Covill Grange, Bouthwaite, Harrogate, Hg3 5Rs

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Covill Grange, Bouthwaite, Harrogate, Hg3 5Rs COVILL GRANGE, BOUTHWAITE, HARROGATE, HG3 5RS OFFERS OVER £750,000 COVILL GRANGE Bouthwaite, Harrogate, HG3 5RS An attractive four-bedroomed residence with large double garage, separate outbuildings including a detached studio barn and approximately 3.29 acres of land. This impressive home is steeped in history, revealing an abundance of period features and architecture with mullioned windows, exposed beams and stone floors. Offered with oil-fired central heating, the accommodation is well proportioned and comprises a dining kitchen, two reception rooms, large utility and two bathrooms and cloakroom. Located in Upper Nidderdale, Bouthwaite is a small hamlet adjacent to the village of Ramsgill, home to the Michelin-starred Yorke Arms restaurant and just a few miles from the popular town of Pateley Bridge. Entrance Hall • Cloakroom • Dining Kitchen • Sitting Room • Dining Room • Utility Room Four Bedrooms - Two Bathrooms Double Garage • Gardens With Far-Reaching Views • Orchard • Studio ACCOMMODATION GROUND FLOOR INNER HALL BEDROOM 2 With side access door with stone lintel A double bedroom with exposed beams With solid wood door leading to - dated 1685. and central heating radiator plus window to rear. ENTRANCE HALL DINING ROOM With stone-flagged floor, central heating With mullioned windows to the side and EN-SUITE BATHROOM radiator and stairs rising to first floor. sash window to rear. Central heating With free-standing roll-top bath, pedestal radiator and stone flagged floor. wash-hand basin and low-flush WC. CLOAKROOM Windows to front and side. Central heating With low-flush WC and wall-mounted UTILITY ROOM radiator with towel rail over. Shower wash-hand basin. With base unit with working surfaces and enclosure with shower screen. Airing ceramic double sink. Central heating boiler cupboard housing hot-water cylinder tank. DINING KITCHEN and stone flagged floor. Plumbing and With a range of base units with wood work space for washing machine and window BEDROOM 3 surfaces with inset ceramic 1½-bowl sink to rear. A double bedroom with central heating and tiled splashbacks. Oil-fired Esse range radiator and sash window to the front. cooker and separate two-ring hob. Sash FIRST FLOOR windows to front and side. Stone-flagged BEDROOM 4 A further double bedroom with central floor and central heating radiator. LANDING Banister staircase and central heating heating radiator and sash window to front. PANTRY radiator. With shelving and window to side. HOUSE BATHROOM Fitted with a suite comprising low-flush MASTER BEDROOM SITTING ROOM With sash window to front and characterful WC, inset wash-hand basin and panelled With a stone fireplace with wood-burning mullioned windows to side, central heating bath with shower over and shower screen stove and stone hearth. Mullioned windows radiator, spacious walk-in wardrobe. adjacent. Sash window to rear and window to the side and sash windows to the front. to side. Fitted book shelves with cupboard storage and alcove cupboard storage. FLOOR PLAN Ground Floor First Floor Outside Ample parking to side giving access to a double garage with double doors and power and light. To the front is an enclosed garden with shaped lawns bounded by dry-stone walls and hand gate. Paved path leads to front door and gravelled seating area with delightful far-reaching views of Nidderdale and Bouthwaite reservoir. Beyond is an enclosed mature orchard with wrought-iron fencing, hand gate and double gates to outbuildings and cart shed with double doors. Studio Part furnished, having power and water supply, provision for shower and WC, stone-flagged floor, stable door to front, double doors and sash windows to front and rear. Roof windows. Tenure Freehold. Services All mains with the exception of gas. Council Tax Band: F verityfrearson.co.uk.
