Showing posts with label Dewsbury & District Ramblers Centenary Walk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dewsbury & District Ramblers Centenary Walk. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 April 2021

Dewsbury & D.R.C. Walk #3: Mirfield to Dewsbury 10/04/21

11.7 miles, via Hopton Bottom, Briery Bank, Whitley Wood, Whitley Lower, Briestfield, 
 Dimpledale, Thornhill Edge, Edge End, Rectory Park, Mill Bank, C&H Navigation, 
  Healey Mills, Pildacre Fields, D&O Greenway, Earlsheaton Common, and Sands Lane. 

Long Distance Trail
means Selfies!
#3 at Mirfield Station.

I'd have loved to have gotten this whole trail down within the Easter weekend, and a different vintage of myself would have eagerly been out there on the Monday, but my contemporary vintage is starting to feel the need to not push things so hard, and thus time is taken out to do other necessary things and the D&DRCW has to wait its turn in the schedule, dropping in on the last quiet weekend before the National Lockdown restrictions see their next significant easing, and also ahead of myself getting my second dose of the Covid vaccine to hopefully ease my mind ahead of the renewal of the crowds. We also have a nice day promised by the forecasts as we ride back out to Mirfield for a jump off ahead of 9.15am, rejoining the circuit path below the deep Station Road overbridge, heading south on Hopton New Road between the open fields and the large plots of allotments to approach the crossing of the Calder at Hopton Bridge, all the way feeling that the dense bank of cloud lingering to the south of the river was not something projected to happen today, before our path takes us a little way east along Granny Lane before slipping onto a path that takes us along between the back gardens, both old and new, of the suburban enclave of Hopton Bottom. Enter the fields as the path skirts the looming woodlands of Briery Bank, tracing the boundary before heading across to Valance Beck, which is crossed before we hit the sharp rise beyond, seeing naught but gloom ahead of us the the southwest, with the blue skies receding to the north as we look back over New Hall farm and woods to Mirfield and greater Dewsbury, and expanding the horizon northwards before we crest and field walk downhill again. A track is joined, skirting around Royds House farm in its own little glade, as we are lead downwards to pass over Liley Clough and then rise among more foliage free trees, to meet the track up from Hopton Mills, passing below Brier Knowl farm perched above, a lane which we traced southwesterly a good few seasons back, and those steps are retraced down towards the cottage cluster at Whitley Wood Bottom, whilst we aim a new track southeastwards, on one of those rare trajectories that has been distinctly absent on all our previous local travels.

Monday, 5 April 2021

Dewsbury & D.R.C. Walk #2: Birstall to Mirfield 03/04/21

9.3 miles, via Monk Ings, Gomersal, Spen Upper, Nibshaw Lane playing fields, 
 Little Gomersall, Royds Park, Rawfolds Mills, Jo Cox community woodland, Hightown, 
  Upper House, Sepulchre Hill, Hartshead, Dockentail Wood, Hartshead Hall Wood, 
   Bracken Hill, Battyeford, Heaton Lodge Junction, and Lower Hopton.

Long Distance Trail
means Selfies! #2 at
Bradford Road, Birstall.
Straight back onto the trail come Saturday morning, riding the #200 bus back to Birstall with some frustration that the Easter Weekend can't bring on some of the warmth that we had at the start of the past week, and gloom greets us as we alight on Kirkgate ahead of 10.30am, rapidly getting back to the D&DRCW path at the point of crossing Bradford Road, and ascending the suburban spur of Monk Ings and rising steadily eastwards out of the valley that encompasses Birstall, and Batley, across the open plots of Monk Ings Fields, aiming us up on the ridge on which Gomersal sits without ever feeling the burn of the ascent despite the altitude gain. Meeting the concealed and snaking path that leads into the close of Scott Lane, which sends us out onto the A651 Oxford Road at the cultural heart(?) of Gomersal village, where we can take in Grove chapel, the old primary school, Red House and the Public Hall before we slip away down Grove Lane, an historic feeling side street to take us to the West End inn and Latham Lane, where we can wave at the #200 bus as it passes on its return trip to Leeds, before we process up the side of the suburban edge of the village to the ancient Methodist chapel, with its boldly convex frontage Then take a left onto Ferrand Lane, heading us off the high ridge towards the Spen valley, recalling came this way many moons ago, down the rough track to find that the path towards Gomersal tunnel through the Fanwood Activity Centre had vanished, and the path up to Cliffe Lane still has you feeling somewhat unwelcome as you are squeezed up a narrow passage past Throstle Nest farm, landing by Gomersal's western edge again as we track southbound, joining Fusden Lane as it traces away around the grounds of Firdene House, which makes its own sort of bold statement. Arrive on the A643 Spen Lane, at the top of its ascent from Upper Spen (or Spen Upper), and we cross to finally get onto some off-road walking, dropping away on an enclosed and grassy track for a short while before we are led up steps to the Nibshaw Lane playing fields, where we head straight across the football pitches, thankfully not interrupting anyone's game to land on it parent road, on the fringe of the council estate that indicates that we are still in the vicinity of Gomersal, which turns out to be much larger than expected, and as we track on southerly, a westwards look into the Spen valley locates us on a latitude with Cleckheaton and Scholes, finally landing at a significant remove from 2021's local bubble.

Sunday, 4 April 2021

Dewsbury & D.R.C. Walk #1: Dewsbury to Birstall 02/04/21

9.1 miles, via Eastborough, Crackenedge, Hanging Heaton, Croft House, Soothill Wood, 
 Howley Hall, Howley Park, Cliff Wood, Birkby Brow Wood, Howden Clough, Copley Hill,
  Birstall Fields, Fieldhead, and Oakwell Hall Country Park.

Long Distance Trail
means Selfies!
#1 at Dewsbury Minster

With the 'Stay Local' lockdown restriction ending on 29th March, we are now officially released to cautiously approach the idea of walking further away from home again in 2021, and with a promising-looking long Easter weekend coming up, it's the perfect time to pull the Dewsbury & District Ramblers Centenary Walk off the To-Do list, as I've had the route guide on my shelf for years and it sat as a plausible fall-back route for last Summer until I decided to go full bore into the Pennines, so its moment is now, easily dividing into three legs that are only modestly long, and with none more than a straightforward ride away from Morley either. Good Friday morning thus has us up, but not with the lark, to ride a still under-populated TPE service down to Dewbury station, to alight at 10.05am, and making our way to the start line via the western side of the town, across the A638 Ring Road and down Wellington Street, by the Dewsbury Reporter flatiron building and the Elim Chapel, across Daisy Hill and down Southgate to the bus station on South Street, before spilling out of Church Street and across the A638 again to the official beginning of the trail at Dewsbury Minster, the ancient church of this parish. Away we go then, anti-clockwise on the trail, along the side of the ring road, eastwards below the looming Town Hall, past the Sports Centre, Job Centre and Bingo Hall complex, and the Matalan dominated retail park, all located on the former goods yards of the L&YR and the GNR, all completely scrubbed from the landscape aside from the name of Railway Street bisecting the two sites, as we rise up to cross the foot of  Wakefield Road and carry on up the side of Old Bank Road to trace the Kirklees Way route on paths seen seven seasons ago. Up the toe of this hill we travel, along the wooded Hollinroyd Road, above the terraces of Eastborough before Sugar Lane drops us onto the A653 Leeds Road by the Crown Inn, with the way leading us on into Caulms Wood park, where we infamously lost the trail in 2014, but this time we are prepped, and find the correct route from the main path across this lofty green space over the town, as we meet the circular arboreal feature at its heart where we are led up into the eponymous woodland.