TADDINGTON, MILLERS DALE, MONSAL TRAIL, WYE
VALLEY
Distance: 10 miles
Difficulty: Strenuous
Weather: Blue skies and warm sunshine
Walkers: George Whaites, George Dearsley,
Alan Hart, Colin Davison, Tom Cunliffe, Jock Rooney and Tips, Lawrie Fairman,
Apologies: Pete Beal (walking in the
Lakes), Micky Barrett (China), John Laverick (man flu), Julian Ross (cycling in
Belgium), Mike Walton (Sri Lanka), Geoff Spurrel (Canaries), Malc Halley (working), Ken Sparrow (Cheltenham)
Leader: Davison Diarist: Dearsley
Starting Point: The Queens Arms, Taddington
Starting Time: 9.47am. Finishing Time: 2.30pm
And so to Taddington, a Derbyshire village
1,100 feet above sea level, that could look charming if it made the effort. It
grew around farming and quarrying for limestone and lead. From 1863 to 1967 the
village was served by Millers Dale railway station, some 2 miles away, which
was on the Midland Railway's extension of the Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and
Midlands Junction Railway.
Its main attractions are Five Wells, a
chambered tomb topped by a cairn, and the 14th-century church, with the remains
of a 7th-century Celtic cross in the churchyard.
We didn’t bother.
Notable local buildings include Taddington
Manor and Marlborough House.
Fields around the settlement show evidence
of both Celtic lynchett terraces, and of Mediaeval strip farming. Kinky.
What first greeted the Wanderers, however,
was a pair of skinny, tight-wearing legs sticking out from the wall of the
Queens Arms, meeting point, like some undernourished burglar making his escape
through a ventilation shaft.
I think the members of the Tidy Village
committee should have a word.
Queens Arms...and legs
We set off at 9.47am, turning right coming
from the pub car park and walking up the main road.
After 120 yards we turned right onto a
footpath across some fields, climbed a wall and turned right again.
Crisp and uneven
This brought us to the A6 which we crossed
and went straight on.
At a crossroads of tracks we went straight
on again, over a stile and down a steep embankment which Mr Davison described
as a “dip” but which, if snowed over, would have tested Franz Klammer.
We went through a gate and onto a track
where we turned left.
After 50 yards we went right, climbed a
wall and found ourselves facing an ice covered pond.
The opportunity to revisit Mr Davison’s
Jesus impression was too good to miss.
You may remember the time when the
Wanderers’ answer to Evel Knievel tried to walk on ice on the canal near Marple
golf club and ended up soaked.
Here he was a bit more circumspect and
after an ominous cracking noise retraced his steps immediately. What a wuss.
Mr Davison walks on water…for a second or
two.
We negotiated a wall and were afforded a
wonderful view of a valley. Cressbrook Hall was away on our right.
We walked along a limestone wall which Mr
Rooney described as “Chasing the Devil” because we were actually following a
lead mine’s “vein”.
This was Millers Dale, a popular beauty
spot in the Peak District of England, much of the area being preserved as a
Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Nearby is Ravenstor and Cheedale, both
popular with rock-climbers. Just to the north of the Dale lies the village of
Wormhill and the lesser known valleys of Peter Dale and Monk's Dale.
The local landmark is the viaduct, first
built by the Midland Railway in 1866. Increasing traffic meant that a second
viaduct parallel to the first was built in 1905, increasing the number of
tracks to four.
The area is of great interest to
geologists, particularly where the strata have been exposed by quarries and
railway cuttings.
In
Station Quarry, which is owned by the Naturalists Trust, two layers of
limestone can be seen, separated by a bed of shale. At one point there is a dip
in the lower layer, possibly from a watercourse, millions of years ago. This is
filled with the shale and a large limestone boulder can be seen within it.
Elsewhere in the area there are signs of lava flows from long-ago volcanic
activity.
Over the top
As we descended what looked like a harmless
track Mr Rooney and Mr Davison were both fallers.
We went down some steps and turned right
onto an old railway track.
This, indeed, was the former Buxton to
Matlock line which later became the main rail route to London.