Recommended publications
  • Otley Walking Festival 2015.Qxp 26/04/2021 18:56 Page 1
    m o c . r e t a w e r i h s k r o y . w w M w 1 k u . o c . l a v i t s e f g n i k l a w y e l t o . w w w r e t a W s ’ e r i h s k r o Y g n i y l p p u S 2 6 M M M 6 1 2 0 2 Y L U J 4 – E N U J 6 2 6 A 2 1 0 1 6 s d e e L d r o f d a r B M 1 A 6 5 A 5 6 8 6 A 4 0 6 6 A A 6 N 0 3 8 9 5 6 A y e l t O 1 2 0 2 l a v i t s e F g n i k l a W y e l t O k r o Y y e l k l I g n i r o s n o p S e t a g o r r a H 5 6 A r e t a W e r i h s k r o Y n o t p i k S y r a s r e v i n n A h t 0 2 e h T m o c . y r e k a b e t a g d n o b @ o f n i : l i a m E 6 1 5 7 6 4 - 3 4 9 1 0 : l e T y e l t O , e t a g d n o B 0 3 1 2 0 2 6 1 0 2 s d r a w A p o h S m r a F & i l e D e h t t a y r e k a B t s e B L A V I T S E F f o s r e n n i W s e v i t a v r e s e r p r o s e v i t i d d a t u o h t i w d n a h y b e d a m s e x o b d a l a s & s c i n c i p G N I K L A W s e i r u o v a s d n a s e k a c , s d a e r b t s i l a i c e p S ' y t i r g e t n I h t i w g n i k a B ' y r e k a B e t a g d n o B Y E L T O .
    [Show full text]
  • Moorlands: People, Places, Stories Exploring People’S Experiences of the Upper Nidderdale Moorland Through Time
    Moorlands: People, Places, Stories Exploring people’s experiences of the Upper Nidderdale moorland through time What do the moorlands mean to you? (from top left: S Wilson, I Whittaker, A Sijpesteijn, Nidderdale AONB, H Jones, I Whittaker; centre: D Powell, Adrian Bury Associates) Sharing stories – listening to the past Everyone, young and old, has a story to tell; unique memories and experiences that would otherwise be lost over time. These personal accounts reveal much about the history of the moorlands, a personal history that is not written down. Here we have an opportunity to preserve our moorland heritage by capturing aspects of history and experiences that would otherwise be lost, and to look at the landscape through different eyes. Guidance Sheet A (V1) Why the moorlands? The moorlands have been influenced by humans over thousands of years, with successive generations finding different ways to exploit the area’s rich resources, leaving their mark as clues for future generations. We hope that the project will help capture the character of the moorland landscape and of the people that live, work, and enjoy them. Join the team Moorlands: People, Places, Stories will be delivered by a newly formed volunteer group. Training will be provided and the team will be supported by Louise Brown (Historic Nidderdale Project Officer), oral history consultant Dr Robert Light, and landscape archaeologist Dr Jonathan Finch from the University of York. It is hoped that documents and photographs shared by interviewees might spark interest in carrying out some additional research. There will be the opportunity for those that are interested to become affiliated to the University of York in order to access online resources, as well as being able to access the archives held by Nidderdale Museum and at North Yorkshire County Council.
    [Show full text]
  • Pen Pictures 2020
    Governing Body - Pen Pictures 2020 Susan Reid Sue has been Chair of Governors for some 12 years. She serves as a Co-opted Governor and Chair of is a chartered accountant. Governors Coopted Governor Dr Janet Holt Dr Janet Holt has been a member of the governing body for a number of years and is Coopted currently a co-opted governor and lead governor Governor for Standards and Achievement. She has considerable experience of education and research in higher education and is a Senior Lecturer in Healthcare Ethics in the School of Healthcare at the University of Leeds. Isabel Peel Isabel has been a school governor for many years. She worked as a community midwife in Coopted the rural and surrounding Pateley Bridge area for Governor over 26 years and managed the community midwifery team. She was the Named Midwife for Safeguarding Children within Harrogate Hospital and has now retired. Clare Gardner Clare has been a school governor for ten years. Vice Chair of She has had a long term career as an IT and Governors Project Management Professional working in both the private and public sectors. Coopted Governor Paul Howard Paul was born in Leeds and went to school in Ilkley. He moved with his family to Pateley Bridge Coopted in 2012. The first of his four children started at Governor Nidderdale High School in 2014. He works from home for a London-based research company, having previously worked as a journalist and author. Ms K Jordan Headteacher Ex officio Governor Angela Hosie Angela’s early career started with the Foreign & Commonwealth Office, including postings to LA India and Ghana.
