Tuesday, 13 November 2012

Following the Cromford Canal ~ 6 ... I visit Hammersmith.

My fifth day following the Cromford Canal was on the 11th July 2010 ... my sixth day was on the 14th January 2011 ~ six months apart. Still I was making progress.

At the start of the sixth day I parked my car under the bridge taking the A38 northwards from Ripley, Derbyshire. There's a small area to park by the side of the road there ...
Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

I should mention that that isn't my car but it is the A38 passing overhead. In fact I recall now, my car was parked back down the road behind me ... not under the A38.

This isn't going to be a walk that the mountain-loving walker is going to like but if you've been following some of my blogs you'll know I don't have to be out in the wilds to enjoy a walk.

So, I left the road shown above by turning right out of the picture, along a footpath, which runs alongside an old railway line which is now part of the Midland Railway Centre ...


Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

This brought me to Butterley Reservoir where you can [just] see one of the steam trains at the far end ...


Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

I walked around the southern end of the reservoir to reach the Butterley Ironworks or what remains of it. The Ironworks has quite a history ~ Butterley [according to Wikipedia] "produced the iron work for the Vauxhall Bridge over the River Thames". The next time you're at St. Pancras Station see if you can spot the 'Butterley Company' name on some of the ironwork. Clink on this link for a short history of Butterley Engineering by the BBC, this includes 12 great images [including a bit of the reservoir] ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/derby/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8470000/8470702.stm 

This area is known for something else of course ~ the Pentrich Revolution in 1817. This seems to have been a badly organised uprising by 200/300 men who planned to march on Nottingham and then London. They didn't even get as far as Nottingham as the cavalry was waiting for them. A government spy had been amongst them. Over 30 of the men were charged with high treason but only Jeremiah Brandreth, William Turner and Isaac Ludlam were found guiltyand subsequently executed. According to the Cambridge Chronicle and Journal of Friday the 14th November 1817 all three men were hanged at a quarter to one and "... at a quarter past one they were cut down." The dead body of Brandreth who had been 31 at the time of his death "was then laid on the block, with the face downwards ... The executioner then raised [his] axe and struck at the neck with all his force. At that instant there was a burst of horror from the crowd. The executioner then took up the head and ... addressed the people. "Behold the head of Jeremiah Brandreth the traitor." " The bodies of Turner and Ludlam were treated in a simlar fashion before "the heads and bodies were then thrown into the coffins, and all the spectators dispersed." 

They don't write newspaper reports like that nowadays.

The 'revolutionaries' passed the gatehouse at Butterley Ironworks ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

A plaque marking that fact ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

I continued, though so far I hadn't seen anything of the Cromford Canal. The Derbyshire Police headquarters are hereabouts though, hence this sign presumably ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Then I did see something of the canal, well at least an airshaft from Butterley Tunnel through which the canal used to pass ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

As I made my way I could see from my OS Map that I wasn't far from the one and three quarter mile long tunnel. I was walking parallel to it though it was some distance below my feet. 

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Eventually I reached the Newlands Inn at Golden Valley ... far from in its prime ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Behind it the Cromford Canal, after it had come out of the tunnel ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

So now I walked back alongside the canal to reach the Butterley Tunnel. As you can see it is in a poor state ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

There is no towpath in the tunnel and so men on the barges or narrowboats had to rely on "legging". This literally meant lying on a plank across the boat and 'walking' along the sides of the tunnel.

Returning to the Newlands Inn I walked along the road for a short distance before turning into a wood and then walking up a field side towards Forty Horse Wood ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...   

This is where many, many walkers would lose interest because the next section of the walk was alongside an unattractive metal fence separating the countryside [on my right] with an industrial site [on my left] ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...  

You never know what you're going to discover though and a mile later after walking past Sainsbury's on the edge of Ripley [and through some of its streets] I reached Carr Wood which is, more or less, in Ripley ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Carr Wood [according to the interpretation panel] can be traced back to the 13th century forming part of ancient Duffield Frith. Coal mining though left the site almost bare but as this decreased trees grew and it is now a local nature reserve. It was certainly much more enjoyable than paddling along some of the pavements of the town.

One interesting building I passed whilst paddling along those pavements was the King William Nursing Home ... though when you look closer at the side of the building ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

... you can see the words 'THE HOME BREWERY COMPANY LIMITED' partly hidden by some planters. The brewery ceased to exist some years ago but I spent my late teenage years drinking Home Brewery's Bitter and Home Brewery's Five Star ... with some enthusiasm.

Shortly afterwards I was passing under the A610 linking the A38 with Ripley ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

I always enjoy walking under busy roads with cars and lorries moving at speed way above my head [seriously].

Then I was walking through Hammersmith, complete with street name on the side of one of the terraced houses ...

Another walk based on the Cromford Canal ...

Not everybody's idea of an interesting walk but I found it very enjoyable.
 
Anyone who wants to find out more about the Butterley Tunnel can search for 'Butterley Tunnel' in YouTube and find a video of some guys passing through it [or some of it] in a boat ... and there is more if you put 'Butterley Tunnel' into Google.
 
