The original route to the coast resumes, and a fresh trail is burned across Leeds, as per my annual plan, and a bright morning comes on with a 9.10am start, leaving the station via the City Square entrance, to make for the Bond Street - Commercial Street - Kirkgate axis across the town centre, which might be my favourite street in the city, as the history runs thick along it, whilst the throng of shoppers gradually diminishes as you pass on beneath the railway in the direction of the Leeds Minister. Onwards across the Parish Graveyard, and over the Inner Loop Roads, away from the new developments that have grown at this end of town, and on to Marsh Lane, to find the site of Leeds' first railway station of 1834, naturally located near Railway Street, which leads us on to the industrial units and terraces of Richmond Hill, with East Park Road following the deep cutting of the railways heading east. Not venturing into East End Park itself, at the old edge of the city, instead slipping onto Halton Moor road, possibly the last forgotten ancient lane in the city, and now a cycleway leads out of the city in a completed unexpected green space, rising above Neville Hill railway yard and the industrial estates of Cross Green, and grazing the bottom edge of the Halton council estate.
Across Wyke Beck, which appears a lot in the eastern parts of Leeds, and join the rising path that leads into the Temple Newsam estate, offering another good view or two of the city as it passes alongside Halton Moor wood, before crossing the golf course and joining the access road and leading into Pump Wood. Taking a path between the stables and the farm, we drop to the descending path in front of Temple Newsam house, down to the bottom of the lawn, and through Charcoal wood to meet the rising track up to the Avenue, offering the best possible scenic vista of the estate along its entire length. Beyond, its on over Bullethorpe Lane, following the bridleway over the M1 and through the farmsteads of Hollinthorpe before hitting the footpath around one of Swillington's clay pits, and a field boundary walk to offer broad views of our destination, Garforth. Meet the A642, and descend taking the confusing footpaths that lead arounf the local Holiday Inn, before meeting the A63, and pacing its side from the Gaping Goose to the old Toll House. Thence it's through the town via Lidgett Lane and Main Street, past the Garforth Academy and the central shopping strip, to meet the A642 again, and to roll up at the intact, unspoiled (and manned!) old NER railway station, for a 12.35pm finish.
5,000 Miles Cumulative Total: 1422.6 miles
2015 Cumulative Total: 20.4 miles
Up Country Total: 1327 miles
Solo Total: 1195.6 miles
Richmond Hill Cutting. Originally bored as a tunnel in 1834, it was opened out in 1893 when the line was quadrupled, and now forms a chasm that is as dramatic from below as it is above. |
Next Up: The alternate Coastal route resumes.
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