For newcomers

At the bottom of each post there is the word "comments". If you click on it you will see comments made by followers, and if you follow the instructions you may also comment and I always welcome that. I have found many people overlook this part of the blog which is often more interesting than the original post!

My blog nick-name is SIR HUGH. I'm not from the aristocracy - my middle name is Hugh which relates to the list of 282 hills in Scotland compiled by Sir Hugh Munro in 1891. I climbed my last one (Sgurr Mor) on 28th June 2009

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Tuesday 2 April 2019

OS Grid 38 (northing) SD 305 380 to TA 269 379 - Day 9

Saturday 30th March 2019 - Leeds to Barwick-in-Elmet

After a good breakfast in the hotel we crossed the road to a petrol station/supermarket providing us with sandwiches for later.

We found many green patches through the Leeds suburbs, and if not we walked on quieter residential roads with only occasional life threatening crossings of major thoroughfares. Part of the Dalesway Link followed Meanwood Beck through attractive woodland and into Meanwood Park. At Tunnel How Hill we were puzzled by endless cars coming back and forth along what is a cul-de-sac road. The reason turned out to be a huge David Lloyd leisure centre with hundreds of cars parked. Long ago, after spending much time in the gym I decided the best exercise for walking is walking.

Crossing the sports ground at  Tunnel How Hill we chatted with a local walker who pointed out mysterious tree planting on this open space which is used by dog walkers and children as a playground, but in time will be transformed into a mini forest - we wondered why. The halfway mark of our straight sea-to-sea line crossed this open space so it will be all downhill from here? Surprisingly we watched a red kite diving, gliding and swooping overhead. They must be getting fairly widespread now.

Roundhay Park was impressive in scale and ambience with its two large lakes and wide open spaces. Here we had a coffee break at the Mansion café. Soon after we left suburban Leeds behind to continue on country paths to Barwick.

We waited for twenty minutes for a bus back to Leeds and then the train to Skipton and our cars awaiting at BC's friends. We had had two days of excellent walking full of interest. I reckon the remainder of this route will be much quieter, but we will see.














This was not far from the hotel

On the Daleswsy Link - Meanwood Beck

David Lloyd Leisure at Tunnel How Hill

Blackthorn reigns this year


Colourful and attractive roundabout belying the busy traffic endlessly rushing past

A sad old SAAB. I remember watching Eric Carlson dominating the rally scene in the 60s in one of these


Roundhay Park

BC waiting for our coffee at The Mansion Café in Roundhay Park

Wide open space in the park

The lower lake in Roundhay Park - I couldn't see the other end from here - massive

Fortunately there was a trodden path through this newly ploughed field

The famous maypole in Barewick-in-Elmet - it is 87ft. high!

7 comments:

  1. Hi Conrad
    I've caught up! You seem to be as active as ever and have returned to the magic of backpacking. Well done!
    Lots of nostalgia, hopefully of a positive kind.
    All best wishes.
    Martin

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  2. Phreerunner - Not as active as you! I'm sorry to say that most of that nostalgia was not particularly pleasant - I had a somewhat disturbed childhood, until I was about 12 years old when things began to improve.

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  3. Thornville is of course the correct name. An unusual error on my part given that words like that, dating back to a period of very absorbent memory, usually stick. As time passes this ability reverses itself. Thus I am still able to remember hymn verses by the hundred, yet not the words of songs I've learned during the last three years. The difference being that the hymns arrived orally (often from Mother and from church services) whereas the Schubert, Mozart stuff has been learned from scores. In my own defence the score material isn't just limited to words

    Your satchel wasn't Rexine (which was mainly used for covering furniture in those days) but a coarsely woven khaki fabric covered with transparent plastic. It also had tape-finished seams. It was far more capacious than my satchel and fairly inflexible.

    I'm glad you've made that small correction about the date. My subsequent inference (that I arrived at Thornville in 1943) just didn't seem right. The war was still raging quite fiercely then and I think I would have been dimly conscious of that.

    I note in another re-comment you refer to your childhood as disturbed. I would agree on my own behalf. However in my case I'm fairly sure I wasn't truly aware of this at the time. Or, if so, only in a general way. The contributing causes only became apparent decades later and via means other than just memory. Is that also your impression? Perhaps any further discussion on this should proceed via emails.

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  4. Sorry. The above comment should be attached to your previous post.

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  5. Your typo in the last image brings to mind a long gone post which elicited a number of place-names with curious connotations -
    a surprising amount of rus in urbe in this walk - not just these two posts, but altogether !
    You have been lucky with the weather - winter here (I was in Newcastle for three days this week and it was savage)

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  6. Gimmer - how do you know it wasn't intended - no further comment.

    We try to wslk on footpsths rsther than roads and thereby often discover green spaces in urbsn areas.

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  7. that's what maypoles are for, n'est ce pas ?

    ReplyDelete