Saturday 3rd. August 2024
This is a five mile walk I have often done and yet again this last Saturday; it encircles my domain and this time I decided to produce a slideshow to showcase some aspects of our Arnside and Silverdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
As this is predominantly a photo exercise it is worth clicking the first photo to enlarge for a slideshow after reading the captions
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Just down the lane from home. The next zoom shot is taken from the furthest point where the road disappears |
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Zoom right across the bay to the limestone cliffs of Whitbarrow |
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The somewhat neglected telephone exchange at the end of Briery Bank, and round the corner into Silverdale Road... |
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...Our Lady of Lourdes, Catholic church, also the next photo. I've never been inside |
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Children's playground, Arnside Cricket Club, Arnside Football Club, Arnside bowling, and tennis courts. Distant Kentmere and Shap fells |
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Dentist in Silverdale Road |
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Our lifeline. Same owner, (Ian Bullough) of similar convenience store down on the Front |
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Ash Meadow woods. A delightful network of paths leading down to the shore at the Beach Café. This is part of an endowment left to the village including our fabulous Arnside Educational Institute: https://www.arnsideeducationalinstitute.org/ |
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From Ash Meadow Woods looking across the bay to the Lake District hills |
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The Beach Café |
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Arnside Coastguard station |
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Arnside Sailing club - there is only a short window at high tide when water is deep enough. Here the tide has just arrived and boats are being launched |
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Looking back up the Kent estuary with the railway viaduct crossing in the distance |
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New Barnes static caravan site with children's playground and the Bob In Café |
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Frith Wood - footpath from New Barnes through to Far Arnside. An alternative follows a more adventurous route on the shoreline with steep thirty foot drops down to the shore |
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Looking out to Morecambe Bay proper |
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Looking back up the Kent estuary, Arnside tucked in round to the right |
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Holgates static caravan site, Far Arnside. Perhaps the most prestigious of its kind in the country, and below... |
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Sea views from these, and with facing west incomparable sunsets. My walking friend Pete and his wife Elizabeth had one of these before they moved to Arnside permanently, around fifteen years ago. |
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From the bottom of Heathwaite's, the climb up to the Knott from Far Arnside. The Knott is out of shot to the right. The skyline is the wild flower meadow, a continuation of the Knott ridge where orchids and other flowers can be seen |
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This and below. The climb up Heathwaite's, an epic ascent now with my breathlessness affliction. |
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Now approaching The Knott summit. The lover's entwined tree to the left. I am always surprised to see this still standing after more than twenty years of my sojourn in Arnside. Here's hoping it doesn't suffer the fate of that tree on Hadrian's Wall |
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Across the bay to Lindale from Arnside Knott summit. Trivia answer: Arnside Knott at 159m is the lowest of the Marilyns, a list of the 1551 hills in England Scotland and Wales with a drop of 500ft on all sides. See my statistics on the sidebar of this blog |
All very familiar. All very beautiful. That must have been a tough climb up the Knott for you, well done.
ReplyDeleteBC - In one way it is gratifying to be able to do such things but I can't help having twinges of regret at being unable to continue with the many prospective projects on higher ground that exist in that endlessly revised "folder" in my noddle. Perhaps that "folder" should be "renamed" as "Pies in the Sky."
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