    [Show full text]
  • Welcome to Nidderdale Group Practice
    PATIENT INFORMATION LEAFLET Spring Gables Surgery The Grange Medical Centre Feastfield Medical Centre Clint Bank Dacre Banks King street Birstwith Harrogate Pateley Bridge Harrogate North Yorks Harrogate North Yorks HG3 4DX North Yorks HG3 3AJ 01423 780436 HG3 5AT 01423 770202 01423 711369 NIDDERDALE GROUP PRACTICE www.nidderdalegrouppractice.co.uk February 2014 The Partners Dr Michael John Beer MBChB Leeds (1980) DRCOG, MRCGP special interests: General Practice Trainer with Yorkshire and Humber Deanery Dr John Robert Spain MBBS Newcastle (1982) MRCGGP special interests: Clinical Governance, Prescribing, Cardiovascular Disease, Diabetes, Hypertension and I.T. Dr Carolyn Mary Ryan MBBCh Cardiff (1982) DRCOG, DCH, DFRSH, FP Cert special interests: Women’s Health Dr John Michael Henry Hain BSc(Hons) MBChB Dundee (1995), MRCGP, DFFP, Dip Derm PGCert Med Ed special interests: Dermatology, General Medicine, Diabetes and General Practice Trainer and Training Programme Director for Yorkshire and Humber Deanery, and Examiner for the RoyalCollege of General Practitioners Dr David Graham Broadhead Lawson B Med Sci BM BS Nott (1993) DRCOG DFFP DCH special interests: Sports Medicine and Weight Management Dr Madeleine Locke MBChB BA MRCGP DFSRH Leeds 2006 special interests: Palliative Care, Family Planning and Contraception including coil and implant fitting Salaried Doctors Dr Debbie Thomas BMBS BMedSci MRCGP DFRSH DRCOG Nottingham 2003PGCert Med Ed special interests: Family Planning and Contraception, including coil and implant fitting Dr Bethan Hain MBChB MRCGP DCH DFRSH DRCOG Dundee 1992 special interests: Palliative Care Dr Elizabeth Austen MBChB MRCGP Leeds 2005 special interests: Family Planning and Contraception, Women’s Health Practice Manager: Mrs Pat Berriman The Partners work as a non-limited Partnership providing essential and additional services under the General Medical NHS Contract.
    [Show full text]
  • Nidderdale AONB State of Nature 2020
    Nidderdale AONB State of Nature 2020 nidderdaleaonb.org.uk/stateofnature 1 FORWARD CONTENTS Forward by Lindsey Chapman Contents I’m proud, as Patron of The Wild Only by getting people involved 4 Headlines Watch, to introduce this State of in creating these studies in large Nature report. numbers do we get a proper 5 Our commitments understanding of what’s happening Growing up, I spent a lot of time in our natural world now. Thanks 6 Summary climbing trees, wading in streams to the hundreds of people and crawling through hedgerows. who took part, we now know 8 Background to the Nidderdale AONB I loved the freedom, adventure more than ever before about State of Nature report and wonder that the natural the current state of Nidderdale world offered and those early AONB’s habitats and wildlife. 14 Overview of Nidderdale AONB experiences absolutely shaped While there is distressing news, who I am today. such as the catastrophic decline 17 Why is nature changing? of water voles, there is also hope As a TV presenter on shows like for the future when so many Lindsey Chapman 30 Local Action and people TV and Radio Presenter the BBC’s Springwatch Unsprung, people come together to support The Wild Watch Patron Habitat coverage Big Blue UK and Channel 5’s their local wildlife. 43 Springtime on the Farm, I’m 46 Designated sites passionate about connecting This State of Nature report is just people with nature. The more a start, the first step. The findings 53 Moorland we understand about the natural outlined within it will serve world, the more we create as a baseline to assess future 65 Grassland and farmland memories and connections, the habitat conservation work.
