Mike,
My husband and I have just returned from the walk up Nealey Nab - however, we got rather lost!
We followed your instructions well until we got to point 4 where you mentioned "looking for a footpath coming in from the right and 2 going off to the left in the space of 10 metres". We did see a footpath on the right but there was only one footpath on the left a few yards further on. We took this path but there was no other path going up to it and there was no disused small quarry workings. We got completely lost at this point! We wandered around the top of Healey Nab for some time and eventually found the cairn and took the path down from there and we did manage to find our way back to White Coppice after some time.
I do have to say though that we did enjoy our walk - eventhough we managed to miss the pub lunch at the Yew Tree Inn 20 minutes late for lunch - they finished serving at 2 p.m.!!
All the best,
L&A
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Monday, October 20, 2008
What day !
Set out for a pleasant walk from Great Langdale, Chapel Stile, Little Langdale and Blea Tarn yesterday. Started well, but Oh, my, did we get wet. You knw the sort of rain that gets up your sleeve cuffs and down the back of the neck ?
Enjoyed it all the same, and claimed a couple of caches into the bargain
Enjoyed it all the same, and claimed a couple of caches into the bargain
Monday, September 17, 2007
Hospice Walk - update
A pleasant 8 mile stroll from Haigh Hall, around Red Rock and Arley, and through the grounds of some very posh houses !
And the rain held off - we must have been good
(8 miles - but we reckon the dog did 24 !)
And the rain held off - we must have been good
(8 miles - but we reckon the dog did 24 !)
Sunday, September 16, 2007
White Coppice Walk
Hi MIke,
Great website. I have enjoyed all of the walks that I have done from your site around the Rivington/Anglesarke/White Coppice area.
I have attempted to do the White Coppice walk a couple of times and I always seem to get lost around this part of the route. I haven't got a GPS just yet, when I do the walk. I manage to get into the forest and head down left until I find the bridge mentioned on the route. But I always seem to get lost after there. I found Watson's Farm but I can't seem to find the path nearby to Watson Farm. Where am I going wrong?
Thanks
Bruce
Great website. I have enjoyed all of the walks that I have done from your site around the Rivington/Anglesarke/White Coppice area.
I have attempted to do the White Coppice walk a couple of times and I always seem to get lost around this part of the route. I haven't got a GPS just yet, when I do the walk. I manage to get into the forest and head down left until I find the bridge mentioned on the route. But I always seem to get lost after there. I found Watson's Farm but I can't seem to find the path nearby to Watson Farm. Where am I going wrong?
Thanks
Bruce
Ling Family History
I am currently researching my great grandfather (william herbert ling) who was a gamekeeper in scorton .he lived at pasture bottom and i would be grateful if you could give me directions there and where he may have lived.any help would be much appreciated.
regards
Alan
regards
Alan
Saturday, September 8, 2007
'Walk for Life' - 16th Sept
Before I forget, 16th of September sees Wigan Hospice's annual 'Walk For Life'. It has a different format from previous years, and you can find details at Wigan Hospice's Walk for a Life website
I'll be there - will you ?
I'll be there - will you ?
Caches & clues
If you're not familiar with the activity of 'geocaching', it consists of using a GPS to find a hidden 'cache' - they are all over the place, I found two on a trip to Chester today. Sometimes your GPS will not be accurate enough to locate the cache and a clue will be given.
So as not to make it easy, these clues are always given in a fairly simple code, so you can't read them by accident if you don't want to, and this is fair enough, but sometimes the clues are so vague as to be meaningless, and it makes you wonder why people bother - two examples, bearing in mind that given factors like cloud cover and urban architecture, your GPS may be accurate to +/-8ft or +/-150ft
1 - in Chester today, the clue was 'Ivy Covered Tree' - this on an isolated mound with a eight or more trees on it, only one of which was not covered in Ivy
2 - in the Lakes the other week - 'in the rocks where the ground slopes away' - this on a rock covered summit, where the ground slopes away in every direction
Two clues, neither of which help - why bother ?
So as not to make it easy, these clues are always given in a fairly simple code, so you can't read them by accident if you don't want to, and this is fair enough, but sometimes the clues are so vague as to be meaningless, and it makes you wonder why people bother - two examples, bearing in mind that given factors like cloud cover and urban architecture, your GPS may be accurate to +/-8ft or +/-150ft
1 - in Chester today, the clue was 'Ivy Covered Tree' - this on an isolated mound with a eight or more trees on it, only one of which was not covered in Ivy
2 - in the Lakes the other week - 'in the rocks where the ground slopes away' - this on a rock covered summit, where the ground slopes away in every direction
Two clues, neither of which help - why bother ?
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