Suggested Trips to the Peak District National Park/Enhancing Your Wild Space* Click on the Pictures for Links to Days out and Ideas

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Suggested Trips to the Peak District National Park/Enhancing Your Wild Space* Click on the Pictures for Links to Days out and Ideas Suggested Trips to the Peak District National Park/Enhancing Your Wild Space* Click on the pictures for links to days out and ideas. ___________________________________________________________________________ The landscape is mixed with woodland, rocky edges and open moorland. The views are amazing. At the Roaches you can see signs of conservation work. These might include: Paved pathways The removal of bracken Wall and / or fence repairs The Roaches, between Leek & Work to restore and repair the moorland damaged in the fire Buxton in August 2018 The Roaches is an outcrop of Rangers helping to protect nesting Peregrines gritstone rock. It has been There are also information signs at Roaches Gate at the managed by Staffordshire bottom of the track towards the rocks Wildlife Trust since 2013 _______________________________________________________________________________________ It is a peak made of layers of mudstone and sandstone. The remains of an Iron Age Fort are found around the summit where there are great views over both the Dark and White Peak. It is popular with walkers, mountain bikers and paragliders. Around Mam Tor you can see signs of conservation work. These Mam Tor and The Great Ridge, might include: near Castleton and Edale, Paved pathways owned by the National Trust. Wall and / or fence repairs Sign-posting _______________________________________________________________________________________ Future are working hard to protect it. You can see here the conservation work that they are undertaking and the benefits they hope to achieve. Kinder Scout is the highest point of the Peak District National Park at 636 metres. It is a peat and moorland plateau. Footpath maintenance can be seen around Grindsbrook and Jacobs Ladder. Kinder Scout, Moors for the ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ *Bringing groups of (young) people to the Peak District National Park requires careful planning & supervision. For more information follow the links above. Alternatively, book an educational visit with the Peak District National Park [email protected] .
Recommended publications
  • Moorland Marathons Philip Brockbank 71
    ( ~~~~~~-T-------t--14 BURNLE IIIIIII11 '11111111111 '11/ BRAQFORD LEEDS I ~---+------+-- 3 I i . 1\\\\11 \ HUD~ERSFIELD'-+-II---12 RTHDALE IIIIII ' ~RSDEN 'f - I BURY!JIIIll!IC-..~~+--=:-=-­ - BARNSLEY BOLTON --I [11111 1 l OPENISTONE OLANGSETT' MANCHESTER Land above 1000' 30Sm 70 Moorland marathons Philip Brockbank Though the Pennine moors lack much of the beauty of the Lakeland fells and the splendour of the Welsh mountains, the more strenuous walks across them have given pleasure and not a little sport-especially in winter-to many an Alpine and even Himalayan climber. For the moorland lover based on Man­ chester, the only part of the Pennine worth serious consideration begins at a point 6 miles SSW of Skipton on the crest of the Colne-Keighley road, or, as easier of access, at Colne itself, and after a crow's flight of 37 miles roughly SSE ends at the foot of the steep slopes of Kinder Scout a mile N of Edale. We can also include the moors which towards the end of that range extend E and SE to nurse the infant Derwent as far as Ladybower on the main road from Glossop to Sheffield. For about the first 28 miles of that Colne to Edale flight the moors are of the conventional type. Their surface consists mainly of coarse grass with bil­ berry and heather in various states of roughness, culminating in the robust tussocks known as Scotchmen's heads, or (more politely) Turks' heads, which when spaced apart at a critical distance slightly less than a boot's width, thereby tending to twist the boot when inserted between them, constitute the worst going in the Kingdom apart from the rock-and-heather mixture of the Rhinogs of North Wales.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ultimate Peak District & Derbyshire Bucket List
