield and Chapel-en-le-Frith.
The television theme continued when we
passed a row of terraced cottages on our left which overlooked Hayfield Cricket
Club. On the wall was a blue plaque erected by Derbyshire County Council dedicated
to Arthur Lowe (1915-1982), who was born and raised in one of the cottages. He was
known and loved by millions in his role as Captain Mainwaring in the BBC sitcom
“Dad’s Army.”
Although this was featured on the plaque,
no mention was made of an earlier part he played with distinction which brought
him to the attention of TV audiences. From 1961 until 1966 he appeared in
Coronation Street as the pompous shopkeeper and lay preacher Leonard Swindley.
His biographer reveals that Lowe despised
Corrie but even when he left the show it was to appear in a spin-off from the
soap entitled “Pardon The Expression,” which was Swindley’s catchphrase.
Lowe started his acting career with the
Manchester Repertory Company earning £5 a week, later appearing in West End
musicals “Call Me Madam”, “Pal Joey” and “The Pyjama Game.”
He also had a small part in the movie
classic “Kind Hearts and Coronets” (1949) in which he played a reporter from
Tit Bits magazine !
Dad’s Army ran from 1968-1977, and between
filming Lowe continued to tread the boards with his actress wife Joan. When
they toured coastal theatres, the couple used an 1885 former steam yacht called
Amazon, which they had bought as a houseboat and converted into a sea-going
vessel, as their floating base.
Lowe also appeared in movies, performing in
a surreal film by Spike Milligan called “The Bed Sitting Room,” (1969) in which
he mutated into a parrot; as a drunken butler opposite Peter O’Toole in “The
Ruling Class,” (1972); and as one of Vincent Price’s victims in the horror film
“Theatre of Blood” (1973).
Lowe also played Micawber in the BBC
serialisation of “David Copperfield” and provided several voices for the
children’s “Mr Men” series, which he also narrated.
He was a heavy smoker and his favourite
tipple was gin and ginger ale with a slice of cucumber. In later years, he
became an alcoholic, suffering a stroke in his dressing room at The Alexandra
Theatre, Birmingham, where he was appearing with Joan in a tour of “Home At
Seven.”
Lowe died the next day, aged 66.
Surprisingly his wife Joan did not attend his low-key funeral because she was
appearing in “Home At Seven” in Belfast and felt “the show must go on.”
In his
youth, Lowe had been a member of Hayfield Cricket Club. During the hugely
successful run of Dad’s Army he recruited his cast colleagues to appear in a
charity match which was attended by thousands of fans. The ageing Private
Godfrey fielded at third slip in an armchair. Happy days.
After passing the plaque we turned left at
a public bridleway at the start of the Snake Pass trail (28mins). Thus began a
steady ascent which took us on to Middle Moor. Before we reached the
distinctive white shooting lodge, we turned left following a signpost towards
Glossop (58mins).
A bridge too far?
A bridge too far?
This led us to Carr Meadow and a wooden
bridge over a stream called Hollingworth Clough. On the far side in the lee of
the wind, we stopped for Pietime at 11.30am (88mins). Resuming, we turned right
uphill on to Chunal Moor and reached the road between Hayfield and Glossop
(115mins). We crossed it and followed the sign for Charlesworth.
After cresting a hill we turned left at a
public footpath sign (122mins). As we turned we passed an intriguing wheelie
bin which was tied with a strap marked “Girls On Tour” and a black feather boa.
The path led us on to Mattley Moor.
Just
before Knarrs Farm we turned right, crossed a stone step stile, and turned left
(124mins). Another stile brought us to a road, where we turned left downhill
(136mins). Passing Kings Clough Head Farm on our right (145mins) we crossed a
stream and forked left (150mins).
Ignoring the first footbridge on our left
we continued then crossed the second. After fording the stream to reach its
left bank again, we turned left over a wooden stile marked with a yellow arrow
(158mins).
“Pie times over you’ve had your 30 seconds!”
“Pie times over you’ve had your 30 seconds!”
The path brought us out by a red phone box
where we turned left for a few yards and then right to follow a public footpath
sign by the side of large stone in the wall which was inscribed: “Sunday school
for children of all denominations 1824.”
This path brought us to the Little Mill Inn
at Rowarth (162mins) where the Banks bitter at £2-75 was not to everyone’s
taste. This did not prevent a second pint from being consumed.
Leaving the Little Mill, we turned right
uphill, passing the giant watermill on our right. Where the lane forked we went
right (173mins) and continued a gradual climb until we went through a gate and
turned immediately right (192mins). This route took us along the shoulder of
the hill called Lantern Pike as we dropped down to the pub of that name,
passing Clough Mill and w*^king George.
The pub was the third site of TV interest
of the day, for it was here in 1960 that Tony Warren penned the early episodes
of Coronation Street, while renting a house in Little Hayfield. One of the
parts was for a character called Elsie Tanner which he had written for a local
actress named Pat Phoenix.
Here the Timothy Taylor Landlord was deemed
to be in fine form, as it should be at £3-22 a pint, and Tom kindly laid on a
liberal supply of chips to sustain us.
We later learned that the B team had caught
a bus to The Ram’s Head at Disley from where they had walked uphill into Lyme
Park, past Lyme Hall and down to Higher Poynton, crossing the Macclefield Canal
en route. After drinks in The Boar’s Head, they had then walked to Wilfred Wood
Wetherspoons in Hazel Grove for further refreshment at the end of a walk of
around five miles.
Next week’s A walk will start at 9.30am
from The Soldier Dick at Furness Vale, with a midway livener at The Dandy Cock,
Disley, around 12.15pm and an anticipated 2.15pm finish back at The Soldier
Dick.