It is better known now, of course, as the
Monsal Trail, about 8.5 miles (13.7 km) in length, starting at the Topley Pike
junction (in Wye Dale, 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Buxton) and running to Coombs viaduct, 1 mile (1.6 km) south-east
of Bakewell.
It
follows the valley of the River Wye and runs parallel to the A6.
For many years the Trail could not trace
the trackbed as rail tunnels had been closed for safety reasons,
such as at Monsal Head and Cressbrook, meaning that the Trail was diverted.
The tunnels were walked by Julia Bradbury
as part of BBC TV's Railway Walks: The Peak Express.
Many resulting access points and diversion
paths were unsuitable for those using cycles or wheelchairs or with difficulty
walking due to steep uneven stone steps or narrow paths.
Plans to make the tunnels safe and re-open
them to the public were given the go-ahead at a cost of £3.78m and the tunnels
were opened officially for use on 25 May 2011 at a ceremony at the Headstone
Viaduct (they had actually been open 12 days earlier).
As a
consequence, the Trail is now virtually level (though the former diversions are
still usable, if desired).
Millers Dale
Below, to the left, is the notorious Litton
Mill, downstream from Millers Dale station, where orphans from major cities
were abused by Ellis Needham, with the graves of many to be found in local
churchyards.
Here the Wanderers split into three. The
main body, led by Mr Davison, took a path on the right, over the first two
tunnels.
Mr Rooney took a path to the left.
Your diarist and Mr Cunliffe decided to
walk the tunnels and were afforded the sight of hundreds of ice stalactites.
Tom - That’s a long one….
The splintered groups converged about 500
yards after the second tunnel and entered the third tunnel - Headstone - as
one.
Train drivers back in the day used to say when
they emerged from this tunnel (coming the
other way to our walk) that they thought they were “in the Alps”.
As this was long before Judith Chalmers was
born, we must assume their knowledge of the Alps was limited to picture books.
But the simile is fully justified.
A few hundred yards from the third tunnel
we took a path to the left following a sign which said “Little Longstone”. We
reached a road and turned left, passing an expensive barn conversion on our
right, to arrive at the Pack Horse (which opened in 1787, incidentally) at
12.03pm.
There was an array of guest beers,
including Kipling (ABV 5.2) at £3.35, Lord Maples and Wild Swan both at £3.10,
Black Sheep at £3.05 and Jaipur at an eye-watering £3.55.
We left the pub at 12.50pm, turning right
and passing the rather pretty church.
Mr Fairman recreates a scene from the 1966
classic horror series Dr Terror’s House of Horrors.
Film buffs may recall Tarot card reading
oddball Peter Cushing - all scary eyebrows and German accent - foretells the
fates of five rail commuters in this trend-setting horror film. While the movie
never quite tops its jaw-dropping early episode in which legendary BBC Radio DJ
Alan Freeman wrestles with a deadly vine with plans for world-domination, it
comes close with the episode “Disembodied Hand”.
Christopher Lee is perfectly cast as a
pompous, pretentious art critic, particularly fond of lambasting the work of
artist Michael Gough. Subsequently he’s hounded by Gough, even after he runs
him over and causes the artist to lose a hand.
We passed the Monsal Head Hotel on our left
and went down some steps to our left. Lunch was declared at 1.15pm at a
weir but Cunliffe Time was observed as
we set off again at 1.22pm.
Mr Davison in a rather effeminate pose
We crossed a bridge and found ourselves in
the Wye Valley.
We approached the A6 again, crossed it and
went straight over and up a hill following a sign saying “Taddington”.
This was a long and quite exhausting climb
that took its toll on a few Wanderers.
We reached what appeared to be the top at
2.05pm only to find that a further climb was required and we swung right up a
new incline to reach a road.
We walked on to a T-junction where we
turned right and the outskirts of Taddington hove into view.
We reached the cars at 2.30pm, de-booted
and entered the Queen’s Arms where Chatsworth Gold was £3.20 and Barnsley
Bitter £3.
A sign by the fire said it all……
1765....and all that
Next week’s walk will start at The Cock,
Whaley Bridge at 9.30am. The halfway point will be the Roebuck Inn at Chapel. Malc
Halley will be in Corfu. Happy Wandering!
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