This walk was followed on the 14th January 2011
 
Length of walk ~ 5 miles *

 
Total mileage walked so far in 2011 ~ 15.8 miles
 
Total mileage between the 1st September 2009 and the 14th January 2011 ~ 544.85 miles
 
4 of 2011
 
* distance calculated on Ordnance Survey's Getamap

One of the World̢۪s Oldest Birch Bark Canoes Discovered in Cornwall | National Maritime Museum Cornwall | Falmouth, Cornwall

One of the World̢۪s Oldest Birch Bark Canoes Discovered in Cornwall | National Maritime Museum Cornwall | Falmouth, Cornwall

Saturday, 10 November 2012

Living lawnmowers

Living lawnmowers by ceeko
Living lawnmowers, a photo by ceeko on Flickr.

Another excellent photo from one of my contacts on Flickr ... this time ceeko.

Friday, 9 November 2012

Is this number 1 ?

Have you noticed how it's only when you play an incident back in your mind that it can be irksome ?

Let me explain ...

Last night, about 6.30, it was dark outside when I heard a knock at the door. I went down and standing outside was a stocky, smartly dressed guy with dark hair and one of those plastic i.d. cards around his neck.

I said "Hello ..."

He just said "Is this number 1 ?"

I then explained that my house didn't have a number and that number 1 was at the other end of the avenue ... well, next to the end because the houses at each end of our avenues have house names only.

And then he went without a 'thank you' or anything. All he said was "Is this number 1 ?"

Now there was a time when a stranger knocking on someone's door, unless he was a doorstep assassin, would say something like "Good evening ... sorry to trouble you ... but I wonder if you could tell me is this number 1 ?".

Who or what was he ? He could have been the police ... a council representative ... or a double-glazing salesman ... 

I know what he wasn't ~ courteous and polite.

Perhaps I've been in this world too long.
 
 

Beyond 'Beyond Limits' ...

Here are a few more features I saw when I was at Chatsworth a couple of months ago.

The first is a fan of a Rolls Royce jet engine ...

Another [dusty] sculpture ... at Chatsworth  

... it needs a duster running round it !

After the Conservative Wall I included in a recent blog here's a more modern greenhouse built in 1970 ...

One of Chatsworth's greenhouses ...

Here's the same greenhouse beside a more traditional greenhouse on the right and the Conservative Wall in the background ...

Two greenhouses and the Conservative Wall ... at Chatsworth

After discovering the gravestone in memory of the tame red deer earlier in the day I then noticed another gravestone erected in memory of Smut, Grandpa ... and others ...

Another memorial ... at Chatsworth

Smut and Grandpa etc appear to have lived for 12 to 15 years so I assume they are dogs.

Then on its own nearby was a stone in memory of Portly who was born in 1951 and died in 1962 ...

... and yet another memorial ... at Chatsworth.  

Why Portly was buried on his or her own I don't know. What Portly was I don't know.

A bit of a mish-mash of photographs but it gives you an idea as to the variety in the garden at Chatsworth. You could easily spend an hour or two looking around. They're worth a visit but even more so when the Beyond Limits exhibition is on. Then you can spend a couple of hours just looking at the sculptures in that exhibition.

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Cromford Canal ~ temporary towpath closure

I was walking along the towpath beside Cromford Canal this morning before discovering that part of it is closed for the whole of November.

It was enough to put me off and I took a few photos instead.

The closed section runs from Aqueduct Cottage as Derbyshire County Council call it [I've always known it as Wayfarers Cottage] to Gregory Tunnel. It's being closed whilst a works depot is being demolished.

Whilst I was stood there taking the photo four cyclists came up having ridden along the closed path. They removed the fence, came through and then put the fencing back in place ...

Cromford Canal towpath

Before anyone points out that there are only two cyclists in the photo perhaps I should add that the other two are a little way away along the towpath, behind them.

This is the first time I have uploaded a photo from my phone to Flickr and then to Blogger. I'm quite impressed though I will stick to the camera generally. Still, the photo also went to Facebook and Twitter almost immediately ... or it would have done if the signal had been better !

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Matlock Bath ~ an old black and white photograph

During my legal 'career' clients got to know that I was interested in local history and photography and some kind souls used to hand me photographs and books etc that they thought I might like ... rather than dump them in the bin. So there was an upside to the law.

Here's an interesting black and white image [scanned from a photograph I was given] which was taken I believe on the main road passing through Matlock Bath, about five miles from here.

Matlock Bath, Derbyshire

I have the feeling that these buildings have gone though I think I saw them before they were demolished. Who knows someone might come along and tell me they are still there.

Whilst this may not be of much interest outside our immediate area I thought that it might be of passing interest to one or two of you.

If anyone has any information as regards this photograph I would be pleased to hear from you.

On the back of the photograph someone has written "WALKERS (PLUMBERS ETC.)"

 It's over to you ...