    The Ultimate Peak District & Derbyshire Bucket List: 101 Great Things To Do 1. Embrace the great outdoors in the UK’s first National Park Established in 1951, the Peak District is the country’s oldest National Park. If you love the outdoors, this protected area of natural beauty - which covers 555 square miles in total - offers over 200 square miles of stunning open access land to explore. 2. Visit the ‘jewel in the Peak District’s crown’ at Chatsworth House Home to the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, Chatsworth is one of the UK’s favourite stately homes. Discover over 30 magnificent rooms, a 105-acre garden, parkland, a farmyard and playground, and one of Britain’s best farm shops. 3. Conquer the tallest ‘Peak’ in the Peak District At 636 metres above sea level, you’ll feel like you’re standing on top of the world when you conquer the Kinder Scout plateau. It’s the highest point in the National Park and was also the site of the 1932 Mass Trespass, a landmark event which sparked a debate about the right to roam in the countryside, leading to the establishment of the Peak District as the first National Park two decades later. 4. Discover the UK’s oldest Ice Age cave art at Creswell Crags Walk in the footsteps of Ice Age hunters, uncover the secrets of early man, discover incredible Ice Age cave art and marvel at the UK’s largest discovery of ritual protection marks at this picturesque limestone gorge on the Derbyshire/Nottinghamshire border. 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Normal Document Template
    Parishes Bulletin 36 31 July 2020 Visitor Management update In our last bulletin, we set out how the authority was monitoring and patrolling the national park, with particular emphasis on the busiest visitor locations. Our focus has been on providing information to visitors and managing certain locations to prevent issues such as traffic congestion, wild camping and fire risk amongst others. The County Councils have assisted in preventing issues at some visitor ‘hot spots’ by painting yellow lines to prevent dangerous parking on sections of the highway. We continue a daily update the status on car parks across the national park via out website at https://www.peakdistrict.gov.uk/visiting/places-to-visit/car-park-status Our communications team continue to share visitor engagement messages across our social channels (with a collective audience now approaching 100,000) and our website. We have also responded to individual requests from Parishes for assisting materials such as signs. In support of the rapidly changing visitor environment, you may also wish to take part in the following short survey, which has been shared with all #PeakDistrictProud partners too. This will inform our work in the coming weeks and months : https://www.smartsurvey.co.uk/s/5HGBCL/ We are also currently working on a collaborative campaign with landowners to raise awareness of the public’s obligations regarding so-called ‘fly’ camping. TV and media opportunities are also being pursued on matters such as litter, to further raise awareness. The management of visitors will continue throughout the summer. We would like to hear from the parishes about the measures we have in place and whether these have alleviated some of the pressures communities may have felt.
    [Show full text]
  • SMDC Local Plan Examination Session 8 Matter 8 - Allocations in Leek – Tues Oct 16Th at 9.30 Am 3
    SMDC Local Plan Examination Session 8 Matter 8 - Allocations in Leek – Tues Oct 16th at 9.30 am 3. Land at the Mount (DSL2) 3.1 Implications of the Mount being used DAILY by up to 200 local people is being overlooked by the Planners. i.e. It is a valuable AMENITY and recreational resource and has been for many decades. Building 345 houses with a school along Mount Road will ruin the beautiful, recreational area that anyone living in Leek knows as “The Mount”. Mount Road does NOT need upgrading at the moment. The proposal to build 95 houses in LE128 is unacceptable as the Mount is an important open space close to the town centre and as you walk along Mount Road towards the north end (Buxton Rd) you get the views both before Pike Hall Farm and then again after you have passed the copse – right over to the Cloud hill, the Roaches, Shutlingslow Hill in Cheshire and across towards Morridge ridge. 360 degrees of views as you walk/cycle/jog along the majority of Mount Road. This is an amenity which has been completely underestimated and its value not understood or EVEN CONSIDERED by the Planners. With 95 houses in LE128 there will be NO VIEW. 1. SMDC promote a self guided 9 mile walk called Leek Landscapes around the perimeter of Leek and you walk along Mount Road for the views across the town below and across to the Roaches and Shutlingsloe hill in the distance. Quoting from the leaflet – “the route passes mostly through attractive farmland and offers many interesting views of Leek and its setting.
