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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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Sunday, 29 May 2022

A gem of a walk from Sedbergh

 Saturday 28th May 2022 

Walk 17  "Frostrow Fells and Dentdale" from:  The Lune Valley and Howgills, Dennis and Jan Kelsall. Cicerone Press.

For reasons I'm not prepared to divulge I walked this route in the opposite direction indicated in the guide - my direction is shown on the map below.

The authors suggest starting from the centre of Sedbergh which necessitates half a mile each way on the main road to Dent, the only attraction being a view of what I presume is Sedbergh's public school cricket pitch immaculately  mown right out to its boundaries by some OCD groundsman.

The obvious place to start the walk, in my opinion, would be at the lay-by parking by the bridge over the river Rawthey. The bridge provides a good view of the more than usually attractive river, even for the Yorkshire Dales. Here I took a zoom shot of a grey wagtail.

My little grumble is somewhat unworthy for this fine walk which incorporates parts of The Dalesway and the Dales High Way, two of the best long distance paths in the country. If one had to recommend a walk in the Dales for a newcomer this would be a strong candidate. 

A short road to the left takes one into the tiny and pretty village of Millthrop from where I was soon onto ancient drove-ways and lush terraced paths on soft green grass interspersed with old woodland and views down Dentdale enticing one to  explore further than this day would allow. The skyline of Holme Knott on the other side of Dentdale dominates and must provide good ridge walking. I have done part of that in the past when visiting the trig.

I knew I was back in Yorkshire at Leases Farm. An elderly gent was sat chatting to a local visitor with her nwely acquired electric bike. I had stopped to look at my map to see which side of the farmhouse the path followed.

In supposedly jocular fashion the old guy addressed me.

"You're lost!"

"No I'm not, I'm just checking which way the path goes"

"I don't care what you say! You're lost!"

This went on for a while before we settled down to more mundane conversation about my intended route and the merits and downsides of electric bikes. I do hate it when you are looking at your map and passers by assume you are lost. In the worst cases they then start trying to impose on you some alternative route  based on what they consider to be their superior local knowledge.

A stretch of country road followed but with  interest and still the overall ambience of just being in a good part of the Dales.

The route now climbed on paths to higher ground. At one point a fascinating gate designed for quad bikes with a system of counterweight had me puzzled for a while before I worked out how it operated. See the photos below.

After this I levelled out following a good moorland path running parallel with the Dales High Way and a few hundred yards to its south-west. At the high point of the undulations a ladder stile crossed the boundary wall and a welcome large flat through stone provided a comfortable seat for my sandwich and coffee break.  I lingered there for over half an hour in the warm sunshine with deep blue sky and rolling white clouds. At one point i listened intently. A long way off there was the sound of a hard pressed motor bike exploring its rev limits in each gear, and then nothing but the odd cry from a lapwing and the trill of a skylark.

As I popped over the stile I was startled by a friendly barking collie and a local couple  who had this walk as far as the wall as  a regular for them. They told me they had never seen anybody coming over that stile before. The moorland on that side of the wall was strewn with abundant bog-cotton and I took an arty photo using that as foreground with the Howgill's southern flanks in the backdrop.

A steady descent and bit more tarmac had me back to the bridge over the river Rawthey and the minor anti-climax of the half mile up the main road to my car.

That was the best walk I have done for some time.

Worth clicking photos to enlarge.
Sedbergh church. I parked just round the corner.

On the main road to Dent down to the Rawthey river bridge

Sedbergh School cricket pitch - the whole area mowed to microscopic length.

 River Rawthey

Grey wagtail

In Millthrop





Perfect walking on ancient terraced pathways

Looking a long way down Dentdale

A bit dead?

Unusual tractors (to me) for Alan




Above the door - 1635

Quad bike gate. You grab the top bar and pull towards you until the gate is flat on the floor  when presumably the bike goes over and the counterweight on a pulley (bottom left corner) takes it back up again. And its companion gate on the right has a unique spring loaded bolt - see below.





My route ahead. The Dales High Way runs parallel higher up the hillside

A projecting through wall-stone below and to the left made a perfect lunch seat

The Howgills southern flanks beyond the cotton grass

Ignore the cursor details


3 comments:

  1. bowlandclimber29 May 2022 at 20:38

    As you say a fine walk. That area is much quieter than most parts of the Yorkshire Dales, yet the scenery is just as good.
    Thanks for the preview and the explanation for that strange gate.

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  2. Ah, Sedbergh: for some reason, I've never really liked that place, despite its being a popular pretty town: maybe it's the childhood fear of doom of being sent to 'that' school and being made to do early morning cross-country runs up the neighbouring steep hills - and other obscure delights perhaps: luckily, Bradford came to the rescue - not much of a lesser evil, you might be thinking.

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  3. BC - There are still other possibilities in the environs of Sedbergh. The one you identified I am keeping for when your knee affliction will permit.
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    gimmer - I guess you were not called upon to make that choice for yourself. I would be hard put to decide which may have been the worst of two bad possibilities. As it turned out YOU did ok with BGS. As for Sedbergh itself I have no objections but for walks in its surroundings there is hardly any need to go into the town.

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