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The 3rd Peak District
Challenge Mick and I did the Peak District Challenge in 2000 and really enjoyed it. Click here to see my report on it. We had hoped to do it last year but, like so many challenge walks, it was a casualty of Foot and Mouth Disease and had to be cancelled. This made us keener to stretch our legs and have a go in 2002. Like so often before
a walk the weather report was indecisive and the night before I had the
usual problem of what to wear. Would we get rain during the walk or would
it hold off until later in the day? The weather forecasters didn’t seem
sure. As it was, it As usual it was an
early start to reach the walk venue at Sheldon, located south of the A6
two or three miles from Bakewell, for the mass start at 9 o’clock. While
waiting I spoke to other walkers and met up with the infamous St John’s
Lady, "Vaseline Val", and counted approximately twenty walkers
waiting to use the one working loo that was From Over Haddon
we followed Lathkill Dale downstream to Alport and the first check point.
From here it was a The next stop was Monyash, 3 miles away, which took us an hour and 8 minutes. We were not quite as quick as we had hoped but the route did take us through the Cales Dale, which can be an ordeal with the 160 plus steps down into it and then a clamber out. Walking poles yet again were very useful. It was also pleasing to note the number of gates that had been placed along the path and thus eliminate having to make the often difficult clambers over wall stiles. As per usual we did
not linger long at the check point and from Monyash we were Hurdlow, which is a collection of about a dozen houses, was interesting. Just before we reached it we, and other walkers, had to negotiate a field with a bull in the corner where the exit stile was. We were all very nervous especially a lady with a red T shirt who made sure I was between her and the bull. Fortunately the bull’s carnal instincts came into play when he spotted a beautiful looking cow – at least I presume the bull found her fanciabull – on the other side of the wall. However, it was only a low wall, and he was a big bull, and she was willing to back towards the wall, so we all got over the stile safely as the bull placed his front legs over the wall and extended his "undercarriage" to make appropriate contact. We then walked through Hurdlow. Everything in Hurdlow
seemed very "run down". It seemed that every building we The next stop was Earl Sterndale and which we reached by going along a path north of the road between Hurdlow and Earl Sterndale. Initially it was up hill and as we neared the top we saw to the north quarries that dominate the landscape in this area. Indeed if you look at the map you would almost think that the Peak National Park has had its boundary drawn so these quarries can exist. I’m certain that more of this area would have been included in the P.N.P. if it were not for the quarrying that takes place. Going downhill to
Earl Sterndale we met some of the most spectacular scenery of the whole
walk. First we saw the almost conical symmetry of Weldon Hill and as we
reached the road, which we followed to Earl Sterndale, we had wonderful
views of Parkhouse Hill and the other nearby steep sided outcrops. I must
come here again and have another look. The check point in Earl Sterndale was at grid reference 089675 and adjacent to the path that would take us up a very very steep hillside on to Sterndale Moor and "wonderful" views of the quarries. The first few yards of this path went through a beautiful rock garden. In fact the path was so much a part of the garden that the check point had been placed there so the stewards could point us walkers in the right direction. We could have easily mistaken the path to be a part of the garden and ignored it. Once high on the
hill the views to our west were even more spectacular. But soon we were
over the brow of the hill and walked adjacent to the quarried areas until
we re-crossed the Buxton to Ashbourne Road. From Chelmorton we
continued up and via Sough Top we reached Taddington and "The Walkers
Supper" was one of the best I’ve had. Before the walk the Needless to say on the way home we needed a celebratory drink which we had at the Devonshire Arms at Beeley and then it was over Beeley Moor to Chesterfield, to beat the traffic jams coming out of Chatsworth Park, and home.
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