    [Show full text]
  • Wheel Easy Ride Report 541
    Sunday, September 18, 2016 Wheel Easy Ride Report 541 Short Ride There were only four of us for the short ride today but it is quality not quantity that counts. So Dennis, Corinne and Malcolm joined me for a jaunt through the sunny countryside. Having been warned that the area around Beckwithshaw would be busy with a Harrogate Harriers Trail Race we opted for Oakdale Bridge and Pennypot Lane, but with Pot Bank closed for the race Pennypot was even more than usual a busy race track. But we survived and turned off to cross the A59 at the Black Bull, the swooped down into Kettlesing. We dawdled along quiet sunlit back lanes coming across the house with a magnificent flower display (photo), and arrived at Clapham Green before making haste for the inevitable Sophie Stop at Hampsthwaite. Lots of cyclists were doing a Leeds 100 event and arrived but we were comfortably ensconced in the garden and were not moving whatever arrived! Soon Steve and Neeta Wilson appeared and also joined us in the garden. Eventually we headed homeward along Hollybank Lane and the Greenway. Twenty exceptionally pleasant miles in the early autumn sunshine. Martin W Slow-Medium Ride There were two gents and eight ladies for today's ride and we set off for Boroughbridge in glorious sunshine. Lovely to see Ruth back with us after a little break over the summer. The route had to be changed from the one posted on the Internet as I was not sure of the way. We rode to Knaresborough, Abbey Road and turned right to the Wetherby Road.
    [Show full text]
  • Nidderdale AONB Visitor Guide 2020 V4.Qxp Layout 1 20/02/2020 10:07 Page 1
    43148-Nidderdale AONB Visitor Guide 2020 V4.qxp_Layout 1 20/02/2020 10:07 Page 1 Caring for the countryside Nidderdale AONB is truly an area of outstanding natural beauty. Please help us keep it that way. These simple steps make a big difference. Follow the Countryside Code Leave gates and property as you find them, follow paths and signs, take your litter home Planning your visit and keep dogs under control. Buy local, stay local The tourist information centres in and Local people are a big part of what makes around the AONB are a great place to the AONB so unique. When you buy local start. goods, use local services and stay in local accommodation, you are helping to sustain Friendly and knowledgeable staff can help you our rural communities who help make the with everything from how to get here and local AONB special. transport, to top attractions and places to eat and drink. Don’t give pests and diseases an easy ride For a full list of tourist information centres, One of the main ways invasive non-native visit our website. species and wildlife diseases spread is by hitching a ride on people. Follow the Check- nidderdaleaonb.org.uk Clean-Dry protocol: check for and remove any mud or plant material, leaving them on site, and clean and dry items like your shoes as thoroughly as you can. © David Tolcher © Paul Skirrow © Janina Holubecki Friends of Nidderdale AONB We think Nidderdale AONB is a truly special place - a haven for those who love the outdoors and wildlife.
