Saturday, 25 February 2012
Derbyshire Caving Association AGM
Karen and I were at the DCA AGM from 10:00 to just
after 15:00 and although we had planned on a short walk, we decided
to just have a meal in the café and head for home due to the time of
day.
Sunday, 19 February 2012
Casualty Care Exam at EMRT's base in Hope Valley
I spent the morning
and part of the afternoon at Edale Mountain Rescue Team's base in
Hope taking the exam for the Casualty Care course.
Myself and four others from DCRO were there on the day for the
exam along with quite a few from Edale and some other Mountain Rescue Teams.
Everyone took and passed the
written part of the exam but things didn't go to well on the two
practical scenarios: a Trauma scenario and a Medical one.
Some failed on of their scenarios but were able to re-take and passed.
One failed both Trauma and Medical so that was it for him as you are
only allowed to fail one scenario and re-take on the day. I passed
both mine OK (Trauma was a caver who had fallen with abdominal
injuries and broken or dislocated shoulder, Medical was a woman at a
fund-raising event with a diabetic hypoglycaemia).
Saturday, 18 February 2012
A Walk Up Shining Tor
A wet start today but at least the forecast was
for an improvement later with dry but colder conditions as Karen and
I started with breakfast in the café in Monyash. While we were there
several walkers and back-packers arrived looking very wet.
We left Monyash in light rain after there had been
a heavy shower while we were eating breakfast and drove through
Buxton and onwards to the Goyt Valley, parking at the car park near
Errwood Reservoir.
As we were getting out of the car, the rain
stopped! What perfect timing!
We got our boots on and walked a gradually-rising
path on slippery grass near and to the east of Shooters Clough and
after passing through a stile next to a gate, continued up a broad
grassy ridge next to a drystone wall which was providing excellent
shelter from the strong and cold wind.
Although we were out of the mist and cloud, it
looked like the cloud base wasn't much higher and we would soon loose
the views across to the reservoir and to the open moorland to the
east but after we reached a junction with another drystone wall
heading towards Shining Tor to the north-west, the cloud base began
to rise.
After following the path to the summit of Shining
Tor, we found another couple just leaving after they had stopped at
the two wooden benches built at the corner of two walls which
provided perfect shelter from the wind, so we took advantage of the
seat and the shelter to have a short break and a bit of hot drink
from our flasks.
As we were sitting there, the cloud above began to
break up with bits of blue sky breaking through. I popped through a
small gate in the wall next to the trig point just the other side of
the wall to have a look at the view to the west and as I approached a
small crag, I found the wind was even stronger there as it was
diverted upwards by the rocky crag.
I returned back the few yards to the gate and then
we headed off to the north towards Cats Tor. Again we had quite a bit
of shelter from the wall we were following near and were grateful for
the large stone slabs which formed a drier path through the damp and
boggy ground,
We rose up and over the broad summit of Cats Tor
ad dropped down the opposite side continuing onwards until we arrived
at Pym Chair where the wall meets a wooden fence and minor road with
views to Windgather Rocks in the near distance to the north and the
Cheshire Plain to the west.
We made use of a hollow in the corner of the wall
and fence where, although we were sheltered from the strong cold
wind, we could still hear and feel it blowing through gaps between
the rocks in the wall. In the bottom of this shallow dip grew a small
clump of snowdrops.
After a short break and again, another hot drink,
we set off again to follow the minor road dropping down to the south
east until we reached a stile through the wooden fence on the south
side of the road.
The stile led to a path crossing Foxlow Edge and
after reaching the highest point, we dropped down the other side soon
arriving at a path dropping down through the woods to arrive at
Shooters Clough Bridge crossing a stream which flows into the very
full Errwood Reservoir.
Sunday, 12 February 2012
A Walk from Calver
As we were starting
today's walk from the village of Calver, it made sense to have
breakfast again at the Outside café at Calver Crossroads.
Afterwards, we walked
along the Bakewell road towards Hassop and after then walking down a
side road, we followed a public footpath passing some houses and
gardens to arrive in pasture land.
The route than led
across the slightly muddy fields due to the melting snow and above
freezing temperatures until we crossed a stile and began the steep
and slippery walk up the slope leading to the ridge following above
the Bakewell road with views over the adjacent Bramley Wood with
views across Calver village below to the north and Baslow further
away to the south-east.