    [Show full text]
  • People and Definition of the Landscape Area
    People People Residents Taking figures from the 2011 census and adjusting for proportion of residential part of parish/ward within the South West Peak LPS area we can give The South West Peak comprises all or part of a very close estimate of a resident population some 35 parishes or wards; 17 of those have of 12,814 people. Some 6,515 of those live in the more than 80% of their parish within the area. urban fringing wards of Buxton, Whaley Bridge, Despite the large number of parishes in the LPS Chapel-en-le-Frith and Macclesfield which area, the resident population is fairly low and together account for 6,673ha or 18.8% of the land highly dispersed. Whilst there are few centres of area. In the remaining rural 28,720ha, or 81.2% of population there is a strong sense of community, the land area, reside the remaining 6,299 people particularly in subdivisions of the area like the at a population density of 22 people per square Staffordshire Moorlands. kilometre. Figure Unit Total area of the SWP 35,393 ha Total population with adjustment for % or parish/ward in the SWP 12,814 no Total area of the above urban parts in the SWP 6,673 ha % urban parts 19 % People Urban population 6,515 no % urban population (urban parish/ward) 51 % Total area of rural parts in the SWP 28,720 ha % rural parts 81 % Total rural population (excluding Buxton, Whaley Bridge, 6,299 no Chapel-en-le-Frith, Macclesfield) % rural population (rural parish/ward) 49 % Population density urban 98 people/sqkm Population density rural 22 people/sqkm Looking at demographics, the most numerous Statistics, 2015).
    [Show full text]
  • Authors' Accepted Manuscript Publication Citation: Barnatt, John (2017) a Bronze Age Flat Grave at the Roaches, Staffordshire (W
    Authors' Accepted Manuscript Publication citation: Barnatt, John (2017) A Bronze Age flat grave at The Roaches, Staffordshire (with contributions by Alistair Barclay, Pauline Beswick, Dana Challinor, Kevin Cootes, Jacqueline Mckinley, Peter Northover, Patrick Quinn, and Valerie Steele). Transactions of the Staffordshire Historical and Archaeological Society 49:1-27. PETROGRAPHIC ANALYSIS Patrick S. Quinn and Kevin V. E. Cootes BACKGROUND, SAMPLE MATERIALS, AND AIMS OF ANALYSIS Thin section petrographic analysis was conducted on a fragment of the Early Bronze Age collared urn. The aim of this analysis was to characterise its likely raw materials and technology and assess its compositional relationships with contemporaneous, stylistically similar pottery from other sites across the Peak District National Park and further afield. METHODOLOGY A small piece of the urn sherd was impregnated with epoxy resin and prepared as a standard petrographic thin section at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. It was studied at magnifications of 25–400× under the polarising light microscope and characterised in terms of its constituent raw materials and manufacturing technology. The sample was compared to the results of a large study of prehistoric pottery from numerous sites within the Peak District National Park, which included several Early Bronze Age urns (Cootes 2013), in order to detect matches. Candidate samples were compared to The Roaches urn under the microscope using the original thin sections from that project. PETROGRAPHIC COMPOSITION The urn sample is characterised in thin section by a non-calcareous fabric containing many argillaceous inclusions of possible grog as well as abundant silt-sized quartz, feldspar, and mica, plus sparse, rounded sand inclusions in a non-calcareous clay matrix with many voids (Plate 8 A/B).
    [Show full text]
  • 4-Night Peak District Guided Walking Holiday
    4-Night Peak District Guided Walking Holiday Tour Style: Guided Walking Destinations: Peak District & England Trip code: DVBOB-4 2 & 3 HOLIDAY OVERVIEW From beautiful limestone valleys, to spectacular scenery on the gritstone edges, the Peak District is home to a superb contrast of landscapes. With a choice of walks each day, your holiday can be as relaxing or adventurous as you choose. Our Guided Walking holidays will introduce you to the best of the national park. WHAT'S INCLUDED • High quality en-suite accommodation in our Country House • Full board from dinner upon arrival to breakfast on departure day • 3 days guided walking • Use of our comprehensive Discovery Point www.hfholidays.co.uk PAGE 1 [email protected] Tel: +44(0) 20 3974 8865 HOLIDAYS HIGHLIGHTS • Head out on guided walks with our experienced leader to discover the varied beauty of the Peak District on foot • Enjoy panoramic views from gritstone edges • Admire stunning limestone dales • Visit classic viewpoints, timeless villages and secret corners • Look out for wildlife and learn about the 'Peaks' history • A relaxed pace of discovery in a sociable group keen to get some fresh air in one of England's finest walking areas TRIP SUITABILITY This trip is graded Activity Level 2 and 3, Explore the beautiful Peak District National Park on our guided walks. We offer a great range of walks to suit everyone - meandering through green valley and pretty villages at a gentle pace to more challenging walks with spectacular views high on the gritstone edges. We'll take you to all the classic viewpoints, timeless villages and hidden corners.