    [Show full text]
  • Wath-Walking-Trail-Nidderdale-AONB.Pdf
    1 The walk begins at the small car park on Low Wath LOOK OUT FOR GOUTHWAITE HALL Road, just before the junction with Wath Road. The higher elevation provides excellent views of Gouthwaite SHORT WALKS Limited parking is available here (about 6 places) Reservoir and the hillside beyond. On the opposite bank IN NIDDERDALE but Wath can be reached after a pleasant walk of of the reservoir, close to the road on the reservoir side, just over 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the car parks in you can see Gouthwaite Hall. Built in the 17th century the Pateley Bridge. hall was the seat of the Yorke family, Nidderdale’s major landowners at the time. Along with the adjacent farmhouse 2 Walk over the narrow bridge that leads towards the hall was re-sited higher up the hillside in 1900 following Wath Wath village and look for a stile immediately to a flood which unexpectedly filled Gouthwaite Reservoir just before its completion. The surveyors had miscalculated and your left. Go over the stile and head up stream both buildings were partially submerged! on the path next to the river Nidd. You will see the embankment of the former Nidd Valley Light 5 Follow the path and after approximately half a mile 1–2 1.5 2.4 Easy Scenic Railway to your right. The footpath follows the hours Miles KM (800 metres) you reach Spring Wood. Shortly after bank of the river and as the field narrows, Beach, the track enters the wood you will see the now Ash and Alder trees begin to line the embankment.
    [Show full text]
  • Area 24 Lower Nidderdale Valley North West of Harrogate
    A From Clint looking south towards Hampsthwaite. AREA 24 LowerLower NidderdaleNidderdale ValleyValley Approved Feb 2004 northnorth westwest ofof HarrogateHarrogate ©Crown Copyright. All Rights Reserved. Harrogate Borough Council. 1000 19628 2004. HARROGATE DISTRICT Landscape Character Assessment Area boundary* Not to Camera location Scale & direction * NB Due to the nature of landform, surface treatment and soil/geology composition Character area bound­ aries cannot be delineated precisely and should be considered "transitional". Location in Harrogate District Description This Character Area covers approximately 27km2 to the accessible area. The western-most end of this Character north west of Harrogate and is a transitional area of the Area is in the Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Nidd Valley as it progresses towards lower land. The Beauty. Much of the area is within the boundary of The confluence of Oak Beck with the River Nidd marks the Royal Forest of Knaresborough, a former medieval eastern boundary and New Bridge (a 19th century hunting park, and it contains five of its old boundary packhorse bridge) on the Nidd west of Birstwith marks stones. A the western boundary. The valley Character Area The area is well tended around settlements and extends to its rim north and south. dwellings, and is generally picturesque. This is a large-scale, broad valley with a flat floor that channels extensive views. The valley floor landscape pattern is intimate and diverse with random fields typical of early enclosure. Field boundaries are an eclectic mix Key Characteristics of walls, hedges, stock fences and metal estate fences. Geology, soils and drainage Higher up the valley sides to the south there are larger fields typical of parliamentary enclosure which are Millstone grit solid geology.
    [Show full text]
  • Traditional Farm Buildings Survey
    National Character Area 21 Yorkshire Dales Summary The Yorkshire Dales is a large scale upland landscape of high moorland, dissected by often deep dales, which forms part of the Pennine uplands running up the centre of Northern England. It is separated from the North Pennines by the Stainmore Trough faults and from the more industrialised South Pennines by the Craven Faults. Just 0.3% of the area is urban, 4% is woodland, and 26% is upland grazing. 71% of the area falls within the Yorkshire Dales National Park and 17% within the Nidderdale AONB. 30% of the area is designated as SSSI. The key farmstead characteristics are: Landscape and Settlement $! !"#$%&'(!)*!+&,-(.%(/!.+/!/#01('0(/!0(%%-(2(+%3!(0%.4-#05(/!#+!%5(!2(/#(6.-!1('#)/!.+/!-.%('3!0(%!#+!.!-.+/0,.1(! with a long history of enclosure. $! !7#85!