There is a path along
the top of the ridge passing the edge of the steeply-banked wood on
one side and a gritstone drystone-wall on the other with a short
section of low arched passage through thisk rhododendron bushes.
Continuing along the
ridge, we dropped a short distance to cross Bramley Lane, then again
along the ridge-top path now passing Bank Wood.
We had a brief stop to
have a hot drink here then continued onwards to another lane, this
time School Lane, then along the Bakewell road again to arrive at
Hassop where we passed the entrance to Hassop Hall and walked up a
rising lane for about 750 metres before leaving the lane to cross a
field planted with a crop looking like brussels sprouts or something
very similar, following a very muddy route where a public footpath
crossed the field until we arrived at the hamlet of Rowland.
Saturday, 11 February 2012
The Great Ridge, Edale
As forecasted, it was a lovely day with dry and
sunny weather but cold.
We parked in the village of Hope and followed the
route leaving next to the school and onwards over the railway bridge
to the summit of Lose Hill. We stopped along the way when the icy
conditions made us decide to put on our Kahtoola Microspikes which
made progress much easier.
There were lovely views across the Hope and Edale
Valleys and it was surprisingly warm with the sun and little wind
despite the freezing weather.
We followed the path along the top of the great
ridge with icy sections making us graeful for the Microspikes, then
after passing Back Tor and the top of Mam Tor, we dropped down from
Mam Nick to Windy Knoll where we stopped for a snack.
Afterwards, we crossed the road and then followed
the tarmaced track passing Rowter Farm then onto the unsurfaced track
which follows where there was more snow and ice, making sure we got
out of the way as a small convoy of four-wheel drives with their “One
Life Live It” stickers trundled past.
Leaving the track at the signpost for The
Limestone Way, our route crossed some fields then down a very icy
Cave Dale to the village of Castleton where we sat on the seat around
a tree in the Market Square and had another snack and hot drink.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
A Walk Near Winster
Last night it had
snowed and we woke up to find several inches of snow had settled so
rather then drive somewhere we had a walk from home.
After walking down
most of Main Street towards Wensley, we followed the public footpath
at Painters Lane then across farmland and through a section of Clough
Wood to again cross some pastureland where a number of ponies were
trying to find grazing beneath the layer of snow.
After crossing a style
in a barbed wire fence where there were loads of animal tracks in the
snow: mainly rabbit and deer, the path led steeply up a wooded slope
then contoured along a further section of Clough Wood in a large arc
arriving at an unsurfaced track of Clough Lane.
Following Clough Lane
westwards passing some farm buildings where there were surprisingly
old lambs for the time of year, we arrived at the narrow minor road
leading from the nearby village of Birchover where there are an old
set of stocks interestingly by the side of the road by a house wall.
Our route now followed
across more fields near Birchover then at a path junction turned
southwards crossing more fields to arrive again at Birchover Lane
near the the road from Wensley to Winster.
Saturday, 4 February 2012
Biggin Dale, Wolfescote Dale and Beresford Dale from Hartington
The morning
temperature was well below zero degrees centigrade as I left Karen at
home with things to do and drove to the nearby village of Hartington.
As I was earlyish at
09:30, there were plenty of places to park in the village centre car
park and after getting my boots on, I left the village centre with
its frozen duck pond to walk up the hill past the very old and
impressive Hartington Hall, which is a Youth Hostel, then passed
through a gate into some fields.
The ground was frozen
rock-hard as I followed the marked path through squeeze stiles then
onto the unsurfaced track called Highfield Lane.
I passed a large flock
of fieldfares in the field the other side of the bordering drystone
wall and after walking along the lane for about 2 kilometres the lane
joins a minor road very near to the top end of Biggin Dale.
My route was through a
gate from the minor road and then down Biggin Dale where I stopped in
the shelter of a small branching dale as there was a very cold wind
blowing, to have lunch.
Afterwards I continued
along Biggin Dale to join the larger Wolfescote Dale where the two
dales join.
Wolfescote Dale has
part of the River Dove flowing along it and I turned to the
north-west to follow the river and the dale to where the dale runs
out at a large flat field.
The route followed a
public right of way across the field with the often wet and muddy
sections frozen.
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