    [Show full text]
  • A Charismatic Chasm
    Trail A charismatic chasm Explore the enigmatic Lud’s Church © Simon Corble Time: 2 hours Distance: 3 miles Landscape: rural The Dane is a fabulous, beautiful river, Location: tumbling down from the moors which loom Lud’s Church, Derbyshire above its ancient, wooded valley. Hidden high up in those woods is the most incredible Start and finish: church in the Peak District, with many a tale Lud’s Church car park by the River Dane, about a to tell. quarter of a mile from Gradbach Mill Grid reference: Rather than a building, Lud’s Church is a SJ 99916 66208 charismatic chasm coated in moss. It is a place where powerful forces flow through a world Getting there: of true grit. The car park is best reached through the village of Flash, which is just off the A53 between Buxton and This trail explores the Church, the identity of Leek. It is on the right hand side of the road, about the mysterious Lud and the site’s connection 3 minutes’ drive down steep lanes from the village. with the surrounding Dane Valley. Keep an eye out for: Dippers – these little brown and white birds love fast flowing, shaded waters like the River Dane Directions Follow the footpath just a few metres upstream along the riverbank, through a small grove of trees on the edge of the car park, to reach a confluence of streams. Every landscape has a story to tell – find out more at www.discoveringbritain.org Route and stopping points 01 The confluence 02 Gradbach Mill 03 The confluence with Black Brook 04 Castle Cliff rocks 05 Inside Lud’s Church 06 Lud’s Church exit Every landscape has a story to tell – Find out more at www.discoveringbritain.org 01 The confluence (grid reference SJ 99975 66210) This is our first meeting with the young River Dane.
    [Show full text]
  • Leekfrith Parish Neighbourhood Plan
    Leekfrith Parish Neighbourhood Plan 2019 - 2033 Submission Version Feb 2018 Leekfrith Parish Neighbourhood Plan CONTENTS PAGES 1. Introduction & Acknowledgements 3 2. Neighbourhood Plan Area 4 3. Leekfrith Parish 5 4. Our Vision 7 5. How the Neighbourhood Plan fits into the Planning System 8 6 Evidence for Policies 8 7 The Polices 9 a. Development of Upper Hulme Mill 9 b. Full time rental of holiday cottages 12 c. Parking on the narrow roads throughout the parish 13 d. Parking at the Roaches 13 Appendix 1 Leekfrith survey questionnaire 15 Appendix 2 Survey Overview 21 Appendix 3 Housing Needs Survey 22 Appendix 4 Data on cars parked illegally on the Roaches 32 Page 2 of 32 Leekfrith Parish Neighbourhood Plan 1. Introduction & Acknowledgements 1.1 This Neighbourhood Plan sets out policies for the use and development of land in the Leekfrith Neighbourhood Area covering the period from 2017-2032. Once adopted, it will be used by the local planning authorities (alongside other strategic plans) to make decisions about development in the Leekfrith Neighbourhood Area. 1.2 As the responsible body for writing the Neighbourhood Plan Leekfrith Parish Council has involved people who live, work and do business in the Neighbourhood area at every stage: in developing a vision for their community and in the choices which will help to shape their neighbourhood. 1.2 The Parish Council would like to thank everyone who contributed, and the many people who are still contributing, to the preparation of this Plan. 2. Neighbourhood Plan Area 2.1 The policies in this plan relate to Leekfrith Neighbourhood Area which was designated by Staffordshire Moorlands District Council and by Peak District National Park Authority in March 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • The Growth of Geological Knowledge in the Peak District Trevor D
    The Growth of Geological Knowledge in the Peak District Trevor D. Ford Abstract: The development of geological knowledge in the Peak District from the 18th century to the present day is reviewed. It is accompanied by a comprehensive bibliography. Introduction lead miners made practical use of geological principles as early as the 17th century (Rieuwerts, Geology has changed in the last two centuries from 1984). In the 18th century the course of the initial a largely amateur “gentleman’s” science to a part of Cromford Sough followed the strike of the professional vocation. The results of professional limestone/shale contact where excavation was easier investigation in the Peak District have been built on through shale. The position of the contact was the amateur foundation and