August 16, 2017.
RIDGEGATE RESERVOIR,
MACCLESFIELD FOREST, SHUTLINGSLOE, CRAG INN AT WILDBOARCLOUGH, PIGGFORD NATURE
RESERVE, THE HANGING GATE INN AT HIGHER SUTTON, THE GRITSTONE TRAIL AND THE
LEATHERS’ SMITHY AT LANGLEY
Distance: Seven
miles.
Difficulty: Moderate.
Weather: Breezy
but dry and warm with occasional
sunshine.
A walkers: Colin
Davison, Lawrie Fairman, , Jock Rooney with Tips, Chris Owen, Steve Kemp Julian Ross and Hugh
Harriman
Leader and Scribe
(3rd reserve) Lawrie Fairman
S.O.B. walkers: no
report.
Apologies: Mickey
Barrett (yachting Scotland), Tom Cunliffe ( Achilles tendon problem), George
Dearsley (living in Turkey), Alan hart (hols), Peter Beal (entertaining) George
Waites ( recovering from hip op),others unknown to me
Starting point: Roadside
next to Ridgegate Reservoir, Langley, Macclesfield.
Starting time: 9.36am.Finishing time: 1.40pm.
This is a popular outing with WWs good pub, beer only! £3 a
pint (c.f. Leather’s Smithy at £3.95.)
great views, lovely countryside. To quote
Alan from the plagiarised report of last year It left many of our group asking: why don’t we use this route more
often ?
During our journey we passed the former homes of
ex-Chancellor George Osborne and England rugby captain Fran Cotton.
Walking with Ridgegate Reservoir on our right, we headed
uphill and turned right at the sign for Wincle (4mins). After 40 yards we
turned left along a stony track and turned left to follow the footpath. This
brought us to a T-junction (11mins) where we turned right. We turned right
again at a sign for Shutlingsloe (14mins).
This is a distinctive
hill which can be seen peeping above the skyline for miles in every direction.
Its shape gives it the ironic title Cheshire’s Matterhorn. At 1,660 feet it is
Cheshire’s third highest peak behind Shining Tor and Whetstone Ridge.
We turned right again at another sign (26mins), went through
a kissing gate (28mins) and ascended a set of stone flags. This brought us to a
metal kissing gate (38mins) and two alternative routes. The younger members i.e
messers Davidson, Owen, Harriman and Ross headed right for the summit and the
magnificent views it afforded.
The rest followed their leader as he walked over the left
shoulder of Shutlingsloe, going through a wooden gate (46mins) and a wooden
stile (52mins). We went over another wooden stile followed by a footbridge
(56mins) to reach a lane and turn right (58mins). After crossing a cattle-grid
(62mins) we reached a road and turned right (68mins).
This brought us to The Crag Inn on our right where we
stopped for Pietime (70mins). Tips was overjoyed when the rest of her flock,
who had been to the top of Shutlingsloe, were reunited with their chums for
snacks and port.
After leaving the bench in the pub car park we turned right
and immediately headed right through a wooden gate marked with a yellow arrow
(71mins). There followed a series of wooden gates, all well signed with red
dinner plate-sized markers, through a series of fields. Eventually we came via
a stone step stile to a lane (93mins) where we turned left.
We walked down the lane with Piggford Nature Reserve on our
right. When we reached a road we turned right
(101mins) and turned right again at a kissing gate marked with a yellow
arrow (104mins). We went through a metal gate and over a footbridge (109mins)
into a field full of exclusively black sheep.
On our right was the former home of David Cameron’s right-hand man,
George Osborne, whose Tatton constituency lies nearby (115mins)
We went left over a wooden stile (116mins) and left through
a wooden gate to head uphill (121mins). Another wooden stile (126mins brought
us to the path leading down to The Hanging Gate Inn. Although your diarist
reached the pub (132mins) at 12.02pm, he had already been beaten to the
recently-opened bar by the five-strong
S.O.B. team.
The pub is nearly 400
years old and has stunning views at the back from its modern decking area,
where we enjoyed pints of Hydes’ Original for £3. A former landlady was Luda
from Estonia and the current licensees are Ernst Van Zyl and his partner Sarah
Richmond. They also run The Lord Clyde at Kerridge.
After slaking our thirsts we left the back garden by a gate
and followed the well-worn path through a field to exit by a metal gate
(134mins). This brought us to a lane where we turned left and then headed right
over a stone step stile at a wooden public footpath sign (138mins). We stopped
for lunch just before a gate near a wooden farm building (146mins).
Resuming we went through two metal gates (147mins), a wooden
kissing gate and a farmyard, following a wooden footpath sign marked with a
yellow arrow and the footprint symbol of The Gritstone Trail (150mins)
We went through two kissing gates to cross a road (152mins),
crossed a field and went through a kissing gate to reach a track where we
turned left. This brought us to a gate where we turned right and passed the
former home of Sale and England rugby legend Fran Cotton on our right with a
duck-pond on our left.
A few yards further we left The Gritstone Trail to turn
right down a path leading to a wooden gate(162mins) and crossed a wooden
footbridge (163mins). This brought us to a track where we turned left in the
direction of Langley (166mins). This took us to cars from where 3 of us,
Fairman, Owen and Kemp adjourned to Sutton Hall where the beer at £3.25 was a
saving on the Smithy
Next week’s walk will start at 9.50am from car park in the
centre of Longnor calling at around 12ish at the Staffordshire Knot in Sheen final drinks may be taken at
the Weatherspoon’s in Buxton.
Happy wandering !
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