December 7, 2022
MELLOR BOUNDARY WALK
BRABYN’S PARK, MARPLE BRIDGE, LONGHURST LANE, TOPCLIFFE LANE, MILL BROW, HOLLYWOOD END, SMITHY LANE, CLOUGHEND, PISTOL FARM, GUN ROAD, SHILOH ROAD, POLE LANE, CASTLE EDGE FARM, SHAW FARM, FOX INN AT BROOK BOTTOM, STRINES STATION, ROMAN LAKES, MELLOR MILL, LOW LEA ROAD, MARPLE BRIDGE
Distance: 10.5 milesTotal ascent/descent: 1,550 ft
Difficulty: Moderate
Weather: Cold and sunny
Walkers: Micky Barrett, Peter Beal, Andy Blease, Tom Cunliffe with Daisy, Jock Rooney with Milly, Julian Ross, Dean Taylor, Dave Willetts, Simon Williams,
Alternative walkers: Colin Davison
Apologies: Alan Hart and Chris Owen (both car maintenance duties), Cliff Worthington (cold), Mark Enright (w***ing), Alastair Cairns (fitting solar panels), Keith Walsh (hospital duties), George Dearsley (Turkey)
Leader: BealDiarist: Beal
Starting point: Brabyn's Park, Marple Bridge
Start time: 9.40amFinishing time: 2.30pm
The temperature was a couple of degrees below freezing as nine Wanderers gathered at Brabyn's Park and stayed not much above that for most of the day. But we enjoyed near-cloudless skies with no wind, which made for almost perfect walking conditions and some striking views on this quite lengthy but unchallenging walk.
We first tackled the ten-and-a-half-mile Mellor Boundary Walk in July this year and it was repeated by popular demand. The route was conceived in May 1992 by the Mellor Society around the parish boundary, although the route strays occasionally in to Derbyshire.
Such a walk around a parish used to be known as ‘beating the bounds’
We left the Brabyn's Park free car park, turned left at the road, and crossed at the pedestrian lights in to Marple Bridge Town Street. This led us to Longhurst Lane and at the brow of the hill, where a postbox was set in to the wall, we turned left then immediately right in to the roughly-surfaced Topcliffe Lane.
At the top of the lane at some cottages we bore left along a track signed Mill Brow. We soon came to a cobbled courtyard at cottages and went straight on, immediately taking a narrow path on the left. This went through a gate with the wooded valley of Mill Brook below us on the left. A second gate brought us in to an open field and we descended to reach a stile.
We crossed this to reach a track descending from our right. We turned left and left again at another surfaced track to cross a bridge over Mill Brook and ascend a surfaced lane. This emerged on a minor road opposite the Hare and Hounds pub in the hamlet of Mill Brow (2 miles). This has been declared a protected Heritage site.
We turned right up the road here and where a road with a ‘no through road’ sign branched off on the left, we swung right to cross a bridge and took an unsigned track on the left past cottages at Hollywood End.
We went through a gate in to fields, where a distinctive green and white Peak and Northern Footpath Society sign on the stream bank pointed us towards Cown Edge via Ludworth Moor. The path went through a garden in front of two picturesque cottages and soon after we ignored a track in front of us and turned left, following a footpath sign, to drop down to cross the stream on a small wooden bridge. The path climbed to a stile and through newly-planted saplings to a gate.
At the next lop-sided stile we ignored a small gate in front of us and bore left up a grassy field and right through a gate at the top, where we turned right to reach Smithy Lane. Immediately opposite was another path alongside farm buildings which we took, fording a stream and climbing on an indistinct path to skirt a house at Cloughend.
We reached a minor road and immediately took a track on the right. Ice was still covering the road here and Tom took quite a crashing fall on to the tarmac, but regained his feet and bravely pronounced himself unscathed.
This track swung right after a short distance but we took an unsigned path uphill on the left that brought us to Gun Road which links New Mills and Charlesworth (3 miles). We continued along the track opposite on a diversion on to Ludworth Moor that reduced the amount of road walking that was to follow.
Pie time was declared at a sport with extensive views towards Greater Manchester shortly before we took the first path signed on our right and crossed a small ladder stile to cross moorland, took another stile and then a large crumbling wall stile on our right.
We crossed the field to cross yet another stile to join a track that brought us back on to Gun Road opposite Pistol Farm. We now faced an unavoidable mile-and-a-half road walk along Gun Road and Shiloh Road but dispatched it in 25 minutes. It took us past a development of smart apartments that some will remember as the Moorfield Arms pub before its closure many years ago.
It brought us to a road junction known locally as Five Lane Ends (5.5 miles), where we took the track immediately ahead of us marked on maps as Pole Lane.
We were alarmed here by the appearance of a large group of the species I believe are known as ‘ramblers’,arriving from the direction of Mellor, prompting concerns that should they arrive at the Fox Inn before us drinks might be unduly delayed.
We pressed on promptly along the track, which took us past a covered reservoir on the left and arrived at a junction of tracks (6 miles). We went straight on, on a surfaced road and almost immediately turned right towards Castle Edge farm.
We took a stile on the left, through a small gate. The path went through a series of small fields and over four stiles, after the last of which, at the foot of a copse of trees, we swung left downhill towards Shaw Farm across a field badly rutted by cattle.
At the farm buildings we crossed a stile in to the yard and at the other side went over a stile and took a gate along a track straight ahead. This soon brought us to a tricky stile on the left which we crossed in to a wood and descended steeply to cross a wooden plank bridge. We climbed the bank opposite and went through a gap in the wall to descend on a stepped path, skirting a house, and going down a drive that brought us to the Fox Inn in the hamlet of Brookbottom (7 miles).
Here we were pleased to be joined by Wanderer Colin, who was completing a six-mile round trip from his home in High Lane and who accompanied us on our ongoing route as far as Strines station.
It has to be reported that some pints of Robinson’s Unicorn had to be sent back and replaced here – a not-unknown occurrence at this pub where beer doesn’t turn over quickly at early lunchtimes.
Resuming, we turned right out of the pub and immediately right again down a track signed as being the route of the Goyt Way, a 10-mile route between Whaley Bridge and the Etherow Country Park in Compstall near Marple. This descended to the railway station at Strines, where we crossed under the tracks on to cobbles.
At the end of the cobbles we took a track on the right, again signed Goyt Way. This climbed steadily to re-cross the Manchester to Sheffield railway line over a bridge and at a track junction we bore left after some buildings. At another junction of paths we kept right.
We soon reached the Roman Lakes on our right (9 miles), the former mill ponds for Samual Oldknow’s nearby textile mill
We continued along the good track, soon reaching the remains of the mill, the largest of its kind in the world when it was built in1793.
We turned right through the site along Bottoms Mill Road, which climbed before descending down Low Lea Road to the top of Marple Town Street (10.5 miles). From here it was a short walk back to our cars, although your diarist and Jock called at the Norfolk Arms for refreshment
Next week’s walk, as Alan has already circulated, will end in the Wanderers’ Christmas lunch at the Boar’s Head in Higher Poynton (SK12 1TE) and the walk will start from outside there at 9.45am. Alan asks that we park on the road near the pub or around the corner in Anson Road to avoid filling the car park up. We aim to call at the White Horse in Disley around noon.
Happy Wandering!
Pictures by Simon Williams