the works cited in this obtained by down-dip projection from the outcrop review demonstrate the change in approach. The showing that the soughers had some appreciation of Geological Survey commenced a professional concealed geology. The lead miners also used the approach in the 1860-1880 period, continued basic principles of stratigraphy and structure to during World War I and in the 1950s, but it was not predict whether or not they would intersect until the 1970s that some intensive economic toadstones in driving other soughs in the 18th investigations were pursued. The Geological century (Fig. 1). Survey’s activities in the 20th century were concurrent with the development of Geology Whilst most of the lead miners’ knowledge was Departments in the nearby Universities, where never written down, some of it has been preserved in research grew slowly after World War I and more the appendix to “An Inquiry into The Original State rapidly after World War II.
    [Show full text]
  • CRAMP Appendix 2 Description Of
    APPENDIX 2: DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTIES The Authority owns about 6070 hectares (15,000 acres) of property within the National Park. This is around 5% of the whole National Park area. The properties comprise of a very diverse mixture including a traditional tenanted agricultural Estate, disused railway lines converted to recreational routes, the HQ building at Bakewell, Ranger, Visitor and Cycle Hire Centres. The Authority has acquired the properties over the years either for specific operational reasons or because acquisition was seen as the best or only means of achieving National Park purposes. It has been necessary for the Authority to review the future of its landholdings and, in particular, in the light of reductions in the Authority budget. A number of properties have already been reviewed and in particular, the Eastern Moors Estate and the Roaches Estate have been leased to partner organisations such as the National Trust, the RSPB and the Staffordshire Wildlife Trust. A significant number of woods have also been sold in the last 5 years. Stanage/North Lees Estate Stanage/North Lees Estate was purchased in 1971 to protect its outstanding landscape and wildlife value in the face of intense visitor pressure. The land comprises 524 hectares (1,296 acres) divided between heather moorland, rough grazing and bracken, in-bye land enclosed by dry stone walls and woodland. Parts of the Estate are of considerable wildlife value, particularly for moorland birds. The moorland and rough grazing areas are designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). There are also a number of Scheduled Ancient Monuments.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Heritage and History
    Cultural Heritage and History enclosure following the Parliamentary Enclosure Cultural Heritage and History Acts in the late 18th and 19th centuries increased the rate of enclosure and resulted in the current landscape of fields with walls and hedgerows on the lower slopes (Natural England, 2013). Archaeology After the prehistoric period, the interdependence of upland grazing and lowland cultivation Transport and travel continued to develop. While there is some During medieval times there were no defined There are 57 scheduled monuments in the South evidence for oval enclosures pre-dating routes across the craggy moorland, high pastures West Peak, including Bronze Age barrows, the Roman period, the area’s small-scale and scattered settlements of the South West a medieval motte and bailey castle, an Iron enclosures date from the medieval period Peak. The land had not been enclosed and there Age promontory fort on Combs Edge, and at least. Evidence of more-typical medieval were few landmarks. However, experienced Goyt’s Moss colliery dating from the early 17th open field farming survives in small areas (for traders were making long cross-country century. Added to the scheduled monuments example, around Warslow and Butterton), journeys using the most direct dry routes of national importance are a series of some where later boundaries perpetuate the broad possible. Parts of these routes can still be seen Packhorse bridge Goyt Valley © PDNPA 80 non-scheduled barrows, a host of medieval outline of the long cultivation strips associated as parallel hollow-ways. The major routes were packhorse routes, field systems and settlements, with such farming (Natural England, 2013).
    [Show full text]