/(+0#%9!)*!*.'20%(./0!.+/!*#(-/!4.'+0!#+!%5(!-.+/0,.1(:!;5(!5#85(0%!/(+0#%#(0!.'(!,)22)+-9!.00),#.%(/!<#%5! small-scale fields in the pastoral upper dales, and the miner-farmer landscapes of the northern dales. Larger farms are found in the lower dales where arable farming was more commonly practised. $! !;5(!*.'2(/!-.+/0,.1(0!)*!%5(!=)'>05#'(!?.-(0!5.6(!02.--!.'(.0!)*!#''(8&-.'!*#(-/0!'(0&-%#+8!*')2!%5(!,-(.'.+,(!)*! woodland by the 14th century. Isolated farmsteads otherwise developed from medieval cattle farms and forest lodges or as a result of the piecemeal and planned enclosure of farm and common land. Farmstead and Building Types $! !@#+(.'!*.'20%(./0!A!<#%5!5)&0(0!.+/!<)'>#+8!4&#-/#+80!.%%.,5(/!#+A-#+(3!0)2(%#2(0!($%(+/(/!#+%)!.+!)6('.--!@! shape - are the dominant type of farmstead, and may also have additional detached buildings.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dales Way Guided Trail
    The Dales Way Guided Trail Tour Style: Guided Trails Destinations: Yorkshire Dales & England Trip code: MDLDD Trip Walking Grade: 4 HOLIDAY OVERVIEW The Dales Way was one of the earliest "unofficial" long distance routes. For most of its 79 miles it shuns the craggy tops and summit ridges to keep to the valley bottoms. It is, in essence, a riverside route linking existing rights of way to cross the Yorkshire Dales in a south-east to north-west direction. It connects the urban fringe of Ilkley to the shores of Windermere by way of Wharfedale, Dentdale and Eastern Lakeland. Wildlife is rich and varied: rivers provide habitat for a wide range of birds and the Wharfe is noted for its trout, often seen leaping out of the water on summer days. WHAT'S INCLUDED • High quality en-suite accommodation in our country house • Full board from dinner upon arrival to breakfast on departure day • The services of an HF Holidays' walks leader • All transport on walking days www.hfholidays.co.uk PAGE 1 [email protected] Tel: +44(0) 20 3974 8865 HOLIDAYS HIGHLIGHTS • The complete Dales Way from Ilkley to Bowness • Meander through beautiful Yorkshire Dales scenery • Stay at Newfield Hall, Malhamdale TRIP SUITABILITY This Guided Walking/Hiking Trail is graded 4 which involves walks /hikes over long distances in remote countryside and rough terrain. Sustained ascents and descents and occasional sections of scree and some steep ground are encountered. You will require a good level of fitness as you will be walking every day. It is your responsibility to ensure you have the relevant fitness and equipment required to join this holiday.
    [Show full text]
  • This Walk Description Is from Happyhiker.Co.Uk Ramsgill To
    This walk description is from happyhiker.co.uk Ramsgill to Lofthouse Starting point and OS Grid reference Ramsgill – roadside parking at village green (SE 119710) Ordnance Survey map OS Explorer Map 298 - Nidderdale. Distance 5 miles Traffic light rating Introduction: Nidderdale missed out on a Yorkshire Dales designation when the National Park was founded in 1954, which was a pity as it is certainly scenic enough to justify inclusion. It has gained prestige however through being designated as an Area of Outstanding National Beauty in 1994. Not surprisingly, the River Nidd flows through it and this walk from Ramsgill explores a short pretty middle section of it. The walk is an easy low level 5 mile “stroll” following the Nidderdale Way, ideal for the shorter winter days or when conditions higher are unappealing. It could be linked with my Lofthouse to Scar House Reservoir walk if you wanted a longer walk of about 15 miles. The Nidderdale Way sign with its Curlew will become a familiar sight. To get to Ramsgill, heading west through Pateley Bridge on the B6265, turn right after crossing the river bridge. Ramsgill is signposted. The road follows the lengthy Gouthwaite reservoir and Ramsgill is reached shortly after its end. Park on the main road by the village green, opposite the Yorke Arms where there are convenient benches for booting up. Refreshments are a possibility at the Crown Hotel in Lofthouse but check the times (and days!) of opening. Start: Facing the Yorke Arms, turn left and walk along the road. After only 50 yards or so, after crossing the bridge, take the track on the left then fork right to follow the fingerpost for the Nidderdale Way.
    [Show full text]